Kaja
Kallas is ‘acting like a prime minister,’ critics of EU’s top diplomat say
The bloc’s
foreign policy chief has faced a barrage of criticism in her first months, from
coming out too aggressively against Russia to challenging U.S. President Donald
Trump.
March 26,
2025 4:00 am CET
By Nicholas
Vinocur and Jacopo Barigazzi
https://www.politico.eu/article/kaja-kallas-is-acting-like-a-prime-minister-her-critics-say/
BRUSSELS —
Kaja Kallas’ troubles started on her first day.
The EU’s top
diplomat was on a trip to Kyiv when she tweeted: “[T]he European Union wants
Ukraine to win this war” against Russia.
Some EU
officials said they felt uneasy that the head of the European External Action
Service, less than a day into her job, felt at liberty to go beyond what they
considered to be settled language more than two years into Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine.
“She
(Kallas) is still acting like a prime minister,” said one EU diplomat who, like
others quoted in this piece, was granted anonymity to discuss internal bloc
dynamics.
The
aforementioned diplomat and nine other EU diplomats and officials pointed to
what they viewed as a series of missteps during Kallas’ first few months on the
job, from floating heavy proposals without buy-in to taking liberties with
foreign policy statements, they told POLITICO. (Kallas still has her defenders
among the EU’s northern and eastern states, including Danish Prime Minister
Mette Frederiksen. A second diplomat said: “Overall, we are very happy with
her.”)
As Kallas
put her stamp on the job, pressuring EU countries to give more military aid to
Ukraine, several diplomats chafed at her leadership style, complaining of what
they described as a lack of consultation on sensitive matters. In subsequent
months those concerns have only grown, including regarding Kallas’ hawkishness
on Russia, which has left her out of step with Spain and Italy, who do not
share her assessment of Moscow as an imminent threat to the EU.
“If you
listen to her it seems we are at war with Russia, which is not the EU line,”
one EU official complained.
Haters gonna
hate
As Kallas
returned from the Munich Security Conference in February, she put together a
proposal for EU countries to provide billions in urgent military aid for
Ukraine after U.S. Vice President JD Vance dismissed Russia as a concern.
The Estonian
politician reacted as a prime minister might — by circulating a 2-page document
to rapidly compensate for a potential U.S. shortfall, asking the bloc’s 27
member countries to find at least 1.5 million rounds of artillery ammunition,
among other requests.
The proposal
landed on a Sunday evening, without warning, ahead of a foreign affairs
gathering set to take place in the days ahead, and it ruffled feathers. Even
more damning to some recipients was the way Kallas had structured her proposal:
It required each country to make a contribution proportional to the size of
their economies.
The
rationale was that this would force larger EU countries such as France, which
have contributed less per capita than Northern or Eastern European countries,
to dig deep. To some, however, that felt like coercion. Criticism reached a
fever pitch last week when Kallas agreed to downgrade the ambition of her plan
to seek just €5 billion worth of artillery shells as a first step.
Two
diplomats, from Eastern and Northern Europe, noted that Kallas had failed to
obtain buy-in from major countries such as France before tabling her proposal.
“This sort of came out of nowhere. The process could have been better managed
to avoid taking people by surprise,” said one of them, adding in Kallas’
defense: “If she’d done the perfect process they would have hated it anyway.”
An EEAS
official downplayed the criticisms, saying member countries had chosen Kallas
because they wanted a wartime leader.
“They hired
a head of state for a reason, not to moderate quietly and find the lowest
common denominator but to push things forward,” the official said. “Many people
argue we are in 1938 or 1939. It’s not the time to hide behind processes.
European leaders keep calling for more Ukraine aid, ok cool, time for deeds not
just words.”
‘Jury is
still out’
It’s the
bookend to a bumpy start for the former Estonian prime minister, who took over
the EEAS, the EU’s diplomatic arm, at a time coinciding with a proposal to
slash its staffing and funding.
Hailing from
a small country (at 1.4 million, Estonia’s population is smaller than that of
Paris), as well as from a liberal party that fared poorly in recent Europe-wide
elections, Kallas is an outsider in a EU now dominated by conservative leaders,
and where national leaders like French President Emmanuel Macron and Germany’s
Chancellor-to-be Friedrich Merz are increasingly setting the pace on defense
policy.
The failure
of the Kallas plan came on the heels of a canceled rendezvous in late February
with U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who spiked the meeting in Washington,
D.C. at the last minute.
A fifth EU
diplomat and a former senior EU official both agreed that Kallas hadn’t
properly set the groundwork for the meeting by offering a clear deliverable to
the U.S. side.
“She went
with her hands in her pockets,” said the former senior EU official — an
assessment that Kallas’ spokesperson disputed, stating that the meeting had
been confirmed and “well-prepared.”
Then came
the infamous exchange by Vance and U.S. President Donald Trump in an Oval
Office meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Amid the
widespread shock at the vitriol aimed at Zelenskyy, Kallas tweeted that “the
free world needs a new leader” — a comment that may have matched the mood of
indignation in many parts of Europe, but also irked countries adamant about
maintaining a bridge to the Trump White House.
“Most
countries don’t want to inflame things with the United States,” said a sixth
diplomat. “Saying the free world needs a new leader just isn’t what most
leaders wanted to put out there.”
It’s still
early days for Kallas in her new post, some of the diplomats concede. And as
Brussels has seen, a lot can happen in a short time.
“The jury is
still out,” a senior EU diplomat added.
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