Officials from Moscow and Kiev will meet in Paris on Wednesday, an aide to French President Emmanuel Macron told AFP on Monday on the condition of anonymity, adding that he sees a “path to de-escalation” ahead of the expected “Normandy Four” meeting between France, Germany, Russia, and Ukraine.

Macron “thinks there is space for diplomacy, a path to de-escalation,” the aide told AFP on Monday. He added that Macron would speak with Russian President Vladimir Putin “in the coming days,” but did not specify if it would happen before or after the Paris meeting.

The meeting itself would see one of Russia’s deputy prime ministers and a senior aide to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky sitting down at the negotiating table together with diplomatic advisers to Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, according to the aide. Moscow has not confirmed whether it’s taking part in the talks and who would be representing Russia there at the time of writing.

The French official told journalists that Paris is “very worried” about Russia supposedly building up troops on the border with Ukraine and would very much like to “avoid creating any ambiguity or creating any additional volatility.”

According to the aide, France has a diplomatic “solution” to the ongoing tense situation in Europe. It would involve the Ukrainian parliament delaying a legislation on the status of the breakaway eastern Ukrainian territories, which Moscow says violates Kiev’s previous commitments under the Minsk Agreements. 

Russia, in turn, is expected to back some “humanitarian measures,” such as prisoner exchanges between Ukraine and the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Lugansk People’s Republics, which have been de-facto independent from Kiev ever since the civil war of 2014, but not officially recognized.

Paris would also push for a “public statement from the Russians about their intentions that reassures everyone,” the French official said. Moscow has repeatedly denied harboring any plans of attacking Ukraine –  something that Washington and its European allies have been accusing Russia of over the recent months.

However, after Washington and London ordered the evacuation of their embassies’ staff in Kiev on Monday, top Ukrainian officials went on the record to say there was “no panic” and that there was no evidence of an impending all-out invasion.

Kiev has confirmed it will take part in the meeting in Paris over the weekend. The head of the Ukrainian president’s office, Mikhail Podolyak, told the Ukrainian UNIAN news agency on Saturday that the sides had agreed to hold the “Normandy Four” meeting on January 26.

While Moscow has not officially confirmed the talks, a source within the Russian presidential administration told TASS news agency that the administration’s deputy head, Dmitry Kozak, might take part in the talks.