Ukraine war briefing: conflict could end if Russia economically or militarily ‘exhausted’, says Germany’s Merz
German chancellor Friedrich Merz has told the Munich Security Council Russia’s war against Ukraine will “only end when Russia is at least economically, potentially militarily, exhausted”. The German chancellor described the security gathering as a seismograph for the state of US-European relations. Merz said the Ukraine war “had forced Europe to return from a vacation from world history”. With Russia’s war against Ukraine entering its fifth year, the conflict was high on the agenda at the security conference. French president Emmanuel Macron said any peace settlement must protect Ukraine, preserve European security and disincentivize Russia from attempting another invasion, while not providing the rest of the world with a “calamitous example to follow”. He said it was a “huge strategic mistake” to urge Ukraine to accept it was defeated. “One day Russians will have to reckon with the enormity of the crime committed in their name, with the futility of the pretexts and the devastating, longer term effects on their country, but until that time comes, we will not lower the guard.” Several top European leaders were scheduled to meet at the conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday for talks about the conflict, the French presidency said. Macron said any peace deal between Ukraine and Russia had to involve Europe. “I want to be very clear: you can negotiate without the Europeans, if you prefer, but it will not bring a peace at the table.” A US official said secretary of state Marco Rubio was not attending those talks because of a packed schedule, but was “engaging on Russia-Ukraine in many of his meetings” in Munich. Ukraine’s foreign minister Andriy Sybiga said he discussed ending the Russian invasion of Ukraine with China’s foreign minister, Wang Yi, whose country is a close partner of Moscow. Wang told Sybiga Beijing was “willing to provide Ukraine with new humanitarian aid”, according to a Chinese foreign ministry readout. Meanwhile, diplomatic negotiations on Ukraine will take place in Geneva on Tuesday, a source briefed on the matter told Reuters. A US delegation including envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner will participate in trilateral talks with representatives from Russia and Ukraine in the afternoon, the source said. Ukraine could hold elections if there was a two to three month ceasefire with Russia, said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Speaking at the Munich Security Conference Zelenskyy said he would be happy, in principle, to hold a poll “as quick as possible,” but said the war had to stop first, and Ukraine had to be given security guarantees. “If president Trump … pushes Putin [into a] ceasefire [that will last for] two, three months, we will do elections.” Zelenskyy also said Trump wanted to agree on a peace deal “all at once,” because he “like things in one big package,” like he did with his “one, big, beautiful bill”. But the Ukrainian president said the sequence of getting things agreed was important. Zelenskyy said Russia’s territorial demands were about Moscow’s ambitions to get Ukraine, bit by bit, a point he has emphasised to the US. He said compromises had already been made by Ukraine. “We made a lot of compromises. Putin and his friends, they are not in prison. This is the biggest compromise that the world made already.” He said Ukraine “can’t forget” how many people were killed during the war, but he said Kyiv was ready to end it at any time. Britain has said it would send another £540m worth of weapons to Ukraine, including spending £150m on buying US made interceptors, using a Nato-run funding scheme for the first time. The latest commitment came before a meeting of the 50 country Ukraine Contact Group, which coordinates international weapons supplies to Kyiv, immediately after the Nato defence ministers summit. Britain has not previously used Nato’s Prioritised Ukraine Requirements List (Purl) before. It was devised last year as a mechanism for European countries to buy US weapons for Ukraine, after the US said it would no longer donate them. The remaining £390m will be spent on supplying 1,000 Lightweight Multirole Missiles (LMMs), which are manufactured in Belfast, to urgently bolster Ukraine’s air defences, which are struggling against nightly onslaughts of Russian attacks. A Ukrainian missile attack killed two people and injured five on Friday in the Russian city of Belgorod near the border, regional governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said. Gladkov, speaking in a video posted on Telegram, said the men were members of crews restoring damaged heating and electricity networks in the city. Restoration work will resume on Saturday as it was too dangerous for crews to be operating at night, Gladkov said.







