INTERNATIONAL
WAR IN UKRAINE
Former foreign minister Kuleba takes Ukraine's message to lecture halls
Swept aside in a cabinet reshuffle, Ukraine's former foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba now teaches 'diplomacy in wartime' at Sciences Po university in Paris – and is free to speak his mind.
By Ariane Chemin (Kyiv, special correspondent) and Thomas d’Istria (Kyiv, correspondent)Published today at 8:00 pm (Paris)
Dmytro Kuleba in Kyiv, Ukraine, January 10, 2025
GUILLAUME HERBAUT/VU’ FOR LE MONDE
Read more Foreign minister leaves in Ukraine's biggest government reshuffle since invasion began
"Don't procrastinate," said Kuleba on Wednesday, January 8.
He arrived at our meeting in Kyiv relaxed and without a tie, a hallmark of his new life after two and a half years spent negotiating night and day among diplomats and security officers. From the moment Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, Dmytro Kuleba, 43, spent his time traveling the globe, from Washington to Berlin, Paris to London, demanding arms for his country, and from Asia to Africa in an attempt to rally countries brooded over by Moscow.
- He was one of the faces of Ukraine at war – a popular minister and one of the best-known personalities abroad after President Volodymyr Zelensky, who thanked him for his services when he resigned his post in September 2024 ahead of a cabinet reshuffle and rumors he would be dismissed.
Read more Foreign minister leaves in Ukraine's biggest government reshuffle since invasion began
"Don't procrastinate," said Kuleba on Wednesday, January 8.
Loyal, he did not comment on his sidelining.
- Nor did he tell anyone that he had turned down Zelensky's offer to become Ukrainian ambassador to the United States, as Le Monde learned.
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