SHARE
COPY LINK

UKRAINE

Macron seeks to rally European support for Ukraine

French President Emmanuel Macron is due to host European leaders on Monday for a conference aimed at strengthening Western support for Ukraine, two years into the Russian invasion.

Macron seeks to rally European support for Ukraine
France's President Emmanuel Macron will welcome European leaders on Monday. Photo by STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN / AFP

The meeting in Paris will be a chance for participants to “reaffirm their unity as well as their determination to defeat the war of aggression waged by Russia in Ukraine”, the French presidency said.

It also signals Macron’s eagerness to present himself as a European champion of Ukraine’s cause, amid growing fears that American support could wane in the coming years.

“Battered and bruised, but still standing. Ukraine is fighting for itself, for its ideals, for our Europe. Our commitment at its side will not waver,” Macron tweeted, to mark two years since the conflict broke out.

For Macron, the conference is also a chance to show European autonomy in security matters, which he called for even before the invasion.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Polish President Andrzej Duda will be among some 20 European heads of state and government present at the conference, which will be opened by a video address from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Other states will be represented at ministerial level, with Foreign Secretary David Cameron travelling to Paris for the UK. The United States and Canada will also be represented.

According to the French presidency, the meeting will “examine all means to support Ukraine effectively”.

Western officials acknowledge that Russia risks gaining the upper hand in the conflict in 2024 as Ukraine runs out of weapons and ammunition.

Ukrainian Defence Minister Rustem Umerov said on Sunday that half of Western military aid pledged to Kyiv is delivered late, lamenting that “commitment does not constitute delivery”.

Revealing the magnitude of Ukraine’s human losses, Zelensky said 31,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed in the war with Russia.

A French presidential official, who asked not to be named, said the meeting needed to contradict any “impression that things are falling apart” after Ukraine’s setbacks on the battlefield.

“We want to send a clear message to Putin that he will not prevail in Ukraine,” said the official.

Even if new aid announcements are not planned, participants will examine ways to “do things better and more decisively,” the official added.

There are growing doubts about the viability of long-term American backing for Ukraine as a new aid package struggles to find legislative approval and Donald Trump eyes a return to the presidency in elections later this year.

Zelensky said on Sunday that his country’s victory “depends” on Western support and that he was “sure” the United States would approve a critical package of military aid.

“We are neither resigned nor defeatist,” said the French official, adding, “there will be no victory for Russia in Ukraine.”

Debra Cagan, a former American diplomat and now senior advisor at the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center, said if the West had given Ukraine weapons such as F-16 combat aircraft or Taurus German missiles “we would be seeing an entirely different conflict now”.

“And that is what indecisiveness does, it causes more deaths, more destruction and harder decisions down the road,” she added.

The conference is due to start at 5pm with a news conference expected from Macron around 9.30pm. 

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

POLITICS

European elections: The 5 numbers you need to understand the EU

Here are five key figures about the European Union, which elects its new lawmakers from June 6-9:

European elections: The 5 numbers you need to understand the EU

4.2 million square kilometres

The 27-nation bloc stretches from the chilly Arctic in the north to the rather warmer Mediterranean in the south, and from the Atlantic in the west to the Black Sea in the east.

It is smaller than Russia’s 17 million square kilometres (6.6 million square miles) and the United States’ 9.8 million km2, but bigger than India’s 3.3 million km2.

The biggest country in the bloc is France at 633,866 km2 and the smallest is Malta, a Mediterranean island of 313 km2.

448.4 million people

On January 1, 2023, the bloc was home to 448.4 million people.

The most populous country, Germany, has 84.3 million, while the least populous, Malta, has 542,000 people.

The EU is more populous than the United States with its 333 million but three times less populous than China and India, with 1.4 billion each.

24 languages and counting

The bloc has 24 official languages.

That makes hard work for the parliament’s army of 660 translators and interpreters, who have 552 language combinations to deal with.

Around 60 other regional and minority languages, like Breton, Sami and Welsh, are spoken across the bloc but EU laws only have to be written in official languages.

20 euro members

Only 20 of the EU’s 27 members use the euro single currency, which has been in use since 2002.

Denmark was allowed keep its krona but Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Sweden are all expected to join the euro when their economies are ready.

The shared currency has highlight the disparity in prices across the bloc — Finland had the highest prices for alcoholic beverages, 113 percent above the EU average in 2022, while Ireland was the most expensive for tobacco, 161 above the EU average.

And while Germany produced the cheapest ice cream at 1.5 per litre, in Austria a scoop cost on average seven euros per litre.

100,000 pages of EU law

The EU’s body of law, which all member states are compelled to apply, stretches to 100,000 pages and covers around 17,000 pieces of legislation.

It includes EU treaties, legislation and court rulings on everything from greenhouse gases to parental leave and treaties with other countries like Canada and China.

SHOW COMMENTS