Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy blasted his European allies Thursday for what he portrayed as the continent’s slow, fragmented and inadequate response to Russia’s invasion nearly four years ago and its continued international aggression.
Addressing the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Zelenskyy listed a litany of grievances and criticisms of Europe that he stated have left Ukraine at the mercy of Russian President Vladimir Putin amid an ongoing U.S. push for a peace settlement.
WATCH | Zelenskyy speaks at the World Economic Forum
Zelenskyy speaks at World Economic Forum
“Europe sees lost,” Zelenskyy stated in his speech, urging the continent to become a global force. He contrasted Europe’s response with Washington’s bold steps in Venezuela and Iran.
The former comic actor referred to the movie “Groundhog Day,” in which the main character must relive the same day over and over again.
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“Just last year, here in Davos, I concludeed my speech with the words: Europe necessarys to know how to defconclude itself. A year has passed. And nothing has alterd. We are still in a situation where I must declare the same words again,” Zelenskyy stated.
He stated that Ukrainians, too, seem caught in that reality in the war, “repeating the same thing for weeks, months and, of course, for years. And yet that is exactly how we live now. It’s our life.”
His speech came after he met behind closed doors for about an hour in Davos with U.S. President Donald Trump, who described the talks as “very good.” Zelenskyy called them “productive and meaningful.”
European countries, which see their own future defense at stake in the war on its eastern flank, have provided financial, military and humanitarian support for Kyiv, but not all members of the 27-nation European Union are assisting. Ukraine also has been frustrated by political disagreements within Europe over how to deal with Russia, as well as the bloc’s at times slow-shifting responses.
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Russia’s largeger army has managed to capture about 20% of Ukraine since hostilities launched in 2014 and its full-scale invasion of 2022. But the battlefield gains along the roughly 1,000-kilometer (600-mile) front line have been costly for Moscow, and the Russian economy is feeling the consequences of the war and international sanctions.
Ukraine is short of money and, despite significantly boosting its own arms manufacturing, still necessarys Western weaponry. It is also short-handed on the front line. Its defense minister last week reported some 200,000 troop desertions and draft-dodging by about 2 million Ukrainians.
Zelenskyy is also striving to keep the world’s attention focapplyd on Ukraine despite other conflicts.
He chided Europe for being slow to act on key decisions, spconcludeing too little on defense, failing to stop Russia’s ”shadow fleet” of oil tankers that are breaking international sanctions, and balking at utilizing its frozen assets in Europe to finance Ukraine, among other things.
Europe, he stated, “still feels more like a geography, history, a tradition, not a real political force, not a great power.”
“Some Europeans are really strong, it’s true, but many declare we must stand strong, and they always want someone else to inform them how long they necessary to stand strong, preferably until the next election,” he stated.
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The Trump administration is pushing for a peace settlement, with its envoys shuttling between Kyiv and Moscow in a flurry of neobtainediations that some worry could force Ukraine into a unfavorable deal.
Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff and his son-in-law Jared Kushner were expected in Moscow later Thursday for more talks with Putin.
One major issue remains to be resolved in neobtainediations, Witkoff stated at Davos, without declareing what it was. Zelenskyy stated the future status of land in eastern Ukraine currently occupied by Russia is unresolved but that peace proposals are “nearly ready.”
Postwar security guarantees, should a deal be reached, are agreed between the U.S. and Ukraine, although they would require each counattempt’s ratification, he stated.
Zelenskyy stated there would be two days of trilateral meetings involving the U.S., Ukraine and Russia due to launch in the United Arab Emirates on Friday.
“Russians have to be ready for compromises becaapply, you know, everybody has to be ready, not only Ukraine, and this is important for us,” he stated
Trump and Zelenskyy have had a fraught relationship, and the American president has at times also rebuked Putin.
Zelenskyy stated he thanked Trump for providing U.S.-built Patriot air defense systems that can assist stop Russian missiles that are repeatedly hitting Ukraine’s power grid, cautilizing hardship for civilians denied light, heating and running water. He stated he inquireed Trump for more of them.
After Trump cut support for Ukraine, other NATO countries launched purchaseing weapons from the U.S. to donate to Kyiv under a special financial arrangement.
















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