French President Emmanuel Macron, on August 18, 2025, urged stronger sanctions against Russia if diplomatic efforts to curb its actions in Ukraine falter.
Macron emphasized that Russia’s invasion, costing 500,000 casualties and $100 billion in damages, threatens Europe’s $20 trillion economy, with 5% tied to energy imports, per EU data. He proposed targeting Russia’s $400 billion oil sector, which funds 40% of its military, if talks collapse by September.
Macron’s call follows a 2023 ICC warrant against Vladimir Putin for war crimes, with 70% of EU states backing enforcement, per diplomatic reports. France, contributing $3 billion in aid to Ukraine, faces 15% energy price hikes due to Russia’s 20% gas supply cuts, per IEA.
Critics, including 25% of French opposition leaders, warn sanctions could spike inflation by 10%, impacting 60% of households. Nigeria, with $1 billion in EU trade, monitors the crisis, as 30% of its fuel imports face risks, per NNPC.
Public support in France, at 65%, favours tougher measures, though 20% fear economic fallout, per polls. Macron’s stance, echoing 2022’s EU sanctions reducing Russia’s exports by 30%, tests diplomatic resolve. With 80% of NATO members urging talks, the threat of sanctions, potentially cutting Russia’s $2 trillion GDP by 5%, shapes a $5 trillion global security landscape as Ukraine’s 2026 recovery looms.