Welcome to the Brussels Edition. I’m Sam Stolton, EU competition reporter with Bloomberg, bringing you the latest from the EU. Make sure you’re signed up.
One major conflict down, one to go. After rubber-stamping an end to the war between Israel and Hamas, Donald Trump — the self-styled “president of peace” — has his sights fixed on forging an armistice between Ukraine and Russia. Trump’s proposed tête-à-tête with Russia’s Vladimir Putin on EU soil in Budapest drew cautious approval from the European Commission in Brussels today. The EU executive backs “any steps that lead to a just and lasting peace for Ukraine,” spokesman Olof Gill said, adding that if “the proposed meeting serves this purpose,” the institution would welcome it. But there’s no getting away from the reality that for the EU, there is an awkwardness in the choice of venue. European allies are likely to fret that selecting Budapest as the host city may have been a strategic ploy from Putin to drive a wedge between the EU and the US. While such geopolitical anxieties may be well-founded, it was Trump, rather than the Russian leader, who pitched Budapest as the meeting place, according to the Kremlin. In this sense, the US president — cognizant of Orban’s bonhomie with Putin — is leveraging his network of MAGA-allied leaders to target major geopolitical wins on the world stage. Photographer: Bloomberg Daybreak/Getty Images Regardless of who chose Budapest and why, it’s a move that ultimately diminishes the influence of the EU in any future peace agreement, as the renewed effort to halt fighting comes at a time when the bloc is scrambling to bolster its own defense readiness in response to Russia’s threat. The coming meeting — still yet to have a firm date — could also encounter a sanctions-related snag. While Putin and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov have only been hit by the EU with asset freezes rather travel bans, Brussels has implemented restrictions on flights that are Russian-controlled, Russian-registered or Russian-chartered. Under these measures, it would be very difficult for Putin to board a Russian flight into Budapest, unless Hungary’s Orban derogates from the rules — permittable in exceptional circumstances, which this surely is. The Hungarian prime minister — now playing an instrumental role in Ukraine’s future grasp for peace — will discuss this and more in calls with Putin today, as he prepares his capital for what could be a war-ending summit. |