Russia's now weeks-long refusal to agree to a full ceasefire in Ukraine continued on April 7, with the Kremlin falling back on debunked tropes about "extremist nationalists" in order to justify continuing the war,
The Kyiv Independent reports.
Ukraine has already agreed to a U.S.-proposed full 30-day ceasefire, saying on March 11 that Kyiv is ready to take such a step if Russia also agrees to the terms.
So far, Russia has refused.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov insisted Russian President Vladimir Putin supports the idea of a ceasefire, but claimed before one could be reached "a whole series of questions have to be answered."
"These questions are hanging in the air, and so far, no one has given answers to them," he added.
Peskov went on to explain that these relate "both to the lack of control over the Kyiv regime and to the inability of the Kyiv regime to control the actions of a number of extremist nationalist units that simply do not obey Kyiv."
Peskov's comments echo longstanding false narratives aimed at undermining Ukraine's government, and repeat Kremlin propaganda claims about the need to "denazify" and "demilitarize" Ukraine — terms Russia has used to justify its full-scale invasion since 2022.
Ukraine's military is centrally commanded and subordinate to civilian leadership.
Western governments and international observers have consistently affirmed the professionalism of Ukraine's armed forces.
Peskov also accused Kyiv of fueling "continued militarization" and said any ceasefire must address "our interests and clarify" unresolved concerns.
The remarks followed U.S. President Donald Trump's renewed push for a ceasefire, which has regardless seen Russia repeatedly striking Ukrainian cities in drone and missile attacks.
A strike on the city of Kryvyi Rih on April 4 killed 20 people including nine children. An attack on Kyiv on April 6 killed one and injured three others. Trump has called on Russia to stop its bombing campaign, saying: "I don't like the bombing."