EU will propose starting membership talks with Ukraine
- EU officials said the recommendations meant formal negotiations with Kyiv – and another EU candidate Moldova – could start next year
- Membership negotiations typically take years before candidates meet legal and economic criteria, and the bloc is wary of taking in a country at war

The European Union executive will recommend on Wednesday that the bloc open membership negotiations with Kyiv once it meets outstanding conditions, two EU officials said on Monday, more than 20 months since Russia invaded Ukraine.
In Kyiv, a senior government official said Ukraine expected the European Commission to deliver a “positive” appraisal of its membership bid, a coveted prize as troops face battle fatigue and concerns swirl over the future of vital US military aid.
The Commission will assess Ukraine across seven reform areas in a report that will inform a key decision in December at a summit of the EU’s national leaders on whether to start formal membership negotiations with Kyiv.
Both EU officials said the recommendations meant formal negotiations with Kyiv – and another EU candidate Moldova – could start next year.
They added the Commission’s report, which will also cover progress towards membership by other EU hopefuls, was still to be finalised before official publication.
Membership negotiations typically take years before candidates meet extensive legal and economic criteria to join, and the bloc is wary of taking in a country at war.
Still, advancing Western integration is a top priority for Ukraine, a former Soviet republic of some 44 million people sitting between Russia and the EU.