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What did the leaders say?
Scholz said the leaders were in agreement on the situation at present and what the consequences should be if Ukraine’s territory and sovereignty were violated.
“Our common goal to avoid a war in Europe,” said the chancellor, flanked by Duda and Macron.
“The deployment of Russian troops on the border with Ukraine is very worrying and our assessment of the situation here is very much the same.
“Just as our attitude is that further violation of the territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine is unacceptable and would have far-reaching consequences, politically, economically and certainly also geo-strategically.”
“We speak with one voice,” said Polish President Duda, adding that the three countries would not give up in their efforts to de-escalate the tensions with Moscow and Kyiv.
“We have to find a solution to avoid war,” said Duda. “As I’ve said, this is currently our main task. I believe that we will achieve it. In my opinion what’s most important today is unity and solidarity.”
French President Macron called for security talks with Moscow, in order to stress the inviolability of Europe’s borders.
The French president is seeking to revive the “Normandy Format” peace talks — aimed at bringing to an end fighting in eastern Ukraine, in which more than 14,000 people have died.
Leaders from the quartet last met in Paris in 2019. However, envoys from the four countries involved — France, Germany, Russia and Ukraine — are to meet on Thursday in Berlin.
Frenzied diplomatic rounds
Tuesday’s meeting came after Russian President Vladimir Putin told Macron that Russia “would not be the source of an escalation.” Earlier on Tuesday, Macron later met Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who said he would welcome concrete steps from Putin for de-escalation, but added that he didn’t “trust words in general.”
It also follows Scholz’s meeting with US President Joe Biden on Monday where the pair threatened Russia with grave consequences if it invades Ukraine.
Biden vowed that the Nord Stream 2 Russia-to-Germany gas pipeline, which has been completed but has not yet started operating, will not be allowed to proceed.
Scholz refrained from explicitly mentioning the project, which has long been a source on contention between Berlin and Washington. Pulling the plug on Nord Stream 2 would prove economically damaging to Russia, but it would also cause energy supply problems for Germany.
Scholz will also travel to Kyiv and Moscow on February 14-15.
Duda, whose country borders western Ukraine and Belarus, has started to play a more prominent diplomatic role recently.
The talks in the German capital under the so-called “Weimer Triangle” format, which takes between leaders of the 3 countries at times of crisis.
rc/rs (dpa, AFP, Reuters)
Ukraine crisis: ‘Our goal is to avoid a war in Europe,’ says Germany’s Scholz (msn.com)Ukraine crisis: ‘Our goal is to avoid a war in Europe,’ says Germany’s Scholz (msn.com)