Intense negotiations over the war in Ukraine have reached a โmajor momentโ on the road to a peace deal, Britainโs Defence Secretary John Healey has said, despite warnings this is an โillusionโ that Russia will not accept.
After high-level talks involving top US envoys in Berlin, with Ukraine appearing to accept that any deal would mean it could not join Nato, the outcome has been well received in Washington.
US President Donald Trump hailed potential progress from โvery long and very good talksโ with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the leaders of the UK, France, Germany and Nato. โI think weโre closer now than we have been ever,โ he said, speaking at the Oval Office.
An apartment building hit by a Russian drone strike in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine. Reuters
This was reflected by Mr Healey on Tuesday who said the discussions had made peace more likely than any point since Russia invaded Ukraine almost four years ago.
โWe are at a major moment in this war,โ he told fellow defence ministers at a meeting of the Ukraine Contact Group. โThe US-led push for peace is advancing, and yesterday in Berlin there were signals of progress in the peace talks, which are further advanced than at any time during this war.โ
As part of the โCoalition of the Willingโ, Britain was stepping up its preparations for a postwar role with its forces โready to deploy when peace comes, with troops on the ground and jets in the airโ.
But, as he announced a ยฃ600 million ($806m) package of air defence weapons, Mr Healey acknowledged that Russia has shown little interest in easing its operations either on the front lines or in attacking Ukraineโs cities. โOur mission is clear cut,โ he said. โSupport the fight today, secure the peace tomorrow.โ
Britain's Defense Secretary John Healey. AP
Peace or escalation?
Military and diplomatic analysts have warned that this optimism is likely to be misplaced, with the harsh reality that Russia has little incentive to accept the peace terms and could well intensify the fighting to take more territory and force further concessions.
Orysia Lutsevych, Russia expert at the Chatham House think tank, said the most tangible progress had been the โEuropeans aligning positions with Americansโ, and that actual peace with Russia was โmore an illusionโ.
โI would suggest it probably will not be acceptable to Russia,โ she added. โWe will end up at ground zero again.โ
She also cautioned that the intense diplomacy came in parallel with Russia using military pressure as negotiations progress. โThe more we negotiate, the more advanced the diplomatic talks become, the bigger the military pressure,โ she said.
โThis is Russian logic, to exert pressure through the battlefield and the negotiating table at the same time. We should expect more escalation as the talks progress, not the other way around.โ
The Kremlin in central Moscow. Reuters
โNothing has changedโ
A gloomier assessment was put forward by Keir Giles, a senior fellow at Chatham House, who suggested that the flurry of statements about ceasefires and peace support forces were all โhypotheticalโ, with scant connection to political reality. "The outcome being described is one which Russia has explicitly rejected,โ he told The National.
He added that the security guarantees to deter further Russian aggression being discussed in European capitals were
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