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Zelensky arrives in UK after Russian attack on Kyiv kills at least 9

Zelensky arrives in UK after Russian attack on Kyiv kills at least 9

Boston Globe23-06-2025
Zelensky said discussions would focus on coordinating diplomatically with Ukraine's allies — likely a reference to cease-fire negotiations — developing joint weapons production projects, and tightening sanctions on Russia.
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Monday's visit appears to be part of a broader European diplomatic push. On Wednesday, Zelensky will address the Council of Europe, the Continent's leading human rights institution. In between, he may attend the NATO summit in The Hague, though he has yet to confirm his participation amid fears that Ukraine could be sidelined during the talks.
Monday's attack was the second lethal barrage on Kyiv in the past week. Last Tuesday, 28 people died in a Russian assault, most of them the victims of a strike on another apartment building. That was the deadliest attack on the Ukrainian capital in nearly a year.
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The new salvo of strikes has reinforced many Ukrainians' belief that Moscow is not interested in a cease-fire, especially as its military pushes ahead with a summer offensive in eastern Ukraine. A strike Sunday in Kramatorsk, a city near the eastern front line, killed four people.
'Russia is once again striking at human lives and destinies,' Tymur Tkachenko, the head of Kyiv's military administration, said Monday after the attack. 'This is not a trend, not an accident — it is a plan.'
Those killed Monday appeared to have been in a residential building that was struck. Ukraine's emergency services released photos showing part of the five-story structure collapsed into rubble. As crews worked to clear the debris, officials warned that more people were probably still trapped beneath the wreckage.
Several European officials in Kyiv, including Katarina Mathernova, the European Union ambassador, condemned the attack. Still, Ukraine worries that its most important ally, the United States, may further disengage from Ukraine's war effort after joining Israel's attacks on Iran over the weekend.
Last week, President Trump skipped a scheduled meeting with Zelensky, at the Group of 7 summit in Canada, citing the need to return to Washington to handle the situation in the Middle East.
Zelensky is likely to be worried that he could get similar treatment from world leaders at a NATO summit set to begin Tuesday in The Hague. He has yet to announce whether he will join that meeting of leaders of the bloc, which has promised to eventually make Ukraine a member.
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Western leaders' shift in focus to the Middle East could leave Ukraine in a difficult position, stripped of the diplomatic leverage it hoped to use this year to end the war. Cease-fire talks have largely stalled, and without US support and pressure for more negotiations, Ukraine may have to endure a prolonged conflict on the battlefield, where its troops are slowly but steadily losing ground.
If he manages to speak with Trump face-to-face in The Hague, Zelensky has said, he plans to request authorization for the sale of US-made Patriot air defense systems to Ukraine and to discuss new sanctions against Russia.
'Frankly, we need to talk about revitalizing diplomacy,' Zelensky told journalists last week. 'We need more clarity and more global pressure on Putin.'
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