The Columbus Dispatch

EU, Ukraine to talk military training and cyber threats

Russia against NATO membership for its western neighbor

- Samuel Petrequin

BRUSSELS – The European Union is considerin­g providing a military training mission to Ukraine amid lingering tensions between Russia and its neighbor, officials said Monday.

Acting on a request from Ukraine for help with “profession­al military education,” the EU sent a fact-finding mission to the country last month. The topic will be discussed during a summit Tuesday in Kyiv, the officials said on condition of anonymity in accordance with EU practices.

The results of the mission have yet to be analyzed in order to define how the 27-nation bloc could best help. One official said the EU’S political and security committee, which is responsibl­e for the common foreign and security policy, will go back to the issue in November.

Ukraine is locked in a bitter tug-ofwar with Russia, which in 2014 annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine and has since been backing a deadly separatist insurgency in eastern Ukraine. This summer, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged closer ties between his country, NATO and the EU. Russia is adamantly against Ukraine, a former Soviet republic, getting NATO membership.

The EU has imposed economic sanctions against Russia and targeted Russian individual­s and entities with restrictiv­e measures in response to the annexation of Crimea and what it calls the “deliberate destabiliz­ation of Ukraine.”

The European Council, which represents

the national government­s of all EU nations, on Monday adopted new sanctions on eight more individual­s, including judges, prosecutor­s and security officers.

“Those individual­s have taken biased decisions in politicall­y-motivated cases, and prosecuted or oppressed opponents of the illegal annexation of Crimea and Sevastopol,” the council said.

According to the EU, the Russian travel bans and asset freezes now target 185 people and 48 entities.

The annexation and Moscow’s backing of rebels in the east of Ukraine, where more than 14,000 have been killed since 2014, plunged Russia’s relations with the West to post-cold War lows. The tensions rose again this year after Russia increased troop numbers near its borders with Ukraine, including in Crimea, eliciting internatio­nal outrage.

At Tuesday’s summit, EU Council President Charles Michel and European

Commission President Ursula von der Leyen are set to reiterate the EU’S “unwavering” commitment to Ukraine’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity, officials said. Zelenskyy will represent Ukraine during the talks.

They will also discuss disinforma­tion and cybersecur­ity with their Ukrainian counterpar­ts. Both sides have already started a cyberdialo­gue, with a second round of discussion­s on that topic scheduled for next year.

“What we are looking to achieve is to really put in place a mechanism to strengthen and deepen on almost a daily basis the inter-institutio­nal cooperatio­n on cybersecur­ity,” an official said.

Other discussion­s at the summit will center around the progress made since the EU and Ukraine signed a free trade and visa-free travel deal in 2014.

The EU will acknowledg­e efforts made by Kyiv to keep pushing reforms.

 ?? RICCARDO PAREGGIANI/AP FILE ?? Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has urged closer ties between his country, NATO and the E.U.
RICCARDO PAREGGIANI/AP FILE Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has urged closer ties between his country, NATO and the E.U.

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