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18 Feb, 2025 14:04

Ukraine has ‘sovereign right’ to apply to EU – Kremlin

Kiev is free to shape its own economic policy, but military alliances remain off-limits, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov stated
Ukraine has ‘sovereign right’ to apply to EU – Kremlin

The Kremlin has no objections to Ukrainian integration with the EU, as long as it pertains solely to economic affairs, spokesperson Dmitry Peskov has stated. Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky has previously characterized EU membership as a vital security guarantee.

Pursuing economic interests through regional integration is every nation’s “sovereign right,” Peskov made the remarks during a press briefing on Tuesday, commenting on Kiev’s EU bid. Nobody, including Russia, can “dictate to a nation” in such matters, the Kremlin spokesman noted.

Moscow holds “a very different position on issues of security, defense and military alliances,” Peskov stressed, emphasizing that “a comprehensive, viable long-term resolution [to the Ukraine conflict] is unattainable without addressing broader continental security issues.”

Zelensky mentioned the possibility of “immediate” EU accession as one of several potential security guarantees during an NBC News interview last Friday. Speaking with ‘Meet the Press’ host Kristen Welker, Zelensky also called for a “strong package of missiles” stationed in Ukraine, a “big army” to exert psychological pressure on Russia, and foreign investments in Ukrainian industry to deter future Russian aggression.

In June 2022, the EU granted Ukraine candidate status, viewed at the time as more of a political gesture than a mark of the country’s progress towards meeting the criteria for potential membership. Since then, some EU nations have resisted fast-tracking Ukraine into the bloc.

Brussels has facilitated Ukrainian access to the common EU market to support Kiev. However, the flood of Ukrainian agricultural products has sunk prices and sparked protests among farmers across the bloc, ultimately leading to import bans in 2023. The nations involved said the crisis highlighted obstacles on Ukraine's path to membership.

Kiev was similarly assured of an “irreversible path” to NATO membership, yet a definitive timeline for joining the US-led military bloc has never been established. Russia has deemed the prospect unacceptable for decades, citing the West's refusal to address its concerns as a major factor in the Ukraine crisis.

US President Donald Trump has diverged from the previous Western narrative, which framed the Ukraine conflict as stemming from “unprovoked Russian aggression,” and acknowledged that the hostilities did not arise in isolation.

”I don’t see how a country in Russia’s position could allow them, given their circumstances, to join NATO,” he remarked last week.

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