US aims to mediate Russia-Ukraine conflict

Germany and France have acted as peace brokers between Russia and Ukraine for years. Now, US President Joe Biden has thrown his hat into the ring as well.
There are new signs of hope in the
conflict between Russia and Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin has
signaled that he is not averse to a summit meeting with US President Joe Biden
this summer. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Russian television
that Biden's proposal had been received positively by the Kremlin. Both Austria
and Finland, which are militarily neutral, have put themselves forward as
potential hosts.
US Secretary of State Antony
Blinken is paying a visit to Ukraine this week and aims to reassure Kyiv that
it has, in the words of State Department spokesman Ned Price "unwavering
US support for Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity in the face of
Russia's ongoing aggression."
Massive Russian troop buildup
Kyiv sees a clear threat from the
tens of thousands of troops Moscow massed at Ukraine's eastern border. The
Russian military carried out drills in Crimea, which Russia annexed from
Ukraine in 2014, and said troops would leave the region following the exercises.
Russia also indicated that it
would close off the Sea of Azov, throttling the only access that the vital
Ukrainian port of Mariupol has to the Black Sea. In eastern Ukraine,
pro-Russian separatists have controlled two "people's republics" for
years with support from the Kremlin.
For years, the German and French
governments have taken the lead in trying to broker peace between Russia and
Ukraine. The first time was in 2014 shortly after the Russian annexation of the
Crimean Peninsula. The so-called Normandy format of talks, named after the
first venue of the negotiations in northern France, brought together leaders
from Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France. A year later, they even managed to
forge a peace plan, but the conflict continued to simmer under the surface,
occasionally erupting into open violence.
'Perhaps Putin needs an opposite number like the
US'
Facing what appeared to be an
acute threat, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy began looking for more
international support. While calling on Paris and Berlin to establish another
summit in the Normandy-format meeting, he also told the British newspaper the
Financial Times that he was open to Washington assuming a greater role in
negotiations.
Increased US involvement does not take away from the importance of the European countries' role as a mediator, according to Michael Gahler, a German member of the European Parliament and foreign affairs spokesperson for the European People's Party (EPP).
He told DW he does not see
"any conflict" of interests in a greater US role and that he was
"very much in favor of the involvement of the United States." During
the Normandy talks, Germany and France had always been pulling together
"in a direction agreed in close consultation with the United States,"
Gahler said.
But added there could be a
psychological factor involved in a larger US role in mediating the conflict:
"Perhaps Putin's self-image requires him to have an opposite number like
the United States before he can bring himself to arrive at a solution."
Is Germany an impartial broker?
There is, however, one major bone
of contention between Berlin and Washington. The German government refuses to
give up on the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline project that will transport gas from
Russia directly to Germany. A number of European countries and the United
States, in particular, oppose the pipeline, which is now almost complete,
because they fear it will make Berlin too dependent on Moscow and cut out other
European transit countries where pipelines currently carry gas from Russia to
Europe.
In a break with his official
German party line, Gahler said he believes Berlin's backing for the project was
a "mistake from the outset." Yet, at the same time, he added that the
German position towards Nord Stream 2 "does not stand in the way of a
credible negotiating role because everyone knows internationally that we do not
stand equidistant between Ukraine and Russia."
Moscow, said Gahler, is the only
government to have violated international law and it has "troops and
mercenaries on the other country's territory." Germany clearly sees
"Russia as the guilty party."
Will Baerbock be the new Merkel?
German Chancellor Angela Merkel
has been the driving force in the Normandy talks, but as she plans to step down
after the next parliamentary elections in September, she is regarded as a
"lame duck" in foreign policy terms. Other senior members of Germany's
governing coalition have remained guarded when it comes to the question of
Ukraine. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas (SPD) said he wants to avoid
"spiraling military escalation" and has opposed placing new sanctions
on Russia.
German Defense Minister Annegret
Kramp-Karrenbauer emphasized that "Ukraine knows that it can depend on
us." During her meeting with her French counterpart, Florence Parly,
Kramp-Karrenbauer did not, however, spell out exactly what Kyiv could depend
upon them for.
Significantly, Annalena Baerbock,
the Greens' candidate to succeed Merkel, called for more Normandy format
negotiations. Baerbock called Nord Stream 2 a "geostrategic error" in
an interview with DW at the Munich Security Conference in February, adding
that, "This pipeline was hugely instrumentalized as a possible means of
destabilizing Ukraine."
NATO membership not in sight for
Ukraine
Yet Zelenskyy is thinking farther
than another round of negotiations. He is seeking permanent protection for his
country within Western political alliances and security structures. At the
beginning of April, Zelenskyy said Ukraine could not remain "in the
waiting room of the EU and NATO indefinitely."
But such cries for support are not
being heeded in Brussels or Berlin. Ukraine has, according to Gahler, "a
prospect of joining the EU in principle." But he conceded that "this
is a long path."
When it comes to joining NATO, the
military alliance turned down Ukraine's application to join in 2008 when Kyiv
had the backing of US former President George W. Bush. And it was Angela Merkel
who led the charge opposing Ukraine's membership.
Gahler said the West faces a
dilemma. Ukraine could only join NATO if "it was of benefit to the safety
of the existing NATO members. Putin is stopping precisely that by continuing
the conflict. To a certain extent, he is taking us hostage."