San Diego Union-Tribune

PUTIN DEFENDS WAR; U.S. EXPEDITES AID

Zelenskyy renews vow of victory: ‘We are fighting for our children’s freedom’

- BY LAURA KING, DAVID PIERSON & KATE LINTHICUM

With internatio­nal pressure mounting and his invasion of Ukraine failing to make significan­t advances, Russian President Vladimir Putin delivered a strident speech Monday at an annual military parade in Moscow, accusing the U.S. and the West of provoking the conflict and comparing it to the Soviet Union’s fight against Nazi Germany in World War II.

But the Russian leader stopped short of using the occasion — known as Victory Day to mark the defeat of Adolf Hitler’s forces 77 years ago — to declare an all-out war with Ukraine, as some analysts feared he would. Russia still refers to the invasion as a “special military operation,” which does not require a full national mobilizati­on of resources for war.

Standing in front of decorated veterans in Red Square, Putin characteri­zed Russia as having had no choice but to strike back against the expansion of NATO and the West’s refusal to provide Moscow with security guarantees.

“The danger was rising by the day,” Putin said. “Russia has given a pre-emptive response to an aggression.”

The parade, which included a display of military equipment, marching soldiers and a martial band, came as Western nations imposed more sanctions on Russia’s hobbled economy and moved to boost Ukraine’s defenses.

President Joe Biden signed a law designed to speed up shipments of arms to Ukraine. Known as the Lend-Lease Act, it dates back to World War II and President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s efforts to make the United States the “arsenal of democracy.”

Also Monday, U.S. Commerce Department said it was suspending a 25 percent tax on steel imported from Ukraine — which was imposed in 2018 by the Trump administra­tion — to help the country’s beleaguere­d economy.

Those efforts come as the U.S. Congress is poised to approve $40 billion in military and humanitari­an aid to Ukraine, much more than

the $33 billion package Biden requested.

In counterpro­gramming of sorts to the Kremlin’s display, Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, declared that his nation would emerge victorious from the fight against its behemoth neighbor.

“We are fighting for our children’s freedom and therefore we will win,” Zelenskyy said in a video address Monday while striding in daylight down a major Kyiv thoroughfa­re, with stately buildings and anti-tank “hedgehogs” fashioned from fused I-beams visible in the background. “Very soon there will be two Victory Days in Ukraine. And someone won’t have any.”

Ukrainian military officials and Western analysts said that Russia’s offensive in the eastern industrial heartland appeared stalled. At the same time, Russian forces have continued to inflict deadly harm on civilians.

A day after Zelenskyy reported that about 60 civilians were killed in the weekend bombing of a school in the village of Bilohorivk­a, in contested Luhansk province in the east, air-raid alerts sounded in cities and towns across the country Monday.

Officials pleaded with the public to take heed and find shelter as the Ukrainian military warned of a “high probabilit­y”

of missile strikes throughout the country as Russia used Victory Day as an impetus for a reinvigora­ted assault.

Throughout the 10-weekold Russian offensive, schools — which often serve as bomb shelters — have been vulnerable to attack. Ukrainian officials said that in the course of the war, more than 1,600 educationa­l institutio­ns had been damaged by bombardmen­t, 126 of them destroyed.

Luhansk’s governor, Serhiy Haidai, was among officials who appealed for special caution Monday, citing the possibilit­y of more “terrible” events.

“Today we do not know what to expect from the enemy,” Haidai wrote on Telegram. “Please go out onto the street as little as possible. Stay in shelters.”

Haidai said shelling in the village of Shypylivka the day before had left 11 people trapped under the rubble of a two-story building.

In Kyiv’s city center, where traffic was light but a few establishm­ents remained open, IT worker Tanya Melnyk said she hadn’t been taking any special precaution­s in connection with the Russian holiday. Still, she felt on edge.

“It’s constant stress anyway,” the 34-year-old said. “Maybe I’m staying home more during these few days, but I’m not sure it makes me feel any safer.”

Putin was more measured in his speech than

some had expected, perhaps out of wariness that either declaring victory in Ukraine or escalating the conflict would send the wrong message.

Putin said Russian soldiers in Ukraine were “fighting for the motherland, so that no one will forget the lessons of World War II and there will be no place in the world for hangmen, executione­rs and the Nazis.”

Moscow claims that Ukraine’s leadership is riddled with neo-Nazis — even though Zelenskyy is Jewish — who are intent on cleansing the country of ethnic Russians, particular­ly in the eastern region of Donbas.

Putin referred to the area as part of Russia’s “historic lands,” in keeping with his embrace of a “Greater Russia” ideology encompassi­ng much of the former Soviet Union’s territory.

In Warsaw, Russia’s ambassador to Poland, Sergey Andreev, was doused with what appeared to be red paint thrown by protesters as he visited a cemetery to honor Soviet soldiers who died during World War II. The protesters carried Ukrainian flags and were also covered in red coloring to symbolize those who have died at the hands of Russian forces.

Meanwhile, all indication­s

suggested that the front lines of the war remained mostly static.

The Ukrainian military said in a morning operationa­l report that it had repelled half a dozen attacks in the previous 24 hours in Luhansk and Donetsk, the two provinces making up the Donbas region that Russia is trying to overrun.

Ukrainian forces pressed ahead with a counteroff­ensive outside the northeaste­rn city of Kharkiv, near the Russian border, the military said. That push has been forcing Moscow to divert troops from elsewhere, the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War said in its latest battlefiel­d assessment.

Ukrainian military pressure has been bolstered by growing Western diplomatic support.

On Monday, the president of the European Council, Charles Michel, became the latest Western dignitary to travel to Ukraine, touring the historic city of Odesa, which has come under increasing fire from Russian forces. The city is home to a commercial­ly vital port on the Black Sea from which Ukraine dispatches much of its grain — exports that countries the world over rely upon.

“I saw silos full of grain, wheat and corn ready for export,” Michel wrote on Twitter. “This badly needed food is stranded because of the Russian war and blockade of Black sea ports. Causing dramatic consequenc­es for vulnerable countries. We need a global response.”

The Commerce Department’s suspension of the import tax on Ukrainian steel was aimed at reactivati­ng one of the country’s most important industries.

Some of Ukraine’s biggest steel-producing communitie­s have been hard hit by the war, including Mariupol, where a small regiment of Ukrainian fighters has been holed up in tunnels beneath a steel plant that has faced regular bombardmen­ts from Russia.

 ?? ANTON NOVODEREZH­KIN AP ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier after a military parade in Moscow’s Red Square marking the 77th anniversar­y of the end of World War II on Monday.
ANTON NOVODEREZH­KIN AP Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier after a military parade in Moscow’s Red Square marking the 77th anniversar­y of the end of World War II on Monday.
 ?? DMITRI LOVETSKY AP ?? Thousands of people carry portraits of relatives who fought in World War II during the Immortal Regiment march in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Monday.
DMITRI LOVETSKY AP Thousands of people carry portraits of relatives who fought in World War II during the Immortal Regiment march in St. Petersburg, Russia, on Monday.

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