French President Emmanuel Macron’s suggestion the West should consider Russia’s need for security guarantees if Moscow agrees to talks to end the war in Ukraine unleashed a storm of criticism in Kyiv and its Baltic allies over the weekend.
Ukraine, Baltics rebuke Macron for suggesting ‘security guarantees’ for Russia
Dec 4 (Reuters) – French President Emmanuel Macron’s
suggestion the West should consider Russia’s need for security
guarantees if Moscow agrees to talks to end the war in Ukraine
unleashed a storm of criticism in Kyiv and its Baltic allies
over the weekend.
In an interview with French TV station TF1, Macron said that
Europe needs to prepare its future security architecture and
also think “how to give guarantees to Russia the day it returns
to the negotiating table.”
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s top aide, Mykhailo
Podolyak, said that it is the world that needs security
guarantees from Russia, not the other way around.
“Civilized world needs ‘security guarantees’ from barbaric
intentions of post-Putin Russia,” Podolyak said on Twitter on
Sunday.