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European Council summit starts – snap analysis

Jennifer Rankin

Jennifer Rankin

Brussels correspondent

European leaders have begun summit talks in Brussels on defence and the economy that are expected to stretch into the night.

Shortly Volodymyr Zelenskyy will brief EU leaders on his call with Donald Trump.

This won’t be a day for big decisions, but leaders could spar over how to fund EU defence investments and “buy European”. Arriving at the summit Greece’s prime minister Kyriákos Mitsotakis urged fellow leaders to “move in a more ambitious direction” by agreeing on EU grants to member states to buy defence equipment. In the frugal corner, Dutch prime minister Dick Schoof, offered a flat no to any further moves towards common debt that would be used to create those grants: “We are opposing eurobonds,” he told reporters. “It is not new, it is what we always say.”

France can be expected to maintain its position on “buy European”, having secured a victory with proposed €150bn loan fund that completely excludes countries from defence contracts without a defence and security agreement with the bloc. Finland’s prime minister Petteri Orpo has said that Europe had to build its defence in close cooperation with the US.

As earlier this month, it is likely 26 leaders will pledge support for Ukraine – without Hungary. In the draft summit text, seen by the Guardian, EU leaders will call on Russia “to show real political will to end the war”.

But a plan from the EU’s foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas to send immediate military aid to Ukraine appears to have been downgraded. Rather than the initial idea to send tens of billions to Ukraine, member states are being asked to provide ammunition.

Some member states, notably the Netherlands and some Baltic countries, want to see a €40bn EU pledge of military aid for Ukraine for 2025. But that idea seems to have fizzled out, with France, Italy and others against an EU plan, saying bilateral aid can meet Kyiv’s needs.

The Kallas plan was an attempt to get relative underspenders, France, Italy and Spain, to give more to Ukraine.

European Council President Antonio Costa and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen attend a European Union summit in Brussels, Belgium.
European Council President Antonio Costa and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen attend a European Union summit in Brussels, Belgium. Photograph: Stéphanie Lecocq/Reuters
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Fury in Italy over Meloni’s comments on Ventotene manifesto

Angela Giuffrida

Italy correspondent

The President of the Council of Ministers, Giorgia Meloni, in the Chamber of Deputies ahead of the European Council. Photograph: Stefano Carofei/Sintesi/SIPA/REX/Shutterstock

Elsewhere in Europe, there was a fiery debate in the Italian parliament on Thursday following prime minister Giorgia Meloni’s attacks against the “Ventotene manifesto” – one of the founding texts of the EU drafted in 1941 by anti-fascist activists imprisoned on the island of Ventotene.

The controversy began on Wednesday, when Meloni ended a speech in the lower house ahead of an EU council meeting by criticising those who had cited the manifesto during a pro-Europe rally in Rome on Saturday. “I hope that those who quote it did not read it, as the alternative would be frightening,” she said.

Meloni appeared to be referring to passages in the text in which its writers called for a “European revolution” to ensure their demands of the continent “being more socialist” were met, as well as calling for the abolishment of private property.

“I don’t know if this is your Europe, but it’s certainly not mine,” said Meloni, whose Brothers of Italy is an offspring of a neofascist party.

Opposition parties were outraged and parliament had to be temporarily suspended.

Raffaela Paita, a senator with the centrist Italia Viva party, said it was “shameful” of Meloni to take the sentences “written by exiled heroes” out of context.

“What happened yesterday dishonours the country and does not give justice to Europe and the anti-fascist resistance,” she said.

Meloni’s comments contradict a tweet she posted in 2016, when former prime minister Matteo Renzi hosted a summit on Ventotene with the then German chancellor Angela Merkel and François Hollande, the former French president, in a show of European unity after the Brexit referendum – in which she praised the writers of the manifesto for appearing to have “clearer” ideas on Europe than the trio.

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