Wednesday, December 3, 2025 - NATO countries pledged on Wednesday, December 3, to buy hundreds of millions more dollars of US arms for Ukraine, sending a strong signal of continued support despite ongoing US-led peace talks with Moscow. Foreign ministers from the 32-nation alliance gathered in Brussels to discuss Washington’s push to end the fighting.
The gathering comes shortly after US envoys appeared to fail
to make a major breakthrough in five hours of talks with Russian President
Vladimir Putin in Moscow.
NATO chief Mark Rutte emphasized the need to strengthen
Ukraine's position regardless of the pace of negotiations. Rutte stated, The
peace talks are ongoing, that’s good, but at the same time, we have to make
sure that whilst they take place — and we are not sure when they will end —
that Ukraine is in the strongest possible position to keep the fight going”
As part of this commitment, Germany, Poland, Norway, The
Netherlands, and Canada announced they would together commit approximately one
billion dollars more to a scheme to buy American weapons for Ukraine.
Norway’s Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide affirmed the
alliance’s resolve, saying, “Ukraine needs to stay strong and we, the allies in
the largest and most successful military alliance in history, need to stay
firm, and we need to stay committed.”
Allies at the meeting used the platform to demand that the
Russian President end the violence and approach peace talks seriously. British
foreign minister Yvette Cooper stated that Putin “should end the bluster and
the bloodshed and be ready to come to the table and to support a just and
lasting peace for Ukraine.”
The ministers also firmly pushed back against recent
comments from the Russian President that he was "ready" for war with
Europe.
Finland’s Elina Valtonen dismissed the remarks as an
intimidation tactic, noting: "It’s the rhetoric that Russia is making use
of in order to intimidate us, and we shouldn’t take such talks too seriously.
We have very strong capabilities as NATO, as Europe, and we are ramping up by
the day.
The US delegation was led by a deputy, as top diplomat Marco
Rubio skipped the meeting. This absence risked reinforcing the impression that
Europe is being left on the sidelines of President Donald Trump’s diplomatic
efforts to end the conflict.

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