Disputes in the EU on the sending of peacekeepers to Ukraine
The Italian newspaper Corriere Dela Sara wrote in a report on Tuesday that EU countries recently expressed different views on sending peacekeeping to Ukraine at an informal meeting in Paris.
French President Emmanuel Macron hosted an unofficial meeting of European leaders in Paris on Monday to discuss the issue of Ukraine and European security.
The meeting, which took place after a phone call, Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, the US and Russian President Vladimir Putin, lasted three hours and ended without issuing any joint statement.
Some EU countries, including France, Britain, and some Baltic and Scandinavian countries, have expressed their readiness to send troops to Ukraine; Meanwhile, countries such as Spain, Poland, Germany and Italy opposed the plan.
Italian Prime Minister Georgia Meloni called the plan to send a force to Ukraine as “inefficient solutions”, and German Chancellor Olaf Schultz announced that the conversations were “inappropriate and inappropriate.”
At the meeting, EU countries also expressed different views on the US and its new government, according to the Correarah Sara newspaper. Melony said at the meeting, “Without America, Europe will not have security”, which was backed by Germany and Britain.
The Washington Post quoted some officials as saying that European countries are investigating 1 to 2 forces to Ukraine.
The Russian Foreign Intelligence Service estimates that the West can send more than 5 troops to the country in the form of peacekeeping forces to strengthen Ukraine’s combat capabilities.
Kremlin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that the deployment of these forces would only be possible with the consent of all European countries, and that any talks on sending peacekeepers to Ukraine will be untrue.
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