Global Times

EU summit ‘to bring limited impact to Ukraine’

Economic reality may shake Europe’s consensus on keeping military aid to Kiev

- By Yang Sheng

Leaders of EU member states are gathering in Brussels on Thursday for a two-day summit as the Ukraine crisis is bringing more concerns, as well as exerting pressure on Europe. Analysts said the EU might not be able to significan­tly change the situation even if major European powers have the strong political will to do so, while the difficult economic situation in Europe will impact EU leaders’ consensus on how to keep supplying military aid to Kiev.

The summit will also address many contentiou­s issues, including the Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict, future EU members and immigratio­n, but the Ukraine crisis and boosting the EU’s defense readiness will top the agenda, the VOA reported. The EU summit will aim to find ways to speed up the supply of ammunition to Ukraine but will also seek to lay the foundation­s for a much broader upgrade of the EU’s military in order to respond to the threat from Russia, Bloomberg reported.

EU leaders are scheduled to discuss a plan on Thursday to use billions of euros in profits from frozen Russian financial assets to buy arms for Ukraine, Reuters reported.

Cui Heng, a scholar from the Shanghai-based China National Institute for SCO Internatio­nal Exchange and Judicial Cooperatio­n, told the Global Times on Thursday that “At present, not only the EU, but also the US, are all facing a key problem when providing support to Ukraine: they have money or they can try their best to make money, but they cannot use the money to buy or produce enough ammunition and weapons that are urgently needed in the battlefiel­d.”

Song Luzheng, a Chinese scholar residing in France and research fellow at the China Institute of Fudan University, echoed that “the lack of productivi­ty makes the EU and the US unable to bring significan­t change to the Ukraine crisis even though they really want to, and many Western countries have already given all they have in their arsenals, but the military failures that Ukrainian troops suffered recently are deeply damaging to the confidence and determinat­ion of the West.”

Even if the leaders of EU members reach a consensus to transform their industrial system into a war machine, they need to put the will of their people and the economic reality into considerat­ion, so the summit might just have a limited impact on the situation, Song told the Global Times.

Talking about sending European troops to fight Russians in Ukraine, Chinese experts said that reinforcem­ents from countries like France and Poland can only help Ukraine to strengthen their defense line, but they are not capable of defeating Russian troops and take back the lands they have lost.

Cui said neither the EU summit nor the Russian presidenti­al election will change the situation significan­tly, and the conflict will continue as Moscow and Kiev are not able to completely defeat each other.

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