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War, and talk of peace in Europe

Kyiv and Moscow may both be open to Delhi facilitating peace talks, but this is difficult if the two sides stick to their maximalist demands

Published on: Sep 06, 2024 09:15 PM IST
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Russian President Vladimir Putin’s statement on readiness for peace talks with Ukraine, facilitated by Brazil, China and India comes in a specific context in the war that has continued for over two-and-half years with neither side in a position where it can comprehensively win. To be sure, there have been many previous attempts to end the war, but these failed due to the maximalist positions of the two warring nations. Kyiv wants a reversal to the 1991 border, which means Russia giving up gains made in Crimea and parts of Donetsk and Luhansk in 2014, and Moscow wants Ukraine to cede the remainder of the latter two regions and end efforts to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).

A resident walks with a bicycle past a building destroyed by a Russian military strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in the village of Yampil, in Sumy region, Ukraine September 6, 2024. REUTERS/Maksym Kishka (REUTERS)
A resident walks with a bicycle past a building destroyed by a Russian military strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in the village of Yampil, in Sumy region, Ukraine September 6, 2024. REUTERS/Maksym Kishka (REUTERS)

That the war has continued suggests that both sides see potential gains in the form of further acquisition or reclamation of territory. But there is also a likely realisation that total victory is impossible. Russia’s strength of military personnel and equipment hasn’t yielded expected outcomes, and Ukraine remains dependent on western military aid, which it can’t remain assured of indefinitely. Europe’s fatigue with the war and its preoccupation with unrest within many national borders are one reason. The other is Donald Trump’s threat to scale back support to NATO were he to become president after the November elections in the US, unless other members of the grouping start pulling their weight. And, while a Kamala Harris presidency will be a continuation of the Biden era support for Ukraine, it may also nudge parties towards a brokered peace at the earliest. Meanwhile, the West has ratcheted up its economic pressure on Russia, and Moscow, despite enlisting support from friendly nations to offset this, has felt the pain.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visits to Moscow in July and Kyiv in August helped assess receptiveness to India playing a facilitator to a peace process. It is now up to both Moscow and Kyiv to revisit their absolutist positions that could jeopardise a brokered peace.

 
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