Russia’s exiled opposition is quietly talking with Ukrainian officials, Vladimir Kara-Murza, a Pulitzer Prize-winning Russian-British journalist who is a leading Kremlin critic, told POLITICO on Thursday.
While both Ukraine and Russia’s opposition movement are fierce opponents of Russian President Vladimir Putin, they have largely avoided working together. Kyiv has been wary of the movement, fearing it still holds imperial views on Ukraine and the Kremlin’s invasion, including the 2014 annexation of Crimea.
But Kara-Murza, a former political prisoner who was freed from a Siberian jail in a prisoner swap last year, told POLITICO that a dialogue was now happening behind the scenes. The discussions with Ukrainian officials were not “public,” he said.