Berliner Boersenzeitung - Macron to meet Putin in bid to ease Ukraine tensions

EUR -
AED 3.93398
AFN 71.761178
ALL 96.184036
AMD 414.757133
ANG 1.930797
AOA 977.344039
ARS 1063.26447
AUD 1.6327
AWG 1.919874
AZN 1.823654
BAM 1.922361
BBD 2.163055
BDT 128.0231
BGN 1.950805
BHD 0.403604
BIF 3103.394723
BMD 1.071059
BND 1.410158
BOB 7.403157
BRL 6.437177
BSD 1.071354
BTN 90.109743
BWP 14.246064
BYN 3.505982
BYR 20992.764993
BZD 2.159418
CAD 1.490176
CDF 3046.092941
CHF 0.938826
CLF 0.037481
CLP 1034.17195
CNY 7.68849
CNH 7.625188
COP 4730.33401
CRC 547.766748
CUC 1.071059
CUP 28.383075
CVE 108.483828
CZK 25.362489
DJF 190.348672
DKK 7.456672
DOP 64.77229
DZD 143.330274
EGP 52.696227
ERN 16.065892
ETB 129.544769
FJD 2.417277
FKP 0.819541
GBP 0.833054
GEL 2.907955
GGP 0.819541
GHS 17.565143
GIP 0.819541
GMD 76.582255
GNF 9243.243099
GTQ 8.268179
GYD 224.129287
HKD 8.327465
HNL 26.862018
HRK 7.378561
HTG 140.976466
HUF 411.343578
IDR 17006.281764
ILS 4.011728
IMP 0.819541
INR 90.31794
IQD 1403.087864
IRR 45083.569503
ISK 148.309377
JEP 0.819541
JMD 169.383653
JOD 0.759698
JPY 165.172898
KES 138.166733
KGS 92.323836
KHR 4364.567395
KMF 482.566019
KPW 963.953253
KRW 1502.626776
KWD 0.328708
KYD 0.892762
KZT 525.268307
LAK 23497.972802
LBP 95893.737729
LKR 313.946128
LRD 204.545587
LSL 18.614715
LTL 3.16256
LVL 0.647873
LYD 5.178605
MAD 10.491073
MDL 19.133995
MGA 4942.939611
MKD 61.607203
MMK 3478.759277
MNT 3639.460001
MOP 8.575159
MRU 42.730537
MUR 49.825952
MVR 16.50489
MWK 1858.82609
MXN 22.145749
MYR 4.716412
MZN 68.413986
NAD 18.604608
NGN 1790.800738
NIO 39.398908
NOK 11.914176
NPR 144.175786
NZD 1.80278
OMR 0.412364
PAB 1.071256
PEN 4.041642
PGK 4.295485
PHP 63.067727
PKR 297.651766
PLN 4.362367
PYG 8377.281239
QAR 3.899194
RON 4.975603
RSD 117.015356
RUB 105.374312
RWF 1461.996133
SAR 4.02355
SBD 8.889072
SCR 14.586835
SDG 644.238629
SEK 11.667094
SGD 1.429784
SHP 0.819541
SLE 24.366729
SLL 22459.577469
SOS 611.574969
SRD 37.385286
STD 22168.767915
SVC 9.373945
SYP 2691.069258
SZL 18.604814
THB 36.716456
TJS 11.409432
TMT 3.748708
TND 3.327242
TOP 2.508523
TRY 36.695886
TTD 7.266534
TWD 34.630034
TZS 2918.636739
UAH 44.432813
UGX 3933.541225
USD 1.071059
UYU 44.574646
UZS 13704.205318
VEF 3879969.083263
VES 46.486825
VND 27188.843845
VUV 127.15836
WST 3.000235
XAF 644.736107
XAG 0.031752
XAU 0.000394
XCD 2.894592
XDR 0.802631
XOF 645.312921
XPF 119.331742
YER 267.577403
ZAR 19.017431
ZMK 9640.817422
ZMW 28.898062
ZWL 344.880702
  • RIO

    -0.9800

    64.52

    -1.52%

  • BTI

    0.2700

    35.73

    +0.76%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    24.68

    +0.16%

  • CMSD

    -0.3300

    24.71

    -1.34%

  • BP

    -0.2900

    29.67

    -0.98%

  • SCS

    0.7600

    13.08

    +5.81%

  • BCE

    -0.3150

    28.525

    -1.1%

  • GSK

    -1.1500

    35.87

    -3.21%

  • AZN

    -1.7400

    64.53

    -2.7%

  • JRI

    0.1700

    13.27

    +1.28%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    47.77

    -0.29%

  • BCC

    5.5650

    144.055

    +3.86%

  • NGG

    -2.1200

    63.35

    -3.35%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    7.28

    -0.27%

  • VOD

    -0.1600

    9.25

    -1.73%

  • RBGPF

    3.1700

    64.17

    +4.94%

Macron to meet Putin in bid to ease Ukraine tensions
Macron to meet Putin in bid to ease Ukraine tensions

Macron to meet Putin in bid to ease Ukraine tensions

French President Emmanuel Macron was in Moscow on Monday hoping to find common ground with Vladimir Putin on Ukraine and NATO, at the start of a week of intense diplomacy over fears Russia is preparing an invasion of its pro-Western neighbour.

Text size:

With tens of thousands of Russian troops camped near the Ukrainian border, Macron will be the first top Western leader to meet Putin since the crisis kicked off in December.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz will also meet Monday with US President Joe Biden in Washington, as Western leaders look to maintain a united front in their biggest showdown with Russia since the end of the Cold War.

US officials say Moscow has assembled 110,000 troops near the border with Ukraine and is on track to amass a large enough force -- some 150,000 soldiers -- for a full-scale invasion by mid-February.

Russia insists it has no plans to attack and has instead put forward its own demands for security guarantees that it says would ease tensions.

Macron, who will go on to Kyiv Tuesday for talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, told reporters on his plane from Paris that he was "reasonably" optimistic going into the talks.

He said he did not expect a solution to the crisis in the "short term", but that he was ready to take Russia's security concerns seriously.

- 'Very important' talks -

"We must try... to see where there are points of disagreement and possible points of convergence" in order to come up with "an equation that makes military de-escalation possible", Macron said.

But he said NATO would never accept a "profound change" in its policies and that no compromise could be agreed on Ukrainian questions "without the Ukrainians".

Moscow has accused the West, in particular Washington and NATO, of ignoring what it says are legitimate concerns for its security.

It is demanding a permanent ban on Ukraine, a former Soviet republic, joining the US-led alliance and that the bloc roll back its military presence in eastern Europe.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Monday's talks between Macron and Putin were "very important" but suggested no one should expect a major step forward.

"The situation is too complex to expect decisive breakthroughs in one meeting," Peskov told reporters.

Macron, whose country currently heads the European Union and who is facing a re-election challenge in April, has tried to position himself as the key EU figure in negotiations with Russia.

He has spoken to Putin by phone several times over the past week and held a 40-minute call with Biden on Sunday.

Macron is expected to try to push forward a stalled peace plan for the festering conflict with Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine, and could make offers to Russia for consultations on arms control and NATO expansion.

- Ukrainian 'red lines' -

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told reporters that Kyiv would not budge on its "red lines" in the conflict by giving up any territory or agreeing to direct talks with the separatists.

"Ukraine is approaching this process... with a clear understanding of our red lines and without any desire and readiness to make any concessions that will be unacceptable to us," he told reporters in Kyiv.

The United States has taken the lead in warnings about an invasion, with officials in Washington citing intelligence assessments this weekend that Russia has stepped up preparations for an invasion.

Such a force would be capable of taking Kyiv within 48 hours in an onslaught that would kill up to 50,000 civilians, 25,000 Ukrainian soldiers and 10,000 Russian troops and trigger a refugee flood of up to five million people, mainly into Poland, the officials said.

Ahead of the talks between Scholz and Biden, Germany said it would send up to 350 more soldiers to Lithuania to help bolster NATO's eastern flank, after similar deployments by the United States.

While Scholz is in Washington, his foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock, will be in Kyiv along with her Czech, Slovak and Austrian counterparts for a two-day visit.

Scholz himself will be in Moscow and Kyiv next week for talks with Putin and Zelensky.

(P.Werner--BBZ)