San Diego Union-Tribune

U.K. PLEDGES MORE MISSILES AS ZELENSKYY VISITS SUNAK

Ukrainian president continues his tour of European capitals

- BY JILL LAWLESS & DANICA KIRKA Lawless and Kirka write for The Associated Press.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy pressed the British government at the end of a whirlwind European tour Monday to join a “fighter jet coalition” that would help strengthen his country’s aerial capabiliti­es, but instead secured a commitment for attack drones and hundreds more missiles.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak greeted Zelenskyy with a handshake and hug after the president’s helicopter landed at Chequers, the British leader’s official country retreat. It was Zelenskyy’s second trip to the U.K. since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, but the fifth European country he visited in three days.

He is seeking more military aid as Ukraine prepares a long-anticipate­d spring offensive to retake Russianocc­upied territory. The Ukrainian leader also visited Italy, the Vatican, Germany and France.

Russia reacted to the U.K.’s new pledge “extremely negatively,” but also doubts the missiles and drones would drasticall­y change the course of the war, Kremlin spokespers­on Dmitry Peskov said Monday.

“Britain aspires to be at the forefront among countries that continue to pump weapons into Ukraine,” Peskov said. “We repeat once again: It cannot yield any drastic and fundamenta­l influence on the way the special military operation (in Ukraine) is unfolding. But, definitely, it leads to further destructio­n . ... It makes this whole story for Ukraine much more complicate­d.”

Zelenskyy said one of the missions of his European travels that started Saturday was to build a “fighter jet coalition” to provide

Ukraine with vital military power in the air. He said more work was needed on that front.

While the U.K. will not provide the planes, the prime minister said the country would join the coalition and begin a previously announced training program for Ukrainian fighter pilots as soon as this summer.

The U.K., one of Ukraine’s major military allies, has provided shortrange missiles and Challenger tanks and has trained 15,000 Ukrainian troops on British soil. Last week, the government announced it had sent Ukraine Storm Shadow cruise missiles, which have a range of more than 150 miles. The British missiles were the first known shipment of longer-range weaponry that Kyiv has long sought from its allies.

Sunak’s office said it was giving Ukraine hundreds more air defense missiles, as well as “long-range attack drones” with a reach of more than 120 miles.

“This is a crucial moment in Ukraine’s resistance to a terrible war of aggression they did not choose or provoke,” Sunak said. “They need the sustained support of the internatio­nal community to defend against the barrage of unrelentin­g and indiscrimi­nate attacks that have been their daily reality for over a year.”

Sunak plans to push allies at a meeting of Group of Seven leaders in Japan later this week to deliver more support to Ukraine, Downing Street said.

As Zelenskyy visited European capitals, Russia stepped up attacks across Ukraine with drones and missiles. Russia shelled two communitie­s Sunday in the northern border province of Sumy, regional officials said on Telegram. They said 109 explosions were recorded.

Zelenskyy’s office said Monday that Russian attacks had killed nine civilians and injured 19 in the past day. Six of the deaths were in southern Ukraine’s

Kherson province. Two civilians were killed in Chuhuiv in Kharkiv province, and one in Prymorsk, on the Azov Sea coast about 10 miles from Russian-occupied Berdyansk.

The presidenti­al office also reported that Marhanets, which lies across the river from the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant, was shelled.

Russian state news agency RIA-Novosti reported that an acting regional interior minister appointed by Moscow, Igor Kornet, was injured in an explosion at a barbershop in the Russian-occupied city of Luhansk. The leader of the so-called Luhansk People’s Republic, a separatist-held region of Ukraine that Moscow illegally annexed, was quoted as saying a bomb caused the explosion.

Assassinat­ion attempts and sabotage attacks have increased in Russian-occupied territory as well as Russia proper. Russian authoritie­s often blame Ukrainian forces, but Kyiv rarely acknowledg­es such attacks.

Zelenskyy traveled to Britain from Paris, where he met Sunday with French President Emmanuel Macron and secured a pledge of light tanks, armored vehicles and air defense systems.

About 2,000 Ukrainian soldiers would receive training in France this year and nearly 4,000 others in Poland, Macron’s office said.

Speaking Monday on French television network TF1, Macron said training on French fighter jets such as the Mirage 2000 “can start now” but rejected the idea of France delivering warplanes to Ukraine.

Zelenskyy also met with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Sunday. It was his first visit to Berlin since the start of the invasion and came a day after the German government announced military aid for Ukraine worth more than $3 billion.

 ?? CARL COURT AP ?? British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy walk in the garden at Chequers in Aylesbury, England, on Monday.
CARL COURT AP British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy walk in the garden at Chequers in Aylesbury, England, on Monday.

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