San Diego Union-Tribune

JAPAN’S PM OFFERS SUPPORT IN UKRAINE

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Prime Minister Fumio Kishida made a surprise visit Tuesday to Kyiv, engaging in dueling diplomacy with Asian rival President Xi Jinping of China, who met in Moscow with Russian President Vladimir Putin to promote Beijing’s peace proposal for Ukraine that Western nations have all but dismissed as a nonstarter.

The two visits, about 500 miles apart, highlighte­d how countries are lining up behind Moscow or Kyiv during the nearly 13-month-old war. Kishida, who will chair the Group of Seven summit in May, became the group’s last member to visit Ukraine and meet President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, after paying tribute to those killed in Bucha, a town that became a symbol of Russian atrocities against civilians.

Xi and Putin announced no major progress toward implementi­ng the Chinese peace deal, although the Russian leader said it could be a basis for ending the fighting when the West is ready. He added that Kyiv’s Western allies have shown no interest in that.

U.S. officials have said any peace plan coming from the Putin-Xi meeting would be unacceptab­le because a ceasefire would only ratify Moscow’s territoria­l conquests and give Russia time to plan for a renewed offensive.

“It looks like the West indeed intends to fight Russia until the last Ukrainian,” Putin said, adding the latest threat is a British plan to give Ukraine tank rounds containing depleted uranium.

“If that happens, Russia will respond accordingl­y, given that the collective West is starting to use weapons with a nuclear component,” he said, without elaboratin­g.

Putin has occasional­ly warned that Russia would use all available means, including possibly nuclear weapons, to defend itself, but also has sometimes backed off such threats.

After meeting Kishida, Zelenskyy told reporters his team had sent his own peace formula to China but hasn’t heard back, adding that there were “some signals, but nothing concrete about the possibilit­y of a dialogue.”

 ?? IORI SAGISAWA KYODO NEWS VIA AP ?? Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida lays flowers at a church in Bucha, a town outside Kyiv that became a symbol of Russian atrocities against civilians, in a visit to Ukraine on Tuesday.
IORI SAGISAWA KYODO NEWS VIA AP Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida lays flowers at a church in Bucha, a town outside Kyiv that became a symbol of Russian atrocities against civilians, in a visit to Ukraine on Tuesday.

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