Rada says Western signals to conclude peace agreement on Ukraine


Western leaders' statements on the situation in Ukraine indicate their desire to conclude a peace agreement. This was reported by Verkhovna Rada MP Artem Dmytruk on December 17.
"These and other decisions indicate that the scenario to discount the financing and provision of Ukraine on the shoulders of the EU will not work. This is a good signal for an early peace agreement and a bad one for lovers of money on blood," Dmytruk said in his Telegram-channel.
The MP also recalled the recent words of German Chancellor Olaf Scholz about the unwillingness to help Ukraine at the cost of weakening its security. He also added that another signal for a solution to the conflict should be Budapest's blocking the allocation of over €6bn from the "Peace Fund" for arms to Ukraine.
Earlier, on December 16, Scholz said that Germany would not help the Kiev authorities to the detriment of its own security, in particular, by transferring Taurus missiles and sending its military to Ukraine.
On 14 December, Verkhovna Rada MP Oleksandr Dubynskyy said that Ukraine would never be in a strong position in negotiations with Russian Federation. He also noted that this once again emphasizes the possibility of ending the conflict only after the departure of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Before that, on December 9, political analyst Oleksandr Dudchak shared with Izvestia an opinion that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (his term expired in May) and the West do not want a full-fledged peace settlement. At the same time, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Galuzin said that Moscow is always open for negotiations on Ukraine, it is the Kiev regime and the Western countries that run it that are closing.
The special operation to protect Donbass, which Russian President Vladimir Putin announced on February 24, 2022, continues. The decision was taken against the backdrop of the worsening situation in the region.
Переведено сервисом «Яндекс Переводчик»