Zelensky criticises Biden for not doing enough

Volodymr Zelensky has criticised US President Joe Biden on Sunday for not doing enough in allowing US weapons to be fired into Russia as Ukraine faces the threat of a renewed invasion.

The Ukrainian president thanked Mr Biden for giving Kyiv permission to strike inside Russian territory with American munitions but said restrictions – including on the use of long-range Atacms – should also be dropped.

In a rare rebuke of his US ally, he said: “Is that sufficient? No. Why? Because I have given you the example of airfields from which Russia is permanently firing, in calm, knowing that Ukraine will not fire back because it has no corresponding systems and no permissions.”

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Europe Stumbles Toward Escalation With Russia Over Ukraine — Without a Strategy for Victory

Why has Europe dithered until the ostensible eleventh hour to mobilize, and, with calls to allow NATO weapons to strike inside Russia, in such a potentially risky way?

European defense policy is in disarray, as the continent edges toward likely escalation with a nuclear-armed Russia. Calls for Ukraine to use North Atlantic Treaty-supplied weapons to strike inside Russia juxtapose with proposals from President Macron and Germany’s Olaf Scholz that climate policies are the solution to Europe’s problems. Meanwhile, European trade with Russia continues via Kazakhstan. Urgently needed is clarity.

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Biden gives Ukraine permission to use US weapons to attack Russia — marking shift in long-standing policy

President Biden has given Ukraine the green light to use US-provided weapons to hit some targets in Russian territory, according to a US official.

“The President recently directed his team to ensure that Ukraine is able to use US-supplied weapons for counter-fire purposes in the Kharkiv region so Ukraine can hit back against Russian forces that are attacking them or preparing to attack them,” the US official said Thursday.

The official noted, however, that Ukraine will not be allowed to use long-range US weapons to hit military targets deep inside Russian territory.


Is Sleepy Joe having his hand held as we are being slow walked into a wider war.

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Pressure on Biden to let US weapons strike Russia

Pressure is growing on US President Joe Biden to allow Ukraine to use West-supplied weapons to strike Russian territory.

A number of US allies this week signalled they were open to this possibility, after months of concern about escalation.

Russia’s Vladimir Putin has warned of “serious consequences”, especially for what he called “small countries” in Europe.

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Biden isolated after Western allies agree to let Ukraine fire weapons into Russia

Joe Biden was left isolated in his refusal to allow US weapons to be fired into Russia by Ukraine, after France and Germany relaxed their rules.

Emmanuel Macron said Ukraine is free to use its high powered weapons – which include French versions of Storm Shadows – to fire over the border.

He made the announcement alongside Olaf Scholz, the German chancellor, while holding up a map showing Russian bases being used to attack Ukraine in the latest offensives.

Footing the lion’s share of the bill but not calling the shots is a bad look for Biden.

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Putin’s plot to destroy Nato is reaching its devastating climax

Ukraine’s fight isn’t merely for its existence as a nation – it’s a battle for the very fabric of the global order.

Yes, it’s about safeguarding European security – a rallying cry heard in countless statements from Western officials, often accompanied by assurances of limited air defence and ammunition – but as Ukraine continues to lose ground, towns, and lives, the West’s response is tepid, with its only firm stance drawn around Nato borders, where geopolitical interests overshadow humanitarian concerns.

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Trudeau’s Canada: Struggling to make ends meet, Ukrainian family that escaped war reconsidering choice of coming to Canada

A Ukrainian family that came to Canada to escape the war is having second thoughts about their new home because of the economic situation.

The Sadovnyks are reconsidering life in Quebec, just outside of Montreal, for financial reasons.

“They like it here but it’s just a question of money,” family friend Oleg Koleboshyn told CityNews.

“They wanted to move to Canada. It was an opportunity for them.”

At least they can return to the Ukraine. Most Canadians have no place to go!

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Canada, Allies Push ‘Gender-Inclusive’ Aid to Ukraine as War Maims, Kills Mainly Men

When Canada announced $3 billion in aid to Ukraine on the anniversary of its invasion by Russia in February, one item that drew some attention was a $4 million allocation for “gender-inclusive demining” in Ukraine.

“What’s woke and what’s a joke: Canada implements gender-inclusive Ukraine support,” headlined Sky News Australia following the announcement. Fox News matched with: “We now need diversity guidelines for clearing landmines.”

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With Russian Oil Refineries Ablaze From Ukraine Strikes, Kremlin Accuses America of ‘Playing With Fire’

Flying through an area of Western Russia twice the size of Texas, hundreds of Ukrainian drones attacked oil refineries and tank farms in five cities last week. In Russia-controlled Crimea, American-supplied missiles hit the main air base. The Army Tactical Missile System rockets damaged the two-mile concrete runway and destroyed $1 billion worth of matériel — one air defense system, four war jets, and the base fuel tanks.

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Ukraine war: The trillion-dollar cost to the West

If you want a reminder of the security threats faced by the world today, take a look at how much governments have hiked defense spending. Global military budgets reached $2.44 trillion (€2.25 trillion) last year, nearly 7% higher than in 2022. It was the steepest year-on-year rise since 2009, recorded during the second year of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

For every man, woman and child, world military spending is now at its highest since the end of the Cold War — at $306 per person.

With Kyiv unprepared to fight such a large-scale conflict, Western countries ramped up military aid to Ukraine, while other escalating tensions with Russia and in the Middle East and Asia also prompted governments to shore up their defenses, unlike any time since World War II.

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The Russians simply walked in, Ukrainian troops in Kharkiv tell BBC

… Denys wants to know what happened to Ukraine’s defences.

“There was no first line of defence. We saw it. The Russians just walked in. They just walked in, without any mined fields” he says.

He shows me video from a drone feed taken a few days ago of small columns of Russian troops simply walking across the border, unopposed.

He says officials had claimed that defences were being built at huge cost, but in his view, those defences simply weren’t there. “Either it was an act of negligence, or corruption. It wasn’t a failure. It was a betrayal”.

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‘It was silent … then it was hell’ — in the path of Russia’s move on Kharkiv

A fierce battle is under way for Ukraine’s second city as Moscow launches the biggest ground assault on the region for two years. Soldiers caught up in the fighting tell their story

The soldiers had spent almost a fortnight digging trenches day and night to deter Russian forces from crossing the border north of Kharkiv, but at about two o’clock on Friday morning the enemy came crashing through. Russia’s new assault on Ukraine’s second city had begun.

“It was silent at first, and then it was hell,” said platoon commander Nikita a few hours later, speaking from his mother’s home in Kharkiv. “We held the artillery. That’s it. We stood watching it all.”

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Ukraine Trying New Ways To Resolve Armed Forces Manpower Shortages

Ukrainian men caught avoiding the call-up to fight will face increased fines under new measures—which will also allow authorities to detain ‘draft dodgers’ for up to three days—supported by Parliament on Thursday.

The bill, which has yet to be signed into law by President Volodymyr Zelensky but is backed by most lawmakers, comes amid fears about Russia gaining momentum on the battlefield and of soldier shortages in the Ukrainian army.

Zelensky said in February that 31,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed since Russia launched its invasion, or the ‘special military operation’ in Kremlin-speak, two years ago—the first figure he has given since the war started. The true number is undoubtedly much higher.

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Ukraine says it repelled Russian bid to cross border

Ukraine says it has repelled a Russian armoured attack in the north-eastern Kharkiv region, after Moscow’s forces launched an incursion across the border and sought to break through defensive lines.

Kharkiv regional head Oleh Syniehubov said Russian reconnaissance groups had tried to penetrate the border, adding that “not a single metre has been lost”.

“Russia has launched a new wave of counteroffensive operations in the Kharkiv sector,” said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

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