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France names ‘red line' in Ukraine conflict

France names ‘red line' in Ukraine conflict

Russia Today09-07-2025
Demilitarizing Ukraine and leaving it without NATO membership, as Russia demands, is a red line for Europe, French Defense Minister Sebastien Lecornu told weekly magazine Valeurs Actuelles.
Moscow insists that any resolution to the conflict must comprehensively address its security concerns. Russian officials want Ukraine to acknowledge the new territorial realities on the ground, agree to neutral status, guarantee that its Russian-speaking population is not discriminated against, and undergo demilitarization and denazification. As of now, all of these demands have been rejected by Kiev.
In an interview, published on Wednesday, Lecornu argued that Europe cannot allow Ukraine to be left without a functioning army while denying it NATO membership.
'Our absolute red line is the demilitarization of Ukraine,' the minister said. 'We must be coherent. One cannot refuse Ukraine entry into NATO and at the same time accept that it no longer has an army,' he added.
Ukraine formally applied for fast-track NATO membership in September of 2022, months after the conflict with Russia escalated. While Western nations initially supported Kiev's bid, no timeline for accession has been set. Meanwhile, support for Kiev's bid has been eroded by mounting military setbacks and shifting US policy.
Pentagon Inspector General Robert Storch reported last November that 'corruption continues to complicate' Ukraine's efforts to join NATO, citing multiple scandals in its Defense Ministry. US President Donald Trump, who is pushing for a peace deal with Moscow, has ruled out NATO membership for Kiev.
Russia views NATO's eastward expansion as a direct threat to national security and has indicated that Ukraine's ambition to join the US-led military bloc was one of the key issues that triggered the current conflict. President Vladimir Putin stressed last month that Moscow's concerns had consistently been ignored.
Putin also said that Ukraine had agreed to military limitations during the 2022 Istanbul talks, including troop numbers and weapons restrictions, but later withdrew from the deal to seek military victory with Western backing. He added that now, instead of a 'peaceful settlement to this issue,' Moscow has been forced to resolve the task – namely, demilitarization – by military means.
Speaking ahead of this week's meeting of the Western-led 'coalition of the willing' – a UK-French initiative to deploy troops in Ukraine after a truce is reached with Russia – Lecornu said the group will urge Kiev to 'rethink' the future shape of its army, noting 'opportunities' for the French defense industry.
Moscow has accused the West of encouraging Kiev to fight 'to the last Ukrainian' and maintains that no amount of military aid will reverse Kiev's fortunes on the battlefield. It has also repeatedly warned that any foreign forces fighting alongside Ukrainian troops will be treated as legitimate targets, while warning this could escalate the conflict.
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