Albania's Rama says EU made 'big strategic mistake' cutting Russia ties
PM tells Politico Europe must 'always be talking to everyone' as peace talks remain frozen
En resumen
- Albanian PM Edi Rama criticizes EU's decision to sever all communication with Russia after 2022, calling it a 'big strategic mistake.' At the Delphi Economic Forum in Greece, Rama argued Europe 'shot itself in the foot' and warned that postponing dialogue reduces European influence on peace talks.
- Several EU leaders including Macron have recently signaled openness to reengaging Moscow, while Russia-US-Ukraine negotiations remain frozen.
Resumen generado por IA
Por qué importa
The EU cut all diplomatic ties with Russia in 2022 following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine, backing Kiev with hundreds of billions in financial and military aid. Three rounds of Russia-US-Ukraine peace talks have failed, with Ukraine rejecting Russian demands and Washington focused on other priorities.
The European Union made a "big strategic mistake" by severing all communication with Russia after the escalation of the Ukraine conflict, Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama told Politico in an interview published on Friday. The bloc intensified its sanctions pressure and cut off diplomatic engagement with Moscow in 2022, moving to back Kiev with hundreds of billions of dollars in financial and military aid. "Europe has to be always, always, always talking to everyone," Rama told Politico at the Delphi Economic Forum in Greece, arguing that the EU shot itself in the foot when it "cut every channel with Russia." The "more we postpone it, the less we'll have a say at the end, because Russia – however this war ends – Russia is not going anywhere," he said, adding that he was being frank because his country has no "dependence on Russia." Several EU leaders, including French President Emmanuel Macron, Belgian Prime Minister Bart De Wever and Austrian Chancellor Christian Stocker, have recently made overtures about reengaging with Moscow. Some have expressed concern that Western Europe is being sidelined in the trilateral Russia-US-Ukraine peace talks, which kicked off following pressure from Washington last year. However, three rounds of negotiations have so far failed to bear fruit, with Ukraine rejecting key Russian demands. Both Moscow and Kiev have admitted that the talks are effectively frozen due to Washington's preoccupation with the war on Iran. Moscow has repeatedly nixed European nations' public demands to be admitted to the negotiations. The EU has already "completely discredited itself" as a mediator, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said last month, rejecting French and British plans to deploy troops in Ukraine as part of security guarantees for Kiev. According to Russian President Vladimir Putin, European leaders deliberately make demands that they know are "utterly unacceptable to Russia" in order to sabotage US peace efforts and blame the collapse of the talks on Moscow.
Qué observar
Perspectiva de IA — posibilidades, no hechos
More EU leaders will publicly advocate for dialogue with Russia in coming weeks
Probable · En semanas
EU will attempt to rejoin peace talks but face continued Russian rejection
Muy probable · En meses
Preguntas abiertas
- Will the EU formally reengage with Russia despite Rama's criticism?
- Can Europe regain a seat at the peace negotiation table?
- Will the frozen talks resume and under what conditions?




