EU state’s FM tells Zelensky ‘not to give ultimatums’

Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky should not “give ultimatums” to the EU over the country’s membership in the bloc, Luxembourgish Foreign Minister Xavier Bettel told reporters on Thursday.
Days earlier, the Ukrainian leader said he expects his country to be admitted to the EU by 2027, as part of a US-backed peace deal.
“I’m sorry, I told him…several times ‘don’t give ultimatums. It’s not in your interest’,” Bettel told journalists in Brussels.
“The fact is there are rules, they have the Copenhagen criteria and we need to fulfill them,” he said. The ‘Copenhagen criteria’ require an EU aspirant nation to have stable democratic institutions, a competitive market economy, and the bloc’s extensive body of law implemented.
Bettel also expressed concern that despite bloc membership being mentioned as part of a settlement of the Ukraine conflict, the EU is being sidelined from the peace talks.
“They are around the table and we are not… I think we are waiting outside for the bill without being around the table.”
According to Zelensky, Ukraine will be fully ready to join the EU by next year.
“We want a specific date in our treaty on ending the war,” he said on Sunday, days after a controversial speech in Davos in which he ridiculed the bloc as indecisive and incapable of defending itself without help from Washington.
Ukraine’s EU accession is reportedly being discussed as part of a US-brokered peace deal, which also includes an $800 billion post-war reconstruction plan circulated to bloc members last week.
However, multiple member states have rejected the idea of fast-tracking Ukraine’s candidate status into full membership.
“Ukraine’s accession on January 1, 2027, is out of the question. It is not possible,” German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Wednesday, adding that it would take the country “several years” to meet the membership criteria.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban stressed that his country’s parliament would not vote to allow accession “in the next hundred years.”
Moscow has said it has no objections to Ukraine seeking EU membership. However, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has condemned what he described as the EU’s transition into an “aggressive military bloc.”
Ukraine’s ambition to join NATO has remained a red line for Russia and one of the underlying causes of the ongoing conflict.











