Macron again declines to rule out Western troops in Ukraine, but says they're not needed now
French President Emmanuel Macron is warning Western powers not to show any weakness to Russia as he reiterates his position that sending Western troops into Ukraine should not be ruled out
French President Emmanuel Macron warned Western powers against showing any signs of weakness to Russia as he reiterated his position Thursday that sending Western troops into Ukraine shouldn't be ruled out, though he said todayās situation doesnāt require it.
In an interview on French national television TF1 and France 2, Macron was asked about the prospect of sending Western troops to Ukraine, which he publicly raised last month in comments that prompted pushback from other European leaders who stressed they had no plans to do so.
"Weāre not in that situation today," he said, but added that āall these options are possible.ā
Macron, who is the commander-in-chief of the countryās armed forces, declined to describe in which situation France would be ready to send troops. He said the responsibility for prompting such a move would lie with Moscow ā āIt wouldn't be usā ā and said France would not lead an offensive into Ukraine against Russia.
But he also said,āToday, to have peace in Ukraine, we must not be weak.ā
Macron described the Russia-Ukraine war as āexistentialā to France and Europe.
āIf war was to spread to Europe, it would be Russiaās sole choice and sole responsibility. But for us to decide today to be weak, to decide today that we would not respond, is being defeated already. And I donāt want that,ā he said.
Macron's televised interview comes after the French parliament debated the countryās Ukraine strategy this week. Both the National Assembly and the Senate approved in symbolic votes the 10-year bilateral security agreement signed last month between Macron and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Macron said he will work on bringing further support to Ukraine at a meeting scheduled on Friday with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk in Berlin.
Last month, the French president appeared isolated on the European stage after his remarks at a Paris conference on Ukraine prompted an outcry from others leaders. Scholz, in particular, appeared to contradict Macron, saying participants had agreed there will be āno ground troopsā on Ukrainian soil sent by European states.
French officials later sought to clarify Macronās remarks and tamp down the backlash, while insisting on the need to send a clear signal to Russia that it cannot win in Ukraine.
Scholz on Wednesday appeared dismissive of any speculation of frictions between France and Germany, saying he has a āvery good personal relationshipā with Macron.
France, Germany and Poland will meet as the so-called Weimar Triangle, and the grouping is especially important now that āwe are all so concerned about the terrible consequences of the Russian war of aggression on Ukraine,ā Scholz said.
Supporting Ukraine āis a very concrete and very practical question of whether there is enough ammunition, enough artillery, enough air defense - many things that play a major role. And discussing and advancing this cooperation once again is what is needed right now,ā Scholz said.
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AP writer Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin contributed to the story.
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Follow the APās coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine