The Jerusalem Post

Ukraine wants US to deliver heavy arms for war

Blinken, Austin set for Kyiv visit • Luhansk governor: Orthodox Easter celebratio­ns shattered

- • By PAVEL POLITYUK and NATALIA ZINETS

KyiV (reuters) – ukraine was to ask us secretary of state antony Blinken and defense secretary lloyd austin for more powerful weapons during an expected visit by the officials to Kyiv on sunday, seeking to build the country’s defenses against the russian invasion.

ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said his country would overcome “dark times,” in an emotional address at Kyiv’s 1,000-year-old saint sophia cathedral to mark orthodox easter as fighting in the east overshadow­ed the religious celebratio­ns.

the trip by Blinken and austin, announced earlier by Zelensky, would be the highest-level visit to ukraine by us officials since russian president Vladimir putin ordered the invasion of the country two months ago.

the white House has not confirmed any visit by Blinken and austin. the state department and pentagon declined to comment.

“we are inspired by the resilience of orthodox christians in ukraine in the face of president putin’s brutal war of aggression,” Blinken said on twitter. “we are continuing to support them and, today, we wish them and all others celebratin­g easter hope and a

swift return to peace.”

after ukrainian defense forced a russian retreat from around Kyiv, moscow’s assault is now focused on the eastern donbas region and the south of the country. with a semblance of normal life returning to the capital, several countries have reopened embassies in recent days and some residents who fled the fighting returned for easter.

serhiy Gaidai, governor of the luhansk region in the donbas, said easter celebratio­ns had been shattered there, with seven churches in his region “mutilated by russian artillery.” He also said an unspecifie­d number of civilians were killed by russian shelling.

reuters could not independen­tly verify his report.

moscow, which describes its actions in ukraine as a “special military operation,” denies targeting civilians and rejects what ukraine says is evidence of atrocities, saying Kyiv staged them to undermine peace talks.

pope Francis called for an easter truce: “stop the attacks in order to help the exhausted population. stop,” he said.

ukrainian refugees filled churches across central europe.

“i pray that this horror in ukraine ends soon and we can return home,” said nataliya Krasnopols­kaia, who fled to prague from odesa last month, one of the more than 5 million ukrainians estimated to have escaped the country.

ukrainian officials plan to tell Blinken and austin of the immediate need for more weapons, including anti-missile systems, anti-aircraft systems, armored vehicles and tanks,

Zelensky aide igor Zhovkva told nBc news on sunday.

the united states and nato allies have shown growing readiness to supply heavier equipment and more advanced weapons systems. Britain has promised to send military vehicles and is considerin­g supplying British tanks to poland to free up warsaw’s russian-designed t-72s for ukraine.

turkish president recep tayyip erdogan said after talks by phone with Zelensky that ankara was ready to assist in negotiatio­ns with russia. Zelensky said he discussed with erdogan the need for the immediate evacuation of civilians from the southern city of mariupol, the site of biggest battle of the conflict.

14; Nakba Day, Palestinia­n “Catastroph­e Day,” on May 15; and Jerusalem Day, with its now very fraught flag march through the Old City to the Western Wall on May 29.

There are plenty of off-ramps where things can turn very violent, very quickly. But so far, the government and security apparatus have kept the situation pretty well under control.

How much worse could things have gotten? Think back to last Ramadan and the brouhaha over Sheikh Jarrah and violence on the Temple Mount that led to Hamas rockets being fired on Jerusalem, followed by the large-scale IDF operation against Hamas called Operation Guardian of the Walls.

We’re not there. Hundreds of thousands of Israelis enjoyed a relatively quiet Passover holiday this year, and that is not something to be taken for granted. Somebody was doing something right.

And what are the government, the IDF and the security forces doing right? Carefully calibratin­g policy to suit the threat.

When the first lone-wolf attack hit on March 22, and then another five days later, and then two others in quick succession after that, the concern was that this would lead to a wave of copycat attacks.

The police and IDF flooded the country’s streets with officers and soldiers; ISIS suspects were arrested; the IDF went on the offensive in West Bank cities and refugee camps and conducted raids and carried out arrests to a degree that has not been seen for years; troops were sent to plug the holes in the security fence to prevent terrorists, like the one who killed five people in Bnei Brak, from just driving into the center of Israel to murder people.

When the rioting started on the Temple Mount on April 15, the police acted swiftly and with a heavy hand, arresting more than 400 people, before opening the mount to tens of thousands of other Muslims who wanted to go there not to create havoc but to pray.

The government also acted to prevent Religious Zionist Party MK Itamar Ben-Gvir from fanning the flames by marching to the Damascus Gate a week later.

Hamas has been trying to ignite Jerusalem, Judea and Samaria, and even some Arab-Israeli towns – there was a pro-Hamas protest in Umm el-Fahm on Friday. But because of a massive security presence and wise government policy not to allow anything that would play into their hands, they have so far failed.

If Hamas failed to set Jerusalem, the West Bank or any Arab-Israeli cities aflame, the next logical step for the Palestinia­n terrorist organizati­ons would be rockets on Israel from Gaza. Predictabl­y, therefore, over the last week, five rockets were fired at Israel – after a fourmonth hiatus – one hitting near a home in Sderot that led to an IDF attack on a munitions facility inside Gaza.

Three other rockets fired at Israel from Gaza over the weekend went unanswered, two fell short inside Gaza, and another fell in an empty field inside Israel. Although Prime Minister Naftali Bennett repeatedly said his government has adopted a policy in Gaza different from

that of his predecesso­r, and that there will be no acceptance at all of any attacks from Gaza – be it Kassam rockets or incendiary balloons – this time Israel did not respond militarily.

However, that does not mean Israel did not respond. On Sunday, it closed the Erez crossing to some 12,000 Gazan workers, with the reopening being dependent on security developmen­ts.

Likewise, Foreign Minister Yair Lapid said a decision made before Ramadan to increase the number of work permits to Gazans to 20,000 would have to be reexamined “in light of recent events.”

In other words, Israel did respond, just in a different way. Rather than firing rocket for rocket, this time it decided to stop the flow of workers. Currently, unemployme­nt in Gaza is running at some 50%, and these permits are important for the economic well-being of many Gazans.

The unstated hope is that this is a lever that will work on Hamas; that the people will force Hamas both not to fire rockets itself and to prevent other terrorist organizati­ons in the enclave with access to rockets from doing so either.

Will it work? There is no guarantee, just as there is no magic wand to wave to make it all go away. Hamas has never been known to care too much about the well-being of those under its rule. But what the government and security forces have demonstrat­ed in recent days is an effort to gingerly calibrate their responses to match the provocatio­ns.

Lone-wolf attackers on the streets? Flood the streets with police and plug holes in the security fence with soldiers. Rioting on the Temple Mount? Act swiftly and without causing fatalities to remove the rioters, and then allow the Ramadan prayers to continue. Rockets from Gaza? Respond to each rocket, if not by striking back militarily, then by removing the carrot of permits for Palestinia­n workers.

One size doesn’t fit all. Calibrate the reaction to the action. So far, the policy has yielded results. But May – with all its celebratio­ns and all its anniversar­ies – has historical­ly proven to be a most combustibl­e month.

For the relatives of those 14 people killed in the recent terrorist attacks, things can’t get any worse. But at a national level, the situation could indeed be much graver. And while that might not sound at all comforting or like much consolatio­n, it

 ?? (Vladyslav Musiienko/Reuters) ?? A PRIEST conducts the Orthodox Easter service yesterday among the remains of the Trinity church in the village of Hostroluch­chia, near Kyiv.
(Vladyslav Musiienko/Reuters) A PRIEST conducts the Orthodox Easter service yesterday among the remains of the Trinity church in the village of Hostroluch­chia, near Kyiv.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel