Scottish Daily Mail

Germany fires back at Boris after he claims it wanted Ukraine to ‘fold’

- By Niamh Lynch

GERMANY yesterday launched an extraordin­ary attack on Boris Johnson after he alleged Berlin wanted Ukraine to fold in the early days of the Russian invasion to avoid a long war.

The former prime minister was heavily critical of France, Italy and Germany in an interview with CNN, calling the countries’ initial response to the invasion ‘disastrous’.

In an astonishin­g briefing, a spokesman for German chancellor Olaf Scholz told the Daily Telegraph: ‘We know that the very entertaini­ng former prime minister always has his own relationsh­ip to the truth – that’s no different in this case.’

A source close to Italy’s former prime minister Mario Draghi suggested that Mr Johnson had changed his tone about Rome’s involvemen­t. ‘Boris Johnson in the past has been very appreciati­ve about Italy’s role in supporting Ukraine against the Russian invasion,’ the source said. Mr Johnson did go on to praise the EU nations, highlighti­ng tough sanctions the bloc had imposed on Russia. A spokesman for Mr Johnson declined to comment last night.

In the CNN interview in Lisbon, Mr Johnson said: ‘The German view was at one stage that if it were going to happen, which would be a disaster, then it would be better for the whole thing to be over quickly and for Ukraine to fold. I thought that was a disastrous way of looking at it. But I can understand why they thought as they did.’

He also accused France of being ‘in denial’ about the possibilit­y of Russian forces crossing into Ukraine and Italy of being too reliant on cheap fuel to take a hardline approach against Moscow. French president Emmanuel Macron has been heavily criticised for pushing for diplomatic talks with Russian leader Vladimir Putin long after many Western nations believed it was impossible to negotiate.

The head of France’s military intelligen­ce, General Eric Vidaud, was also reportedly fired in March for failing to anticipate the invasion. Meanwhile, Mr Draghi was accused of vetoing tough sanctions on Moscow in the early days of the war.

Mr Johnson continued: ‘What happened was everybody – Germans, French, Italians, everybody, Joe Biden – saw that there was simply no option because you couldn’t negotiate with this guy [Putin].’

‘The EU has done brilliantl­y. After all my anxieties... I pay tribute to the way the EU has acted. They have been united. The sanctions were tough.’ Mr Johnson also praised Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky and called on Western government­s to maintain military support for Kyiv.

‘His own relationsh­ip with the truth’

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