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France's Macron takes own path, seeks dialogue with Russia

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PARIS -

There's still room for diplomacy in the Ukrainian crisis. At least that's the conviction of French President Emmanuel Macron, who continues to push for dialogue with Russia despite signs pointing to a potential war.

His stance reflects France's post-World War II tradition of carving its own geopolitical path, refusing to line up blindly behind the U.S. It's also part of Macron's domestic political strategy amid campaigning for April's presidential election, where nationalists are setting the agenda and a war in Ukraine could prove an unwelcome distraction.

Macron is preparing to talk Friday with Vladimir Putin, and Macron's presidential palace hosted marathon talks Wednesday between Russian and Ukrainian advisers, the first such face-to-face negotiations since Russia has massed troops near Ukraine in recent weeks.

Wednesday's talks among Russian, Ukrainian, French and German advisers appeared to buy all sides more time, as they agreed to meet again in two weeks. But France's diplomacy-focused strategy complicates efforts by the U.S. and NATO to show a tough, united front against Russia. And experts question whether it will be enough to deter a Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Macron's call with Putin on Friday morning has two goals, French government spokesman Gabriel Attal said: "to continue dialogue" and to "push Russia to clarify its position and the aim of (military) maneuvering."

Moscow has denied it is planning an assault, but it has moved an estimated 100,000 troops near Ukraine in recent weeks and is holding military drills at multiple locations in Russia. That has led the United States and its NATO allies to prepare for the worst.

Macron "is at the heart of efforts towards de-escalation" and will also speak to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the coming days, Attal said.

French expert on geopolitics Dominique Moisi told The Associated Press that Macron has tried since in power "to reset the relation between France and Russia, and to do it based on a mix of being open and being firm... This is very laudable, but did it work? Will it work this time? That's the challenge."

European diplomacy has helped cool tensions in the past. Wednesday's talks took place in the so-called "Normandy format," which helped to ease hostilities in 2015, a year after Putin ordered the annexation of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula and the Russia-backed insurgency began in eastern Ukraine.

Soon after his election in 2017, Macron invited Putin to a meeting in the sumptuous Palace of Versailles, letting him be "very impressed by the grandeur of France," according to the Russian's president's own words.

Macron also invited Putin to his summer residence at the Fort de Bregancon, on the French Riviera, in a rare honour meant to give a boost to peace talks with Ukraine during summer 2019.

"Macron has shown extreme confidence in his ability to seduce, to charm world leaders and start with them a dialogue," Moisi said.

It hasn't always worked. His unlikely bond with Donald Trump early in their presidencies quickly soured. And despite similar world views, relations between Macron and President Joe Biden were deeply damaged by a secret U.S.-Australia-U.K. submarine deal last year that squeezed France out of the market and undermined the 250-year-old alliance between the U.S. and France.

Macron said it was a "good thing" that the U.S. and Russia have resumed talks in recent weeks, but noted he did not see any concrete results. "It's because a discussion with Russia is always difficult," he added, citing his own efforts to establish a personal relationship with Putin.

The French position has two question marks, Moisi said: "Will Macron have such power of seduction toward Putin?" and "Can France rally support from a large number of European countries?"

Countries that used to be under Soviet influence are particularly worried about Russia's intentions in Ukraine and want a tougher line.

Last June, Macron and former German Chancellor Angela Merkel tried to press EU leaders to hold a summit with Putin. The plan was rejected, notably by the Baltic countries and Poland, amid concerns about meeting with the Russian leader at a time when Europe's relations with Moscow were so poor.

But Macron has made in recent days a fresh push for such a high-level meeting. He insisted that it wouldn't disturb ongoing negotiation efforts from the U.S. and NATO.

"Each of these channels must be exploited until the end to get Russia back into a process of de-escalation, to get guarantees, and allow us to build a new (European) security and stability order," he said this week.

He also pressed last week for a new EU security plan to ease tensions with Russia. Some EU partners expressed concerns that this would make things even more complex, and undermine cooperation with the U.S.

The French presidency stressed that Paris is working in close coordination with Washington and EU partners to be ready for a joint response if there were to be a Russian offensive in Ukraine. In such a case, "there will be retaliation and the cost (for Russia) will be very high," Macron reaffirmed this week.

France also expressed its willingness to station troops in Romania as part of a NATO force. France's defence minister is on a visit Thursday to Romania, which has a border with Ukraine, for talks on "deepening" defence ties, including in "armaments cooperation."

"Nothing that concerns European security can be discussed or decided without the full involvement of Europeans," French foreign minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told EU lawmakers this week. "We are at the table. We are not simply on the menu."

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Lorne Cook in Brussels, Belgium contributed.

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