Every year young people from around the world don grey suits and serious looks to participate in the “Model United Nations”, a kind of make-believe UN for aspiring diplomats.
Europe has its own such programme, known as the European External Action Service (EEAS). The only difference is that this one is for adults, is hugely expensive, and requires participants to sacrifice every last shred of their professional dignity.
Like a tired reality-show format (The Biggest Loser comes to mind), this sad display pops up on our screens with startling regularity. The latest cringe-inducing episode starred Kaja Kallas, the former Estonian prime minister, currently playing a recurring cameo role as the EU’s “High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy”.
Asked last week whether Europe had been involved in the US-Russian peace plan for Ukraine – arguably the most significant negotiation over European security since the Second World War – the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy replied: “Not that I know of.”
At least she was honest. The response was revealing, both for Kallas’ admission that she wasn’t involved and for her implication that even if others were, she wouldn’t necessarily know about it.
We now know that Kallas wasn’t alone. Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, French President Emmanuel Macron – along with every other European leader, large and small – were also kept in the dark.
The photos from last weekend’s gathering in Geneva leave little doubt about Europe’s role: On one side of the table sat US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and his delegation; on the other, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s emissary Andriy Yermak and the Ukrainian faction.
European officials who were there appear to have been lurking in the corridors, trying to peddle their own peace plan and being ignored. As if to underscore their helplessness, von der Leyen weighed in from South Africa with what looked more like a hostage video than serious diplomacy.
“The centrality of the European Union in securing peace for Ukraine must be fully reflected,” she insisted.
Alas, wishing it won’t make it so.
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