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You are at:Home » Europe live: Ukraine will not accept US-Russia talks outcome if it is not involved, says Zelenskyy, as EU leaders meet for summit | Ukraine
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Europe live: Ukraine will not accept US-Russia talks outcome if it is not involved, says Zelenskyy, as EU leaders meet for summit | Ukraine

Adnan MaharBy Adnan MaharFebruary 17, 2025No Comments16 Mins Read0 Views
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Ukraine will not accept US-Russia talks outcome if not involved, Zelenskyy says

We’re also now hearing directly from Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, commenting on the US-Russia talks in Saudi Arabia.

In comments reported by the Associated Press and Reuters, he said Ukraine won’t take part in US-Russia talks this week on ending the war and won’t accept the outcome of the talks if Ukraine doesn’t take part.

Speaking to journalists on a conference call from the United Arab Emirates, Zelenskyy said his government had not been invited to Tuesday’s planned talks in Saudi Arabia.

He said they would “yield no results,” given the absence of any Ukrainian officials.

“Ukraine regards any negotiations on Ukraine without Ukraine as ones that have no result, and we cannot recognise … any agreements about us without us,” he said.

The Ukrainian president also said that “for the first time” he noted some interest from China over any settlement of Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Zelenskyy also pushed back on the floated idea of a minerals agreement with the US, saying that Ukraine cannot be just seen as a “simple supplier of raw materials,” and that any deal would need to include “at least somehow” additional security guarantees.

He said that he expected to get more clarity on any future meeting with Trump only after US envoy Keith Kellogg visited Ukraine.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy, pictured in Munich, Germany, last week.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, pictured in Munich, Germany, last week. Photograph: Sven Hoppe/AP

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Updated at 12.10 GMT

Key events

34m ago

Slovakia PM Robert Fico says EU officials have no mandate for talks in Paris

46m ago

Discussion of European troops in Ukraine premature, German prime minister says

1h ago

Denmark looking to increase defence spending to 3% GDP – media reports

1h ago

If we fail to spend now, we will spend 10 times more during war, Poland’s Tusk warns

2h ago

Pope Francis faces ‘complex’ clinical picture as hospitalisation continues

2h ago

Europe needs to ‘step up’ its defence capability, Starmer says before Paris talks, as he confirms plans to visit Trump

2h ago

View from the Élysée ahead of Paris talks

2h ago

Ukraine will not accept US-Russia talks outcome if not involved, Zelenskyy says

2h ago

Poland will not send troops to Ukraine, prime minister Tusk says

3h ago

Russian view on negotiations with US

3h ago

Pro-Russian hackers hit Italian transport system, banks after threats of ‘consequences’ over president’s criticism of Russia

3h ago

Ukrainian president Zelenskyy to visit Saudi Arabia on Wednesday

3h ago

Confirmation of US-Russia talks on Tuesday

3h ago

Poland’s Sikorski floats idea of Nobel peace prize for Trump for fair peace deal in Ukraine

4h ago

Europe needs to show unity, come up with plans on security guarantees, Spanish foreign minister says

5h ago

Sweden could be part of peacekeeping forces in Ukraine, prime minister says

5h ago

Norway, UK with ‘clear expectation’ Ukraine and Europe must be involved in peace talks with Russia

5h ago

Italian singer claims he was asked to perform in Russia to mark end of Ukraine war

5h ago

Hungary welcomes US-Russia talks, criticised ‘pro-war’ European leaders

5h ago

US Rubio arrives in Riyadh for talks with Russia

5h ago

US Ukraine envoy Kellogg to visit Warsaw on Tuesday

6h ago

Sweden does not rule out sending troops to Ukraine

6h ago

UK prepared to send troops to Ukraine, Starmer says

6h ago

Morning opening: Make Europe Relevant Again

6h ago

Paris talks on Ukraine, European security – context

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Slovakia PM Robert Fico says EU officials have no mandate for talks in Paris

European Union officials have no mandate for talks in Paris on Monday on Europe’s role in any Ukraine ceasefire, Slovak prime minister Robert Fico said, adding the discussions did not concern the EU and their participation hurt confidence in the bloc.

He said in a statement issued by the government office that the issue of troops in Ukraine was only for the UN or through bilateral deals and “is a topic with which the EU has nothing to do and should not comment.”

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Updated at 13.55 GMT

Discussion of European troops in Ukraine premature, German prime minister says

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, chancellor candidate for the Social Democratic party (SPD), taking part in a TV debate recently. Photograph: Kay Nietfeld/EPA

German chancellor Olaf Scholz suggested that any discussion of European troops taking part in a peacekeeping force in Ukraine is premature.

In comments reported by the Süddeutsche Zeitung, Scholz said that “unfortunately we are still a long way off” that moment, and added that “it’s quite clear that a very strong Ukrainian army, even in peacetime, must be at the core” of any solution.

Reuters said he also spoke about the European security more broadly, saying that supporting Ukraine and its army will be “a great task for Europe, for the US, and international alliance partners.”

“We have to make sure that Europe overcomes the challenges of the future in a strong and sovereign manner and with its back straight,” Scholz told reporters on the sidelines of an election campaign event in Kassel, ahead of his departure for the French capital.

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Denmark looking to increase defence spending to 3% GDP – media reports

Denmark’s prime minister Mette Frederiksen speaks as she participates in a panel discussion during the Munich Security Conference. Photograph: Matthias Schräder/AP

The Danish government is looking to advance multi-billion investments in defence, effectively increasing its defence spending for 2025 and 2026 to 3% GDP, according to the Danish daily Berlingske.

The weekly Weekendavisen, which also reported the plans, said that the priority investments would be picked by the acting Chief of Defense in the high command of the Armed Forces, Michael Hyldgaard.

Danish prime minister Mette Frederiksen is expected to take part in an hour-long questions session in the Danish parliament on Tuesday, where she is likely to get asked about the country’s reaction to developments in Munich over the weekend and her participation in today’s informal Paris summit.

Speaking in the last hour, she told reporters that Europeans “must increase military support for Ukraine, produce more, and do it faster”.

She said she sensed “a new European determination … a drive that is necessary” to respond to the challenge, Berlingske reported.

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Updated at 13.15 GMT

If we fail to spend now, we will spend 10 times more during war, Poland’s Tusk warns

After his press conference earlier (13:01), Polish prime minister Donald Tusk has now made further comments – unusually, this time in English – on social media, warning that Europe should not shy of making necessary defence commitments now as it would have to “spend 10 times more if we don’t prevent a wider war.”

He once again points to Poland’s track record in this matter, as the country spends 4.7% of its GDP on defence, way above the Nato target of 2%.

Here is what he said:

If we, Europeans, fail to spend big on defence now, we will be forced to spend 10 times more if we don’t prevent a wider war.

As the Polish PM I’m entitled to say it loud and clear, since Poland already spends almost 5% of its GDP on defence. And we will continue to do so.

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk speaking at a press conference in Warsaw earlier today. Photograph: Aleksander Kalka/NurPhoto/REX/Shutterstock

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Pope Francis faces ‘complex’ clinical picture as hospitalisation continues

A nun sits in front of the main entrance of the Agostino Gemelli Polyclinic, in Rome where Pope Francis has been hospitalized to undergo some necessary diagnostic tests and to continue his ongoing treatment for bronchitis. Photograph: Andrew Medichini/AP

Pope Francis has a “complex clinical picture” with a “polymicrobial infection of the respiratory tract,” which will require further hospitalisation, his spokesperson confirmed.

There was no timeframe given for his hospitalisation, but spokesperson said the complexity of his symptoms “will require an appropriate hospital stay.”

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Europe needs to ‘step up’ its defence capability, Starmer says before Paris talks, as he confirms plans to visit Trump

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy (R) and British prime minister Keir Starmer (L) shake hands after a joint press conference following their meeting in Kyiv, Ukraine last month. Photograph: Sergey Dolzhenko/EPA

British prime minister Keir Starmer has said that Europe needs to “step up in terms of our collective response in Europe” as he travels to join European leaders in Paris for emergency talks on Ukraine.

“By that, I mean playing our full part when it comes to the defence of the sovereignty of Ukraine if there’s a peace agreement,” he said, quoted on our UK liveblog and the BBC.

Last night, Starmer said the UK would be ready to deploy troops to Ukraine as part of a peacekeeping force (9:32).

The British PM also said that any Ukraine deal would need to be “just and enduring.”

“The last thing I want to see is a pause in the fighting that simply gives Putin the chance to come again,” he said in comments reported by the AFP.

Separately, his office also has confirmed in the last few minutes that Starmer will travel to Washington DC next week to meet US president Donald Trump, the first European leader since Trump’s inauguration last month.

You can read more details lined from Starmer and our coverage of UK politics on our UK live blog here:

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Updated at 14.07 GMT

View from the Élysée ahead of Paris talks

Jon Henley

Jon Henley

in Paris

French president Emmanuel Macron at an event in Paris last week. Photograph: Ludovic Marin/EPA

Élysée officials have said the key objective of today’s mini-summit is to seek agreement on what concrete actions European governments should and can take, including making progress on the fraught question of how to fund a major increase in defence spending.

“We consider that, in view of the acceleration of the Ukraine situation and in view, also, of what US leaders have said, there is a necessity for the Europeans to do more, better, and in a coherent manner, for our collective security,” an adviser said.

The meeting also aims to reassure Kyiv that as the US and Russia begin peace talks this week that could result in a settlement Ukraine could not sign up to, Europeans – including the UK – would stand by their political, financial and military commitments.

Emmanuel Macron is expected to tell the leaders of the UK, Germany, Poland, the Netherlands, Spain and Italy, as well as Nato chief Mark Rutte and top EU officials Ursula von der Leyen and Antonio Costa, that the US stance can be an opportunity.

Trump’s peace initiative could hasten the end of the war, the Elysée adviser told French media, but it was essential that the agreement was acceptable to Ukraine and to Europe, whose security was also at stake.

In any event, Macron is thought likely to urge leaders not to rise to the US bait and to avoid provocative or confrontational language. Instead, Europe should welcome Washington’s proposals – while taking meaningful steps of its own.

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Ukraine will not accept US-Russia talks outcome if not involved, Zelenskyy says

We’re also now hearing directly from Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, commenting on the US-Russia talks in Saudi Arabia.

In comments reported by the Associated Press and Reuters, he said Ukraine won’t take part in US-Russia talks this week on ending the war and won’t accept the outcome of the talks if Ukraine doesn’t take part.

Speaking to journalists on a conference call from the United Arab Emirates, Zelenskyy said his government had not been invited to Tuesday’s planned talks in Saudi Arabia.

He said they would “yield no results,” given the absence of any Ukrainian officials.

“Ukraine regards any negotiations on Ukraine without Ukraine as ones that have no result, and we cannot recognise … any agreements about us without us,” he said.

The Ukrainian president also said that “for the first time” he noted some interest from China over any settlement of Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Zelenskyy also pushed back on the floated idea of a minerals agreement with the US, saying that Ukraine cannot be just seen as a “simple supplier of raw materials,” and that any deal would need to include “at least somehow” additional security guarantees.

He said that he expected to get more clarity on any future meeting with Trump only after US envoy Keith Kellogg visited Ukraine.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy, pictured in Munich, Germany, last week. Photograph: Sven Hoppe/AP

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Updated at 12.10 GMT

Poland will not send troops to Ukraine, prime minister Tusk says

Poland will not send troops to Ukraine as part of a peacekeeping force, Polish prime minister Donald Tusk said today, ahead of European leaders’ meeting in Paris on the continent’s response to potential peace talks between Russia and Ukraine.

Tusk said the issue of Polish support was “settled,” as Warsaw was ready to continue its logistical, financial, humanitarian and military support for Ukraine, but not to deploy Polish troops inside Ukraine.

“We will be supporting, through logistics and political support, other countries willing to make such (hard security) guarantees,” he said.

Speaking to reporters before flying to Paris, Tusk also urged European leaders to “massively” increase spending on defence, noting that Poland’s 4.7% of GDP, way above Nato target, is “an exception, not a rule” and “this needs to change”.

He signalled his support for US comments on spending, saying that “there is no point getting offended or irritated” about their warnings on spend, as Europe “has to show that we are capable of much more serious investment in our own security.”

He also warned against trying to build any European defence formats outside Nato, despite “what some people say, sometimes in brutal words, … but there is no reason for allies, even if they disagree (on some topics), to not find an agreement on the most important issues.”

In what seemed like a pointed swipe at the UK and the US, the signatories of the 1994 Budapest agreement which was meant to guarantee Ukraine’s security after it gave up nuclear arsenal, he also said that leaders of the countries considering making such promises now must be ready to follow through with actions.

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk seen at another event earlier this month. Photograph: Kacper Pempel/Reuters

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Updated at 13.22 GMT

Russian view on negotiations with US

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov attends a meeting with his Serbian counterpart Marko Djuric in Moscow earlier today. Photograph: Tatyana Makeyeva/EPA

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has been speaking to the media this morning offering the Kremlin’s view on negotiations with the US over Ukraine.

Lavrov is expected to be part of the talks with the US in Riyadh on Tuesday, alongside Putin’s diplomatic adviser Yuri Ushakov.

He said “Putin and Trump agreed on the necessity of leaving behind absolutely abnormal relations.”

He also addressed the issue of any potential European involvement in the peace talks:

I don’t know what they would do at the negotiating table… if they are going to sit at the negotiating table with the aim of continuing war, then why invite them there?

Lavrov also said there could be “no thought of” Russian territorial concessions to Ukraine at future peace talks, Reuters reported.

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Pro-Russian hackers hit Italian transport system, banks after threats of ‘consequences’ over president’s criticism of Russia

Lorenzo Tondo

Lorenzo Tondo

in Rome

Sergio Mattarella at an event in Rome last month. Photograph: Domenico Cippitelli/SOPA Images/REX/Shutterstock

Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova has said on Monday that Italian president Sergio Mattarella’s comments at the University of Marseilles earlier this month (Europe Live on 6 Feb) comparing Moscow to Nazi Germany over its invasion of Ukraine will not go “without consequences”.

“During a lecture at an educational institution, he said he believed that Russia could be equated with the Third Reich,” Russian news agency Ria Novosti quoted Zakharova as saying on Russian state TV.

“This cannot, and will never, be left without consequences”, she added.

Shortly after Zakharova’s comments, the pro-Russian hacker group “NoName57” attacked the telematic system of transportation and several Italian banks, citing how Mattarella is “Anti-Russian.”

Zakharova described Mattarella’s speech as “blasphemous inventions”.

Premier Giorgia Meloni said the attacks against Mattarella “offend the whole nation, which the head of state represents.

“I express my full solidarity, as well as that of the entire Government, to President Mattarella, who has always firmly supported the condemnation of the aggression perpetrated against Ukraine”, the prime minister said in a statement.

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Ukrainian president Zelenskyy to visit Saudi Arabia on Wednesday

We are just getting a line from the Agence Frence-Presse that Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy will visit Saudi Arabia on Wednesday, just a day after US-Russia talks are due to start there…

Zelenskyy spoke briefly about the trip last week, even if without giving dates, and insisted that he had no plans to meet Russian or US officials there.

One to watch.

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Confirmation of US-Russia talks on Tuesday

US state secretary Marco Rubio, second right, shakes hands with Saudi Arabia’s deputy minister for protocol affairs Abdulmajeed Al-Smari as he arrives at King Khalid International Airport in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/AP

US secretary of state Marco Rubio, National Security Adviser Mike Waltz, and special envoy Steve Witkoff will meet with Russian delegation in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Tuesday, the US state department spokesperson Tammy Bruce confirmed.

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Poland’s Sikorski floats idea of Nobel peace prize for Trump for fair peace deal in Ukraine

Poland’s foreign minister Radosław Sikorski speaks at a panel discussion during the Munich Security Conference. Photograph: Matthias Schräder/AP

Polish foreign minister Radosław Sikorski put forward one of the most creative proposals on how to get to US president Donald Trump, influence his position on peace talks with Russia and make him side with European allies on the need of a just and lasting peace with appropriate security guarantees for Ukraine.

Playing off Trump’s well-known desire to get praise and public recognition, he suggested that Europeans could use the promise of a Nobel peace prize to get him on side.

“I would tell him that we, Europeans, control the Nobel peace prize. If you want to earn it, the peace has to be fair,” he told the Munich Security Conference over the weekend.

Here’s the clip.

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Updated at 10.59 GMT

Europe needs to show unity, come up with plans on security guarantees, Spanish foreign minister says

Sam Jones

in Madrid

Spanish foreign minister José Manuel Albares, speaking at the Munich Security Conference 2025. Photograph: dts News Agency Germany/REX/Shutterstock

Spain’s foreign minister, José Manuel Albares, says today’s meeting of European leaders in Paris has three main objectives.

In an interview this morning with the Onda Cero radio station, Albares said:

“It’s about showing European unity at such a crucial moment for European security.

Second, it’s about what we Europeans should do going forward to guarantee that there’s a just and lasting peace in Ukraine as soon as possible.

Third, it’s about analysing and deciding what we Europeans need in order to be able to achieve that just peace and to keep helping Ukraine win peace; it’s also about European security and the protection of our citizens.”

Albares said he didn’t think anyone would be talking about sending troops to Ukraine as “peace is still very far away”.

He also rejected suggestions that the meeting was a direct response to what had been said in Munich last week, saying:

There’s a new (US) administration that’s putting forward new ideas on Ukraine and, at the same time, we’re about to enter the fourth year of war and unjustified aggression. It’s very legitimate that, faced with this new panorama, Europeans should be meeting and reflecting on taking a series of decisions because all this affects our security and our European values.

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Updated at 10.49 GMT



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Adnan is a passionate doctor from Pakistan with a keen interest in exploring the world of politics, sports, and international affairs. As an avid reader and lifelong learner, he is deeply committed to sharing insights, perspectives, and thought-provoking ideas. His journey combines a love for knowledge with an analytical approach to current events, aiming to inspire meaningful conversations and broaden understanding across a wide range of topics.

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