Macron Says France Has “Given Everything” to Ukraine, Signals Fatigue as Peace Talks Loom

In a rare moment of candor during a lengthy televised interview yesterday, French President Emmanuel Macron appeared to  concede that France has exhausted its military aid capacity to Ukraine.

“We gave away everything we had,” Macron told TF1 on Tuesday. “But we can’t give away what we don’t have, and we can’t strip ourselves of what is necessary for our own security.” This admission marks a stark reversal from the French president’s earlier bombast and signals growing cracks in the NATO consensus as the Russo-Ukrainian conflict drags into its third bloody year.

Macron’s comments come as France teeters on the brink of economic turmoil, with the country’s deficit soaring to 5.8% and public debt surpassing 110% of GDP. His government, beset by domestic unrest and a resurgent right-wing, anti-globalist opposition, is struggling to maintain both internal legitimacy and external posturing.

The TF1 broadcast, which opened with a montage of public criticisms, reflected deepening disillusionment with Macron’s leadership. One citizen bluntly described him as “a president who practically wants to send us to war.” That perception certainly isn’t unfounded.

Despite his now subdued rhetoric, Macron has openly floated the idea of deploying French troops to Ukraine in the event of a “peace deal”—a move that many fear could ignite direct confrontation with a nuclear-armed Russia. He also hinted that France is prepared to enter discussions about stationing French nuclear-armed aircraft in other European countries, mimicking the US nuclear-sharing strategy in NATO.

“The Americans have the bombs on planes in Belgium, Germany, Italy, Turkey,” Macron noted. “We are ready to open this discussion.”

But this escalation comes at a time when Macron also acknowledged the stark truth of the battlefield: Ukraine cannot win back the territories it has lost since 2014. “Even Ukrainians themselves have the lucidity to acknowledge … that they will not have the capacity to reclaim everything that has been taken [by Russia] since 2014,” he said, referencing Crimea and the eastern Donbass regions.

This is not simply a military confession—it is a geopolitical admission of defeat.

While Macron speaks of ramping up production in a so-called “wartime economy,” the reality on the ground is far more sobering. “Not only did we give everything we could—we tripled our production,” he claimed. Yet the strategic and economic costs have been borne by French taxpayers, not faceless bureaucrats in Brussels and Paris.

France has already poured over €3.7 billion ($4.2 billion) into Ukraine, making it one of the top military donors in Europe. But what have the French people gained? Inflation, budget shortfalls, and a president increasingly focused on foreign entanglements over increasingly problematic domestic issues.

Meanwhile, in a moment of unintentional irony, Macron claimed he did not want to trigger a “Third World War” over Ukraine—this, from the same man who has mused casually about troop deployments, nuclear escalation, and military “reassurance forces” along the front lines.

“We must help Ukraine defend itself,” he said, “but we do not want to unleash a Third World War.” Such double-speak is emblematic of Macron’s leadership: performative on the world stage, dismissive at home, and ultimately dangerous for peace and stability in Europe.

As Macron postures, real opportunities for peace are emerging. Both Russia and Ukraine have signaled their readiness to resume direct talks in Istanbul, seeking what it calls a “sustainable settlement.” French and British proposals to send peacekeeping troops following a ceasefire have surfaced, though predictably, Moscow warned that any NATO personnel on Ukrainian soil would be treated as legitimate targets.

US President Donald Trump, in stark contrast to the globalist Western establishment, has made clear that any resolution must acknowledge the realities on the ground. “Crimea will stay with Russia,” Trump said in a recent interview with Time, calling for a freeze on the conflict and swift peace negotiations. Unlike Macron, Trump understands that endless escalation is not a strategy—it’s a dead end.

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