Tag: Ukraine

  • As Trump-Putin summit nears, Zelenskyy calls for creation of ‘European army’ – National

    As Trump-Putin summit nears, Zelenskyy calls for creation of ‘European army’ – National


    Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Saturday the time has come for the creation of an “armed forces of Europe” because the U.S. may no longer be counted on to support Europe.

    Meanwhile, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz hit back at Americans for meddling in his country’s election after U.S. Vice President JD Vance scolded European leaders over their approach to democracy and met with the leader of a German far-right party.

    Forceful speeches from Zelenskyy and Scholz on Day 2 of the Munich Security Conference underlined the impact of a blizzard of decisions by U.S. President Donald Trump that show a rapidly growing chasm in transatlantic ties.

    European leaders are reeling after Trump’s decision to upend years of U.S. policy by holding talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in hopes of ending the Russia-Ukraine war. Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine and Russia on Saturday all but ruled out that Europeans will be included in any Ukraine peace talks.

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    Ramping up his desire for a more muscular and mighty Europe, Zelenskyy said Ukraine’s three-year fight against Russia has proved that a foundation exists for the creation of a European army — an idea long discussed among some continental leaders.

    “I really believe that time has come,” he said. “The armed forces of Europe must be created.”

    Zelenskyy alluded to a phone conversation between Trump and Putin this week, after which Trump said he and Putin would likely meet soon to negotiate a peace deal over Ukraine — breaking with the Biden administration’s harder line against Moscow over Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.


    Trump later assured Zelenskyy that he, too, would have a seat at the table to end the war. The Ukrainian leader insisted Europe should also have one.

    “Ukraine will never accept deals made behind our backs without our involvement, and the same rule should apply to all of Europe,” Zelenskyy said, adding that “not once did (Trump) mention that America needs Europe at the table.”

    “That says a lot,” he said. “The old days are over when America supported Europe just because it always had.”

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    “Now, as we fight this war and lay the groundwork for peace and security, we must build the armed forces of Europe, Zelenskyy said.

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    Zelenskyy said his idea wasn’t about replacing NATO. “This is about making Europe’s contribution to our partnership equal to America’s,” he said.

    It’s unclear whether the idea will catch on with European leaders. Zelenskyy has sought greater military and economic support from the European Union for years and repeatedly warned that other parts of Europe could be vulnerable to Russia’s expansionist ambitions too.

    While the bloc — along with the United States — has been one of Kyiv’s strongest backers, pockets of political disagreement in EU over its approach to Moscow and economic realities, including national debt levels that have crimped defense spending, have stood in the way of greater support.

    Europeans likely excluded from Ukraine peace talks

    European leaders have been trying to make sense of a tough new line from Washington on issues including democracy and Ukraine’s future, as the Trump administration continues to upend transatlantic conventions that have been in place since after World War II.

    Gen. Keith Kellogg, Trump’s special envoy for Ukraine and Russia, all but cut out Europeans from any Ukraine-Russia talks, despite Zelenskyy’s call for Europe to take part.

    “You can have the Ukrainians, the Russians, and clearly the Americans at the table talking,” Kellogg said at an event hosted by a Ukrainian tycoon. Pressed on whether that meant Europeans will not be included, he said: “I’m a school of realism. I think that’s not going to happen.”

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    “We need to ensure Ukrainian sovereignty,” he said, before adding: The “European alliance … are going to be critical to this.”


    Click to play video: 'Trump government at odds over how to bring Ukraine war to an end'


    Trump government at odds over how to bring Ukraine war to an end


    Asked what he would tell Trump if he were at the conference, Radosław Sikorski, Poland’s foreign minister, said he would remind Trump that the U.S. had pledged to stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes until it secures its independence.

    “The credibility of the United States depends on how this war ends — not just the Trump administration (but) the United States itself,” Sikorski warned.

    Annalena Baerbock, Germany’s foreign minister, described the new U.S. stance as a “moment of truth” that requires European leaders to overcome their differences and unite for a meaningful peace in Ukraine.

    “This is an existential moment. It’s a moment where Europe has to stand up,” she said. “There won’t be any lasting peace if it’s not a European-agreed peace.”

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    Iceland’s Prime Minister Kristrún Frostadóttir, meanwhile, lamented a lack of clarity from Washington.

    “People are still not sure what the U.S. wants to do. And I think it would be good if we came out of this conference if they had a clear picture of it,” she said.

    German chancellor hits back at Vance

    Earlier, Scholz said he was “pleased” at what he called a shared commitment with the United States to “preserving the sovereign independence of Ukraine,” and agreed with Trump that the Russia-Ukraine war must end.

    But Scholz also condemned the new political tack from Washington, affirming his strong stance against the far-right and said his country won’t accept people who “intervene in our democracy.”

    A day earlier, Vance chastised Europe leaders at the conference and suggested that free speech is “in retreat” across the continent. He said that many Americans saw in Europe “entrenched interests hiding behind ugly Soviet-era words like misinformation and disinformation.”

    Vance said no democracy could survive telling millions of voters that their concerns “are invalid or unworthy of even being considered.” He also met with the co-leader of the far-right Alternative for Germany (AfD) party, which is polling second ahead of Scholz’s own Social Democrats ahead of Feb. 23 elections in Germany.

    Alluding to Germany’s Nazi past, Scholz said the longstanding commitment to “Never Again” — a return to the extreme right — was not reconcilable with support for AfD.

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    “We will not accept that people who look at Germany from the outside intervene in our democracy and our elections and in the democratic opinion-forming process in the interest of this party,” he said. “That’s just not done, certainly not amongst friends and allies. We resolutely reject this.”

    “Where our democracy goes from here is for us to decide,” Scholz added.




  • Ukrainians in Canada react to Trump’s comments on the prospects for peace

    Ukrainians in Canada react to Trump’s comments on the prospects for peace


    Frustrating. Devastating.  That’s how Tetiana Prykhodko reacted when she heard about U.S. President Donald Trump’s plans to end the war in Ukraine, following his telephone conversation this week with Russian President Vladamir Putin.

    During the election campaign, Trump promised to quickly end the war.

    On Wednesday, Trump said he and Putin spent an hour on the phone and agreed to begin peace negotiations — and they promised to meet soon face to face.

    At first non-committal about Ukraine being given a seat at the negotiating table, on Thursday Trump said Ukraine would be there.  But officials with his administration have also said NATO membership will not be on the table and it is unrealistic for Ukraine to expect to given back all the land it has lost to Russia during the war — about a fifth of Ukrainian territory.

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    U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladamir Putin spoke by phone on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025 and agreed to start negotiations on a peace deal in Ukraine.


    Photo by JIM WATS(Photo by JIM WATSON,EMMANUEL DUNAND/AFP via Getty Images

    Prykhodko, one of tens of thousands of Ukrainians who fled to Canada following the start of the war, said all Ukrainians want peace, but she asks, “At what cost?”

    “People are still being killed and are suffering — especially in the eastern parts of Ukraine,” said Prykhodko who was forced to flee her home town of Chernihiv, near the border with Russia and Belarus, on the day Putin ordered his army to invade.


    Volunteers clear the rubble from a home near Chernihiv, Ukraine that was destroyed by Russian bombs on Saturday, Aug. 13, 2022.


    (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)

    “When all the talking on TV was about, ‘you have to pack,’ I didn’t actually take it seriously,” added Prykhodko.  “After I heard the sirens, and after I saw smoke from my window (I realized) it’s not a joke and we decided to move out. I have a sister in the western part of Ukraine and she called me that day and said. ‘You are coming to our place,’ so that is what we did.”

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    “Lots of nearby villages suffered.  Little girls being raped,  people were killed, those who were imprisoned — awful things.  I know really bad stories and it’s really hard to talk about them,” said Prykhodko.


    Click to play video: '‘I don’t see any logic in this war except to destroy and kill people’: The trauma for survivors in war-torn Chernihiv, Ukraine'


    ‘I don’t see any logic in this war except to destroy and kill people’: The trauma for survivors in war-torn Chernihiv, Ukraine


    Realizing the war would last a lot longer than Putin originally boasted about, her family applied for, and were granted, visas to come to Canada. “My husband has a sister here and she told us, ‘You are coming here.’”


    Tetiana Prykhodko, who fled to Canada from Ukraine following the outbreak of war, reflects on the prospects for peace as looks at pictures of happier times at her home in Ukraine, before the Russian invasion.


    Global News

    The reception her family has received in Canada has been “amazing,” said Prykhokdo.  “Canada has been a wonderful place to come, and we received so much support and care.”

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    While she, like most Ukrainians, yearns to one day return home, she is not optimistic about the prospects for peace under Trump’s and Putin’s terms.

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    It is “like a feeling of no way out — it will never end in a good way and that makes me sad — that is frustrating and devastating,” said Prykhokdo.


    Tetiana Prykhodko, seen here during New Years celebrations with her family in Ukraine, just weeks before Russia invaded, fears even if a peace deal is reached, they will have no home to return to.


    Global News

    “An overwhelming sense of disappointment — utter betrayal,” is how Stephania Romaniuk, vice-president of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress, describes the reaction of Calgary’s Ukrainian community to Trump’s comments on the terms for peace.

    “There’s so many lives that have been lost, not just people who’ve been killed, civilians, the military in Ukraine, but lives that have been shattered and destroyed,” said Romaniuk.

    “Perhaps we’re going to negotiate a peace, but at the cost of everything that these people have been fighting for.”

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    While she is pleased Ukraine will be at the negotiating table, she fears Trump is “falling into Putin’s trap” — adding NATO membership for Ukraine is really the only guarantee against future Russian aggression.

    “We know that Russian diplomacy means nothing when Putin comes to the table,” said Romaniuk.  “You can probably be guaranteed that he’s going to do the exact opposite of what he commits to — any peace deals are only going to be temporary, they’re going to be an opportunity for Russia to strengthen its forces, to prepare once again to mobilize.

    “Whether it’s five, 10, 15 years from now, they’re going to come again.”


    “Utter betrayal” is how Stephania Romaniuk, vice president of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress, describes the reaction of Calgary’s Ukrainian community to Trump’s comments on the terms for peace in Ukraine.


    Global News

    Romaniuk believes what’s happening in Ukraine should also be a warning for Canada.

    “We share a border with Russia. As Russia feels emboldened, if the results of these peace talks show to them that they can take what they want, they are not going to stop there.”

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    “There are resources in the Arctic — certainly the changing environment is going to have an impact on what can be extracted from there, so I think that Canada needs to be prepared.”

    For Prykhodko and her family, it’s like a horror movie that won’t stop.

    “The peace that the Russians are offering — my biggest fear is I will have nowhere to come back to.  The territories that are close to the eastern border, they are devastated, there is no house —  just ruins. I’m scared about that.”

    “The place of your childhood, your best memories.  My biggest fear is that the Ukraine will become Russia.”


    Click to play video: 'Video shows moments after Russian troops allegedly shoot civilians standing in line for food in Chernihiv'


    Video shows moments after Russian troops allegedly shoot civilians standing in line for food in Chernihiv


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