From the CBC:
“Ukraine not on cusp of losing
war with Russia, Zelenskyy says”
(Volodymyr Zelenskyy visits Fox
News's Special Report with Bret Baier in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 12. The
Ukrainian president said on Tuesday he is mulling a request from Ukraine's
military to send another half-million soldiers into battle.)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy says Ukraine is not on the cusp of losing its war with Russia as he
considers mobilizing up to 500,000 more troops. Zelenskyy said Tuesday he is
mulling a request from Ukraine's military to send another half-million soldiers
into battle but has asked military officials to spell out their plans in detail
on the "very sensitive matter" before making a decision. He said the
move would cost Ukraine about 500 billion hyrvnias ($17.9 billion Cdn).
The Ukrainian army had nearly
800,000 troops fighting the Russian invasion in October, and one million in
uniform in total including National Guard and other units, according to the
Ukrainian Ministry of Defence. It is outgunned by the Russians, whose President
Vladimir Putin ordered the country's military to increase its number of troops
by 170,000 earlier this month, to a total of 1.32 million.
Ukrainian President Volodomyr
Zelenskyy says despite mounting challenges, his country is not on the cusp of
losing its war against Russia. 'We are living creatures, he said through a
translator, in response to a journalist's question. 'We fight.' With the war
approaching its two-year mark, Ukraine's support from Western allies, as well
as its ability to win the war, has come into question. In response to a
journalist's question at Tuesday's press conference in Kyiv, Zelenskyy said
that he does not believe Ukraine is losing the war but acknowledged the country
is facing many challenges. "We are living creatures," he said through
a translator. "We live here in Ukraine and we fight." Ukraine's counteroffensive has barely budged
the 1,000-kilometre front line this year against Russian defences, and ground
movements are being slowed by bad weather as winter settles in, leading to
heavier artillery, missile and drone use. Zelenskyy dismissed suggestions
Tuesday that Moscow's forces have come out of 2023 on top. The UN's human
rights chief, Volker Turk, said Tuesday that his agency has confirmed more than
10,000 civilian deaths in Ukraine since Russia's full-scale invasion started in
February 2022, and that the true toll is "probably substantially higher."
Meanwhile, billions of dollars in
financial support from Western countries are currently in limbo. Hungary vetoed a proposed 50-billion euro
($73.2-billion Cdn) aid package from the EU last week that was aimed at helping
the country stay afloat as it continues to suffer damages from the war. In the
U.S., President Joe Biden is struggling to push a $60-billion aid package to
Ukraine through Congress, and the U.S. Defence Department says it is almost out
of money to help Kyiv. Zelenskyy said he is not worried about his allies
pulling through. "I am confident that the U.S. will not let us down and
that what we have agreed with the U.S. will be fulfilled," Zelenskyy said.
He was less optimistic about Ukraine's chances of joining NATO, however, which
he said is Ukraine's "most powerful" option. "All these signals
about our membership so far are nonsense," Zelenskyy said. "We didn't
receive a solid offer, not from a single partner of ours. It is hard to
imagine, at this point, how this can happen."
^ It is important for the
Ukrainians and the Rest of the World not to lose hope. We need to continue to
support Ukraine and help them defeat Russia and end the War. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/world/zelenskyy-says-ukraine-not-losing-1.7064068
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