France signs security pact with Ukraine, pledges ‘up to €3 billion’ in additional military aid

France signs security pact with Ukraine, pledges ‘up to €3 billion’ in additional military aid

February 17, 2024   04:13 pm

The agreement includes a French aid pledge for up to €3 billion for 2024, after €1.7 billion in 2022 and €2.1 billion last year.

Both deals are part of Zelensky’s drive to shore up help for his forces who are struggling to hold off Russian attacks on the frontline city of Avdiivka.

After touching down at Orly airport south of the French capital, Zelensky travelled on to the Elysee palace where he met with President Emmanuel Macron to sign the accord. 

The French presidency said ahead of the meeting that the pact would run for 10 years, and include precise commitments from the French side, including financial pledges.

It would strengthen cooperation in the area of artillery, the presidency said, without providing details.

The deal is also to help pave the way towards Ukraine’s future integration into the European Union and NATO, officials said.

With the Ukraine war about to enter its third year, Zelensky was to make further pleas for sustained help with financing and armaments at the Munich Security Conference on Saturday, where leaders like US Vice President Kamala Harris have gathered.

Zelensky’s European tour comes at a critical time with Ukraine facing mounting pressure on the eastern front because of ammunition shortages and fresh Russian attacks.

Fierce fighting raged around the beleaguered frontline town of Avdiivka, which has become a main Russian target ahead of the February 24 invasion anniversary.

The long-term future of billions of dollars of Western aid is meanwhile in doubt, with the biggest contributor, the United States, in the throes of an election year.

A possible $60-billion package of military aid has been held up in Washington since last year because of wrangling in Congress.

The EU has also admitted that it will only be able to make good on half of the one million artillery shells it promised to send by March.

But Scholz underlined that the security pact inked in Berlin on Friday illustrates that Germany will “not let up” in supporting Ukraine. He also announced a new package of immediate military support worth 1.1 billion euros ($1.2 billion). 

‘For as long as it takes’ 

“This document ... shows that Germany will continue to help Ukraine with its defence against Russia’s attacks. I have often said: for as long as it takes,” said Scholz, who also called the signing of the deal “a historic step”.

The agreement lays out support for a post-war Ukraine to build up a modern army that can repel further attacks from Russia in the future.

“Our security agreement is a truly unprecedented bilateral document,” said Zelensky.

G7 nations flagged plans to provide Ukraine with long-term defence support on the sidelines of the NATO summit last July. Alliance leaders failed, however, to set a timetable for Ukraine to join the bloc.

A first agreement had been signed with Britain in January, during Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s visit to Kyiv.

Zelensky is seeking to shake off any war fatigue besetting his allies. 

Addressing the conference in Munich, Harris said President Joe Biden’s administration “will work to secure critical weapons and resources that Ukraine so badly needs”.

Abandoning Kyiv would be a “gift to (Russian President) Vladimir Putin,” she said, on the eve of bilateral talks with Zelensky.

Ukraine was once the main conflict on the minds of world leaders but Israel’s war with Hamas and the ensuing escalating crisis in the Middle East now also require urgent attention.

Zelensky’s European tour was meanwhile overshadowed by the announcement Friday of the death in a Russian prison of opposition figure Alexei Navalny that sparked worldwide reactions.

“Obviously he was killed by Putin,” Zelensky said in Berlin. “Like thousands of others who have been tortured.”

He said this demonstrated why Putin must be made to “lose everything and held accountable for his actions”.

Source: AFP
--Agencies

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