European leaders at Berlin summit finalize US-backed protection force proposal for Ukraine ceasefire amid territorial disputes.
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Berlin Ukraine Summit: Protection force detailed, ceasefire push amid territorial deadlock

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Building on the initial Berlin summit agreement, European leaders—including new signatories from Poland, Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands, Norway, and EU presidents—finalized a proposal on December 15-16 for a US-backed multinational protection force to secure a Ukraine ceasefire. Zelenskyy eyes NATO-like guarantees, but territorial concessions remain unresolved.

The Berlin Ukraine Summit extended into December 16, 2025, with a joint declaration signed by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, leaders from France, the UK, Poland, Italy, Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, EU Council President António Costa, and Commission President Ursula von der Leyen. The Europe-led force, supported by the US, would aid Ukraine's 800,000-strong peacetime army, secure airspace and seas—including operations inside Ukraine—and monitor a potential ceasefire.

US President Donald Trump voiced optimism, calling it closer to peace than ever, though challenging. Merz hailed US guarantees as 'impressive progress.' Zelenskyy, deeming NATO membership unrealistic, seeks commitments treating attacks on Ukraine as attacks on all, akin to NATO's Article 5.

Territorial issues stalled: Zelenskyy rejected Russian demands for Donbas cities as unconstitutional; Russia deems monitors military targets. The US will convey outcomes to Moscow, potentially in Miami. Merz urged a Christmas ceasefire and EU action on 185 billion euros in frozen Russian assets.

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Discussions on X highlight optimism from European leaders like Merz on US-backed security guarantees making a ceasefire conceivable for the first time since 2022. Ukrainian voices emphasize no prior territorial concessions, favoring ceasefire along current lines in exchange for NATO-like protections. Skeptical reactions, including from Russian-aligned accounts, dismiss the multinational protection force proposal as escalatory and unrealistic without Russian buy-in. High-engagement posts from journalists and officials reflect diverse views on progress amid unresolved territorial deadlock.

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