President Putin has said Russia’s war goals remain unchanged and there won’t be peace in Ukraine until they are achieved.
He has been taking questions during a four-hour phone-in.
The Q&A had been a regular fixture on Russian television, but didn’t happen during the first year after the invasion in February 2022.
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Mr Putin reiterated his goals were still the “de-Nazification, de-militarisation and a neutral status” of Ukraine.
“Peace will come when we reach our goals,” he told TV viewers and a Moscow studio audience.
Russia wants to keep Ukraine from joining NATO – something which would mean Western countries have to directly help defend it.
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Meanwhile, Mr Putin’s claims of radicals and neo-Nazis being in control in Kyiv have long been derided by the West.
The Russian leader said 617,000 troops, including 244,000 reservists, were in Ukraine and claimed the number signing up “is not diminishing”.
He claimed another call-up of amateur reservists – a move that saw some flee Russia last year – wasn’t necessary as 1,500 men are joining every day.
Mr Putin also said Ukraine’s stalled counteroffensive – which this summer aimed to win back territory and cut off Russian supply lines – had “failed everywhere”.
Ukrainian officials have conceded that progress has been disappointing, with only minor gains in the south near Kherson.
President Putin’s determination to continue – despite the heavy toll on his forces and tough international sanctions – comes after he confirmed he’s going for re-election again in March.
It also comes in a week that saw President Zelenskyy of Ukraine on a begging mission to America, pleading with his allies for billions more in military support and aid.
There is no certainty whatsoever he will get it because Republicans in the US House of Representatives are tying continued military aid to Ukraine to domestic concessions over immigration – something the Democrats have so far found unpalatable.
Meanwhile, Hungarian president Viktor Orban is also blocking the European Union giving €50bn (£43bn) in financial aid to Kyiv to support it as it continues its fight against Mr Putin’s troops.
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The 71-year Russian president also took a call from a soldier – apparently on the frontline in Ukraine – who told Mr Putin “victory is close”.
He asked whether the president would allow soldiers to educate children after the war – something he agreed to as “very relevant” and patriotic.
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The Kremlin said 2.1 million questions had been submitted to the highly-choreographed TV show.
A question from a pensioner on the rising price of eggs was among the more mundane issues the president was quizzed on.
An increase in salaries had pushed up demand, said Mr Putin.
“It’s very popular. I am very happy to eat them, sunny side up. I could eat a dozen of them at breakfast; well, what happened is there was greater demand, however the production did not [increase],” he said.
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Despite the questions being vetted, a couple of more awkward messages occasionally popped up on screens.
They included: “Don’t run for another term – let the young try”; “When will the life of ordinary people be better not in words, but in deeds?”; and “A bad peace is better than a good quarrel. We should move in this direction. People’s lives are an unacceptable price.”