French President Emmanuel Macron made his first trip to Ukraine since the start of Russia's invasion this week to throw political clout behind the war effort -- and also to clear the air.
Macron is one of the few Western leaders who has been speaking to Russia's leader since Moscow sent troops into Ukraine on February 24, spending hours on the phone with President Vladimir Putin.
It's a controversial tendency that has drawn ire from Ukraine's allies. Their frustration only deepened in May when Macron said that in ending the conflict Russia must not be "humiliated".
The French president's trip -- coordinated with the German and Italian leaders -- appeared to bring the embarrassing chapter to a close.
"We've turned the page," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said.
"The relationship with President Macron is transparent and frank," he added, speaking in the gardens of the Ukrainian presidential palace alongside German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi, and Romanian President Klaus Iohannis.
In the run-up to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, European leaders made last-ditch efforts to persuade Putin to change course, with Macron and Scholz among leaders traveling to Moscow to meet face-to-face with Putin.
The coordinated visit by the EU leaders this week to Kyiv illustrates how the bloc has firmly come down on Kyiv's side, including most recently by backing its status as an EU-member candidate.
Macron's meeting with Zelensky this week was the first since the war but the two men have known each other for years.
Macron was one of the first European leaders to host the actor-turned-president after his election in April 2019 -- and they have shown their mutual affinity in front of the cameras with hugs and handshakes.
Like Zelensky, Paris this week also played down the idea that Macron's remarks in mid-May -- in which he said that peace efforts would not be served by Russia's "humiliation" -- had generated tension.
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