EU ‘not ready’ to give Ukraine date for membership, says bloc’s foreign policy chief Kallas
Ukraine applied to join the EU days after Russia’s invasion almost four years ago, seeking to anchor itself to the West

European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said on Sunday she felt that EU governments were not ready to give Ukraine a date for membership despite a demand to do so from President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Zelensky repeated on Saturday that he needed a date as part of security guarantees for a final peace package with Russia.
“My feeling is that the member states are not ready to give a concrete date,” Kallas told a panel at the Munich Security Conference. “There’s a lot of work to be done.”
Ukrainian EU membership in 2027 was pencilled into a 20-point peace plan discussed between the United States, Ukraine and the European Union, diplomats have said, as a measure to ensure Ukraine’s economic prosperity after the war ends.

But many EU governments believe that date, or any other fixed date, is completely unrealistic because EU accession is a merit-based process, moving forward only when there is progress in adjusting a country’s laws to EU standards.