logo
NATO members' leaders snubbing Zelensky at key summit

NATO members' leaders snubbing Zelensky at key summit

Russia Today4 days ago

Several NATO members, including the US, are deliberately avoiding meeting with Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky at the bloc's key summit in The Hague, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has claimed.
Speaking prior to the gathering on Wednesday, Orban noted that Zelensky would only attend the informal dinner and 'will not participate in the NATO summit in any official form,' indicating that 'a clear sign that the previous chapter is over.'
The Hungarian prime minister went on to explain that this is a drastic change compared to previous years, stating that 'the Americans, the Turks, the Slovaks, and we have made it clear that we do not want to sit at the same table with Zelensky when it comes to NATO.'
He further stressed Hungary's continued opposition to Ukraine joining NATO or the EU. Orban has repeatedly warned that Kiev's membership in any of the blocs would drag the West into a direct conflict with Russia.
Meanwhile, Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto noted that the 2025 summit would be the first since 2022 where the focus would be not on stepping up support for Ukraine, but on strengthening the bloc's collective defense.
'With Ukraine's NATO membership off the agenda, direct confrontation with Russia has been avoided. Rationality has prevailed,' he added.
Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump confirmed that he would 'probably' meet with Zelensky on the sidelines of the summit. At the same time, he described the Ukrainian leader as being in a 'tough situation,' adding that he 'should have never been there.'
In another sign of the simmering tensions between Zelensky and Trump, the Washington Post reported that NATO leaders are 'tiptoeing around rifts' during the summit, trying to showcase 'a veneer of unity'.
The paper reported that 'NATO officials are trying to keep [Trump and Zelensky] apart as much as possible in public — a recognition of Trump's occasionally volcanic disdain for the Ukrainian leader.'
In this vein, NATO organizers positioned Zelensky far from Trump during the official summit photo-op, according to footage broadcast by C-SPAN.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lavrov compares Ukrainian Nazis with Third Reich
Lavrov compares Ukrainian Nazis with Third Reich

Russia Today

time31 minutes ago

  • Russia Today

Lavrov compares Ukrainian Nazis with Third Reich

Nazis in both Ukraine and World War II-era Germany killed people based on their ethnicity, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has said, in reference to the 2014 Odessa massacre. Speaking after talks with Kyrgyz Foreign Minister Jeenbek Kulubaev on Sunday, Lavrov drew direct parallels between the Third Reich and modern Ukraine with regard to their treatment of people they seek to subjugate. 'The Nazis burned Jews simply because they were Jews, and the Ukrainian Nazis burned Russian people in Odessa on May 2, 2014 simply because they were Russian,' he stated. The Russian foreign minister was referring to violent clashes in Odessa in the early days of the Ukraine crisis, when street battles between pro-Ukraine and anti-Maidan activists ended with a fire at the city's Trade Unions House, which claimed dozens of lives. Moscow described the incident as a massacre by Ukrainian nationalist groups. Lavrov also criticized German Chancellor Friedrich Merz for calling for Ukraine's defense capabilities to be strengthened and for warning European countries against repeating the appeasement policies of the 1930s by negotiating with Russia on its terms. 'A stunning comparison for a person who expects to be taken seriously as chancellor of Germany,' Lavrov said, adding that Moscow is seeking a just settlement of the Ukraine conflict. 'But of course, we are not ready for the fraudulent approaches that some European leaders are pushing us toward,' he stated. Moscow has denied that it has any plans to attack NATO countries, and has for years sounded the alarm over the resurgence of Nazi ideology in Ukraine, as well as the suppression of Russian culture by Kiev. The Kremlin has listed 'denazification' as one of the key goals in the Ukraine conflict.

US lifts Russia sanctions that blocked key NPP construction in EU state
US lifts Russia sanctions that blocked key NPP construction in EU state

Russia Today

time31 minutes ago

  • Russia Today

US lifts Russia sanctions that blocked key NPP construction in EU state

The US has lifted sanctions that barred financial transactions via Russia's Gazprombank related to Hungary's Paks-2 nuclear power plant. A general license issued by the US Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) on Friday grants Gazprombank and a host of other Russian banks permission to conduct transactions 'related to civil nuclear energy.' Paks-2, launched in 2014 under a bilateral agreement, involves two reactors constructed by Russia's Rosatom and includes a €10 billion ($11.7 billion) Russian loan to cover most of the estimated €12.5 billion cost. The project, deemed critical to Hungary's energy security, was scheduled to start last year near the existing Paks NPP, the country's only nuclear power station, which supplies about half of the nation's electricity. However, US sanctions on Gazprombank – through which the project was financed – forced construction to pause. Budapest repeatedly appealed to Washington for a waiver. Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto confirmed on Sunday that the US has now lifted the restrictions. 'The US made numerous decisions on political grounds that placed our country in an extremely difficult situation,' Szijjarto said in a statement. 'One of these decisions sought to undermine Hungary's energy supply by imposing restrictions on the construction of the Paks-2 NPP, making it virtually impossible for construction to continue.' He added that 'fortunately, since January, there has been a president in Washington who views Hungary as a friend.' 'In light of this, the US government has lifted sanctions related to the Paks nuclear power plant investment,' Szijjarto stated. He stressed that Paks-2 'guarantees Hungary's secure energy supply,' and will allow the country to cover most of its electricity needs by the mid-2030s. Hungary has opposed Western sanctions on Russian energy since the Ukraine conflict escalated in 2022, arguing the imports are essential for national security. It maintains a long-term gas deal with Gazprom. Hungary gets the bulk of its oil and gas from Russia under exemptions it secured from EU restrictions. Budapest recently blocked a European Commission proposal to phase out Russian gas imports by 2027, warning the move would 'destroy Hungary's energy security' and raise costs sharply. The OFAC license also lifts restrictions on civil nuclear-related transactions from the Russian central bank and the country's largest lender Sber Bank, along with Vnesheconombank, Alfa-Bank, VTB, Otkritie, Rosbank, and several others. The move follows a thaw in relations between Russia and the US amid diplomatic efforts toward a peaceful resolution of the Ukraine conflict.

UK wasted 20 years searching for ‘Russian mole' in MI6
UK wasted 20 years searching for ‘Russian mole' in MI6

Russia Today

time5 hours ago

  • Russia Today

UK wasted 20 years searching for ‘Russian mole' in MI6

British intelligence agencies spent two decades hunting a suspected Russian double agent inside MI6, only to drop the case after failing to find evidence, The Guardian has reported, citing unnamed sources. The investigation, dubbed Operation Wedlock, was eventually closed as 'inconclusive,' and the suspect left service, the outlet said on Friday. The probe, which reportedly ran from the mid-1990s to around 2015, was led by MI5, the UK's domestic counter-intelligence agency. MI6, which is responsible for foreign intelligence, launched the inquiry after a CIA tip-off suggested a senior officer may have been spying for Russia. '[We were told] the target was a Russian spy… The US believed he was leaking information to the Russians,' a source told The Guardian. 'The job was taken more seriously than any other [MI5] was involved in. Wedlock eclipsed them all.' The operation allegedly involved some 35 officers. MI5 is said to have bugged the suspect's home, tailed him around London with video surveillance, and even followed him abroad, despite that being outside its legal mandate. MI5 reportedly believed the mole had two accomplices based in London but found no supporting evidence. 'We thought we had another Philby on our hands,' a source told the outlet, referring to Kim Philby, one of the most prominent members of the intelligence group Cambridge Five, which supplied the Soviet Union with information from the UK during World War II and the early stages of the Cold War. The Wedlock spy saga is believed to have dragged on until at least 2015, by which time the suspect had left MI6. Despite the scope of the operation, MI5 failed to prove any espionage. 'MI5 never got the conclusive proof it was looking for,' one source said, calling Wedlock 'highly unusual… the longest in recent memory and probably the most expensive.' The UK has repeatedly accused Russia of espionage and sabotage in Europe without offering proof. In a high-profile case in 2018, London alleged Moscow tried to poison ex-Russian military intelligence officer turned MI6 asset Sergey Skripal and his daughter. Russia denied involvement. Tensions between Moscow and London have worsened since the escalation of the Ukraine conflict in 2022. The UK is one of Kiev's staunchest backers, imposing sanctions on Russia and supplying weapons to Ukraine. Russian officials believe that British intelligence trains Ukrainian units for sabotage missions inside Russia.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store