EU top diplomat Kaja Kallas said Monday that this week could be crucial for the push to end the Ukraine war, as US representatives head to Moscow after talks with Kyiv’s negotiators.

“It could be a pivotal week for diplomacy. We heard yesterday that the talks in America were difficult but productive. We don’t know the results yet, but I will talk to the defence minister of Ukraine as well as foreign minister of Ukraine today,” Kallas said at a meeting of EU defence ministers.

President Donald Trump’s envoy Steve Witkoff will head to Russia on Monday, as Washington pushes to end the Kremlin’s war against its neighbor Ukraine.

Witkoff’s visit -- for expected talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday -- follows high-stakes negotiations on Sunday between top officials in Trump’s administration and a Ukrainian delegation in Florida.

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Kallas sidestepped a question on whether she trusted the United States to negotiate a good deal.

Instead, she said it would be better if Europe -- which has largely been sidelined by Washington -- were a part of diplomatic efforts involving Ukraine.

“The Ukrainians are there alone. If they were together with Europeans, they would definitely be much stronger. But I trust that the Ukrainians stand up for themselves,” she said.

In the meantime, she said that Europe needed to focus on making “Ukraine as strong as possible in order (for) them to be ready to stand up for themselves in this very, very difficult time”.

Hungary Drops Final Veto, Clearing €6.6B EU Air Defense Package for Ukraine
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Hungary Drops Final Veto, Clearing €6.6B EU Air Defense Package for Ukraine

Hungary has ended its opposition to a €6.6 billion EU support package for Ukraine under the European Peace Facility, Hungarian media reported on Friday. The funding is expected to strengthen Ukraine’s air defenses, while Budapest has also reportedly lifted its objections to opening the first cluster of Ukraine’s EU accession talks following an agreement on minority rights.

The EU is currently wrangling over a plan to provide Ukraine a mammoth 140-billion-euro loan funded by Russian frozen assets, but the proposal faces opposition from key player Belgium.

Kallas said the bloc was determined to reach a “result for the financing of Ukraine” at a December 18 leaders summit, saying “we are not going to leave” without a deal.

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