Global Times

Worry, division deepen as RussiaUkra­ine conflict enters stalemate

- By Liu Xin and Xu Yelu

Exactly nine months since the Russia-Ukraine conflict broke out on February 24, it is now not only Russia and Ukraine that have been severely impacted in the crisis, Europe and the US that stand behind it have also been deeply mired. As the conflict continues to further drag in a stalemate, it has been triggering more worries from the internatio­nal community especially after the latest airstrikes on Ukraine cities, knocking out power and water service, and according to media reports, this is the largest strike that Russia has launched against infrastruc­ture in Ukraine since November 15.

Ukraine’s capital Kiev, the western city of Lviv and the southern city of Mykolaiv were among multiple areas reporting missile strikes.

The UN Security Council called an emergency meeting on Ukraine on Wednesday, during which Chinese Ambassador Geng Shuang said the ongoing conflict in Ukraine has led to constant attacks on civilian facilities and the steady rise of civilian casualties and displaced persons, which is a very worrying developmen­t. There is no winner in conflicts and wars.

Chinese military expert Song Zhongping said that the Russia-Ukraine conflict is currently at a stalemate while tensions have been built since 2014. Russia’s airstrikes against strategic targets in Ukraine aim to further impair Ukraine’s military potential, push it to take a realistic position at talks and gain itself more leverages in negotiatio­ns with the US, an expert on internatio­nal security who asked for anonym

ity, told the Global Times on Thursday.

The UN meeting on Wednesday had also become another battlefiel­d as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky appealed to the UN via video link to take action to stop Russian airstrikes. US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield accused Russia of “weaponizin­g winter” while Russian diplomat Vasily Nebenzya told the UN meeting that remarks from Zelensky and his allies cannot be interprete­d as “readiness for peace but is rather a language of reckless threats and ultimatums.”

The Russia-Ukraine conflict is still far from reaching its tipping point because neither the US nor the EU, or Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, have made any significan­t policy changes, the anonymous expert said, instead, the US continues to fan the flames, and the EU is being forced to swallow the bitter pill without being able to change anything. He noted that it is also not easy to promote talks between Russia and Ukraine as the Biden administra­tion sees the current situation as an achievemen­t and attempts to prolong the situation to win more political capital.

US fanning flames

On Wednesday, the Biden administra­tion announced $400 million in additional military aid for Ukraine. Among the arms being shipped are 150 heavy machine guns with special thermal-imagery sights to help shoot down self-destructin­g drones as well as ammunition for an air defense system, US media said citing Pentagon officials.

Song, the military expert, told the Global Times that currently, the military equipment the US and some Western countries have sent to Ukraine are mostly light and medium weapons, with the heaviest ones being the likes of armored vehicles, M142 HIMARS and the M777 howitzers. Large and heavy weapons and equipment are not being provided.

By inciting the Russia-Ukraine conflict, the US has made great fortune by supplying energy to the EU, realizing its goal of containing Russia and strengthen­ing trans-Atlantic partnershi­p, while Russia has greatly consumed its national strength and exposed some domestic problems and Ukraine, who has been staying at the core of the battlefiel­d, have undermined its economy, social stability, and the well-being of the people, Cui Heng, an assistant research fellow from the Center for Russian Studies of East China Normal University, told the Global Times on Thursday.

Europe’s losses are no less than Russia’s as Europe continues to suffer from high inflation and pays a huge price for its energy security, said Cui.

On Tuesday, Ukraine also received a new 2.5 billion euros tranche of financial support from the EU, Reuters reported.

However, voices advocating spending more money to solve issues closely related to people’s livelihood­s are getting louder within the bloc as European countries are facing probably one of the most difficult winters with soaring energy prices and severe inflation, analysts said.

The heavy price for the Russia-Ukraine conflicts have been put on the people and they will suffer more if the conflicts continue or deteriorat­e and the government­s in related countries should take concrete actions to protect their own people and their national interests instead of only serving US’ geopolitic­al interests, analysts said on Thursday.

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