Zelelnsky speaks to the Chinese leader Xi…..
The Ukreaine has received Western combat vehicles…..
Florida Gov DeSantis pushes for a cease-fire now, which would allow Russia to keep conquered Ukraine territory ….
President Biden wants the Ukraine to fight get back land…..Then settle up….
The Russian Foreign Minister taks about swaps for the WSJ Reporter….
The Ukraine offense maybe held off due the rain and muddy conditions…..
Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, had long requested a call with China’s leader, Xi Jinping. Beijing has not criticized the invasion by Moscow, its close partner. Here is what we’re covering:
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Zelensky says the conversation with Xi was ‘long and meaningful.’
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Xi’s language in the call underscores China’s close ties to Russia.
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Zelensky tailors his message to China, but remains firm on territorial restoration.
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The U.S. and France welcome the Xi-Zelensky call, but Washington underlines its skepticism.
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Ukraine has nearly all the combat vehicles allies promised, NATO’s military commander says.
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A reporting team for an Italian newspaper comes under fire in South Ukraine, and one journalist is killed.
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Those who stayed in Chernobyl lived through another calamity when Russian troops came…..
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Here’s the latest on the war and its impact around the globe.
- A Biden administration spokesman said Wednesday that the United States is glad to see that Xi and Zelensky connected in a phone call. John Kirby, the National Security Council spokesman, asked about the possibility of China brokering a negotiated settlement between Kyiv and Moscow, said that any deal needs to be one that Zelensky accepts. ““The only settlement that we think is worth pursuing is one that President Zelensky thinks is worth pursuing,” Kirby said.
- Last month, Xi made a grand state visit to Russia in ashow of strength, highlighting Beijing’s bid for global leadership. It came shortly after the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin. Zelensky, who has been visited by numerous world leaders in Kyiv, said previously that he has invited Xi to visit Ukraine. Beijing has positioned itself as neutral in the conflict and recently released a 12-point proposal for ending the war.
- “It was a long and quite rational conversation,”Zelesnky said in his nightly address. The two leaders focused on areas of concurrence such as “threats with nuclear weapons,” “the situation around the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant,” and the Balck sea grain deal, he said.
- Journalists reporting for La Republica, an Italian newspaper, came under fire in Ukraine Wednesday, and Ukrainian fixer Bogdan Bitik was killed, Italian media outlets reported. Italian reporter Corrado Zunino was injured in the attack, near Kherson.
- German and British warplanes intercepted three Russian military aircraft over the Baltic Sea, German air force officials wrote on Twitter Wednesday. Two Russian air force Sukhoi Su-27 fighter aircraft and one Ilyushin Il-20 aircraft flew in international airspace over the Baltic Sea without a transponder signal, Germany’s Luftwaffe said.
- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused the West of causing a deadlock over the Black Sea grain deal. The negotiations, he said during a news conference at the United Nations in New York, have been “brought to a dead end by Western colleagues.” Russia has indicated that it will not agree to extend the fragile pact that allows Ukrainian grain to be exported beyond May 18 unless its demands — which include rejoining the SWIFT banking system — are met. The grain deal has helped ease a global food crisis resulting from the war.
- Lavrov also alluded to the possibility of a prisoner swap for two Americans, Paul Whelan and Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, who are detained in Russia. He referred to a number of Russians detained by the United States, telling reporters that “the discussion of these matters exists” but that such work “is not public in nature.” He was speaking at a news conference in New York, where Russia’s month-long term as the rotating head of the U.N. Security Council is winding down.
- “Heavy, short-range combat” continues in Bakhmut, according to a daily British intelligence update. The besieged area in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region has been the site of a deadlocked battle for months. Supply lines to Ukraine’s forces in Bakhmut are being “complicated by muddy conditions on unsurfaced tracks,” it added. Analysts at the U.S.-based Institute for the Study of War said in their latest assessment that Russian forces continue to mount ground attacks in and around Bakhmut, aided by fighters from the Russian mercenary Wagner Group.
- Ukraine is working with the FBI to collect evidence of war crimes, FBI special agent Alex Kobzanets told a conference. Ukrainian authorities are gathering phone data and geolocation information from battlefields, as well as forensic analyses of DNA samples to prove Russian war crimes, Kobzanets told the RSA cybersecurity conference in San Francisco, Reuters reported. “The next step is working with national U.S. service providers and transferring that information,” he added.
- Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a Republican who has moved toward entering the presidential race, said in an interview Tuesday it is “in everybody’s interest to try to get to a place where we can have a cease-fire” in Ukraine — a message out of step with the Biden administration, which has called negotiations with Russia untenable and says cease-fires would allow the country to rest and rearm, Hannah Knowles reports.
- President Biden is set to discuss the Ukraine war at a Group of Seven meeting in Japan. Biden is set to attend a summit in Hiroshima on May 19 to “discuss a range of the most pressing global issues, including the G-7’s unwavering support for Ukraine,” a White House statement said. He will also attend a meeting of the Quad alliance in Sydney, which includes Australia, India and Japan, to address Indo-Pacific matters.
- A former Wagner Group commander who is seeking asylum in Norway pleaded guilty to charges related to a fight outside a bar in the capital, Oslo. Andrey Medvedev, 26, said he was “very ashamed” of his behavior, Reuters reported. He seemingly defected from the fighting in Ukraine and crossed into Norway from Russia in January, claiming that his life is at risk if he returns….
*For a Detailed update on the Ukraine ground situation check here.…
CG says
I have noticed you are correctly calling it “Ukraine” in the headline. That is a good thing.
However, please also keep in mind that it is “Ukraine” and not “The Ukraine” when you write additional commentary on the post. Again, “The Ukraine” is an outdated term that dates back to when they were under Russian domination. They very much do not want to be referred to in that way.
CG says
“The Ukrainian(s)” to start off a sentence or as part of a sentence is fine, just like “the American” would be.
jamesb says
He, he, he….
Thanks CG…..