logo
Russia has no say in deployment of foreign peacekeeping troops in Ukraine, says Macron

Russia has no say in deployment of foreign peacekeeping troops in Ukraine, says Macron

Telegraph16-03-2025

Emmanuel Macron, the French president, has said that Russia will have no say in whether foreign troops are deployed to Ukraine to ensure a future ceasefire.
France, Britain, and other Nato countries, including Turkey, have expressed their willingness to contribute to a peacekeeping force to protect peace in post-war Ukraine.
'If Ukraine asks allied forces to be on its territory, it is not up to Russia to accept or not,' the Mr Marcon told local press late on Saturday, ahead of another heavy round of aerial attacks between Russia and Ukraine.
Moscow has repeatedly rejected the idea of Nato soldiers being stationed in Ukraine, saying such a move would be a major escalation.
Mr Macron clarified that any peacekeeping force would consist of 'a few thousand troops per country,' to be deployed at important locations. He added that a number of European and non-European countries were interested in participating.
Anthony Albanese, Australia's prime minister, reiterated on Saturday that Australia is open to contributing troops, while Canada has also indicated it would consider such a request.
However, the details of how such a force would be deployed remain unclear.
Alexander Stubb, Finland's president, said that any firm commitments would only come once there was a clear plan in place. 'There are anywhere from zero to 50 different ways they can help. Boots on the ground is only one way. You can talk about intelligence, you can talk about different types of things but it's too early to commit right now,' he told the BBC on Saturday.
In a rush to consolidate military support from Ukraine, Sir Keir Starmer hosted a virtual meeting on Saturday with a 'coalition of the willing' involving 26 nations, including Ukraine.
The Prime Minister revealed that Western military chiefs would meet in London on Thursday to plan for a peacekeeping force that was now entering an 'operational phase'.
Sir Keir stressed once again that Britain was ready to play a 'leading role' and put 'troops on the ground and planes in the sky'. However, sources suggest the group of allies has yet to reach a formal agreement to deploy forces in Ukraine.
Fighting continues
Meanwhile, on the battlefield, Russian troops continue to rapidly retake territory from Ukraine in Kursk. Ukrainian president Voloydmyr Zelensky warned that Russia is preparing for a fresh invasion of Ukraine's northeast.
Russian troops are massing across the border from Ukraine's Sumy region, which borders Kursk, Mr Zelensky said.
Any new incursion or major escalation in fighting would severely rile Washington's efforts to secure a 30-day truce in Ukraine, a proposal Kyiv has accepted, but which the Kremlin has so far resisted.
Earlier this week, Vladimir Putin claimed in principle that he supported Washington's ceasefire, but stated that 'serious questions' remain, and that his forces would continue fighting until certain conditions were addressed.
'I would like all partners to understand exactly what Putin is planning, what he is preparing for, and what he will be ignoring,' Mr Zelensky said, accusing Putin of trying to delay a ceasefire to improve his troop's battlefield position.
He added: 'The build-up of Russian forces indicates that Moscow intends to keep ignoring diplomacy. It is clear that Russia is prolonging the war,'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Britons ‘better learn to speak Russian' without major defence spending hike, Nato chief warns
Britons ‘better learn to speak Russian' without major defence spending hike, Nato chief warns

The Independent

time26 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Britons ‘better learn to speak Russian' without major defence spending hike, Nato chief warns

British people 'better learn to speak Russian' if Sir Keir Starmer does not massively ramp up defence spending, the Nato secretary general has warned. Mark Rutte said he was 'really impressed' by the prime minister 's strategic defence review unveiled last week. And he called for Nato countries to set a 'credible path' towards spending 5 per cent of their national incomes on defence amid the growing threat from Russia. Speaking at London's Chatham House, Mr Rutte said it is 'not up to me' whether that means Rachel Reeves should consider tax hikes to pay for the commitment. He added: 'I mean, what I know is that if we want to keep our societies safe... look, if you do not do this, if you would not go to the 5%, including the 3.5% core defence spending, you could still have the National Health Service, or in other countries their health systems, the pension system, etcetera, but you had better learn to speak Russian.' He did not set out a deadline by which Nato countries will have to reach the 5 per cent target, more than double what the UK currently spends on defence. 'I have a clear view on when we should achieve that,' he said. But he added: 'I keep that to myself, because we are having these consultations now with allies, and these discussions are ongoing, and we will in the end agree on a date when we have to be there.' His plans would see a return to Cold War levels of defence spending, with Russia's war on Ukraine still raging and rising tensions around the world. Nato chief Mr Rutte is in London to see Sir Keir ahead of a Nato summit in the Netherlands this month. The visit comes just days after the PM promised to make Britain 'battle ready', outlining Labour's plans to overhaul the country's defence capabilities. Defence secretary John Healey meanwhile said Britain's army needed to become '10 times more lethal' in the face of the 'immediate and pressing threat" from Russia and the rise of China. 'We are in a new era of threat, which demands a new era for UK defence,' he told MPs. But the announcement descended into a row over funding, with Sir Keir refusing to commit to hiking defence spending to 3 per cent of GDP by 2034. The PM was boosted on monday as Mr Rutte said the his plans to spend 2.5 per cent of GDP on defence from April 2027, with an aim to rise to 3 per cent over the next parliament, were not at odds with his own proposed target for the bloc. The 5 per cent goal is not "some figure plucked from the air", he said. "The fact is we need a quantum leap in our defence. The fact is we must have more forces and capability to implement our defence plans in full." While he said the "exact details are classified", Mr Rutte said there needed to be a 400 per cent increase in air and missile defence. He said Russia could be ready to use force against Nato within five years. "The new generation of Russian missiles travel at many times the speed of sound. The distance between European capitals is only a matter of minutes. There is no longer east or west. There is just Nato." As he met with Sir Keir in the White Room of No 10, he commended the Prime Minister on the "very good stuff" in the defence review. "It is not only about the traditional things, of course we need them, like ammunition... there is also drones, innovation, building the defence industrial base. It is really broad, it is really making a big impression in Brussels I can tell you," he said. Sir Keir called Nato the "cornerstone of our defence" and the "most effective military alliance the world has ever seen", adding that the task of the upcoming summit was to make sure it serves that purpose for decades to come. Sir Keir also spoke to German chancellor Friedrich Merz on Monday and the two leaders welcomed efforts by Nato allies to step up defence spending as well as Mr Rutte's suggestions to further boost it, a Downing Street spokeswoman said. The boost to the defence budget announced last week will be confirmed by chancellor Ms Reeves in her spending review on Wednesday, when she will set out the government's priorities for the next three years.

Russian threat will not disappear when the war in Ukraine ends, Rutte says
Russian threat will not disappear when the war in Ukraine ends, Rutte says

The Guardian

time29 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Russian threat will not disappear when the war in Ukraine ends, Rutte says

Russia will remain an imminent threat to Nato even if there is eventual peace in Ukraine, and the western alliance has to increase its air and missiles defences, its secretary general, Mark Rutte, warned in a speech at the Chatham House thinktank in London. 'Let's not kid ourselves, we are all on the eastern flank. There is no east or west, there is just Nato,' he said, adding that for Russian missiles 'the distance between European capitals is only a few minutes'.

MPs raise concerns about Jersey's 'backdoor route into the UK'
MPs raise concerns about Jersey's 'backdoor route into the UK'

ITV News

time33 minutes ago

  • ITV News

MPs raise concerns about Jersey's 'backdoor route into the UK'

MPs in the UK have raised concerns about Jersey 's French ID card scheme, saying it opens a "backdoor route into the UK" for potential illegal immigrants. The ID card scheme grants French visitors access to the island for the day without the need for a passport. It was introduced in both Bailiwicks in 2023, after it was found the number of day trippers had fallen post-Brexit - and last week, Jersey's government voted unanimously to extend the scheme on the basis of its success. However, UK MPs are now flagging it as a risk to their own border security. Chris Philp, the UK's Shadow Home Secretary and Conservative MP for Croydon South, says "our concern is that French ID cards are not particularly secure documents - it is possible to forge them relatively easily. "And because the Channel Islands are part of the Common Travel Area, the checks between the Channel Islands and the UK mainland are nothing like as strict as a regular passport control." Whilst no person has been identified to have exploited the scheme in this way in the past two years, Philp argues "concerns about border control are higher now than they ever have been." Citing rising number of immigrants who've made their way to the UK on small boats from Calais, he argues Jersey's scheme leaves a chink in the UK's armour that has the power to "snowball into something much larger" if left unaddressed. "When you have a vulnerability with your border security, what can start off as a very small problem can rapidly grow as illegal immigrants and others exploit vulnerabilities", he says. Philp hasn't raised concerns with members of Jersey's government directly. However, the island's Home Affairs Minister, Deputy Mary le Hegarat, admitted in the Assembly last week that "it is quite clear with correspondence from the Home Office that this is not a project they endorse." She added: "This heightens the risk for us in relation to the Common Travel Area and also potentially us being given a hard border." But Deputy Ian Gorst, Jersey's Minister for External Relations, says suitable checks and balances are in place to ensure the system isn't exploited as a pathway to the mainland. "These arrivals on their ID card have to have a return ticket for the ferry and there have been no incidences of onward travel to other places within the Common Travel Area. "So we can be confident that our border forces are protecting us and yet at the same time bringing this benefit to Jersey's economy." Guernsey is in the process of deciding whether to extend their version of the scheme for another year. A Guernsey Government spokesperson says: "It is the intention in Guernsey to extend the French Identity Card Scheme locally, on the condition it does not place our membership of the Common Travel Area at risk. "Guernsey Border Agency Officers have been in contact with the UK to discuss the matter from a Bailiwick of Guernsey perspective, and will continue to work with UK counterparts around the introduction of ETAs." Want the inside track on the issues that will shape Guernsey's Election this June? Listen to Guernsey Votes, an ITV Channel podcast packed with expert guests, local insight and analysis you can trust...

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store