Portuguese Prime Minister Luis
Montenegro (pictured) was in Brussels for Thursday’s emergency summit to thrash out
defence plans for Ukraine and the entire continent in the face of Russian
aggression and the lack of solidarity from the Trump administration.
Leaders from 26 of the 27
European nations attending the summit reached a commitment to work closely
together to bolster support for Ukraine and increase the continent's security.
Predictably, the only exception was Hungary’s Victor Orbán.
Mr Montenegro made it clear that the summit was of great importance. Speaking to reporters on the sideline of the meeting, Mr Montenegro said: “Our expectation is that we can take very big steps towards the EU’s participation in a peace process that everyone wants for Ukraine.”
He noted that the EU will provide €150 billion in loans to
member nations, but would not be drawn on the possibility of a snap election quite
soon in Portugal
As a loyal
supporter of the European Union for decades, and a founding member of NATO in
1949, Portugal, like nearly all other EU and BATO member states, is deeply
concerned about President Trump’s increasingly erratic and unpredictable decisions.
Portugal’s stance in the current
defence crisis is neither erratic nor unpredictable— nor is that of Europe’s
most influential leader, President Emmanuel Macron, who recently met with Mr Montenegro
during the French president’s state visit to Lisbon. Their position is
unambiguous: they will continue to back Ukraine against Russian aggression and fully
support the EU and NATO, with or without United States backing.
Prime Minister Montenegro and
the other European leaders are trying to work out the problem of money: how to
dramatically raise funds to meet the need for far greater defence spending.
As part of the latest
discussions in Brussels, the European Commission has proposed invoking an
emergency provision that would allow Portugal and all other EU nations to significantly
exceed hitherto defence spending limits. The plan includes loans guaranteed by
the EU budget.
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