Russia doesn't want "peace" they just want to stop the bleeding and regroup. Any deal made with dickface putin is just a delaying tactic on his part. He won't abide by it. Anyone that thinks he seriously wants real lasting peace is about the dumbest fucker on the planet.
If he wanted real lasting peace the solution is obvious and immediate-- withdraw from Ukraine and end the war. It's completely within his power to do so.
I hear this a lot, and while I think there's some truth to it, I don't quite wholly agree with it.
I have no idea what "Russians" want. They're not a monolith any more than we Americans are. I think I have a reasonable idea of what Putin wants (or, possibly more relevant, what the oligarchs he answers to want). I have no formal education in Russo-European history, but I've tried to learn something about it from reading and from listening to lectures by various historians for the past few years since this war has been going on.
What I gather is that Russia has always viewed Ukraine as vital to its survival. Long before Putin, long before the Soviet Union, even before the "modern" era Czars. There are economic reasons Russia cares so much about what happens in that land, a lot of which have to do with ports and agriculture.
So where I agree is that Russia (forget Putin, this goes back way before him) is unlikely to ever just walk away from Ukraine and say "we won't interfere anymore." In that way, I don't think Putin wants "peace," per se. Actually, to the contrary, I think he's publicly voiced his support for putting something back together roughly resembling the USSR.
Where I disagree is that it necessarily means war and never-ending aggression towards Ukraine. There seem to be conditions he's willing to accept in Europe, regardless of what he "wants." There are lines they're not willing to let be crossed, and NATO winking at Ukraine is one of them. IMO, a major fault for this whole conflict is us, the USA. "We" pushed Putin into this as much as any factor, by dangling NATO in front of them and encouraging Ukraine to talk about it and consider it as if it's a real option. We always knew that would provoke Russia, and we did it anyway. When things got to a certain point, Russia invaded (again). When Trump 1.0 was happening, Russia did not invade, and it's worth looking at why, and I don't think the answer is a simple "He was scared of what crazy-ass Trump would do."
Can Putin be "trusted?" Well....I trust people to do what's in their best interest, even if they're untrustworthy. I do think there is a way forward that makes clear to Russia "It's not in your best interest to keep going," and that it can be paired with removing the antagonistic conditions that appear to have fired Russia up in the first place. There's a difference in what Russia ideally wants, and what they will let be, and I don't buy the whole spiel about "There is no peace. You can't trust Putin. The end. Finito." I think Russia's broader interests as well as some historical facts support that.
If that makes me the dumbest fucker on the planet, well, here we are.