In an interview given at the sidelines of a meeting of European Union foreign ministers in Brussels, Estonia’s foreign minister Margus Tsahkna said he hoped widespread international criticism of Scholz’s call would dissuade any other European leaders from talking to Putin.
Scholz held
a one-hour call with Putin on Friday – his first direct communication with Russia’s leader in almost two years.
He later defended the call saying it was a way to make clear to Putin that German, European and other support for Ukraine would not wane.
But Tsahkna, whose Baltic nation is one of Ukraine’s most vocal supporters and one of Moscow's fiercest critics, said the call had damaged Western efforts to isolate Putin.
“It was a strategic mistake,” he said. “We have had a principle agreed that we keep Putin in isolation.”
Tsahkna said that position should be maintained until Putin showed a willingness to take part in meaningful negotiations and withdraw his troops from Ukraine.
But currently, Putin was doing the opposite, Tsahkna said, pointing out that Russia mounted
of its most severe attacks on Ukraine in months in the days after Scholz’s call.
“It just weakened our unity and our positions,” Tsahkna said.
The Estonian foreign minister’s criticism comes on the heels of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy who said the call was “exactly what Putin has long sought” and could open a “Pandora’s Box” of calls that would further undermine efforts to isolate him.
Arriving at Monday’s EU meeting, Lithuania’s foreign minister Gabrielius Landsbergis also voiced skepticism about the call.
He said such a move has to come from a position of strength, not weakness, or “the Russians will abuse it.”
“They clearly are doing exactly that with the massive new rocket barrages against Ukraine’s civil infrastructure, against energy,” he said.