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Macron got no promises on Ukraine but called his meeting with Trump a ‘turning point'

Macron got no promises on Ukraine but called his meeting with Trump a ‘turning point'

Boston Globe25-02-2025

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'But my message was to say 'be careful' because we need something substantial for Ukraine,' Macron said.
France's President Macron (second left) speaks with President Trump as Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio react during a meeting in the Oval Office on Feb. 24.
Ludovic Marin/Associated Press
'We want peace swiftly, but we don't want an agreement that is weak,' Macron said earlier in a joint news conference with Trump. Any deal with Russia, Macron insisted, must be able to be 'assessed, checked and verified.'
Asked at the news conference by an Associated Press reporter what makes Trump believe he can trust Putin in negotiations about Ukraine, Trump answered, 'I may be wrong, but I believe he wants to make a deal.'
Macron is known for his bold diplomatic moves.
In February last year, he was the first European leader to publicly consider sending Western troops to Ukraine. In December, as he welcomed Trump to Paris to celebrate the reopening of the Notre Dame Cathedral, he hastily arranged
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Macron, who came into office in 2017, is one of the few leaders who got to know Trump during his first term.
'We call each other several times a week,' Macron told the French online news channel HugoDécrypte, according to excerpts released Tuesday. 'Even if it doesn't have an immediate impact, this allows us to know each other's thinking.'
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Their friendly relations were reflected Monday in Macron's gentle correction, hand on Trump's arm, to make clear that Europeans gave 'real money' to Ukraine, not just loans.
Macron did not come to Washington empty handed. He repeatedly said he would push to boost French and European defense spending, in response to one of Trump's most insistent demands.
He also voiced support for Trump's push to make a deal for access to Ukraine's valuable mineral resources, which he described as a sign of 'very strong American involvement.' Paris, like Kyiv, sees the deal as a way to secure long-term US support for Ukraine's sovereignty.
Trump said he agreed with the possibility to deploy European security forces in Ukraine once a peace deal is achieved.
But he didn't make any promises regarding Ukraine's sovereignty or Europe's security.

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