What next? Ukraine's allies divided over Russia endgame
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[June 13, 2022]
By John Irish, Andreas Rinke and Humeyra Pamuk
PARIS/BERLIN/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Is it
better to engage with Russian President Vladimir Putin over his invasion
of Ukraine or to isolate him? Should Kyiv make concessions to end the
war, or would that embolden the Kremlin? Are ramped up sanctions on
Russia worth the collateral damage?
These are some of the questions testing the international alliance that
swiftly rallied around Ukraine in the days after the Russian invasion
but that, three months into the war, is straining, officials and
diplomats told Reuters.
As Western governments grapple with spiralling inflation and energy
costs, countries including Italy and Hungary have called for a quick
ceasefire. That could pave the way for scaled back sanctions and end the
blockade of Ukrainian ports that has worsened a food security crisis for
the world's poorest.
Yet Ukraine, Poland and the Baltics warn that Russia is not to be
trusted and say a ceasefire would enable it to consolidate territorial
wins, regroup and launch more attacks down the line.
The Russians have "spread the narrative that this would be an exhausting
war, we should sit around the table and seek consensus," a senior
Ukrainian official told Reuters.
U.S. Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin has said he wants Russia
"weakened" and President Joe Biden called for Putin to be prosecuted for
war crimes. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson says Kyiv must not be
strong-armed into accepting a bad peace deal and that Ukraine "must
win".
Germany and France have remained more ambiguous, vowing to stop Putin
from winning rather than to defeat him, while at the same time backing
tough new sanctions.
"The question being asked is whether we return to the Cold War or not.
That's the difference between Biden, Johnson and us," an ally of French
President Emmanuel Macron told Reuters.
Russia launched what it calls a "special operation" in Ukraine in
February, saying it was needed to rid the country of dangerous
nationalists and degrade Ukraine's military capabilities - aims the West
denounced as a baseless pretext.
Moscow has since argued that military support from Washington and allies
is dragging out the war and deterring Ukraine from peace talks. In
March, the Kremlin demanded Ukraine cease military action, change its
constitution to enshrine neutrality, acknowledge Crimea as Russian, and
recognise eastern separatist-held areas as independent states as a
condition for peace.
The Ukrainian and French sources, and officials in other countries
consulted by Reuters for this story, requested anonymity in order to
speak freely about sensitive diplomatic and security policies.
Divisions could become more pronounced as sanctions and the war take a
toll on the global economy, risking domestic backlashes and playing into
Putin's hands.
"It was clear from the start it is going to get more and more difficult
over time - the war fatigue is coming," Estonian Prime Minister Kaja
Kallas said in an interview with CNN.
"There may be difference between those countries who have much better
neighbours than we do, and those who have a different history like us,
the Baltic countries, and Poland."
DEALING WITH MISTER PUTIN
Macron has warned any peace should not "humiliate" Russia like it did
for Germany in 1918.
He, like German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, has kept channels of
communication with the Kremlin open, triggering consternation in more
hawkish countries. Poland's president compared the calls to speaking
with Adolf Hitler during World War Two.
"We'll have to deal with Mister Putin at some point, unless there's a
palace coup. And even more so because this war needs to be as short as
possible," the Macron ally said.
Scholz said his and Macron's calls with Putin were used to convey firm
and clear messages, and has stressed sanctions on Russia would not end
unless Putin withdrew troops and agreed to a peace deal acceptable to
Kyiv.
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A local man walks next to a building damaged by a military strike,
as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues, in the town of Lysychansk,
Luhansk region, Ukraine June 10, 2022. REUTERS/Oleksandr Ratushniak/File
Photo
However, one of Scholz's team told Reuters that
Macron's wording had been "unfortunate." Some French diplomats have
also privately expressed reservations about Macron's stance, saying
it risked alienating Ukraine and eastern European allies.
While grateful for the West's support, Ukraine has bristled at
suggestions that it should concede territory as part of a ceasefire
deal and sometimes questioned whether its allies were properly
united against Russia.
Macron's warning not to humiliate Russia prompted Ukraine's Foreign
Minister Dmytro Kuleba to warn that France was only humiliating
itself, and Kyiv's relations with Scholz have been frosty.
"We don't have a Churchill across the European Union. We do not have
any illusions on that," the senior Ukrainian official said,
referring to Britain's wartime Prime Minister Winston Churchill.
A French presidency official said "there is no spirit of concession
with regard to Putin or Russia in what the president says." France
wanted a Ukrainian victory and Ukrainian territories restored, the
official said, and dialogue with Putin was "not to compromise but to
say things as we see them".
A U.S. administration official said Washington was more vocal in its
scepticism about Russia acting in good faith, but denied there was
"strategic difference" between allies.
A State Department spokesperson told Reuters that the U.S. working
along with allies had "delivered," for Ukraine - with sanctions,
weapons transfers and other measures - despite naysayers since
before the invasion casting doubt on the unity of the alliance. The
goal, the spokesperson said, was to put Ukraine in a strong position
to negotiate.
WEAKEN RUSSIA?
Referring to Austin's comments, the first official said Washington
had no intention of changing Russia's leadership but wanted to see
the country weakened to the point that it couldn't carry out such an
attack on Ukraine again.
"Everyone focused on the first part of what Austin said not on the
second part. We want to see Russia weakened to the extent that it
can't do something like this again," the official said.
One German government source said Austin's aim to weaken Russia was
problematic. It was unfortunate that German Foreign Minister
Annalena Baerbock, from Scholz's coalition partner the Greens, had
endorsed that aim, the source said, because it complicated the
question of when sanctions could ever be lifted, irrespective of
whether Ukraine agreed to a peace deal or not.
German government sources also said they were worried that some in
the West could be egging on Ukraine to unrealistic military goals,
including the recapture of the Crimea peninsula annexed by Russia in
2014, that could prolong the conflict.
Baerbock has publicly said sanctions would have to remain in place
until Russian troops withdrew from Crimea.
Ukraine's ambassador to Germany meanwhile has repeatedly criticised
Germany for dragging its feet on sending heavy weapons to Ukraine,
though Berlin has robustly defended its record of support.
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's senior adviser Mykhailo Podolyak
signalled Ukraine's frustrations:
"Russia must not win, but we won't give heavy weapons - it may
offend Russia. Putin must lose but let's not impose new sanctions.
Millions will starve, but we're not ready for military convoys with
grain," he tweeted on May 31.
"Rising prices are not the worst that awaits a democratic world with
such a policy," he said.
(Reporting by John Irish and Michel Rose in Paris, Humeyra Pamuk and
Andrea Shalal in Washington, Andreas Rinke and Sarah Marsh in
Berlin, Elizabeth Piper in London; writing by Matthias Williams;
Editing by Frank Jack Daniel)
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