European leaders are skeptical of President Donald Trump’s efforts to broker a peace agreement between Ukraine and Russia. The European Union’s chief diplomat stated that Russian President Vladimir Putin is not genuinely interested in achieving peace.
Trump mentioned on Thursday that his administration has engaged in productive discussions with Russia. However, he did not provide details on any concrete advancements towards resolving the conflict in Ukraine.
Several NATO members and longstanding allies of the United States are growing increasingly dissatisfied with President Trump’s contentious remarks regarding Ukraine. These statements are viewed as a potential consequence of Washington’s attempts to improve relations with Moscow.
“[The] U.S. is talking to Russia, and you have to establish contacts,” EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas told Fox News Digital in a sit-down interview. “But right now, Russia doesn’t really want peace.

Kaja Kallas (Nicolas Landemard/Anadolu via Getty Images)
“In terms of … international security, we need to work together with the Americans, who have been our allies for a very, very long time,” she said. “And we have been there for America.”
Kallas, who served as the first female prime minister of Estonia, pointed to the sacrifices that NATO troops made in aiding the U.S. fight in the War on Terror.
“We, as Estonia, lost as many soldiers per capita as the United States,” she said. “We were there for you when you asked for help.
“That’s why it’s painful to hear messages that, you know, we don’t care about our European allies. It should work both ways,” Kallas added.
The EU chief diplomat has repeatedly urged the U.S. and European nations not to let Putin succeed in dividing the West over Ukraine.
Ultimately, she argued that the U.S. needs to remain a steadfast partner with Europe in deterring Russian aggression because it is not only Putin that poses an active threat to the collective alliance.

Chinese President Xi Jinping, left, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Iranian Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un are all viewed as major threats to the West. (Getty Images)
Kallas visited Washington this week to meet with Secretary of State Marco Rubio and lawmakers about vital issues that affect the EU-U.S. security partnership, though her meeting with Rubio was canceled.
The State Department did not confirm why the meeting was canceled without being rescheduled during her stay in Washington, though Kallas said that after positive discussions with Rubio at the Munich Security Conference earlier this month, she if confident communication will remain ongoing.
“There’s a lot to discuss, from Ukraine to the Middle East, also what is happening in Africa, Iran – where we have definitely mutual interest to cooperate – and not to mention China as well,” Kallas said. “There are a lot of topics that we can do [work] together with our transatlantic partners.”