Macron
warns against ‘surrender’ in Ukraine as Trump claims Putin will accept
peacekeeper deal
Macron and
Trump disagree over aid and securing a lasting peace after US president says
Russian counterpart has ‘no problem’ with European forces in Ukraine
David Smith
in Washington
Tue 25 Feb
2025 05.26 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/feb/24/trump-ukraine-putin-peacekeepers-macron
Emmanuel
Macron, the French president, has warned Donald Trump against a “surrender” of
Ukraine as the US president said Russia’s leader Vladimir Putin “wants to make
a deal” that could include European peacekeepers.
The
transatlantic rift over the war was apparent on Monday as Trump and Macron –
the first European leader to visit the White House since Trump regained power –
disagreed over aid and efforts to secure a lasting peace in Ukraine.
The meeting
was cordial, at times even warm, but came just hours after the US voted against
a United Nations resolution drafted by Ukraine and the European Union
condemning Russia for its invasion.
Trump, who
last week branded Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelenskyy a “dictator” and falsely blamed
Ukraine for starting the war, told reporters in the Oval Office that Putin
would accept European peacekeepers in Ukraine as part of a potential deal to
end the three-year conflict.
Trump said
he saw no objection to such a move, adding that he had raised the idea with
Putin. “Yeah, he will accept it,” the US president said. “I’ve asked him that
question.
“Look, if we
do this deal, he’s not looking for more war. He doesn’t mind. But I’ve
specifically asked him that question. He has no problem with it.”
Later, at a
joint press conference in the east room, Trump touted his team’s positive
conversations with Russia. “Before I came here there was no communication with
Russia whatsoever and Russia wasn’t answering calls. They were not talking to
anybody and people accepted that.
“But when I
got here one of the first calls I made was to President Putin and we were
treated with great respect and they want to end this war, so that’s a big
thing.”
He added: “I
really believe that he wants to make a deal. I may be wrong, but he wants to
make a deal.”
The US
president claimed he had made more progress in the past month than was made in
the previous three years. “I believe that Emmanuel agrees with me on many of
the most important issues,” he said. “Europe must take a central role in
ensuring the long-term security of Ukraine.”
Macron
acknowledged that he and Trump had “made very substantive steps forward” in
their discussion. But he pointedly described Russia as the “aggressor” in
Ukraine and was appreciably more cautious.
He told
reporters: “This peace must not mean a surrender of Ukraine. It must not mean a
ceasefire without guarantees. This peace must allow for Ukrainian sovereignty
and allow Ukraine to negotiate with other stakeholders.”
The French
president added: “I think it’s super important to go to the peace. But my
strong point was to say, let’s try to get something first which can be
assessed, checked and verified … We want peace swiftly but we don’t want an
agreement that is weak.”
Earlier, the
pair clashed directly when Trump made false claims about the funding of the
war. He said: “Just so you understand, Europe is loaning the money to Ukraine.
They’re getting their money back.”
Macron
leaned over to touch Trump’s arm and interjected: “No, in fact, to be frank, we
paid. We paid 60% of the total effort. It was like the US: loans, guarantees,
grants.”
Trump
responded: “If you believe that, it’s OK with me. They get their money back,
and we don’t. But now we do.”
Trump and
his team have been negotiating a minerals revenue-sharing agreement with
Ukraine to recoup some of the money that the previous administration had sent
to Kyiv to repel Russia.
Trump
described the minerals deal as “very close” and said he might meet Zelenskyy
soon to seal the agreement. “He may come in this week or next week to sign the
agreement, which would be nice,” Trump said, adding that he would also be
meeting Putin at some point.
Zelenskyy
last week rejected US demands for $500bn in mineral wealth from Ukraine to
repay Washington for wartime aid, contending that the US had supplied nowhere
near that sum so far and offered no specific security guarantees in the
agreement.
Asked if
Ukraine should be willing to cede territory to Russia as part of a negotiated
end to the conflict, Trump said: “We’ll see,” and noted that talks were just
beginning.
In an
interview with Fox News after his visit with Trump, Macron said a truce between
Ukraine and Russia “could be done in the weeks to come”. He also praised
Zelenskyy’s leadership and said it was crucial for Trump to meet with the
Ukrainian president.
Meanwhile,
Putin on Monday signalled that he was not opposed to Europe’s involvement in
the talks. In a televised interview reported by Agence France-Presse, the
Russian president said: “Not only European [countries] but other countries too
have the right and can take part.”
The British
prime minister, Keir Starmer, is to visit Trump later in the week, amid alarm
in Europe over Trump’s hardening stance toward Ukraine and overtures to Moscow
on the three-year-old conflict.
That alarm
deepened on Monday as the UN security council on Monday adopted a US-drafted
resolution that takes a more conciliatory position towards Russia. Previously,
the 15-member body had been deadlocked because Russia holds a veto.
France,
Britain, Denmark, Greece and Slovenia abstained. Russia voted in favour after
failing to amend it and vetoing European bids to add language supporting
Ukraine.
The US voted
against a separate, Europe-backed UN general assembly resolution condemning
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, siding with North Korea, Belarus and other
Russia-aligned countries over European allies.
Sheldon
Whitehouse, a Democratic senator who co-led a bipartisan delegation to the
recent Munich security conference, said: “This vote is a disgrace. Trump’s
senseless betrayal of the alliances that have kept Americans safe since world
war two and his fealty to the murderous aggressor Putin are a national security
threat.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário