Lammy to meet western allies in Munich as Trump touts Ukraine peace talks
The Munich Security Conference comes as the US appears to be stepping back from European security guarantees.
![Foreign Secretary David Lammy giving a speech, with the Union flag in the background](https://www.expressandstar.com/resizer/v2/https%3A%2F%2Fcontentstore.nationalworld.com%2Fimages%2Faf28b042-1ba5-412c-ac1d-7af2b13e35f9.jpg?auth=dee849b4110602aa8a23f24d56ed347e288577dcf99ab3e184f408b5bdb57e68&width=300)
David Lammy is set to meet G7 allies on Friday as the West reels from Donald Trump’s telephone conversation with Vladimir Putin.
The Foreign Secretary will travel to the Munich Security Conference, where he is expected to attend a G7 meeting and a dinner with his counterparts from the US, France, Italy and Germany – the so-called “Quint”.
But while he may have expected to discuss the Middle East and migration as well as European security, it will be Ukraine that features at the top of the conference agenda as Europe responds to Mr Trump’s discussion of a peace deal with the Russian president.
![President Donald Trump speaks during a news conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington](http://content.assets.pressassociation.io/AP/2025/02/13/ac3f7941af0545c2854d03b953d027d2.jpg?w=640)
The US president reversed American policy on Wednesday, announcing he had spoken to Mr Putin and agreed to “work together, very closely” to end the conflict in Ukraine that began with the Russian invasion three years ago.
Although he had initially appeared non-committal about involving Ukraine in talks about its future, Mr Trump said on Thursday that it would have a seat at the table.
But in comments to journalists in the Oval Office, he insisted that he could “trust” Mr Putin and said he would like to see Russia readmitted to the G7.
The country was kicked out of the then-G8 in 2014 over its invasion of Crimea.
Western leaders, including Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, had insisted throughout Thursday that Ukraine must be fully involved in any peace negotiation, with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky saying he could not accept “any agreements (made) without us”.
The US has suggested that as part of a peace deal, Ukraine must accept it will have to give up some territory to Russia, and that Nato membership is not a realistic prospect.
But Nato’s official position – endorsed by Sir Keir’s Government in the UK/Ukraine 100-year partnership – is that Kyiv is on an “irreversible” path to joining the alliance.
Questions remain about what concessions Russia would have to make in any deal, with former MI6 chief Sir Alex Younger saying Ukraine had been asked to make “some very, very hefty concessions… without much being asked for in return”.
![United States secretary of defence Pete Hegseth, left, shakes hands with Britain’s Defence Secretary John Healey prior to a bilateral meeting on the sidelines of a Nato defence ministers meeting at Nato headquarters in Brussels](http://content.assets.pressassociation.io/AP/2025/02/12/04cfb426a10e4446abe760cb42b2ca6b.jpg?w=640)
As well as his meetings with the G7 and the Quint, Mr Lammy is expected to take part in an event on Ukraine and meet representatives from European, Middle Eastern and North American nations.
Mr Lammy will be joined by the Defence Secretary, John Healey, who has already attended a Nato meeting and chaired a meeting of the Ukraine Defence Contact Group this week.
That meeting saw US defence secretary Pete Hegseth announce America was no longer “primarily focused” on guaranteeing European security, leading to calls from some European capitals for greater spending on defence.