French President Emmanuel Macron has said France and Britain are proposing a one-month truce between Russia and Ukraine which would put a halt on air strikes but not cover ground fighting.
Macron said the 900-mile front line was equivalent to travelling from Paris to Budapest.
He said the plan was for a “truce in the air, on the seas and energy infrastructure.”
Russia has been actively targeting Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, leading to substantial power cuts which have sapped morale and hampered Kyiv’s war effort.
The French president spoke to Le Figaro as he flew to London for a summit on March 2 with European leaders, hosted by British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer.
European Troops in 2nd Phase
But Macron said under the Franco-British proposal, European ground troops would be deployed to Ukraine only in a second phase, after the ground fighting between Russian and Ukrainian forces had ended.Macron told Le Figaro: “There will be no European troops on Ukrainian soil in the coming weeks. The question is how we use this time to try to obtain a truce, with negotiations that will take several weeks and then, once peace is signed, a deployment.”
Macron said: “We want peace. We don’t want it at any price, without guarantees.”
When Zelenskyy was asked whether he was aware of the Anglo-French plan, he told reporters in London, “I’m aware of everything.”
Macron also told Le Figaro that his country and other European nations must spend more on defense.
He said this might mean in the region of 3 percent to 3.5 percent of gross domestic product.
Macron also said the European Commission needed to be more innovative when it comes to defense spending, and he said, “We probably need, initially, 200 billion euros to be able to invest.” That amount is equivalent to about $209 billion.
Von der Leyen said, “Let there be no room for any doubt: I believe when it comes to European security, Europe has to do more, Europe must bring more to the table, and to achieve this, we need a surge in European defense spending.”
An extraordinary summit of the European Union is due to take place on March 6, and Macron said he wanted defense spending to be the main item on the agenda.
Kremlin Pours Scorn on Summit
On March 3, the Kremlin said promises made by European leaders at the London summit would not bring about a peaceful resolution to the conflict.Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the $2 billion air-defense missiles offered by Britain would just allow hostilities to continue and would not encourage Zelenskyy to pursue peace.
Peskov said: “What happened at the White House on Friday, of course, demonstrated how difficult it will be to reach a settlement trajectory around Ukraine. The Kyiv regime and Zelenskyy do not want peace. They want the war to continue.”
“It is very important that someone forces Zelenskyy himself to change his position,” he added. “Someone has to make Zelenskyy want peace. If the Europeans can do it, they should be honoured and praised.”