President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky |
The
leaders of France, Germany, Russia, and Ukraine—the so-called Normandy Four
group—met yesterday, December 9 in Paris to renew negotiations to end the
five-year conflict in eastern Ukraine. While diplomatic momentum has grown in
recent months, high obstacles remain before all sides can reach a lasting
settlement.
A map shows territory controlled by Russian-backed forces in Eastern Ukraine. |
A Formula for Peace?
Volodymyr
Zelensky, a political novice and popular television comedian, won the Ukrainian
presidency this past spring with 73 percent of the vote, pushing a platform of
reform and peace. The Paris talks build off of some positive steps this fall,
including prisoner exchanges between the Ukrainian and Russian sides.
The
president has signed onto the “Steinmeier formula,” a 2016 proposal from Germany’s foreign minister that calls for
holding elections and potentially granting greater autonomy to the
separatist-held territories in exchange for Ukraine regaining control of its
border with Russia. The prospect of the disputed territories gaining special
self-governing status has aroused concern among some Ukrainians that Russia
will continue to wield major influence in the country’s affairs. Zelensky has
stressed that local elections would only be held if the sides resolve the
border issue and Russian forces drawback entirely—though Russia disputes that
it has any forces in Ukraine. “We need a
full withdrawal,” he told TIME in an
interview this month, “a full disarming of all illegal formations, military
formations, no matter the type, no matter the group, no matter the uniform, no
matter what weapons.”
Ukrainian
officials have said a final prisoner swap and cease-fire declaration are among
the preconditions for a discussion of bigger steps toward peace. The most
challenging questions during the Paris summit and after will be the sequencing
of demilitarization, elections, and border control, experts say.
What’s at Stake
Russia’s
annexation of Crimea and support for separatists—on the grounds it was
protecting ethnic Russians in Ukraine—spurred severe EU and U.S. sanctions
against Russia. The moves also stirred concerns about Russia’s intentions elsewhere in Eastern Europe, prompting
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) to bolster its deterrent, setting
up patrols in the three Baltic republics and Poland. If the parties can achieve
a peaceful resolution to the conflict, it could ease big-power tensions and
possibly open the door to closer cooperation with Moscow on other priorities,
such as counterterrorism and arms control.
A Ukrainian Army soldier stands in front of destroyed buildings on the front line. |
Washington’s Role
The
Paris summit will follow a negotiating format that excludes the United States
and European states except France and Germany. Still, the United States has
been a major actor in multilateral diplomacy involving Ukraine, and a source of
critical military aid to the country. The departure of special envoy Kurt Volker
and the broader U.S. political controversy over Ukraine threaten to sideline Washington from vital
diplomacy and influence vis-à-vis Russia, writes CFR Senior Fellow Stephen
Sestanovich.
What Comes Next
Prospects
for a diplomatic breakthrough are slim, experts say. More likely to happen at
Paris is progress on smaller steps such as facilitating prisoner exchanges,
easing movement across the makeshift front lines, and opening economic links
with the separatist enclaves.
The
talks will also mark the first face-to-face meeting between Zelensky and
Russian President Vladimir Putin, which will be closely watched for any
progress on allowing Russian natural gas to transit through Ukraine. The
countries’ current transit deal expires on December 31.
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