Russian President Vladimir Putin listens during an annual call-in show on Russian television "Conversation With Vladimir Putin" in Moscow, Russia, Thursday, April 16, 2015. AP

Russian President Vladimir Putin is still denying that there are any Russian troops in Ukraine.

During an hours-long question-and-answer show on Thursday, Putin said he wants a "stable, peaceful Ukraine" and that Ukrainians and Russians are one people.

Im what seems to be imitating US President Barack Obama's favorite phrase, "Let me be clear," Putin said: "I will say this clearly: There are no Russian troops in Ukraine."



Not everyone is buying it:

No Russian troops in Ukraine, Putin says with a straight face http://t.co/JlhiTtv6bH pic.twitter.com/cEyIs6kPr0 — The Daily Beast (@thedailybeast) April 16, 2015

During Putin's end-of-year press conference in December, a Ukrainian journalist asked him how many soldiers he sent to Ukraine. Putin responded by saying Russian soldiers in eastern Ukraine were volunteers and couldn't be called mercenaries because they were not paid. He also blamed Kiev for starting the conflict.

Experts estimate that thousands of people have died since fighting broke out between Ukrainian forces and pro-Russian rebels a year ago. Kiev, Ukraine's capital, says Russia is supporting the separatists and has thousands of troops on the ground.

Just a few days ago, a NATO official told a German newspaper that Russia is supporting the separatists in Ukraine with weapons, troops, and training, AFP reported.

At Thursday's press conference, Putin seemed to make a veiled threat when discussing US and the West: