France backs Zelensky’s ‘victory plan’
France is ready to rally Western countries behind Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky’s “victory plan,” French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said during a visit to Kiev on Saturday.
“A Russian victory would consecrate the the law of the strongest and would push the international order towards chaos,” Barrot told reporters during a press conference with his Ukrainian counterpart, Andrey Sibiga.
“That is why our exchanges must enable us to make progress on President Zelensky’s victory plan, and to rally as many countries as possible around it.”
The diplomat reiterated that Paris would “support, again and again, Ukraine’s resistance against Russian aggression.”
Barrot said that France was “open” to the idea of inviting Ukraine into NATO. “It is a discussion that we are having today with our NATO partners,” he said.
Zelensky unveiled his five-point plan in a speech to Ukrainian lawmakers this week. The scheme includes demands that were previously rejected by Kiev’s Western backers, such an immediate invitation for Ukraine to join NATO and the lifting of restrictions on the use of foreign longer-range weapons for strikes deep inside Russia.
NATO has maintained that it will be impossible to admit Ukraine into the alliance until the conflict is resolved, while US President Joe Biden said on Friday that there was “no consensus” on whether to greenlight the use of ATACMS missiles and other weapons for strikes on Russian territory.
During his trip to Kiev, Barrot also announced that France would deliver the first batch of Mirage 2000 fighter planes in early 2025. The French Air Force is currently training Ukrainian pilots and aircraft technicians. Kiev has long argued that Western jets, such as Mirage 2000s and US-made F-16s, would be crucial to reverse the tide on the battlefield, as Russian troops have been steadily gaining ground in the Donbass in recent months.
Moscow has repeatedly said that no amount of foreign military aid would stop Russian troops in Ukraine. Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has described Zelensky’s plan as “a set of incoherent slogans.”