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PA

EU leaders look to deepen relations with former Soviet republics

The EU summit with its Eastern partnership came on the same day as Russia issued Washington a series of security demands.

EUROPEAN LEADERS PUSHED to salvage their role as mediators in the Ukraine-Russia crisis on Wednesday as the Kremlin made it clear it prefers to speak to directly Washington.

The EU summit with its Eastern partnership – its neighbours Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan – came on the same day as Russia issued Washington a series of security demands.

Western capitals have raised the alarm about a Russian troop build-up around Ukraine, and the EU leaders took a stern tone, warning of sanctions with “strategic consequences” if Moscow attacks.

“Our very first call is on Russia to de-escalate but we are also prepared for any increasing aggression from Russia side,” European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen said after the talks.

“Sanctions are in place, those sanctions could be tightened but of course there are also sanctions prepared that are additional and coming on top in all the different fields you might think of.”

But Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky, who has accused Germany of blocking weapons shipments and leaving Ukraine exposed, said he would prefer sanctions to be imposed immediately, before Russia acts.

“Some leaders are proposing a format to respond to a possible escalation after a possible escalation,” Zelensky said, after meeting France’s President Emmanuel Macron and Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

“To be honest, no one is particularly interested in the sanctions policy after that. Our state is interested in a powerful sanctions policy before a possible escalation,” he said.

‘Brain dead’

EU capitals are keen to show solidarity with Kiev but some worry that immediate strong actions – like blocking the Nord Stream 2 pipeline from Russia to Germany – may provoke rather than deter Moscow.

President Vladimir Putin’s Kremlin, meanwhile, did not wait to see the result of Wednesday’s talks in Brussels. It already set out its demands to the United States.

Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov presented US Assistant Secretary of State Karen Donfried with a list of security conditions for standing down the troops.

This implicitly sidelines France and Germany, the guardians of the so-called “Normandy process”, a four-way peace dialogue between Paris, Berlin, Kiev and Moscow.

Participants in the meeting expressed support for Normandy co-chair France, for the “process and progress achieved”, a European official told reporters.

But, privately, a minister told AFP that “Normandy is brain dead” and that Putin would only seek to deal with the United States on European security matters.

The European minister, speaking on condition of anonymity, said US President Joe Biden has stepped up to open a dialogue with Putin and “we have to see what that leads to”.

And Zelensky said that he was “glad that the United States today want to play this or that role. I would like them to play one of the main, not episodic roles”.

Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said the situation proved he had been right, despite German resistance, to call for Nord Stream 2 to be abandoned.

“Nord Stream 2 was a major mistake, because it’s already becoming, it’s already a tool of blackmail, of helping President Putin in dictating gas prices all around Europe,” he said.

Morawiecki suggested that Scholz, who succeeded Angela Merkel last week as German leader, was aware that Nord Stream could be a powerful lever to threaten Russia.

But it is not clear whether the gas line forms part of the threatened sanctions package.

“We are looking with great concern at the security situation on the Russian-Ukrainian border,” Scholz said before leaving for Brussels, in his first speech to parliament since taking office.

“Any violation of territorial integrity will have a price, a high price,” he warned.

Long-shot candidates

Brussels sees the Eastern Partnership as an opportunity to help stabilise the east and counter Russian influence. But diplomats in Brussels expected a frustrating encounter.

The grouping has already lost Belarus, which broke away in June after criticism from EU capitals of leader Alexander Lukashenko’s disputed 2020 re-election.

Ukraine, Georgia and Moldova – which all have Russian troops deployed in regions on their soil – would like to join the European Union, seeing it as a guarantor of peace and prosperity.

Each step on the long accession process needs unanimous support from existing member states, and longstanding candidates in the western Balkans already face an uncertain wait.

No official in Brussels expects Ukraine or Georgia to be accepted as candidates any time soon.

© AFP 2021

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    Mute Paul Gorry
    Favourite Paul Gorry
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    Dec 15th 2021, 11:08 PM

    ISN’T the world a mad place lately.

    77
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    Mute Sean Simpson
    Favourite Sean Simpson
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    Dec 15th 2021, 11:39 PM

    Euro leaders as mediaters…LOL. They helped cause this crisis. Also, its not a Russia-Ukraine issue. Its an issue between the break away republics and Ukraine.

    59
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    Mute Eoin Roche
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    Dec 16th 2021, 12:53 AM

    @Sean Simpson: If they hadn’t received Russian encouragement and significant amounts of military hardware and Russian troops operating illegally in foreign territory without uniform or identity, there wouldn’t be any breakaway “republics”.

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    Mute Zack Twamley
    Favourite Zack Twamley
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    Dec 16th 2021, 10:24 AM

    @Sean Simpson: spoken like a person who has no grasp of the situation. Russia started this when it invaded Ukraine and engineered an undeclared war against Ukraine since 2014. Most people don’t realise that Ukraine is in a state of war since that date. It suits Putin to bleed Ukraine dry.

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    Mute Niall Ó Cofaigh
    Favourite Niall Ó Cofaigh
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    Dec 16th 2021, 4:03 AM

    I do believe that Ireland needs to remind other European leaders that the tension is between NATO and Russia and that the EU cannot speak of military issues or certain aspects of international military alliances as some EU members are not members of any military alliance and some non EU members are. We, the EU, should not get involved in military issues as the EU has no mandate to represent Ireland in this regard as to do so would be a breach of our neutrality. This is not saying that we approve of the actions of Russia but we must also condemn the provocative action of having NATO troops close to the Russian sphere of influence — this is the Cuban crises in reverse with NATO, at least in part, the aggressor. World peace not posturing is needed.

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    Mute Mick Tobin
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    Dec 16th 2021, 4:54 AM

    @Niall Ó Cofaigh: The paradox is that we, indeed the EU, cannot ignore and should take care of and look after our border regions. Unfortunately this inevitably involves geopolitical issues, but should these be left to military matters only, or should things be softened with trade? The extended paradox is that by softening things up with trade, the geopolitics of military matters are today being drawn into the equation as well. Diplomacy has become a fine balancing act. I wish everyone involved the best of wisdom.

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    Mute Brendan Lawlor
    Favourite Brendan Lawlor
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    Dec 16th 2021, 8:04 AM

    @Niall Ó Cofaigh: NATO is redundant since USA repositioned it’s focus to China. USA made it clear they’ll not fight over Ukraine. Europe no structure to offer military opposition hence Putin bravado. He wants the to make Eastern Europe vassal states once more. The peoples of Eastern Europe have made it plain they do not want that. Europe are cowards if we let these people get crushed by Moscow. I know you want to hide under the bed but that’s no solution. Ireland’s “neutral” is a joke. We can’t defend our borders so stop talking nonsense. Sweden and Switzerland are neutral as they can back it up.

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    Mute Genera L Consensus
    Favourite Genera L Consensus
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    Dec 15th 2021, 11:46 PM

    Lots of friction going on, waiting for the first spark

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    Mute Jonathan O'Riordan
    Favourite Jonathan O'Riordan
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    Dec 16th 2021, 10:30 AM

    We also need to support Lithuania in its “war” with China

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    Mute Neil Neart
    Favourite Neil Neart
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    Dec 16th 2021, 10:21 AM

    The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development was set up more than 20 years ago to help former Soviet Republics. Unfortunately it has become a retirement home for former failed politicians and retired bureaucrats rather than an instrument for positive change.

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