President Trump unleashed a blistering rebuke of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday, calling him a “dictator without elections” who tricked the U.S. into spending billions to help his country.
Zelenskyy is now the subject of withering posts by the world’s most powerful man, who is parroting a regular supply of Kremlin talking points stemming from somewhere yet unknown, altering the
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who met with U.S. Vice President JD Vance in Germany on Friday, said Ukraine was not invited to the talks in Saudi Arabia and Kyiv would not engage with Russia before consulting with strategic partners.
Donald Trump's former special envoy to Ukraine reacted to the president's "strange and divergent" comments about the country and its leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Kurt Volker, who had been a key witness in Trump's first impeachment inquiry over his Ukraine extortion scheme,
President Trump’s new comments that Ukraine started the war with Russia and that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is an unpopular “dictator” who refuses to hold elections generated a sharp pushback Wednesday from top European leaders — and a ringing endorsement from Russia’s foreign minister.
President Donald Trump’s false claim, an attack on Ukraine and its president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has ignited outrage from U.S. allies abroad and from his frequent critics at home — who branded him a “Russian asset” and a “traitor to the free world.
On the third anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the U.N. General Assembly is expected to vote on dueling resolutions.
India and China abstained from voting on a resolution moved by Ukraine in the United Nations General Assembly on the third anniversary of Russia’s invasion.
In a setback for the Trump administration the assembly approved a European-backed Ukrainian resolution, which demands an immediate withdrawal of Russian troops and calls Moscow’s aggression a violation of the U.
US sides with Putin’s Moscow at UN vote after Macron hails ‘turning point’ in war - Moscow rejected the idea of European peacekeepers in Ukraine as an ‘uncontrollable’ development last month
In a win for Ukraine on the third anniversary of Russia’s full-scale invasion, the UN General Assembly (UNGA) refused to approve a US-backed resolution on Monday that urges an end to the war. Members of the assembly refused to adopt Washington’s resolution as it failed to make mention of the Kremlin’s aggression.