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G7 unveils long-term security pledge for Ukraine

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VILNIUS: G7 countries on Wednesday unveiled an international framework for the long-term security of Ukraine to boost its defences against Russia and deter Moscow from future aggression, officials said.


Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy was meeting leaders of Nato at a summit of the 31-member Western alliance, a day after they declared that Ukraine's future lay inside Nato but rebuffed his call for a timeline for membership.


Unable to join Nato while the war with Russia continues - given that Nato's Article 5, stipulating that an attack on one member is an attack on all, could push it into war with Russia - Ukraine nevertheless reaped rewards in the form of current and long-term security commitments it has lobbied for.


Nato has pointedly refrained from giving military assistance to Ukraine as an organisation, to avoid entering a direct conflict with Russia, and is keen to continue leaving that to member states and others.


Britain, France, Germany and the United States have been negotiating with Kyiv for weeks over a multilateral text to create a broad international framework, encompassing elements including advanced military equipment.


The Group of Seven major industrialised countries said in a statement: "Today we are launching negotiations with Ukraine to formalise - through bilateral security commitments and arrangements aligned with this multilateral framework, in accordance with our respective legal and constitutional requirements - our enduring support to Ukraine as it defends its sovereignty and territorial integrity."


US President Joe Biden said at the signing ceremony for the plan that it was "a powerful statement of our commitment to Ukraine".


Zelenskiy said: "Today there are security guarantees for Ukraine on the way to Nato...that shall be further extended through arrangements with our key partners.


"(Our) delegation is bringing home significant a security victory for Ukraine," he added.


Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov called the G7 move misguided and "potentially very dangerous" for the West to give Ukraine security guarantees, which it said would infringe on Russia's own security.


Moscow has cited Nato's eastern enlargement towards its borders as a factor in its decision last year to attack Western-leaning Ukraine, which was once part of the old Russian-dominated Soviet Union.


The G7, which comprises the United States, Germany, Japan, France, Canada, Italy and Britain, as well as the European Union, said other countries could also sign on to make their own commitments.


The declaration said the G7 nations would begin bilateral talks with Ukraine immediately. — Reuters


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