European Parliament
Grants Ukraine EU
Candidate Status
June 23, 2022
The European Parliament
voted overwhelmingly
Thursday to grant
European Union candidate
status to embattled
Ukraine, pushing it one
step closer to Western
allies who have been
supplying it with
massive amounts of
armaments to help it
fight off Russia’s
four-month invasion.
The vote favoring
Ukraine was 529-45, with
14 abstentions. The
European Parliament also
approved EU candidacy
for Georgia and Moldova.
The vote came as the
U.S. said it was sending
another $450 million in
military aid to Ukraine,
including some
additional medium-range
rocket systems, on top
of the $1 billion in
assistance it announced
a week ago.
Ukrainian Parliament
chair Ruslan Stefanchuk
thanked the European
lawmakers for their
support in a Facebook
message, saying,
“Ukraine is EU country.
And we fight for this
right not only on the
battlefield but also in
the legal sphere.”
In order for the three
countries to join the
27-member EU bloc, they
will be required to
carry out a series of
political and economic
reforms.
European Commission
President Ursula von der
Leyen said Ukraine “has
already implemented
roughly 70% of EU rules,
norms and standards.”
She said, however, that
much needed to be done
in the areas of “the
rule of law, oligarchs,
anticorruption and
fundamental rights."
Council vote
The European Council,
which comprises the
heads of all 27 EU
governments, will have
the final vote on
Ukraine’s membership.
The vote must be
unanimous. Diplomats say
the process could take a
decade to complete.
Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy said
Wednesday that he had
spoken to 11 bloc
leaders following nine
calls with other leaders
the day before and
planned talks with
others on Thursday.
Zelenskyy said the
meeting would be a
“historic session of the
European Council” and
that he believed all 27
EU countries would
support Ukraine’s
membership.
The EU leaders gathered
in Brussels discussed
the impact of Russia’s
war in Ukraine on global
food security, as well
as additional EU
economic, military and
humanitarian support for
Ukraine.
Zelenskyy said Russia
was continuing to launch
“massive air and
artillery strikes” in
eastern Ukraine’s Donbas
region, adding that
Russia’s goal was to
“destroy the entire
Donbas step by step.”
The Ukrainian leader
called for faster arms
deliveries to help his
forces match up against
those from Russia.
'No letup' in shelling
Kharkiv region Governor
Oleh Synehubov said
Wednesday that shelling
of the residential
districts of Kharkiv or
other towns in the
region had continued
unabated.
"There is no letup in
the shelling of
civilians by the Russian
occupiers," he wrote on
the Telegram messaging
app. "This is evidence
that we cannot expect
the same scenario as in
Chernihiv or Kyiv, with
Russian forces
withdrawing under
pressure."
Ukrainian presidential
adviser Oleksiy
Arestovych said in a
video address that
Russian forces were
hitting Kharkiv "with
the aim of terrorizing
the population" and
forcing Ukraine to
divert troops, Reuters
reported.
Microsoft
reported Wednesday that
Russian intelligence
agencies had conducted
multiple efforts to hack
the computer networks of
Ukraine’s allies.
"The cyber aspects of
the current war extend
far beyond Ukraine and
reflect the unique
nature of cyberspace,"
Microsoft President Brad
Smith said in the
report.
The Russian Embassy in
Washington did not
immediately respond to a
request for comment,
Reuters reported. In the
past, Moscow has denied
conducting foreign cyber
espionage missions,
saying it "contradicts
the principles of
Russian foreign policy."
Since the conflict began
February 24, Ukrainian
entities have been
attacked by Russian
state-backed hacking
groups, Microsoft
reported. Researchers
found 128 organizations
in 42 countries outside
Ukraine had also been
targeted by the same
groups in
espionage-focused hacks,
the report found.
Nearly two-thirds of the
cyberespionage targets
involved NATO members,
researchers found.