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Several NATO and EU members consider sending troops to Ukraine, Slovak PM claims

Several NATO and European Union nations are considering sending soldiers to Ukraine, according to Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico.

Fico, who has previously opposed sending military supplies to Ukraine, claimed that global leaders are discussing whether to send reinforcements to Eastern Europe during a Paris conference over the war on Monday.

“I will limit myself to say that these theses (in preparation for the Paris meeting) imply a number of NATO and EU member states are considering that they will send their troops to Ukraine on a bilateral basis,” Fico said in a televised briefing.

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico claimed that NATO and European Union nations were considering sending troops to Ukraine. REUTERS
Fico’s comments come as Ukraine is experiencing an ammo shortage in the front lines against Russia. Hector Adolfo Quintanar Perez/ZUMA Press Wire / SplashNews.com

“I cannot say for what purpose and what they should be doing there,” he added, noting that he would not allow any soldier from Slovakia to be sent to Ukraine.

Most of the 20 NATO and the European Union nations attending the Paris conference at the Elysee Palace have not responded to Fico’s claims.

Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala, however, has come forward to say that “the Czech Republic certainly is not preparing to send any soldiers to Ukraine”

While NATO members, including the US, have supplied Ukraine with billions of dollars in weapons and ammunition, they have reiterated that the West wants to avoid direct conflict with Russia as it could lead to global war.

“Neither NATO nor NATO allies are party to the conflict,” NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg emphasized in a statement on Feb. 14.

French President Emmanuel Macron, left, welcomed Fico at a Paris summit aimed at showing a united front against Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. AP

During Monday’s Paris conference, French President Emmanuel Macron echoed the need to avoid direct conflict but called on European leaders to continue to support Ukraine as the war with Russia is expected to intensify in the coming months.

“We are in the process of ensuring our collective security, for today and tomorrow,” Macron said at the conference, held just days after the war in Ukraine entered its third year. “Russia cannot and must not win that war.”

An adviser for Macron told reporters at the meeting that a goal of the conference was to send a message to Putin that he “won’t win in Ukraine,” and show support for the ally nation after suffering a loss in Avdiivka.

A man checks his car destroyed by a Russian drone strike in Dnipro, Ukraine, on Monday. REUTERS

“Our goal is to crush this idea he wants us to believe that he would be somehow winning,” the adviser said.

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also spoke in a video message to Paris, urging global leaders to back his nation lest they fall and prevent the Kremlin from expanding further into the continent.

“We must ensure that Putin cannot destroy our achievements and cannot expand his aggression to other nations,” he said.

With Post wires