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The bloc needs Moscow and vise versa, Slovakia’s Robert Fico has said
Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico has vowed to do everything he can to restore relations with Moscow once the fighting between Russia and Ukraine ends.
Since returning to power last year, Fico has stopped weapons deliveries from Bratislava to Kiev, and has consistently called for a diplomatic solution to the conflict. In May, the 60-year-old survived an assassination attempt, with a pro-Ukrainian activist firing several shots at him. The prime minister quickly recovered and was back at work within two months.
"If the war ends during the mandate of this government, I will do everything to restore economic and standard relations with Russia,” Fico stated during a press conference on Thursday. His government is set to lead the country until 2027.
The prime minister explained that he would do so because “the EU needs Russia, and Russia needs the EU, of course.”
At the same time, he said Slovakia would also “care very much about friendly relations with Ukraine.” Fico’s statements were made ahead of a meeting between Slovak and Ukrainian governments next week.
Read moreHe reiterated his stance that the conflict between Russia and Ukraine does not have a military solution.
"It is proven by the words of many politicians, who are already talking about compromises, that Ukraine should prepare for some sort of compromise,” he said.
According to the prime minister, one of those politicians is Czech Republic President Petr Pavel.
Pavel, who used to be a staunch supporter of Ukraine and advocated for the West to provide even more arms and ammunition to Kiev, told the New York Times last month that “the most probable outcome of the war will be that a part of Ukrainian territory will be under Russian occupation, temporarily.” He also said Ukraine should be “realistic about the support that they can achieve” from its foreign backers.
In June, Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed that the current difficulties in relations between Moscow and the EU could have been solved if the bloc’s leaders had “felt more confident and had more courage to defend their national interests.”
A month later, Putin described the state of relations between Russia and the EU as being “at its lowest point.”