Ukraine and Russia draw up neutrality plan to end
war
Fifteen-point draft deal would involve Kyiv renouncing
Nato ambitions in return for security guarantees
Max Seddon
in Riga, Roman Olearchyk in Kyiv and Arash Massoudi in London 3 HOURS AGO
https://www.ft.com/content/7b341e46-d375-4817-be67-802b7fa77ef1
Ukraine and
Russia have made significant progress on a tentative 15-point peace plan
including a ceasefire and Russian withdrawal if Kyiv declares neutrality and
accepts limits on its armed forces, according to three people involved in the
talks.
The
proposed deal, which Ukrainian and Russian negotiators discussed in full for
the first time on Monday, would involve Kyiv renouncing its ambitions to join
Nato and promising not to host foreign military bases or weaponry in exchange
for protection from allies such as the US, UK and Turkey, the people said.
The nature
of western guarantees for Ukrainian security — and their acceptability to
Moscow — could yet prove to be a big obstacle to any deal, as could the status
of Ukrainian territories seized by Russia and its proxies in 2014. A 1994
agreement underpinning Ukrainian security failed to prevent Russian aggression
against its neighbour.
Although
Moscow and Kyiv both said that they had made progress on the terms of a deal,
Ukrainian officials remain sceptical Russian president Vladimir Putin is fully
committed to peace and worry that Moscow could be buying time to regroup its
forces and resume its offensive. Putin showed no sign of compromise on
Wednesday, vowing Moscow would achieve all of its war aims in Ukraine.
“We will
never allow Ukraine to become a stronghold of aggressive actions against our
country,” he said.
Mykhailo
Podolyak, a senior adviser to Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, told the
Financial Times that any deal would involve “the troops of the Russian
Federation in any case leaving the territory of Ukraine” captured since the
invasion began on February 24 — namely southern regions along the Azov and
Black seas, as well as territory to the east and north of Kyiv.
Ukraine
would maintain its armed forces but would be obliged to stay outside military
alliances such as Nato and refrain from hosting foreign military bases on its
territory.
Putin’s
press secretary Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Wednesday that neutrality for
Ukraine based on the status of Austria or Sweden was a possibility.
“This
option is really being discussed now, and is one that can be considered
neutral,” said Peskov.
Sergei
Lavrov, Russia’s foreign minister, said that “absolutely specific wordings”
were “close to being agreed” in the negotiations.
Despite the
progress in peace talks, Ukrainian cities came under heavy shelling for a third
consecutive night while Kyiv said it was launching a counter-offensive against
Russian invaders.
In a virtual
address to members of Congress on Wednesday, Zelensky pleaded for the US to
enforce a no-fly zone or provide fighter jets or other means to fend off
Russia’s attack on his country, and impose harsher economic sanctions on
Moscow.
In a
dramatic appeal, Zelensky said Ukraine needed America’s support after Russia
had launched a “brutal offensive against our values”. He called on Americans to
remember the attacks on Pearl Harbor and of September 2001 and showed a searing
video of the missile attacks and shelling destroying Ukrainian cities.
Though
Ukraine’s constitution commits it to seek membership of Nato, Zelensky and his
aides have increasingly played down Ukraine’s chances of joining the
transatlantic military alliance, a prospect that Russia sees as a provocation.
“There is
no effective system of European security now, which would be moderated by Nato.
As soon as a serious war began in Europe, Nato quickly stepped aside,” Podolyak
said.
“We propose
a ‘Ukrainian model of security guarantees’, which implies the immediate and
legally verified participation of a number of guarantor countries in the
conflict on the side of Ukraine, if someone again encroaches on its territorial
integrity,” he added.
Ukraine,
Podolyak added, would as part of any deal “definitely retain its own army”. He
also played down the significance of a ban on foreign bases in Ukraine, saying
that was already precluded by Ukrainian law.
Two of the
people said the putative deal also included provisions on enshrining rights for
the Russian language in Ukraine, where it is widely spoken though Ukrainian is
the only official language. Russia has framed its invasion as an attempt to
protect Russian speakers in Ukraine from what it claims is “genocide” by
“neo-Nazis”.
Podolyak
said “humanitarian issues, including language issues, are discussed only
through the prism of Ukraine’s exclusive interests”.
The biggest
sticking point remains Russia’s demand that Ukraine recognise its 2014
annexation of Crimea and the independence of two separatist statelets in the
eastern Donbas border region.
Ukraine has
so far refused but was willing to compartmentalise the issue, Podolyak said.
“Disputed
and conflict territories [are] in a separate case. So far, we are talking about
a guaranteed withdrawal from the territories that have been occupied since the
start of the military operation on February 24,” when Russia’s invasion began,
he said.
Turkey’s
foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu, whose nation has sought to play a role as a
mediator in the conflict, echoed hopes that negotiations could bear fruit after
a meeting with Lavrov.
“I’m not
going to go into the details on behalf of the two countries but I know that
there are convergences between them,” Cavusoglu said.
However, UK
defence minister Ben Wallace expressed scepticism about Russia’s commitment to
diplomacy.
“There is a
massive information campaign going on in this conflict, this war, and certainly
when it comes to Russia you need to judge them on their actions and not on
their numerous words.”
Additional
reporting by Laura Pitel in Ankara and Henry Foy in Brussels
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