German chancellor says Ukraine 'cannot currently meet' NATO membership requirements
As the G7 meeting was brought to an end in Japan, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said on Sunday that Ukraine
still does not qualify to join the NATO alliance. While Ukraine would
like to become part of the alliance, there are several hurdles that are
currently keeping it from doing so - one of which is that the country
cannot actively be engaged in a war.
While the meeting was successful, with the Ukrainian leader securing $375 million more of American taxpayer dollars to fend off Russia, it does not appear that Zelensky is anywhere close to securing membership in NATO, per Breitbart.
The report also mentioned that Ukraine has also managed to get the
go-ahead from Washington to supply American-made F-16 fighter jets to
the country. However, it is unclear if a peace deal was discussed during
the meeting over the weekend.
Scholz also said: “Now it’s about supporting Ukraine, defending its
country. For the future, there will also be talk about security
guarantees, that is clear. These security guarantees include the
question of how strongly we will equip Ukraine with weapons in the
future. After the war, Ukraine will be equipped with weapons of Western
production.
“It is also clear that we then have to discuss which security guarantees
can be given in a post-war situation. But we are far from there yet.
Now we are concentrating on what is coming up.”
The report noted that if Ukraine were to join NATO, it would require
that all other member states would go to war on behalf of the small,
Eastern European country. Scholz said that “NATO’s criteria include a
whole series of conditions that Ukraine cannot currently meet.”
The Pew Research Center recently released a report,
suggesting that most Americans view NATO and Ukraine in a possible
light, whereas Americans view Russia as the enemy. However, the same
report suggested that Americans have expressed mixed confidence
in two of NATO’s most prominent leaders, including French President
Emmanuel Macron and Scholz. The research went on to note that 35 percent
of Americans had never even heard of Germany’s leader, whereas 24
percent said that they had never heard of Macron.