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EU must prepare to talk to Russia

EU must prepare to talk to Russia

Russia Todaya day ago

EU member states should consider resuming contact with Moscow, which was severed after the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022, French President Emmanuel Macron has told reporters.
According to Macron, despite being fully committed to boosting military capabilities within NATO, the bloc's European members have no wish to 'endlessly' arm themselves and should in the near future negotiate a new security framework with Moscow.
'We are not going to go towards an endless escalation, towards more armament. We must arm ourselves because today there is a gap between our level of armament and that of Russia. And that poses a threat,' Macron stated on Wednesday.
'At the same time, we must think about the security framework in which we want to live tomorrow,' he said. 'That's why we need to rethink [the security architecture] in the territories from the Black Sea to the Arctic, to determine how far we are willing to go to defend ourselves and what would be the terms of the discussion with Russia to make it possible to limit military capabilities and restore trust.'
Macron advised member states to 'think about' restoring dialogue with Russia 'right now' in order to be able to negotiate broader European security as part of a potential Ukraine peace deal.
Macron made the remarks at the NATO summit in The Hague, where members committed to hiking defense spending to 5% of their GDP annually by 2035 in order to address the alleged 'long-term threat posed by Russia to Euro-Atlantic security.' US President Donald Trump has repeatedly urged European NATO members to take more responsibility for their security and increase defense spending. Commenting on the hike, which one reporter called a 'one-man whim,' Macron said it is both Washington's wish and a 'European necessity' to become more independent militarily.
Moscow has stressed that it has no intention of attacking any NATO member states, dismissing the claims as 'nonsense' and scare tactics used by Western officials to justify increased defense spending. Asked to disclose what NATO's warnings of a Russian threat were based on at the NATO summit, Secretary-General Mark Rutte did not provide any specific intelligence assessments, instead citing general fears.
Earlier this week, Russian President Vladimir Putin accused NATO of 'fueling global militarization and an arms race' by fabricating 'horror stories' to extract money from citizens of member states.

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