PARIS, France
When European leaders meet for a summit addressing Ukraine on Thursday, it won't be the first time they've recently gathered to discuss European defense and support for Kyiv.
French President Emmanuel
Macron hosted
two groups of top politicians, and British Prime Minister Keir
Starmer held a security
summit on Sunday following a contentious meeting in the Oval
Office between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and his US
counterpart Donald
Trump.
For London and Paris,
brokering a peace
agreement is top priority, particularly since Trump's announcement
late Monday that the
US would stop military aid for Ukraine.
Macron has
already hinted at further details. For example, he told French daily Le
Figaro, one step toward a possible truce could be a one-month
ceasefire "in the air, at sea and in the area of energy
infrastructure."
Paris and London intend to
work on the peace plan together with one or two other states, Starmer announced
Sunday. The detailed plan would then be presented to the United States.
Starmer is banking on a
"coalition of the willing" to secure a possible peace plan
militarily. Some states already declared themselves ready to participate.
While it is not yet
clear which
countries would take part and in what capacity, some initial
indications are trickling in.
Some two weeks ago, Starmer
indicated that he was prepared to secure a possible peace agreement with
British troops.
France has also shown itself
open to the peacekeeping deployment of troops to Ukraine.
Both countries insist that
such a deployment must be backed by the United States.
In the past, the Netherlands and Sweden have also
shown themselves to be open to participating in the deployment of troops.
However, according to the
German press agency dpa, Macron has clarified that European soldiers would only
be deployed in the event of a stable ceasefire — not during the initial truce.
Following an earlier summit in
Paris, Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez expressed his opposition to the
deployment of troops as long as the conflict was ongoing.
Danish Prime
Minister Mette Frederiksen also said in Paris that she was open to the idea in
principle but a number of details needed to be clarified in advance.
Current German
Chancellor Olaf
Scholz expressed his "irritation" when the discussion
arose and emphasized that he thought it was premature to discuss which nations
would enforce a ceasefire before Russia and Ukraine even met to negotiate the
terms of a truce.
Friedrich Merz, probably
Germany's next chancellor, expressed a similar view.
So far, however, neither
Scholz nor Merz has ruled out the deployment of the German armed forces in
Ukraine.
No comments:
Post a Comment