Germany: NATO will not send military forces to Ukraine
In the midst of increasing speculation about NATO's possible decision to send troops to Ukraine, the German chancellor emphasized that NATO will not send military forces to Ukraine. |
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Before this, French President Emmanuel Macron emphasized that European leaders discussed the possibility of sending military forces to Ukraine, but there is still no consensus.
A few hours ago, Dmitry Peskov, the spokesman of the Russian presidency, announced that if Western forces are sent to Ukraine, a direct conflict between NATO and Russia will not be a possibility but inevitable.
In response to French President Emmanuel Macron’s words, he said: Kremlin takes into account Macron’s words that sending military forces to Ukraine is considered among European countries. However, the spokesman of the Kremlin Palace added that Moscow emphasizes that there is no consensus among European countries about sending Western troops to Ukraine.
Emmanuel Macron, the president of France, announced in a meeting yesterday, Monday: “Western countries do not intend to go to war with the Russian people, but seek to prevent the escalation of tensions in They are Ukrainians.” Macron said during the opening of the Ukraine support conference in Paris: “We all agree that we do not want to go to war with the Russian people.”
He noted: “We seek to commit to deterrence against escalation, as we have successfully done since the beginning of the conflict.”
James O’Brien, the assistant secretary of the US for European and Eurasian affairs, and David Cameron, the British foreign minister, will attend this conference. Agence France-Presse reported earlier, quoting its sources, that no new military aid to Ukraine is expected to be announced at the end of this meeting.