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The conflict between Moscow and Kiev cannot be resolved with “more weapons,” Sahra Wagenknecht has said
Berlin should make more active diplomatic efforts if it wants the ongoing conflict between Moscow and Kiev to end, German MP Sahra Wagenknecht told Funke Media Group on Friday. “More weapons” for Ukraine would not bring peace to Europe, she argued.
The veteran politician has repeatedly criticized Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s government over its stance on the Ukraine conflict, asserting that Berlin’s current policy only helps to fan the flames of war. “We need more diplomatic efforts,” said Wagenknecht, once of Left Party’s parliamentary faction but who established her own party – the Sahra Wagenknecht Alliance (BSW) – this year.
“There is a good peace plan by Brazil and China. I hope that Germany and the EU will support such initiatives,” Wagenknecht said. In May, those two nations presented a joint six-point proposal calling for de-escalation, negotiations, and an international peace conference recognized by both Russia and Ukraine.
Read moreBrasilia and Beijing tried to advance their initiative at a 17-nation meeting on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in September. Kiev immediately rejected their plan, calling it “unacceptable.” In addition, Ukraine’s Vladimir Zelensky branded it “destructive.”
Moscow welcomed China’s and Brazil’s peace proposals and expressed appreciation that they have received international backing. It still expressed its doubts about Kiev’s willingness to engage in any such talks.
In Wagenknecht’s view, Germany should put pressure on Zelensky to “force” him to agree to a certain compromise. China could exert its influence on Moscow to make talks possible, she said. “There will be no peace without compromise,” the politician stated.
Read moreThe lawmaker also warned that current Western policy towards the Ukraine conflict is “insanely dangerous” since it lets NATO get “drawn ever deeper into this war.” If the US-led bloc becomes a party to the conflict, that would lead to a direct confrontation with Moscow, she warned. “And this conflict will then very quickly escalate into a nuclear war,” she believes.
When pressured by journalists on whether she was just doing Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “bidding,” Wagenknecht replied that it was “not about being a friend or enemy to Russia, but about peace in Europe and [ending] the war in Ukraine.”
“Without peace, everything else is nothing,” the politician said, adding that it was high time Germany became “an internationally respected voice that mediates in conflicts and advocates diplomacy.”
Moscow has repeatedly warned that Western military aid to Kiev drags NATO ever closer to getting directly involved in the ongoing hostilities. This summer, Putin said that Western support for Ukrainian strikes deep into Russian territory is a significant escalation that could spark an “asymmetric” response. Last month, he also suggested changes to Russia’s nuclear doctrine that would particularly allow a nuclear response in case of a conventional attack by a non-nuclear state that is backed by a nuclear state.