China's Xi Jinping 'demanded a written explanation from Putin on how and when he planned to end the war in Ukraine', says Telegram which claims to have links to Vladimir's bodyguards
- Xi Jinping allegedly asked Putin the exact dates he intends to end war in Ukraine
- Kremlin loyalist Dmitry Medvedev delivered a missive to Xi in Beijing yesterday
- The claims were made by General SVR which has alleged links to the Kremlin
- Read more: Wife of Putin official goes on £70,000 Paris shopping spree
Chinese premier Xi Jinping has demanded a letter from Vladimir Putin detailing how and when he will end the war with Ukraine, it has been claimed.
The Russian despot was allegedly asked the exact dates he intends to end the bloody conflict by his Chinese counterpart, who threatened to halt communications unless he received a response.
Telegram channel General SVR, which has alleged links to the Kremlin and Putin's bodyguards, said Dmitry Medvedev was dispatched yesterday to Beijing 'as a postman' to deliver his leader's response to Xi.
The unverified channel is reportedly authored by an exiled Kremlin lieutenant-general, known by the alias Viktor Mikhailovich, and it has made a series of anti-Putin claims throughout the war.
Deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council Dmitry Medvedev shakes hands with Xi Jinping in Beijing yesterday
Medvedev, deputy chairman of the Russian security council, has been seldom deployed by Putin in recent years and lately has been portrayed as a 'court clown' in the Kremlin for his extreme anti-Western social media posts.
The claims about the letter indicate that Putin is facing strong pressure from China to end a war that is causing grave ructions in the world economy.
General SVR said Xi had 'demanded from Putin a detailed plan with dates, where the Russian president was to write how and when he was going to end the war'.
It further claimed that 'only if there were such written explanations or, if you like, promises, the Chinese leader was ready to agree to telephone conversations with Putin and discuss the possibility of a visit to Russia next year'.
It continued: 'How much the letter of the Russian president convinced Xi Jinping will be clear from whether the leaders of the two countries will have telephone conversations in the near future or not.'
The Russian despot was allegedly asked for the exact dates he intends to end the bloody conflict by his Chinese counterpart
Ukrainian soldiers ride in a Humvee in Bakhmut, Donetsk region, yesterday
Medvedev, deputy head of the Russian security council, has been seldom deployed by Putin in recent years and lately has been portrayed as a 'court clown' in the Kremlin (pictured second from right in Beijing yesterday)
Official Chinese accounts of the meeting stressed that Medvedev had handed Xi a letter that 'conveyed his friendly greetings and good wishes' to the Chinese leader.
On Ukraine, Xi emphasised that his country 'has always decided its own position and policy based on the merits of the matter itself', said China Daily.
Yet there was a clear message stressing the need for peace in Beijing accounts of the unexpected Xi-Medvedev meeting.
China 'takes an objective and fair position on the issue - and has made active efforts to facilitate peace talks', said the official newspaper.
It also reported that Xi 'expressed his hope that the parties concerned will show rationality and restraint, start a comprehensive dialogue and address each other's security concerns through political means'.
Medvedev claimed that the war happened due to complex factors which he did not explain.
Separately, Putin was humiliated further when his two senior security henchmen - Nikolai Patrushev and Alexander Bortnikov, both 71, and long time retainers - were seen dozing off during his key speech on defence policy in Moscow.
Putin was humiliated further when his two senior security henchmen - Nikolai Patrushev and Alexander Bortnikov, both 71, and long time retainers - were seen dozing off during his key speech
Pictures and footage showed the senior apparatchiks underwhelmed by the lecture in which Putin vowed there would be no limits on military spending and pledged to expand his army to 1.5million and raise the age of forced conscription from 27 to 30 to meet cover for his failure to seize Ukraine by force.
Patrushev is an ex-FSB counterintelligence service boss and is now secretary of the Russian security council. He is widely seen as the sinister architect of the war in Ukraine.
He is supposedly angling for his son Dmitry Patrushev, 45, the Russian agriculture minister, to take over from Putin if he quits through ill health.
Bortnikov is current head of the feared FSB.
Telegram channel General SVR reported: 'There is no point in discussing the expanded meeting of the Collegium of the Ministry of Defence of the Russian Federation, which Putin chaired….
'FSB director Alexander Bortnikov and Security Council secretary Nikolai Patrushev, peacefully dozing during the leader's speech, are vivid confirmation of the futility of the event.'
It wasn't just this pair struggling to stay awake as Putin spoke.
Several among the uniformed army top brass behind them also appeared to find it hard to concentrate on the Russian dictator's words.