Estonia PM Warns Costa's Kremlin Outreach Undermines Ukraine Support
L'essentiel
- Estonia's PM Kristen Michal warns EU Council President António Costa's diplomatic outreach to the Kremlin could undermine bloc support for Ukraine.
- Michal insists any peace talks must be led by Kyiv, not the EU, to avoid constraining pressure on Russia.
Résumé généré par IA
Pourquoi c'est important
Estonia's prime minister has warned that diplomatic backchannels opened by European Council President António Costa to the Kremlin could undermine the EU's support for Ukraine.
BRUSSELS — Efforts by European Council President António Costa to open diplomatic backchannels to the Kremlin could undermine the bloc’s support for Ukraine, Estonia’s prime minister has warned in the most staunch condemnation of the move yet.
In comments to POLITICO following the first day of a summit of leaders in Brussels, Kristen Michal said Russia continues to reject any realistic path to peace — and insisted any diplomacy must be led by Kyiv.
“The European Union cannot assume the role of mediator in these negotiations,” he said. “The moment the EU — or any individual country — positions itself as a mediator, it inevitably constrains its own ability to take the very actions required to support Ukraine and increase pressure on Russia.”
The furore comes after confirmation Costa’s influential chief of staff Pedro Lourtie reached out to a senior Russian official, in a move that raised eyebrows among countries that say they were not informed of the plan. The EU members warn Moscow is as set on its path of aggression as it was when it launched its full-scale invasion over four years ago. Russia has amped up its indiscriminate bombing of civilian sites and critical infrastructure in recent weeks.
“Suggestions that alternative channels or backdoor diplomatic tracks are needed are misguided. The objective remains unchanged: [Russian President Vladimir] Putin must ultimately accept the conditions put forward by Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Ukraine,” Michal said.
“History offers a clear warning about attempts to pursue alternative negotiating frameworks with dictators. Democratic nations end up negotiating among themselves over concessions, while the dictator simply chooses from the menu of options presented to him, exploiting divisions and weakening the democratic world.”
The reaction has seen rare criticism from leaders towards Costa, who has spent the first two years of his mandate painstakingly working to broker consensus among the bloc’s countries.
Officials have insisted the outreach was entirely within Costa’s mandate. It was done in close coordination with both EU capitals and with Ukraine and no actual negotiations begun, they say.
“What we are talking about is brief contacts with no exchange on substance — diplomats doing their job,” said one EU official with knowledge of the approach, granted anonymity to speak freely. “The contacts made at this point had the mere objective of establishing a channel of communication in order to, when the moment comes, have a diplomatic channel with Russia to defend EU’s interests.”
Questions ouvertes
- What specific conditions were discussed in the brief contacts?
- Will other EU members support Estonia's position?
- What are the long-term implications for EU-Russia relations?





