Zelenskyy In Paris, Witkoff To Moscow, In 'Pivotal Week' For Ukraine Talks

French President Emmanuel Macron (right) welcomes his Ukrainian counterpart, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, to the Elysee Palace in Paris on December 1.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived at the Elysee Palace in Paris on December 1 for talks with his French counterpart, Emmanuel Macron, kicking off another week of intense diplomacy aimed at ending nearly four years of fighting in Ukraine following Russia's full-scale invasion.

The visit, aimed at finding "conditions for a just and lasting peace," comes a day after talks in Florida between US and Ukrainian delegations that both sides praised as productive without providing further details.

'Pivotal Week' For Peace Efforts

"The idea of ending the war by making some concessions to Russia will not work. On the contrary, it would only encourage Russia to continue its expansion in various directions," Mykhaylo Podolyak, an adviser in the Ukrainian presidential office, told Current Time on December 1.

"Some more or less clear compromise version of [US President Donald] Trump's peace initiative will be on the table," he added, referring to a plan proposed by the White House in mid-November that has led to the current burst of diplomacy.

European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said on December 1 that "it could be a pivotal week" for peace efforts.

SEE ALSO: Could Frozen Russian Assets Be Europe's Ticket To US Peace Talks For Ukraine?

US special envoy Steve Witkoff, a member of the US team in Florida, will be holding talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on December 2, according to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov. It will be Witkoff's sixth meeting with Putin since January.

The initial 28-point US proposal alarmed Ukrainian officials -- and reportedly angered Zelenskyy -- who then held their own talks with Rubio and other US officials in Geneva on November 23.

Those talks resulted in a 19-point plan that leaves several major issues on the table, including the fate of a chunk of Ukraine's Donbas region, Ukraine's NATO aspirations, and a potential cap on the size of Kyiv's armed forces. They were followed by the talks in Florida a week later.

Russian 'Pleasure' At Ukraine Scandal

For Ukraine, an added complication has been the controversy surrounding Zelenskyy's chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, who has been a key figure in talks.

Yermak -- who has not been charged by investigators and has said he has done nothing wrong -- resigned on November 28 amid an ongoing corruption investigation. He led the Ukrainian delegation in Geneva but was no longer part of the team in Florida.

Podolyak, who was Yermak's adviser, told Current Time that Russia was benefitting from the corruption scandal.

"They always invest in provoking internal conflict in Ukraine, inflating it as much as possible. They understand how to do this, have many information platforms, social networks that they use for this. And, of course, they now watch this internal conflict with pleasure," he said.

SEE ALSO: Andriy Yermak, Zelenskyy's Talisman -- Or Albatross?

Trump on November 30 cautioned that the scandal was not helpful to the peace process, adding that "Ukraine's got some difficult little problems."

Even as the diplomacy ramps up, the killing has raged on.

Ukrainian authorities reported on December 1 that three people were killed and eight injured in a Russian missile attack on Dnipro.

Meanwhile, Kremlin spokesman Peskov complained about Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian oil infrastructure.

He said a weekend attack on Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) infrastructure was "outrageous given its international significance and the involvement of international partners," including US oil major Chevron.

Kazakhstan, a partner in the project, lodged an official protest with the Ukrainian government over the strike, which it said was "the third act of aggression against an exclusively civilian facility."

In the past, Kyiv has said it has targeted the oil industry in order to deny revenues that finance the Russian war effort.

For its part, Moscow has denied aiming at civilian targets in Ukraine, despite overwhelming evidence of attacks on schools, hospitals, housing, and other facilities since launching its full-scale invasion in February 2022.