EU Chief Kaja Kallas declares the bloc remains attractive, stresses Russia failed to win in Ukraine, and warns of peace negotiation risks.
EU Resilience and Attractiveness
EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs Kaja Kallas addressed narratives portraying Europe as a declining continent. She affirmed the EU remains a politically and economically attractive project, citing Canada as a non-European nation strongly aligned with European values.
Russia’s Strategic Failure
Kallas stated that despite over a decade of conflict, including the 2014 Crimea annexation and the full-scale 2022 invasion, Russia has not achieved its strategic objectives. She highlighted Russia’s inability to secure decisive military victory and its significant economic consequences, such as losing European energy markets and citizen emigration.
Threat of Premise Peace Negotiations
Kallas identified the greatest upcoming risk in peace negotiations not as a Russian military offensive, but as the Kremlin potentially securing political concessions without a battlefield victory. She urged EU members to establish a unified negotiating mandate with clear demands before talks begin.
Clinton’s Sharp Critique of Trump
Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton delivered a sharply critical address, accusing Donald Trump of undermining the foundations of the international system. She stressed Ukraine defends not only its sovereignty but the entire democratic Western system.
Rubio’s Mixed Transatlantic Message
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio emphasized the U.S. remains “a child of Europe” with intertwined destinies while criticizing past Western policies on migration and globalization. His remarks received mixed reactions from European leaders, some seeing it as alliance-building, others noting a lack of concrete support commitments.
Call for European Defense Autonomy
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and French President Emmanuel Macron underscored the need for a stronger and more autonomous European defense capability.



