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Zelensky open to idea of Western troops in Ukraine

President Zelensky stresses that even with an invitation to the NATO military alliance, long-term protection would still be uncertain in the face of future Russian aggression

Steffie Banatvala
Monday 09 December 2024 21:03 GMT
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, left, and the Chairman of the German Christian Democratic Party (CDU) Friedrich Merz shake hands during their meeting in Kyiv, Ukraine
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, left, and the Chairman of the German Christian Democratic Party (CDU) Friedrich Merz shake hands during their meeting in Kyiv, Ukraine (AP)

President Volodymyr Zelensky has said that he is open to the potential deployment of Western troops in Ukraine to guarantee the countryā€™s security as part of an effort to end the almost three-year war with Russia.

ā€œA troop contingent from one country or another could be present in Ukraine for as long as it isnā€™t part of NATO. But for that we need to have a clear understanding of when Ukraine becomes an EU member and when a NATO member,ā€ Mr Zelensky said speaking alongside German opposition leader Friedrich Merz in Kyiv.

Mr Zelensky stressed that even with an invitation to the NATO military alliance, long-term protection would still be uncertain in the face of future Russian aggression.

ā€œEven if we get invited (to NATO), what happens then? Who guarantees our security? We can think about that and work on (French president) Emmanuel Macronā€™s proposal,ā€ Mr Zelensky said, referring to president Macronā€™s controversial idea of sending European troops to Ukraine.

In the same breath Mr Merz condemned chancellor Olaf Scholzā€™s refusal to send Kyiv long-range missiles as akin to making the country fight with one arm tied behind its back.

Mr Scholz has argued that deploying Germanyā€™s Taurus missile could be seen as Germany joining the war.

Military experts believe the Taurus cruise missile, with its bunker-busting warhead, could be instrumental in destroying targets like the Kersh bridge that links Crimea, the Ukrainian peninsula annexed by Russia in 2014, with Russiaā€™s mainland.

ā€œWe want your army to be capable of hitting military bases in Russia. Not the civilian population, not infrastructure, but the military targets from which your country is being attacked,ā€ conservative frontrunner Mr Merz told Mr Zelensky.

Mr Merz added that a strong Ukraine is essential for bringing Russian President Vladimir Putin to the negotiating table.

Echoing Mr Merz, president Zelensky said ā€œPutin doesnā€™t want to end this war. He must be forced toā€¦ And he can only be forced if Ukraine is strong.ā€

Germany is the second largest provider of financial and military support to Ukraine after the United States and hosts more Ukrainian war refugees - over a million - than any other country.

With questions over Ukraineā€™s ability to host refugees and a flagging economy, the government is under pressure from populist parties questioning continued support for Kyiv.

Mr Scholz, increasingly positioning himself as a peace candidate, has warned against what he calls Mr Merzā€™s willingness to escalate tensions with a nuclear-armed Russia.

The discussion on military support comes as Donald Trumpā€™s imminent return to the White House intensifies talk of a possible deal to end Russiaā€™s 33-month-old war.

The Ukrainian leader told reporters he was hoping to call outgoing US president Joe Biden in the coming days to discuss NATO membership but dimissed the need to discuss with Mr Trump before he takes office.

Russia has demanded that Ukraine abandon its NATO ambitions and sees Kyivā€™s membership of the alliance as an unacceptable security threat.

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