Macron says ‘nothing ruled out,’ including using Western troops, to stop Russia winning Ukraine war

French President Emmanuel Macron speaks at a news conference at the end of the conference on Monday. Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters
French President Emmanuel Macron has openly discussed the possibility of sending European troops to Ukraine to help Kyiv win the war against Russia, a potential major escalation to the largest ground war Europe has seen since World War II.
Though
the possibility of Western democracies putting boots on the ground in Ukraine
remains remote, Macron’s comments following a summit in support of Ukraine
prompted a hawkish response from the Kremlin and sent European leaders
scrambling to backtrack.
A
NATO official told CNN the alliance had “no plans” to deploy combat troops in
Ukraine.
German
Chancellor Olaf Scholz, who attended the meeting in Paris on Monday, said that
while there was a good debate and detailed discussion on the topic, summit
participants were “unanimous” in their opinion against deploying troops
Macron
had told reporters at a news conference that while he and the other 21 European
leaders present did not agree on deploying military personnel, the prospect was
discussed openly.
“Nothing
should be ruled out,” he said. “We will do anything we can to prevent Russia
from winning this war.”
However,
a raft of European officials came out Tuesday against such a plan. Among them
were some of Ukraine’s more ardent supporters, including the United Kingdom,
Poland, Spain and Italy, as well as officials from Hungary and Slovakia, two
countries whose leaders have been criticized as pro-Russian.
“What
was agreed among ourselves and with each other from the very beginning also
applies to the future, namely that there will be no ground troops, no soldiers
on Ukrainian soil sent there by European countries or NATO states,” said
Scholz.
Macron
did, however, announce that a new coalition would be created to supply Ukraine
with medium-range and long-range missiles.
“We’re
at a critical moment in this conflict that requires us to take the initiative,”
Macron said.
With
$60 billion worth of American funding for Ukraine held up by Republicans in
Congress, the burden has shifted to Europe to help arm Ukraine as it attempts
to fend off a resurgent Russian military.
Ukrainian
soldiers on the frontlines say they are already running low on ammunition,
which has cost them on the battlefield.
Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelensky told CNN in a recent interview that “millions”
could die if Washington fails to supply his country with more aid.
The
European Union has already committed more than $150 billion in aid to Ukraine,
but sending in troops would be a drastic step, one that was unthinkable when
Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion two years ago.
Macron
pointed out that Western democracies have gradually increased their support to
levels unthinkable when the war began.
He
highlighted the example of Germany, which offered helmets and sleeping bags to
Kyiv at the outset of the conflict and is now saying more needs to be done to
supply the country with missiles and tanks.
“The
people that said ‘never ever’ today were the same ones who said never ever
planes, never ever long-range missiles, never ever trucks. They said all that
two years ago,” he said.
“We
have to be humble and realize that we (have) always been six to eight months
late.”
Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday that such a deployment in Ukraine would
put the West in conflict with Moscow.
“In
this case, we need to talk not about the likelihood, but about the
inevitability of a conflict.” Peskov said.
“These
countries must also assess and be aware of this, asking themselves whether this
is in their interests, as well as the interests of the citizens of their
countries.”
Kremlin
officials have made similar comments in the past. Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov said last year that the US, the United Kingdom and many others are
“waging war” against Russia and are engaged in hostilities against the country
by supplying Ukraine with assistance.
In
hosting Monday’s summit and committing to such a strong defense of Ukraine,
Macron appears to be attempting once again to assert himself as the symbolic
leader of a united Europe, as the continent braces for the possibility of
former US President Donald Trump winning a second term.
Given
Trump’s antipathy toward NATO and transactional view toward alliances, leaders
like Macron have stressed that the burden must fall to Europe to protect itself
from any future Russian aggression.
Macron
warned at the start of the summit that Russia would likely attack beyond
Ukraine in the coming years, threatening Europe’s collective security.
“This
is a European war,” Macron said. “It’s our soil and our continent.”
Macron
also signaled he was willing to abandon his longstanding opposition to buying
arms for Ukraine from outside the EU for Ukraine.
The
French president had been against purchasing weapons outside the bloc to
support an EU initiative known as “strategic autonomy” – bureaucratic jargon
for a series of policies aimed at making Europe less reliant on the US – and
other international partners in matters of foreign and defense policy.
While
Macron’s apparent shift on non-EU weapons acquisition may seem in conflict with
Europe’s drive for self-sufficiency, it is more likely a reflection of how
badly European arms stockpiles have been hit by the war in Ukraine.
As
long as a year ago, officials were warning that supplying Ukraine had left
nations desperately short of a wide range of weapons.
The
urgent need to do this as soon as possible means that buying exclusively within
the EU simply isn’t realistic.
Region-wide
drops in defense spending following the end of the Cold War led to arms
manufacturers reducing their ability to make such weapons, and rebuilding the
industry won’t happen overnight.
This
meant that Europe didn’t only need to “refill its own cupboard, but build a new
cupboard and fill that too,” one European official told CNN last week.
Macron’s
change of heart, however, doesn’t necessarily mean he is moving on from
strategic autonomy. It remains a long-term goal, but rearming Kyiv is a
short-term necessity.
It’s
also worth noting that there is no precise end point to strategic autonomy and
many European officials have shifted on what the exact role of the US should be
in European security and to what extent NATO should be the broker in that,
rather than the EU.
But
by arranging the meeting where this new short-term approach was agreed, Macron
can still claim to be leading the charge on bolstering Europe’s new, more
assertive and independent foreign policy.
Still,
even within France, Macron’s comments have proved controversial. Various
opposition lawmakers criticized the comments Tuesday, saying a French
deployment would constitute belligerence, though Defense Minister Sebastien
Lecornu insisted that “to say that we exclude nothing is neither weak nor
escalatory.”
Meanwhile,
the US State Department and the Pentagon both reiterated that President Joe
Biden had ruled out sending US troops to fight in Ukraine.
“Certainly
every country is free to speak to its own interest, but in addition to the
president making clear that the US will not send troops to fight in Ukraine,
the NATO secretary general has ruled out any NATO troops to fight in Ukraine,”
said State Department Spokesperson Matthew Miller at a press briefing.
Pentagon
spokesman Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder added: “Just to be clear, we have no plans to
send US service members to fight in Ukraine.”
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