France and Britain are considering whether to deploy troops to the front line in Ukraine, CIA-founded news outlet Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty has reported.
The two countries could send military personnel to Ukraine in the event that Moscow and Kiev engage in peace talks, the Ukrainian branch of the US propaganda network said on Monday, citing a high-ranking NATO official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Putting Western boots on the ground would help European NATO members to have a say in the outcome of the conflict after US President-elect Donald Trump is sworn in in January, the source claimed.
Trump has said he could resolve the Ukraine conflict in 24 hours following his return to the White House. Outgoing President Joe Biden is ramping up arms deliveries to Kiev in his final days in office.
Similar reports about deliberations in the West have been emerging since last week, with French newspaper Le Monde first reporting details. A Politico source, described as a conservative MEP, claimed that the proposed deployment would be touted as a peacekeeping mission.
The UK should have a role in any EU military presence in Ukraine after a truce, former British prime minister Boris Johnson told The Telegraph, saying last week: “I cannot see that such a European operation could possibly happen without the British.”
Western nations are considering the deployment of as many as 100,000 “so-called peacekeepers,” according to the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR). That would amount to an occupation, and would give Kiev time to rebuild its army before renewing hostilities with Russia, the agency warned.
As a general rule, the presence of peacekeepers requires support from all parties in a conflict, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, following the SVR statement.
“We have clear parameters required for a resolution,” he told the press last week. “Core causes of this conflict need to be addressed to move towards a resolution. It’s deeper than sending in some peacekeepers.”
Those core causes are NATO’s expansion in Europe, which represents a threat to Russia, and Kiev’s systematic violation of the rights of its Russian-speaking citizens, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov reiterated at a meeting with foreign diplomats in Moscow last week.