US reassures allies over Nord Stream 2 but says it’s a ‘reality’
Russian company Gazprom said on Friday it had finished construction of the pipeline, which will take natural gas to Germany via the Baltic Sea, bypassing Ukraine.
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s government fears Russia will use it as a geopolitical weapon and deprive Ukraine of billions of dollars in transit fees.
Hochstein visited Ukraine and Poland, which also criticised the US-German deal in July, “to talk and to give them reassurances”, he said on the sidelines of the Yalta European Strategy (YES) summit.
“Look, I think we have to shift the process from talking about what we all wish would have happened, that the project would not be completed, to the reality now that it’s going to be completed.”
Ukraine’s current transit deal with Russia expires in 2024. Moscow has not given a firm commitment on extending it.
Asked whether he was confident Ukraine would keep its transit status, Hochstein said: “I am 100 per cent confident that we will do everything we can, and that the Germans are committed to do everything they can, to make sure that that transit continues.”
Ukraine wants Nord Stream 2 stopped. If it is not, Ukraine has called on Washington and Berlin to outline specific guarantees on protecting Kyiv’s interests.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel was on Saturday visiting Poland.
“We are still waiting for the time when this (concrete steps) will be put on paper,” Andriy Yermak, the head of Zelenskiy’s office, said at the YES summit.
He said that “today Ukraine is forced to believe not words but real steps”.
Washington has not said what actions it would take against Russia.
“There is a contract in place until 2024, so we have some breathing room here to make sure that they live up to the contract that they have today and that it doesn’t end in 2024,” Hochstein said.
The U.S.-Germany deal stipulated a new US$1 billion “Green Fund for Ukraine” aimed at improving the country’s energy independence.
“We also have to start working with Ukraine together on transitioning the energy economy here to match what’s happening in the rest of the world, and especially in Europe,” Hochstein said.
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