At the Élysée Palace in Paris on September 3, 2025, French President Emmanuel Macron, standing alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, revealed that political and military proposals from the “coalition of the determined” are now complete and awaiting formal approval.
“Thanks to the input prepared, documented and confirmed this afternoon at the level of defense ministers in strict secrecy, we can now say: this work is complete and ready for political approval,” Macron said.
“We have come a long way; our chiefs of staff have worked closely, and today I can say that we are ready. Today we have on the table a political proposal, a military proposal, and a proposal coming from 35 leaders to provide security guarantees to Ukraine,” Macron said.
The coalition, comprising leaders from 35 countries, prepared two core elements:
During their joint press conference, Emmanuel Macron emphasized that this force aims to guarantee peace—not escalate conflict—and act as a deterrent against any future aggression.
Macron outlined the coalition’s strategy in two complementary parts:
Macron confirmed that military chiefs have already documented and secured these commitments, enabling swift action upon receiving political approval.
Although none of the 26 nations is the United States, Macron disclosed a follow-up call with American President Donald Trump, during which U.S. support—particularly air support and intelligence sharing—is expected to be confirmed in the coming days.
European leaders also used their Paris summit to apply diplomatic pressure to Trump. Concerns prevail that without clear U.S. backing, Ukraine could be vulnerable. Especially if the political momentum shifts towards conceding a hasty peace, the threat of New Russia’s attack remains.
Moscow’s response was swift. The Kremlin ruler Vladimir Putin warned that any Western or foreign troops deployed on Ukrainian soil would be considered “legitimate targets,” rejecting the coalition’s guarantees as intolerable.
Moscow’s threat, which is not new, underscores the delicate balancing act the coalition must perform: ready and visible deterrence, yet carefully calibrated to avoid triggering direct confrontation.
The new security guarantee initiative—anchored in both deterrence and restoration of Ukrainian sovereignty—is pivotal for several reasons:
To summarize, here’s a clear breakdown of coalition components:
As European leaders await full political endorsement, the coalition’s initiative marks a turning point in Europe’s strategic posture. The “reassurance force” could become a lasting deterrent mechanism—not merely reactive, but forward-leaning.
For Ukraine, the commitments send a powerful message: once a truce is reached, the country won’t stand defenseless facing Russian aggressive imperialism. A multilateral force will instead support it, striving to preserve peace and uphold its sovereignty.
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