Russia denies Trump call with Putin urging restraint in Ukraine
The Kremlin has denied media reports that US President-elect Donald Trump held a call with Vladimir Putin, in which he is said to have warned the Russian president against escalating the war in Ukraine.
The call, which was first reported by the Washington Post on Sunday, is said to have happened on Thursday.
Trump is also reported to have mentioned America's extensive military presence in Europe to Putin.
A Kremlin spokesperson said the reports were "pure fiction", while Trump's team told the BBC that it would not comment on the president-elect's "private calls".
- Europe's leaders face up to Trump victory at Hungarian summit
- Trump ally says Ukraine focus must be peace, not territory
- Moscow targeted as Ukraine and Russia trade huge drone attacks
- Return of unpredictable president puts UK defence spending top of agenda
- Trump tariffs could cost UK £22bn of exports
Trump's communications director Steven Cheung told the BBC: "We do not comment on private calls between President Trump and other world leaders."
But he said leaders had begun the process of contacting the president-elect.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov denied a conversation had taken place.
"This is completely untrue, it is pure fiction. That is, this is simply false information. There was no conversation," Peskov said.