Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky continued his European tour on Tuesday. After addressing German MPs, the Ukrainian head of state obtained several promises of support from his Western allies, including increased financial support and the initiation of the process of joining the European Union.
“Russia’s greatest strategic advantage in Ukraine is its air superiority,” President Zelensky told members of the Bundestag (the lower house of the German Parliament). “It is the terror inspired by missiles and bombs that helps Russian troops advance on the ground. »
The Ukrainian president’s speech to the Bundestag received a standing ovation from the vast majority of MPs present. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz promised that “the allies would support Ukraine as long as necessary” and urged them to strengthen Ukraine’s air defenses. German Finance Minister Christian Lindner also promised his government’s unlimited support for the reconstruction of Ukraine.
The only downside: Mr. Zelensky’s speech was boycotted by elected officials from the Alternative for Germany (AfD, far right) and the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW, populist left). These two parties, opposed to sanctions targeting Russia, criticized arms deliveries to Ukraine and instead called on the two states to negotiate a ceasefire. A hypothesis rejected by Chancellor Scholz, who declared that he did not want a “military victory nor a peace dictated” by Russian President Vladimir Putin.
This visit by the Ukrainian president comes as Russian bombings are seriously damaging the country’s infrastructure.
The same day, Ukrainian energy supplier Ukrenergo imposed nationwide electricity rationing from 2 p.m. to 11 p.m. According to President Zelensky, Russian strikes in recent months have destroyed 80% of thermal production and a third of hydraulic electricity production. In total, Ukrainian electricity production has been cut by half since the winter.
Serial diplomatic summits
President Zelensky, who also attended a conference for the reconstruction of Ukraine in Berlin, obtained further pledges of support from the European Union. On the first day of the conference, the President of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, confirmed that Ukraine would receive financial aid of 1.9 billion euros (2.8 billion Canadian dollars) this June and of 1.5 billion euros ($2.2 billion) in July. These funds, taken from the interest on Russian financial assets subject to European sanctions, will largely be used to finance the Ukrainian war effort.
The announcement of this new financial support comes the day after the resignation of the director of the Agency for the Restoration of Ukraine, Mustafa Nayyem. The latter explained his departure by the mismanagement of financial aid granted by Ukraine’s Western allies. This departure comes on the heels of the dismissal of Ukrainian Infrastructure Minister Oleksandr Koubrakov, who was publicly concerned about corruption surrounding the distribution of Western aid in Ukraine.
Mme von der Leyen also confirmed that discussions aimed at Ukraine’s accession to the European Union would begin by the end of the month, as Ukraine has completed the legislative reforms necessary to adapt its legal and political regime to European standards. . The former Soviet republic submitted its application for membership on February 28, 2022, four days after the start of the Russian invasion.
Financial aid to Ukraine will also be on the agenda at the G7 summit, which will be held in Italy from Thursday to Saturday. The seven member states will try to find common ground for the use of interests in Russian assets frozen by Western sanctions.
This very busy week on the diplomatic level will conclude on Saturday and Sunday with a summit on peace in Ukraine which will take place in Switzerland, in the presence of President Zelensky. The ten-point peace plan presented by the latter at the end of 2022 should be at the heart of the discussions, but in the absence of Russia at the discussion table, we hardly expect any major progress in terms of peace. a resolution of the conflict this weekend.
Russia in fact rejects any diplomatic solution that does not recognize the unilateral annexation of the Ukrainian territories that it has occupied since 2022, while Ukraine demands a total withdrawal by Russia from the territories occupied since 2014. The other Largely absent from this diplomatic summit is China, accused by many of supporting the Russian offensive, by helping Russia to circumvent Western sanctions.
With Agence France-Presse