U.S. promises more aid for Ukraine as Zelenskyy drives home Kyiv’s need for support now

0
36

U.S. promises more aid for Ukraine as Zelenskyy drives home Kyiv’s need for support now

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is reminding Kyiv’s allies that his country cannot rely on IOUs to defend its borders, calling on those same partners to follow through on defence provision commitments promptly.

“There are packages that have been announced and approved, but they have not been delivered to Ukraine,” Zelenskyy said Friday in his regular televised address. “And the front is fighting with shells and equipment, not with words ‘tomorrow’ or ‘soon.'”

Russia launched an all-out invasion of Ukraine’s borders 30 months ago, and the ensuing war has left Zelenskyy continually working to build external support for Kyiv’s fight.

The United States has been integral to Ukraine’s fight against the invasion, and on Friday, the White House said in a statement that U.S. President Joe Biden had spoken with Zelenskyy and that a new military-aid package was forthcoming for Ukraine.

A man uses a landscaping lawn-trimmer near a damaged home in Bobrove, Ukraine, on Friday.
A man uses a landscaping tool near a damaged home in Bobrove, Ukraine, on Friday. (Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters)

U.S. Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin, who also spoke with his Ukrainian counterpart Rustem Umerov on Friday, said on social media the package was worth $125 million US.

In the call with Zelenskyy, Biden reaffirmed Washington’s support, which the White House called “unwavering,” for Ukraine in its war with Russia.

The aid package includes air-defence missiles, counter-drone equipment, anti-armour missiles and ammunition, the statement said.

Biden is not seeking re-election this fall but has indicated that continued support for Ukraine will be a key focus of his final months in office.

The pending U.S. election could have implications for Ukraine, depending on who follows Biden in the Oval Office.

India’s Modi visits Kyiv

In other news on Friday, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited Ukraine and urged Zelenskyy Friday to sit down for talks with Russia to end the war.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy looks on as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi signs a guest book at Kyiv's Mariinskyi Palace.
Zelenskyy looks on as Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi signs a guest book at Kyiv’s Mariinskyi Palace. Modi visited Ukraine this week, the first such visit for an Indian prime minister in modern times. (Sergei Supinsky/AFP/Getty Images)

The first visit by an Indian prime minister in modern Ukrainian history came at a volatile juncture in the war. Moscow is making slow gains in Eastern Ukraine as Kyiv presses a cross-border incursion in Russia’s Kursk region.

The optics closely resembled the Indian leader’s visit to Moscow last month where he called for peace and embraced Russian President Vladimir Putin, angering Ukraine as a Russian missile strike hit a children’s hospital on the same day.

“The road to resolution can only be found through dialogue and diplomacy,” Modi said in Kyiv. “And we should move in that direction without wasting any time. Both sides should sit together to find a way out of this crisis.

“I want to assure you that India is ready to play an active role in any efforts towards peace. If I can play any role in this personally, I will do that, I want to assure you as a friend.”

It was not immediately clear what Kyiv made of his remarks and whether they were part of a diplomatic push taking place behind closed doors.

Speaking later on Friday in his regular address to the nation after the visit had ended, Zelenskiy said it is “important to us that India remains committed to international law and supports our sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

He also said he appreciated that Modi had begun the visit by paying tribute to the children killed in the July hospital strike.

India-Russia ties

India, which traditionally has close economic and defence relations with Moscow, has publicly criticized the deaths of innocent people in the war, but also strengthened its economic ties with Moscow.

Both leaders described Modi’s visit as “historic” in their statements during their meeting, in which Modi spoke second and Zelenskyy had no opportunity to respond to the call for dialogue.

WATCH | Problems for Putin in Russia’s Kursk region: 

Ukrainian push into Russia is ‘catastrophic’ for Putin’s plans, former U.S. ambassador says

3 days ago

Duration 3:52

Ukrainian push into Russia is ‘catastrophic’ for Putin’s plans, former U.S. ambassador says

Zelenskyy said that “the matter of ending the war and a just peace are the priority for Ukraine.”

Ukraine has repeatedly said it wants the war to end but on Kyiv’s terms, not Russia’s. Ukraine has been pushing to hold a second international summit later this year to advance its vision of peace and involve representatives from Russia.

The first summit, held in Switzerland in June, pointedly excluded Russia, while attracting scores of delegations, including one from India, but not from China, the world’s second largest economy. Zelenskyy urged Modi to sign the summit’s communique, which India has not done.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Monday that talks were out of the question after Ukraine launched its incursion into Russia’s Kursk region on Aug. 6.

Kyiv’s top armed forces commander has touted the capture of almost 100 settlements in the assault, part of what military analysts see as an attempt to divert Russian troops from Eastern Ukraine where Moscow’s forces are making gains.

A Ukrainian solider is seen riding in the back of a pickup truck in Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia region on Monday.
A Ukrainian solider is seen riding in the back of a pickup truck in Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region on Monday. (Andriy Andriyenko/The Associated Press)

Published at Fri, 23 Aug 2024 21:24:07 +0000

As a gender gap splits U.S. voters, Kamala Harris opts not to play the woman card

During one of the Democratic National Convention’s most popular events, Seinfeld and Veep star Julia Louis-Dreyfus led a discussion with the party’s eight female governors about being women in politics, breaking the glass ceiling and Kamala Harris’s presidential campaign.

Louis-Dreyfus asked the women if they had any advice for Harris, who, if elected on Nov. 5, would make history in the United States as the first female president, the first Black female president and the first South Asian president. One governor said that Harris wouldn’t need their advice; another said that she should just be herself.

But it was Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs who advised Harris not to take anything for granted: “There’s still a lot of work ahead of us. We have not won, and we have to fight for every single vote.”

With Harris having taken a deep lead among women since becoming the Democratic nominee, polling experts have called the 2024 presidential race one of the most gendered elections in history.

But the vice-president has hardly mentioned the historic nature of her candidacy — in contrast with Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign, which leaned heavily on the fact that she would have been the first female president.

During that election, some voters were apprehensive of Clinton, the former secretary of state, on account of her being a woman. A recent CBS News poll found that the gender gap during the 2024 election is issue-based: People who felt that efforts to promote gender equality had gone overboard were mostly men and mostly Donald Trump voters, while those who felt that the country hasn’t gone far enough to promote gender equality were mostly female and mostly voting for Harris.

Likewise, people who believed that abortion should be legal were overwhelmingly siding with Harris (76 per cent in favour, 21 per cent against), while the inverse was true for voters backing Trump, the Republican nominee — with 23 per cent thinking abortion should be legal and 78 per cent thinking it should be illegal.

WATCH | Kamala Harris takes Republicans to task on abortion issue:

Harris slams Trump on abortion, says Republicans are ‘out of their minds’

11 hours ago

Duration 3:15

Kamala Harris, speaking as she accepted the Democratic presidential nomination said, ‘we trust women’ and pledged to sign a bill — if passed by Congress — that would ‘restore reproductive freedom’ in the U.S.

Diverging from Clinton on gender

Clinton herself cast part of the blame for her own election loss on female voters who, according to a report in the New York Times, abandoned her during the final days of her campaign because she wasn’t “perfect.”

Harris has taken a different approach, focusing less on the historic circumstances of her candidacy, whereas Clinton, whose campaign slogan was “I’m With Her,” leaned into that messaging.

Nancy Pelosi, former Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, has emphasized that. “She happens to be a woman, and that’s icing on the cake,” she said of Harris during an interview this month with MSNBC. “But the fact is she’s the strongest and the best, and that’s why she is in the position that she is in.”

During an election in which a large number of Democratic voters believe reproductive rights are at stake, a handful of those attending the convention said they were motivated to get into politics by the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2022 Dobbs decision, which overruled the court’s 1973 landmark abortion ruling in Roe v. Wade.

WATCH | Harris ignites crowd at Democratic National Convention:

Kamala Harris tells DNC, ‘We are moving forward’

4 days ago

Duration 2:00

U.S. Vice-President and Democratic party presidential nominee Kamala Harris made a surprise appearance on the first night of the party convention in Chicago, thanking President Joe Biden and telling the crowd, ‘We are moving forward.’

Dr. Emily Walters, a convention delegate and anesthesiologist from Pittsburg, Kan., is one of those voters. Citing Harris’s background prosecuting sexual predators, she said, “I can think of no better champion for what women are worried about right now.”

As for whether she’s concerned that Harris will take a hit at the polls by voters who are uncomfortable with the idea of a female president, “100 per cent,” said Walters, chair of Crawford County Democrats in Kansas.

“We have an image of what it means to be a leader or what it means to be presidential,” she said.

“That falls back on us, on women, on all of us who are active to bridge that gap for her. And to change the world to make it [so that] future possible presidents can look back and say, ‘Oh, I do look like that. And now I can run.'”

‘Polls don’t vote. People do’

Suzan LeVine, a former U.S. ambassador to Switzerland, told CBC News that “it’s not Kamala being the first woman, it’s Kamala being a great president.”

“And not having gender as a part of it, but having the policy, having the vision and being able to move forward on that front,” she said. But she added that there are some lessons to be gleaned from Hillary Clinton’s 2016 run.

A woman stands in front of a microphone and gestures with her hands.
Hillary Clinton, former U.S. secretary of state, is shown at her portrait unveiling ceremony on Sept. 26, 2023, in Washington, D.C. Harris is handling the gender issue differently from Clinton, who ran for president in 2016, placing less emphasis on the historic circumstances of her candidacy. (Jacquelyn Martin/The Associated Press)

“Unfortunately there were other forces at play that we didn’t even see or anticipate,” LeVine said, pointing to a Russian disinformation campaign that discredited Clinton on gender issues.

However, she said, “I think a key lesson is to not take any vote or voter or moment for granted. I can’t tell you how many people said to me, ‘Oh, there’s no way Hillary can lose. She’s got it in the bag.’ And the polls had her up ahead. But polls don’t vote. People do.”

Clinton, speaking during the Democratic convention in Chicago earlier this week, kept the focus on Harris but briefly referred to that shocking 2016 loss: “The story of my life and the history of our country is that progress is possible but not guaranteed,” she said.

Making Harris more ‘likable’

Walters, the delegate from Kansas, who supported Clinton eight years ago, said she believes that the Harris campaign has gleaned certain lessons from that failed run.

“If you look at the criticisms that were levied against [Clinton], things like not being likable, not being warm or approachable, it is a difficult needle to thread for women in leadership positions,” she said.

“And I do think that the campaign has put some effort into making [Harris] more likable.”

Back at the panel chaired by Julia Louis-Dreyfus, the actor asked whether there were any advantages to being a female candidate. Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer was quick to answer.

“There are unique hurdles, there are unique barriers, there are a lot of different ways that we are treated compared to male candidates. But I would also say that it is a huge advantage to be underestimated,” she said.

“I think that is a huge advantage — to come in, where people write us off and don’t expect us to be as deep on issues or as thoughtful in articulating the vision or as tough,” Whitmer said. “I would much rather be underestimated than overestimated.”

WATCH | Democrats party after Harris accepts nomination for president:

DNC celebrates after Kamala Harris formally accepts presidential nomination

19 hours ago

Duration 1:49

An electric crowd celebrated shortly after Kamala Harris formally accepted her party’s presidential nomination on the last night of the Democratic National Convention.

Published at Sun, 18 Aug 2024 18:39:34 +0000

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here