Brussels hosts EU leaders at 'turning point of history' for special council on defence
EU leaders gather in Brussels on Thursday for a special council on defence • Prime Minister Robert Abela says Malta will insist on promoting peace and safeguarding country’s neutrality

EU leaders gather in Brussels on Thursday for a special council on defence, as France's President Emmanuel Macron warned that the continent was at a "turning point of history".
Prime Minister Robert Abela will be in attendance on Thursday.
In a short tweet Abela said Malta’s priorities during the council will be to safeguard Malta’s neutrality, promoting peace “ensuring that our people's hard-earned money - go towards bettering lives.”
Safeguarding Malta's neutrality, promoting peace & ensuring that our people's hard-earned money - go towards bettering lives.
— Robert Abela (@RobertAbela_MT) March 6, 2025
Our priorities at #EUCO in Brussels. - RA
As well as rearmament, leaders are expected to discuss how the body can further support Kyiv in the face of US President Donald Trump's announcement on Monday that he would suspend aid to Ukraine. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is invited to the summit.
Nerves have grown increasingly frayed across Europe since Trump and Zelensky's showdown at the White House last week, and the rhetoric around Thursday's summit leaves no doubt about the importance EU officials are ascribing to it.
Three years on since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the Trump administration's overtures to Russian President Vladimir Putin have left many in Europe concerned the continent would not be able to rely on US support for its security.
Washington's decision on Wednesday to pause intelligence sharing with Ukraine did nothing to allay those worries.
In a sign of the depth of concern, President Macron said France was open to discussing extending the protection offered by its nuclear arsenal to its European partners, during an address to the nation on Wednesday.
That followed a call from Friedrich Merz, likely to be Germany's next chancellor, to discuss increased nuclear sharing.
Europe was facing a "clear and present danger on a scale that none of us have seen in our adult lifetime", European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said, while European Council President António Costa said this was a "defining moment for Ukraine and European security".
In a letter to European leaders, von der Leyen also said the continent had to "meet the moment" and "unleash our industrial and productive power and direct it to the goal of security".
On Monday, von der Leyen announced an unprecedented defence package - dubbed ReArm Europe - and said that Europe was ready to "massively" boost its defence spending "with the speed and the ambition that is needed".
Von der Leyen said the three proposals outlined in the ReArm Europe plan would both support Ukraine and "address the long-term need to take much more responsibility" for European security.
Many European leaders have signalled their support for swift, decisive action in regards to the continent's security.
Donald Tusk, Poland's prime minister, said the Commission's plan represented "a fundamental shift", while Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda said that the summit would give Europe the opportunity to show "whether it's just a debate club or whether we can make decisions".
But dissent from certain European leaders sympathetic to Moscow is expected.
Earlier this week, Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico said the EU's "peace through strength" approach was "unrealistic".
And in a letter to Costa, Hungary's Viktor Orban demanded that Ukraine not be mentioned in any written conclusions following the summit.
Orban - who has repeatedly attempted to block EU aid to Ukraine and has praised Trump for "standing bravely for peace" - said there was now a "strategic divide... between the majority of Europe and the USA".
"One side insists on prolonging the war in Ukraine, while the other seeks an end to the conflict," he added.
Yet Orban left the door open for a "greater probability for co-operation" with other leaders over issues of common security and defence.
While Thursday's crisis summit is taking place in Brussels, UK Defence Secretary John Healey will be in Washington for discussions with his counterpart Pete Hegseth on the US decision to pause intelligence sharing with Ukraine.
Their bilateral meeting will focus on a possible peace plan while efforts continue to bridge a transatlantic rift over Kyiv's future security.