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Zelenskyy Meets Europeans In Next Round Of Fitful Peace Process

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
January 5, 2026
in Europe
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Zelenskyy Meets Europeans In Next Round Of Fitful Peace Process
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After months of uncertain progress in the peace process, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Kyiv will this week focus on European allies in two meetings with hopes of “hastening the end” of Russia’s war on his country.

On January 5, Ukraine will host a meeting of the chiefs of general staffs of European countries, including those of Kyiv’s key backers, Britain, France, and Germany.

On January 6, French President Emmanuel Macron will host a Paris gathering of European leaders in an even more-crucial session — one in which the French leader has promised that Kyiv’s backers will make “concrete” commitments to Ukraine’s security.

Ahead of the talks, Zelenskyy vowed that his country is ready for all possibilities.

“There will be meetings in Europe that must become yet another contribution to our defense and to hastening the end of the war,” he said on January 4 in his nightly video address.

“Ukraine will be prepared for both possible paths ahead — diplomacy, which we are pursuing, or continued active defense if the pressure from our partners on Russia proves insufficient.”

“Ukraine seeks peace. But Ukraine will not give up its strength to anyone,” he added.

A day earlier, Zelenskyy insisted that if a diplomatic end to the war cannot be struck during peace negotiations, his country would continue to defend itself against Russia’s full-scale invasion.

“If Russia blocks all of this — and as I said, it depends on our partners — if our partners do not compel Russia to stop the war, there will be another path: to defend ourselves,” he said on January 3.

Trump in November 2025 pressed Zelenskyy to accept a 28-point peace proposal that many saw as heavily favoring Russia.

Ukraine and its European allies — led by Britain, France, and Germany — scrambled to develop a counterproposal, eventually putting forward a 20-point plan that took in more of Kyiv’s interests, especially on security guarantees and territorial integrity.

In his meetings with the Europeans, Zelenskyy is likely to press the need for security guarantees — from Europe but also in conjunction with desired solid assurances from the United States as well.

Macron has spoken of the so-called Coalition of the Willing — an informal grouping of more than 20 Western countries that have expressed support for Ukraine — and suggested specific proposals could be presented at the Paris gathering.

One Week: 2,000 Air Strikes

Zelenskyy has expressed skepticism over Russian President Vladimir Putin’s real interest in coming to peace terms.

On January 4, the Ukrainian leader said Russia launched more than 2,000 air strikes on Ukraine during the past week and repeated his call for additional help from the West.

“Stability and predictability of aid to Ukraine are what can really move Moscow toward diplomacy. We are counting on further defense aid,” Zelensky wrote on social media.

He added that over the period, Russia launched more than 1,070 glide bombs, almost 1,000 drones, and six missiles against Ukraine.

“Each missile for air defense systems that is now somewhere in storage with partners can really protect lives,” he said.

Along with nightly Russian drone and missile strikes, Ukraine is battling to hold ground against the Russian invaders in the east of the country.

A January 2 Russian air strike on Kharkiv killed at least six people, Ukraine said.
A January 2 Russian air strike on Kharkiv killed at least six people, Ukraine said.

On January 4, ‍Russia’s Defense Ministry said its forces had gained control over the town of Podoly in ⁠Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region.

The ministry also said Russian air defense units had destroyed 57 drones over the Moscow region on January 4 alone — out of 437 shot down over the country during the day.

The claims could not independently be verified.

Ukrainian authorities, meanwhile, said the death toll from a Russian strike on a residential area in Kharkiv on January 2 had risen to six, including a 3-year-old boy, with at least 30 others injured.

With reporting by Reuters and dpa

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