President Barack Obama and German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday said the U.S. and Europe are united in trying to end the conflict in Ukraine. But President Obama said he is weighing providing lethal defensive weapons to the besieged Ukrainian government in the event that diplomacy fails, a step that his European allies have resisted.
“It is true that if in fact diplomacy fails, what I’ve asked my team to do is to look at all options,” the president said. “Defensive weapons is one of those options that’s being examined, but I have not made that decision yet.”
President Obama declared that the West “cannot stand and simply allow the borders of Europe to be redrawn at the barrel of a gun.”
Obama and Merkel spoke at a joint press conference in the East Room of the White House. They held a formal meeting and holding a working lunch with Vice President Joe Biden.
“Russian aggression has only reinforced the unity of the United States and Germany,” Obama said.
The president said that the Russians have violated a September truce agreement and have continued to support Ukrainian separatists with tanks, artillery and other arms. He recommitted the U.S. to maintaining sanctions and diplomatic pressure – but added he might be prepared to go further and send the defensive weapons.
“We will not relent,” Obama said.
Merkel, who’s long had a working relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin, has been opposed to providing lethal assistance, partly for fear of sparking a proxy war with Russia. The German economy — and particularly its energy sector — is closely tied with Russia, and the Germans initially resisted imposing strict sanctions on Russia.
“I’ve always said, I don’t see a military solution to this conflict,” Merkel said on Monday.
But she emphasized: “The alliance between United States and Europe will continue to stand, will continue to be solid.”
“We stand up for the same principles of the inviolability of territorial integrity,” Merkel said. “Russia has violated the territorial integrity of Ukraine.”
The meeting comes two days before European leaders are set to meet with Putin in Minsk, Belarus, to try and negotiate peace in the region. The U.S. doesn’t plan to participate, though Vice President Joe Biden met with Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko over the weekend.









