This
weekend, a secluded Swiss resort above Lake Lucerne will be transformed
as dozens of world leaders and thousands of soldiers and police descend
on Bürgenstock.
More than 90
countries and global institutions are attending the event, which aims
to discuss basic principles for ending the conflict in Ukraine.
The
Swiss hope that the Ukraine summit might produce the first tentative
sketch marks for a peace process, some 28 months after Russia invaded
its neighbour.
It is the biggest gathering for Ukraine since the full-scale invasion.
But
with key players like China staying away, and Russian President
Vladimir Putin issuing a new ultimatum - demanding Ukraine’s
capitulation and calling that a peace proposal - expectations of
significant progress are low.
Russia has not been invited.
For Ukraine, the mere fact this meeting is taking place is positive.
Politicians
in Kyiv have been hailing every confirmed participant as a gesture of
support. For them, the giant summit should demonstrate to Moscow that
the world stands on the side of Ukraine - and of international law.
It comes at a tough time.
There
has been a new Russian offensive in the northeast, near Kharkiv, and
missiles are slamming into homes and power plants across Ukraine with
renewed intensity.
So size matters when it comes to the summit. But so does the substance.
"It’s
important to establish a political and legal framework for future
peace. To show that peace can only be achieved in the framework of
Zelensky’s 10 points," Ukrainian MP Oleksandr Merezhko sets out the case
from Kyiv. "That includes the territorial integrity of Ukraine and its
sovereignty."
He is referring to a
peace formula put forward in late 2022 by Ukraine's president that
insists on compelling Russia to return all the occupied land.
Ukraine
now wants to rally as many countries as possible behind its formula,
putting "psychological pressure" on Russia to accept such terms, should
it come to that stage.
Right now, that looks unlikely.
This
summit was first mooted when the situation on the battlefield looked
more promising for Kyiv: a prime time to try to shape the terms of any
future peace deal.
Since then the dynamic has shifted.
"I
think the constituency that believes this may not be a war that’s
winnable for Ukraine is growing," argues Sam Greene of the Centre for
European Policy Analysis, or CEPA.
He
points to a "significant chunk" of the US foreign policy establishment
who believe Ukraine should "cut its losses", as well as the rise in
support in Europe for right-wing parties more sympathetic to Moscow.
"I
think one thing this event is meant to do, is to galvanise support
behind Ukraine’s vision of an acceptable outcome," Professor Greene
says.
But the turnout is less promising than Ukraine and Switzerland once hoped.
Joe Biden will not come in person, a
decision that upset Mr Zelensky. And the attempts to get key countries
from the "Global South" – not instinctive allies of Ukraine – to sign
up, were only partially successful.
India, Brazil and China are all either no-shows or sending low level representatives.
Russian
officials have been lining up to dismiss the event as insignificant. It
is "worthless" and a "dead end", according to Russia's Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov. But Moscow has been pushing its allies to boycott the
summit nonetheless.
"That is a
minus," Oleksandr Merezhko admits. "It seems China decided to support
its strategic partner without limits, Russia, not the peace process: the
aggressor, not the peace."
On the eve of the event, Vladimir Putin
tried to drop another spanner in the works by outlining his own
conditions for a supposed peace: the man who invaded Ukraine,
unprovoked, now wants Kyiv to capitulate.
Amongst
other things, Mr Putin demands Ukraine hand over all four regions that
Russia claims to have annexed, including areas that remain under Kyiv’s
control.
Kyiv dismissed that right away as "ludicrous".
The
meeting on Lake Lucerne will home in on three of the least contentious
points in President Zelensky’s peace formula: the issues of nuclear
security, getting food to global markets and getting abducted Ukrainian
children and prisoners back home.
Straying beyond that is unlikely to be productive.
Not right now, when neither Ukraine nor Russia is ready to give up the fight.
"I
think from the Ukrainian perspective, looking at what’s going on the
frontlines, what they really need is not a commitment to peace,
certainly not at any cost," Sam Greene argues, of Kyiv’s allies.
"They need a commitment to winning the war."
The US president is notable by his absence from the event, but Vice-President Kamala Harris (L) is attending
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