RT composite. © Getty Images/Emmanuele Contini;Thierry Monasse
The
idea of a unified European army as advocated by Ukraine’s Vladimir
Zelensky is unworkable because many EU states are also members of NATO,
the economic bloc’s foreign policy and security chief Kaja Kallas has
said.
Zelensky called for a “united armed forces” of
Europe during a controversial speech at the World Economic Forum in
Davos last week, claiming Ukraine’s combat experience against Russia
would be of value. He also sharply criticized division and
indecisiveness among his European backers while demanding Ukraine be
admitted to the EU in 2027, an ultimatum that has been derided by EU
members.
“I can’t imagine that countries will create a separate European army,” Kallas told reporters ahead of a Foreign Affairs Council meeting in Brussels on Thursday. “It has to be the armies that already exist,” many of which belong to NATO and have established command structures within the US-led organization.
“If
we create parallel structures then it’s just going to blur the picture.
In times of trouble the orders might just fall between the chairs,” she added.
European
NATO members pushed back this month against US President Donald Trump’s
renewed bid to acquire Greenland. Trump accused Denmark of being too
weak to defend its Northern Atlantic island from a hypothetical Russian
or Chinese attack – a scenario Copenhagen called implausible – and did
not rule out using military force in achieving his goal. Tensions were
defused by NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, who offered Trump a “framework” for moving forward.
Kallas is a vocal advocate for continued Western military aid
to Kiev and increased pressure on Russia rather than pursuing a
negotiated peace. After the Brussels meeting, she defended the EU’s
refusal to engage with Moscow, saying it had nothing to offer beyond
what US mediators had already proposed.
Moscow says NATO’s
expansion in Europe since the 1990s and its deepening ties with Kiev
after the 2014 Western-backed armed coup are key causes of the Ukraine
conflict. Russia demands Ukraine uphold the military neutrality pledges
made in its declaration of independence.