Welcome to the Brussels Edition. I’m Suzanne Lynch, Bloomberg’s Brussels bureau chief, bringing you the latest from the EU each weekday. Make sure you're signed up.
Greetings from Day 2 of the leaders’ summit in Copenhagen, where the EU has been joined by heads of state from across Europe, including British Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. The European Political Community, as the gathering is known, was conceived by President Emmanuel Macron as a forum for non-EU and EU countries to get together and discuss shared challenges. First convened in the shadow of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, its power is as much symbolic as yielding concrete deliverables, but its focus is still very much on Ukraine. “It is our war, and if Ukraine loses it means our failure,” Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk told the gathering as he took the stage in a friendly fireside-chat format alongside Starmer, Macron and Moldovan President Maia Sandu, fresh from her election victory last weekend. Tusk warned that if Russia wins against Ukraine, Poland knows “it’s the end of our country.” Macron highlighted the progress Europe has made against Russia, noting that Finland and Sweden’s decision to join NATO had been a “big strategic defeat” for Moscow. Denmark's Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen walks with Volodymyr Zelenskiy in Copenhagen, on Oct. 1. Photographer: Mads Claus Rasmussen/Getty Images But beneath the show of unity, cracks were evident. The European Commission’s plan for a drone wall got a lukewarm reception from countries yesterday, with Italy and Spain arguing that defense plans must help the entire continent — not just the EU’s eastern flank. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz clashed with Hungarian leader Viktor Orban during the meeting over the latter’s overtures to Moscow, our Bloomberg team reported overnight. This morning, Belgian Prime Minister Bart de Wever doubled down on his resistance to the EU’s plan to tap up to €185 billion in Russian assets held in his country for reparation loans for Ukraine. The EU’s plan entails “huge amounts of money,” requiring guarantees for “a very long time,” he told journalists in Copenhagen. His comments come as Russia warned that it may nationalize and swiftly sell off foreign-owned assets in retaliation for any European moves to seize Russian holdings abroad. Separately, France confirmed that it had detained the captain of an oil tanker linked to Russia that was close to the Danish coast. Macron said it was important to identify and act on so-called shadow fleet vessels that have been evading sanctions, describing the business model as “totally industrialized.” “I suggest that in the framework of the coalition of the willing, with close coordination with NATO, we work to see how to optimize this common action,” he told the summit. |