President Zelensky pushes for Ukraine to join the EU now after third day of Russian invasion


Ukraine’s leader Volodymyr Zelensky has pushed for his country’s urgent ascension to the European Union and says he has discussed the prospect with the bloc’s leaders.

The Ukrainian premier said now was a ‘crucial moment to close the long-standing discussion once and for all and decide on Ukraine’s members in the EU’. 

Taking to Twitter to describe a ‘new page in the history of our states’, President Zelensky pointed to a surge in support from EU leaders in recent days as the Russian invasion of his country stalled.

‘This is the beginning of a new page in the history of our states… Ukraine must become part of the EU,’ the Ukrainian leader said.

He later added: ‘Ukraine is fighting the invader with weapons in hands, defending its freedom and European future’. 

Zelenskiy’s appeal came after a round of calls with senior EU figures, including Italian PM Mario Draghi, French President Emmanuel Macron, European Council President Charles Michel and President of the EU Commission, Ursula von der Leyen.  

Fighting has raged on in and around major Ukrainian cities for a third consecutive day, as Kyiv’s defence ministry has so far put Russia’s losses at around 2,800 troops, 80 tanks, 516 armoured vehicles, and 10 airplanes and seven helicopters.

Intelligence experts have predicted Vladimir Putin’s war with Ukraine is no longer going to plan due to Kremlin ‘overconfidence’, poor tactical planning, and ‘shock’ at the fierce resistance put up by brave Ukrainians fighting for national survival.  

Ukraine's leader Volodymyr Zelensky (above) has pushed for his country's urgent ascension to the European Union and says he has discussed the prospect with the bloc's leaders

Ukraine’s leader Volodymyr Zelensky (above) has pushed for his country’s urgent ascension to the European Union and says he has discussed the prospect with the bloc’s leaders

Taking to Twitter to describe a 'new page in the history of our states', President Zelensky pointed to a surge in support from EU leaders in recent days as the Russian invasion of his country stalled.

Taking to Twitter to describe a ‘new page in the history of our states’, President Zelensky pointed to a surge in support from EU leaders in recent days as the Russian invasion of his country stalled.

The Ukrainian premier pointed to the surge in support from EU leaders in recent days, as the Russian invasion stalled and fighting raged on in Ukraine for a third day.

He also urged cutting Russia from the SWIFT international electronic payment system, and called on Germany, Italy and Hungary to show ‘courage’ and agree to the move. 

Ukraine has long aspired to join the European bloc, with the country’s foreign minister pointedly using Ukraine’s independence day last year to tell Politico they must welcome Moldova, Georgia and Ukraine into the EU.

Ukraine already belongs to the EU’s Eastern Partnership as well as the European Neighbourhood Policy. 

The bloc also forged closer economic and political links with Ukraine after signing a bilateral Association Agreement in 2014. 

The news comes as EU member states were branded a ‘disgrace’ by the bloc’s former president yesterday after they rejected Boris Johnson’s call to eject Russia from the world’s biggest financial payments system.

It comes as the bloc's former president Donald Tusk (above) rounded on Germany, Italy , Hungary and others after they vetoed moves to kick Russia out of the Swift payments network that forms the bedrock of international trade

It comes as the bloc’s former president Donald Tusk (above) rounded on Germany, Italy , Hungary and others after they vetoed moves to kick Russia out of the Swift payments network that forms the bedrock of international trade

Donald Tusk rounded on Germany, Italy, Hungary and others after they vetoed moves to kick Russia out of the Swift payment network that forms the bedrock of international trade.

Mr Tusk tweeted: ‘In this war everything is real: Putin’s madness and cruelty, Ukrainian victims, bombs falling on Kyiv. 

‘Only your sanctions are pretended. Those EU governments which blocked tough decisions (ie Germany, Hungary, Italy) have disgraced themselves.’ 

Donald Tusk (pictured) rounded on Germany, Italy, Hungary and others after they vetoed moves to kick Russia out of the Swift network that forms the bedrock of international trade

Donald Tusk (pictured) rounded on Germany, Italy, Hungary and others after they vetoed moves to kick Russia out of the Swift network that forms the bedrock of international trade

While EU leaders left a Swift ban out of a ‘tough’ package of sanctions – despite a plea from Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskyy – Italy got an exemption for its luxury goods industry. 

Senior sources said the likes of Gucci loafers and designer handbags were not included in the export ban measures agreed late on Thursday, which focused largely on the high-tech, aviation and energy sectors.

One EU diplomat said Italy’s argument was that banning sales to Russian oligarchs ‘would have been largely symbolic’.

But senior Italian government sources reacted furiously, with one saying the country’s prime minister Mario Draghi ‘did not seek a carve-out on Italian luxury goods – that is categorically untrue’.

Mr Draghi also sparked a row with Mr Zelenskyy after he told Italian MPs the Ukrainian president had missed a planned phone call yesterday because he was ‘hiding somewhere’.

Mr Zelenskyy tweeted details of heavy fighting in his country, including deaths, before adding sarcastically: ‘Next time I’ll try to move the war schedule to talk to Mario Draghi at a specific time. Meanwhile, Ukraine continues to fight for its people.’

Mr Zelenskyy had urged European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen to back a Swift ban on Russia, saying: ‘Not all possibilities for sanctions have been exhausted yet. The pressure on Russia must increase.’

Latvia’s deputy prime minister Artis Pabriks condemned nations that blocked the move, saying: ‘Some people in Europe are afraid of losing money while other people in Kyiv have to die.’

Boris Johnson (pictured) has been urging allies to back a Swift ban, saying only the harshest economic sanctions will have any effect on Vladimir Putin

Boris Johnson (pictured) has been urging allies to back a Swift ban, saying only the harshest economic sanctions will have any effect on Vladimir Putin

Mr Johnson has been urging allies to back a Swift ban, saying only the harshest economic sanctions will have any effect on Vladimir Putin.

The Prime Minister raised the issue at a G7 summit on Thursday and again at a crisis summit of Nato leaders yesterday. 

He has also raised it in one-to-one talks with fellow leaders, including German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, warning him: ‘Western inaction or under-reaction would have unthinkable consequences.’

A Government source said Mr Johnson ‘is going to keep pushing very strongly for this’.

And Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said yesterday Britain would ‘work all day’ to get the Swift system ‘turned off for Russia’.

EU leaders have said little publicly about their opposition to kicking Russia out of Swift. But diplomatic sources said several countries were concerned about disruption to gas supplies from Russia.

Diplomatic sources said US President Joe Biden sat on the fence on the issue at the G7 summit on Thursday. 

He cited EU concerns as the reason for not going ahead with a ban. 

Q&A: WHAT COULD A BAN ON SWIFT MEAN FOR RUSSIA? 

What is Swift?

The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (Swift) is a secure messaging system used by banks to make rapid cross-border payments. 

The Belgian-based system handles around 42million messages a day and is said to account for around half of all major international money transfers.

Would a ban hurt Russia?

Supporters of banning Russia from the Swift payment network, including Boris Johnson and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, argue it would cripple Moscow’s ability to trade, cutting off vital revenue from its oil and gas exports. 

Analysis of a Swift ban on Iran in 2012 suggests Tehran lost half of its oil export revenue and 30 per cent of its foreign trade.

Who’s blocking a ban?

Several leading EU countries are opposed to the move, including Germany and Italy. They have not given a public reason but are understood to be concerned that it could lead to the Russian gas supplies on which they depend being cut off. 

Germany gets 49 per cent of its gas from Russia and Italy 46 per cent. France, which said yesterday a Swift ban should be a ‘last resort’, gets 24 per cent.

Could Russia cope?

Russia tried to establish its own payments system when it was threatened with a Swift ban over its 2014 annexation of Crimea, but it has struggled to gain international recognition. 

Some countries, including the US, are concerned that Moscow and Beijing could try to build a rival payments system if Russia is cut out, which they fear could weaken the influence of the West in the long term.

Will it happen?

EU leaders have effectively vetoed banning Russia from Swift for now. But Mr Johnson, along with like-minded allies in countries including Canada and Lithuania, are pushing for the issue to be reopened. 

US President Joe Biden has indicated he is willing to look at it again if the EU drops its opposition. 

Ukrainian leaders have warned that without it, Vladimir Putin will shrug off the impact of other sanctions.

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