Major NATO state balks at Ukraine’s demand
Italy will not allow its missiles to be used against Russia, Rome’s foreign minister has said
Italy will not allow its weapons to be used by Ukraine to strike Russian territory, Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani has said.
A number of European NATO members and public figures across the West have responded to unconfirmed media reports that US President Joe Biden had lifted the restrictions on Kiev’s use of long-range missiles provided by the West, something Vladimir Zelensky had been demanding for months. Washington has neither confirmed nor denied the claim.
“Our position on the use of weapons by Ukraine does not change, they can only be used inside Ukrainian territory,” Tajani told reporters on Monday in Brussels, on the sidelines of the meeting of EU foreign ministers.
Rome is also “in favor of a peace conference in the presence of the Russians, the Chinese, the Indians and the Brazilians,” Italy’s top diplomat added. “I hope that Beijing can play a positive role in making Moscow understand that this senseless war must be stopped.”
The US and its allies have placed certain restrictions on the use of the weapons they have supplied to Kiev since 2022, in order to maintain plausible deniability regarding their involvement in the conflict with Russia.
Zelensky has requested the removal of these limitations since this spring, presenting this measure as the key pillar of his “victory plan.” He has argued that the US-supplied ATACMS missiles, British ‘Storm Shadows’ and French SCALPs could be game-changers for Kiev.
Moscow has repeatedly warned the West that any such move would amount to a direct involvement in the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Russian President Vladimir Putin has pointed out that Kiev is incapable of using long-range missiles without relying on NATO satellites and military personnel to develop targeting and firing solutions. This is not a matter of the US “giving permission” to Ukraine, but crossing the threshold of direct involvement, Putin told reporters in September.
Russia’s top lawmaker, State Duma chairman Vyacheslav Volodin, said on Monday that Moscow would have to respond to any such attack by Kiev, including with “new weapons systems” that have not been previously deployed to Ukraine.
Moscow’s response will be “adequate and tangible,” Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Monday.
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