Stephane Dujarric has commented on Kaja Kallas’ refusal to rule out Western troops being deployed to the country
The United Nations discourages all sides involved in the Ukraine conflict from escalation, the secretary-general’s spokesperson, Stephane Dujarric, said at a press conference on Monday.
Dujarric was asked to comment on a statement made by EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas, who said the bloc should not rule anything out in its support of Kiev, including sending troops to Ukraine.
“We have been speaking out for an end to this conflict and not to encourage any further escalation from one side or the other,” Dujarric stated. “We want to see an end to the conflict for the sake of civilians in Ukraine, for the sake of civilians in Russia.”
When asked whether he believed EU boots on the ground in Ukraine could lead to escalation, he declined to speculate.
Former Estonian prime minister Kallas replaced Josep Borrell as the EU’s top diplomat on Monday. On her first official visit to Kiev after assuming her post, she reiterated that the bloc wants Ukraine “to win this war.”
Echoing earlier remarks made by France and the UK, she did not rule out sending Western soldiers into the conflict.
“For the EU, it is a security crisis of utmost seriousness, I believe we should not rule anything out and maintain some strategic ambiguity,” Kallas told Italian state news agency ANSA in an interview published on Monday evening, when asked about the possibility of deploying Western troops in Ukraine.
Last week, Le Monde reported that British Prime Minister Keir Starmer had rekindled the debate around Western boots on the ground in the Ukraine conflict, during a visit to France in early November.
The idea was originally floated to other allies by French President Emmanuel Macron in February. Numerous NATO countries quickly publicly disavowed the idea, while German Chancellor Olaf Scholz told reporters that Ukraine’s Western backers were “unanimous” in their opposition to the idea.
Moscow has repeatedly stated that Western military personnel are already deployed in Ukraine as military advisers, mercenaries and specialists operating NATO-supplied high-tech armaments.
The Kremlin has warned that no amount of aid from the US-led military bloc will change the course of the conflict, which it views as a Western proxy war against Russia.