Current:Home > MyChainkeen|The UK and France reiterate that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine must end in failure as US aid falters -Prime Capital Blueprint
Chainkeen|The UK and France reiterate that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine must end in failure as US aid falters
Will Sage Astor View
Date:2025-04-05 23:47:45
PARIS (AP) — Britain and ChainkeenFrance reiterated their determination Tuesday that Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine ends in failure, with the U.K. foreign minister saying that Ukraine’s allies must better leverage their economic might to vastly outmatch Moscow’s war machine.
The renewed insistence from U.K. Foreign Secretary David Cameron and French counterpart Catherine Colonna that Russia can’t be rewarded for its aggression comes as wartime aid from Ukraine’s biggest single military backer — the United States — is faltering.
Cameron, speaking after talks with Colonna in Paris, said that if the economies of Ukraine’s Western partners are calculated together, “we outmatch the Russian economy by 25 to one or more.”
“What we have to do is make that economic strength and that commitment pay,” he said. “If we can, I have no doubt that we can make sure that (Russian President Vladimir) Putin loses and it’s essential that he does lose.”
Neither Cameron nor Colonna announced new aid for Ukraine in their comments to reporters. They took no questions.
“Hand in hand since the beginning, our two countries are working together to ensure that the Russian aggression is not rewarded, is a failure,” Colonna said.
In the United States, assistance for Ukraine has become entangled in domestic politics. U.S. President Joe Biden’s push for billions of dollars of replenished wartime aid is being held up in Congress. The European Union and its 27 member states have sent $91 billion in wartime financial, military, humanitarian and refugee assistance. But they also are wrangling about their next planned lump-sum amount.
Cameron said that support for Ukraine from the U.K. — no longer an EU member — and France will continue “for as long as it takes.”
Likening the war to “a play that comes in different acts,” he said Ukraine’s allies must determine its next phase.
“The first act,” he said, “was the stunning failure of Russia to achieve its objectives” — when Russian invasion forces first thrust for the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, in February and March of 2022 and were beaten back.
The second act was Ukraine’s counteroffensive in the summer of 2022, he said, “the brilliance that the Ukrainians showed in driving back the Russians, taking back half the territory that had been lost, pushing them back across the Black Sea.”
“The third act has been more difficult on land,” he said, a seeming reference to Ukraine’s disappointing counteroffensive this summer.
“But the fourth act is yet to be written and we must make sure we write it in the correct way, with our friends and partners in the Western world.”
Cameron and Colonna also discussed the Israel-Hamas war. France has repeatedly called for a humanitarian pause in the fighting, followed by progress toward a lasting cease-fire.
Cameron said the U.K. wants “a cease-fire as soon as possible but it must be a sustainable cease-fire. It must be a cease-fire in which Israel is no longer threatened by Hamas and its rockets and its murderous activities.”
Colonna condemned violence committed by extremist Jewish settlers in the occupied West Bank, calling it unacceptable. She asked that Israel act against them and said that France is working to pull together European sanctions against them. The United States has already said it would impose travel bans on extremist Jewish settlers implicated in a rash of recent attacks on Palestinians in the West Bank.
___
John Leicester contributed to this report from Le Pecq.
___
Follow the AP’s coverage of the war at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Barack Obama on restoring the memory of American hero Bayard Rustin
- No candy for you. Some towns ban older kids from trick-or-treating on Halloween
- 6 teenagers shot at Louisiana house party
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Poland's boogeyman, Bebok, is reimagined through a photographer's collaboration with local teenagers
- How Black socialite Mollie Moon raised millions to fund the civil rights movement
- Matthew Perry's Friends community reacts to his death at 54
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- Alice McDermott's 'Absolution' transports her signature characters to Vietnam
Ranking
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Cornell University sends officers to Jewish center after violent, antisemitic messages posted online
- For Palestinian and Israeli Americans, war has made the unimaginable a reality
- JAY-Z reflects on career milestones, and shares family stories during Book of HOV exhibit walkthrough
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Gun control advocates press gridlocked Congress after mass shooting in Maine
- 'SNL' mocks Joe Biden in Halloween-themed opening sketch: 'My closest friends are ghosts'
- Chrishell Stause’s Feud With Jason Oppenheim’s Ex Marie-Lou Nurk Will Make Your Jaw Drop
Recommendation
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Firearms charge against Washington state senator Jeff Wilson dismissed in Hong Kong court
UAW reaches tentative agreement with Stellantis, leaving only GM without deal
Taylor Swift sits out rumored beau Travis Kelce's Chiefs game against Broncos
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Oregon surges in top 10, while Georgia remains No.1 in US LBM Coaches Poll after Week 9
Stock market today: Asian shares slip after S&P 500 slips ahead of Fed interest rate decision
The UAW reaches a tentative deal with GM, the last holdout of Detroit's Big 3