Marco Rubio and Steve Witkoff to visit Paris for talks on Russian invasion of Ukraine, US confirms – Europe live | European Union


Rubio, Witkoff to visit Paris this week for talks on Russian invasion of Ukraine, US confirms

Further to earlier reports from France (13:25), we now have a formal confirmation from the US state department that Marco Rubio and Steve Witkoff will travel to Paris for “talks with European counterparts” on advancing president Donald Trump’s plan to end the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

They will arrive in France today, and leave on Friday, the statement said.

“While in Paris, [Rubio] will also discuss ways to advance shared interests in the region,” the statement added.

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Slovakia’s Fico confirms plans to attend 9 May parade in Moscow, rejects EU’s criticism

Despite another warning from the EU, Slovak prime minister Robert Fico has just reiterated his intention to attend the Russian Victory Day celebrations in Moscow on 9 May (12:50).

Croatian prime minister Andrej Plenkovic welcomes Slovakia’s prime minister Robert Fico in Zagreb, Croatia. Photograph: Antonio Bronić/Reuters

Speaking at a press conference alongside Croatian prime minister Andrej Plenković, Fico said his view was “rooted” in his understanding of politics and history, as he spoke of hunderds of memorials dedicated to Red Army soldiers, “literally across the entire territory of Slovakia.”

We know who liberated us … No one can take it away from us, no one can tell me we were liberated from the West, when we were liberated from the East,” he said.

Fico argued that he takes part in all international commemorative events related to the end of the second world war, recalling his visits in the Normandy, the Arlington National Cemetery in the US, and his upcoming visit to London to pay tribute to RAF pilots.

He explained that during his visit to Moscow he would “pay tribute to people who died when liberating Slovakia, Czechoslovakia, and civil victims,” adding that in his view “historically, the nations of the former Soviet Union had the largest role in the fall of Hitler’s Germany.”

The Slovak prime minister said that during his visit he would lay a wreath at the tomb of the Unknown Warrior in Moscow and take part in the Immortal Regiment, a march commemorating those who died in the war.

“I feel absolutely comfortable about my visit,” he said, stressing the need to “have dialogue” with Russia.

Fico said that Slovakia would also send a representative to any commemorations in Ukraine, with its delegation led by the country’s foreign minister “or someone else, as I cannot be in two places at the same time.”

He also expressed his frustration with the criticism from the EU, saying he “would never allow himself to criticise the prime minister of your country for deciding to do something based on their historical truth.”

Directly criticising EU’s foreign policy chief, he wrapped his comments up saying mockingly that “I will be in Moscow, even at the cost of, as Kallas said, ‘this not being taken lightly’”.

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