Paris:French President Emmanuel Macron will sign a bilateral security agreement with his Ukrainian counterpart, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, on Friday in Paris to provide "long-term support" to the war-ravaged country which has been battling Russia's full-scale invasion for nearly two years.
The French presidency said in a statement Thursday that Macron and Zelenskyy's bilateral meeting in late afternoon will be followed by a news conference and a working dinner at the Elysee presidential palace. It did not release specific details about the agreement.
Macron said earlier this year that France was negotiating a bilateral deal on the model the one Ukraine recently agreed with the United Kingdom, which covers 10 years and provides a package worth 2.5 billion pounds ($3.2 billion) over the next fiscal year. It is the largest the U.K. has given to Ukraine since the war began.
A French official, speaking anonymously because he was not allowed to disclosed the details of the deal, said the agreement aims to "provide long-term support" to Ukraine as well as sending a "message of determination."
He said it was part of a "collective approach" from the Group of Seven most advanced economies, as per commitments made at a NATO summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, in July.
The Group of Seven then vowed to provide weapons and military equipment, including combat airpower, as well as more military training for Ukraine's beleaguered army. Zelenskyy asked that these assurances last at least until Ukraine joins NATO.