NewsZelensky and Biden to sign security pact amid growing tensions

Zelensky and Biden to sign security pact amid growing tensions

Reports on Biden and Zelensky. Agreement on the table
Reports on Biden and Zelensky. Agreement on the table
Images source: © East News | MANDEL NGAN
Mateusz Czmiel

30 May 2024 18:01

President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky and U.S. President Joe Biden will sign a bilateral security agreement in Italy, reports the Financial Times. This is expected to happen on the eve of the Peace Summit, which will be held on 15-16 June in Switzerland.

The Financial Times cites sources familiar with the matter.

"However, days before the peace summit, Zelenskyy and Biden are expected to sign a bilateral security agreement on the sidelines of the G7 meeting in Italy next month," it read.

Tension between Washington and Kyiv

The G7 summit of state leaders is scheduled for June 13- 15 in Italy. The publication's sources do not specify the exact day the agreement will be signed.

The FT notes that the agreement was reached in recent weeks, which "have been marked by increased tension in relations between Kyiv and Washington."

One of the top members of Zelensky's government, who spoke to the newspaper about U.S.-Ukraine relations, said, "We are more distant from each other than we have been since the beginning of the war. There is a very, very tense atmosphere."

Volodymyr Zelensky's frustration with Joe Biden stems from the fact that the U.S. president may not attend the peace summit in Switzerland because, as Biden announced, he will have obligations related to the ongoing election campaign across the ocean.

Officials point out that Kyiv is increasingly embittered by the U.S.'s lack of support for the peace summit initiative.

A series of controversies. delay, lack of progress

Several current and former Ukrainian officials and diplomats from G7 countries who spoke to the Financial Times point to a number of controversial issues.

These include a six-month delay in Congress approving U.S. military aid, the expected lack of significant progress towards Ukraine's NATO membership at the July Alliance summit in Washington, the Biden administration's ban on the use of American weapons by Kyiv on Russian territory, and Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian oil refineries.

Other tense moments include the dismissal of Chief Commander Valeriy Zaluzhnyi in February and Infrastructure Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov, as well as differences in the strategy regarding how Ukraine can achieve victory and what that victory might look like.

Several members of Zelensky's government expressed their concern about the methods used by the Ukrainian president in communicating with the United States. One of them said that Zelensky is "very irritated" with Biden, adding that they are worried about an "open provocation" from the White House. "Don't bite the hand that feeds you," said an official from Zelensky's entourage.

Let's recall that former U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said that the future bilateral security agreement with Ukraine would provide military aid in "various areas and help it move closer to NATO membership."

At the beginning of May, President Zelensky said that Ukraine is preparing seven new bilateral security agreements, including one with the United States.

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