The United States’ work to bring peace to Ukraine is proving to be difficult, as Americans attempt to bring about a ceasefire in the Black Sea—a major route for goods traveling between Europe and Asia.
Demands from Russian, Ukrainian, and European Union figures have complicated the process.
The announcement Tuesday of U.S. talks with Russia and Ukraine of bringing peace to the Black Sea sent grain prices plummeting, as investors saw the possibility of the seaway becoming once again a stable trade route.
On Wednesday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio addressed the Black Sea ceasefire, saying, “What we have here is an agreement in principle on a Black Sea ceasefire.”
He added that Russia had added conditions to the proposed ceasefire, some of which apply not to the U.S., but to its allies.
“After our meeting … the Russians detailed a number of conditions that they want to see met in order to do that. So, we’re going to evaluate that. Some of those conditions include sanctions that are not ours; they belong to the European Union.”
Rubio said that his team would be evaluating the demands for dropping sanctions and would present their ideas to the president.
But it will be a difficult task to bring the nations of the European Union, as well as Ukraine, on board with the terms of the ceasefire.
French President Emmanuel Macron indicated at a Wednesday summit in Paris that he would be no friend to Russia in the peace process.
“I want to be very clear this evening: Russia cannot have a say in the support we give and will give to Ukraine, nor can it dictate the conditions of this lasting peace, because Ukraine’s sovereignty is at stake and the security of all Europeans is at stake,” said Macron.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also expressed his reservations about the proposed ceasefire Thursday, saying, “Moscow always lies,” according to a translation, and calling the proposal “unrealistic.”
The multilateral clash of interests in the Black Sea negotiations demonstrates the difficult task of President Donald Trump’s push for peace in Ukraine.
Trump himself suggested Tuesday that Russia may be “dragging its feet” in pursuing peace. After years of war in Ukraine under his predecessor, President Joe Biden, however, it appears that the United States is having its most productive talks with Russia since before the beginning of the Russia-Ukraine war that began in February 2022.
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