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US to send Ukraine at least $275m in new weapons 

The latest tranche of weapons comes as worries grow about an escalation in the conflict, with both sides pushing to gain any advantage that they can exploit if Trump demands a quick end to the war…reports Asian Lite News

The Pentagon will send Ukraine at least $275 million in new weapons, US officials said Tuesday, as the Biden administration rushes to do as much as it can to help Kyiv fight back against Russia in the remaining two months before President-elect Donald Trump takes office. 

The latest tranche of weapons comes as worries grow about an escalation in the conflict, with both sides pushing to gain any advantage that they can exploit if Trump demands a quick end to the war — as he has vowed to do. 

In rapid succession this week, President Joe Biden gave Ukraine the authority to fire longer-range missiles deeper into Russia and then Russian President Vladimir Putin formally lowered the threshold for using nuclear weapons. 

US officials contend that Russia’s change in nuclear doctrine was expected, but Moscow is warning that Ukraine’s new use of the Army Tactical Missile System, known as ATACMS, inside Russia on Tuesday could trigger a strong response. 

One American official said the US is seeing no indications that Russia is preparing to use a nuclear weapon in Ukraine. The US officials spoke on condition of anonymity because the aid package has not yet been made public. 

Asked Tuesday if a Ukrainian attack with longer-range US missiles could potentially trigger use of nuclear weapons, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov answered affirmatively. He pointed to the doctrine’s provision that holds the door open for it after a conventional strike that raises critical threats for the “sovereignty and territorial integrity” of Russia and its ally Belarus. 

A US official said Ukraine fired about eight ATACM missiles into Russia on Tuesday, and just two were intercepted. The official said the US is still assessing the damage but that the missiles struck an ammunition supply location in Karachev, in the Bryansk region. 

The weapons in the new package of aid for Ukraine include an infusion of air defense, including High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS), as well as 155mm and 105mm artillery rounds, Javelin anti-armor munitions and other equipment and spare parts, US officials say. 

The weapons will be provided through presidential drawdown authority, which allows the Pentagon quickly to pull supplies from its shelves to speed them to Ukraine’s front line. 

Trump’s upcoming move to the White House has triggered a scramble by the Biden administration to ensure all the congressionally approved funding for Ukraine gets delivered and that Kyiv is in a strong position going into the winter. 

The Biden administration would have to rush $7.1 billion in weapons from the Pentagon’s stockpiles to spend all of those funds before Trump is sworn in. That includes $4.3 billion from a foreign aid bill passed by Congress earlier this year and $2.8 billion still on the books in savings due to the Pentagon recalculating the value of systems sent. 

As part of the wider effort, the administration also is on track to disperse its portion of a $50 billion loan to Ukraine, backed by frozen Russian assets, before Biden leaves the White House, according to two senior administration officials. 

The officials, who were not authorized to comment publicly, said the US and Ukraine are now in “advanced stages” in discussing terms of the loan and are looking to complete the process for the $20 billion portion of the mammoth loan that the US is backing. 

The goal is to get it done before the end of the year, one official said. 

HIMARS – a game-changer in Russia-Ukraine conflict?.(photo:IN)

Biden agrees to give anti-personnel mines 

Biden has agreed to give Ukraine anti-personnel land mines, a US defence official told the BBC, a move seen as an attempt to slow Russian troops who have been steadily advancing in Ukraine’s east in recent months. The official, who was speaking on condition of anonymity, said such mines would be delivered soon and Washington expected that they would be used on Ukraine’s territory. 

Ukraine was also committed to not using the mines in densely-populated areas, the official said. Separately, the US State Department said it would close its embassy in Kyiv after it “received specific information of a potential significant air attack on 20 November”. 

“Out of an abundance of caution, the embassy will be closed, and embassy employees are being instructed to shelter in place,” it said in a statement. “The US embassy recommends US citizens be prepared to immediately shelter in the event an air alert is announced.” 

Overnight, both Ukraine and Russia reported major drone attacks on their respective territories. It was not immediately known whether there were any casualties. The provision of anti-personnel land mines is the latest move by the outgoing US administration to bolster Ukraine’s war effort before Donald Trump returns to the White House on 20 January. 

Russia has deployed landmines liberally since the start of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 but international objections to the use of such weapons on the grounds that they pose a risk to civilians had prevented the Biden administration from signing off on them. 

The US defence official confirmed to the BBC that Ukraine had pledged to use only mines that remained active for a limited period of time. 

The US “non-persistent” mines differ from Russia’s as they become inert after a pre-set period of time – anywhere from four hours to two weeks. They are electrically fused and require battery power to detonate. Once the battery runs out, they will not detonate. 

Washington has already been providing anti-tank mines to Ukraine, but the anti-personnel land mines – which can be rapidly deployed – are designed to blunt the advances of ground forces. Earlier, it was confirmed that US-made longer-range Army Tactical Missile System (Atacms) missiles had struck targets inside Russia only days after reports emerged that the White House had granted permission for their use. 

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UK expected to give Ukraine Storm Shadow missiles   

Keir Starmer, the prime minister, said at the G20 summit that the UK recognised it needed to “double down” on its support for Ukraine..reports Asian Lite News

Britain is expected to supply Storm Shadow missiles for use by Ukraine on targets inside Russia, now that the US president, Joe Biden, has agreed to do the same for the similar American long-range Atacms weapon. 

Keir Starmer, the prime minister, said at the G20 summit that the UK recognised it needed to “double down” on its support for Ukraine, while diplomatic sources briefed they expected other European countries to follow the US lead. 

The prime minister said that, while he was “not going to get into operational details”, he recognised the need to do more to help Ukraine, whose electricity network was seriously damaged by a wave of Russian bombing on Sunday. 

“I’ve been really clear for a long time now, we need to double down. We need to make sure Ukraine has what is necessary for as long as necessary, because we cannot allow Putin to win this war,” the prime minister said. 

Russia, however, accused the west of escalation and said that Biden risked adding “fuel to the fire” in Ukraine, and while Donald Trump remained silent on the issue, his son Don Jr accused the military industrial complex of wanting to get “world war three going”. 

Storm Shadow missiles have a range of about 250km (155 miles), similar to the US Atacms, and have in the past been given to Kyiv by the UK and France to strike targets inside Ukraine’s internationally recognised borders. 

But the US retained an effective veto on their use because it supplies a guidance system and repeated lobbying by the UK had failed to shift the US position, which has only begun to soften after the election victory of Donald Trump earlier this month. 

Ukraine wants to be able to strike barracks, fuel and logistics hubs, and airbases deeper inside Russia to blunt Moscow’s relentless attacks on their country. Russia, by contrast, is able to strike targets anywhere in Ukraine. 

Biden had refused to allow permission for long-range missiles to be used inside Russia for years but finally relented on Sunday, and said that Ukraine could use Atacms missiles to try to halt an expected counter-offensive by an estimated 50,000 Russian and North Korean forces in Kursk. 

Ukraine had also become increasingly exasperated with Britain on the issue of long-range missiles, complaining earlier this month that not only had there been no progress on their use inside Russia but that the UK had stopped supplying them at all. 

Vladimir Putin’s spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, accused the US of escalation. “It is clear that the outgoing administration in Washington intends to take steps to continue to add fuel to the fire and to further inflame tensions around this conflict.” He added: “This decision is reckless, dangerous, aimed at a qualitative change, a qualitative increase in the level of involvement of the United States.” 

Peskov said Putin had expressed his position clearly in September when the Russian leader warned that the move to let Kyiv use longer-range weapons against targets inside Russia would mean Nato would be directly “at war” with Moscow. 

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Too Early To Discuss Detente: Kremlin On Russia-US Ties

Putin on Thursday said that he is ready to hold discussions with Trump and congratulated him on winning the US presidential election.

It is too early to discuss prospects for improving Russia-US relations, local media reported Friday, citing Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.

He said Russian President Vladimir Putin remains willing and open to dialogue with the US President-elect Donald Trump but arranging a time would come later.

The spokesman recalled that during the election campaign, Trump mentioned that he intended to contact Putin personally, Xinhua news agency reported.

Meanwhile, Putin on Thursday said that he is ready to hold discussions with Trump and congratulated him on winning the US presidential election.

When answering a question at the plenary session of the Russian think tank Valdai’s annual meeting in Sochi about whether he is ready to talk with Trump, the Russian leader said: “ready.”

“I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate him on his election as president of the United States,” Putin said, adding that Russia will work with any head of state who the American people trust.

However, Putin made it clear that – to a large extent – the ball remains in the United States’ court.

“Because we have not spoiled relations with them, we have not introduced any restrictions or sanctions against them. We do not contribute to any armed conflict being ignited in territories close to them. We have never sought this, and in practice, I want to emphasise this, we have never allowed ourselves to do this,” said Putin.

“It is unclear why the United States allows itself to do this. I hope that they will eventually come to the realisation that it is better not to do this if we do not want some global conflicts. The President-elect of the United States, Mr. Trump, has spoken in a similar vein. Let’s see how this will actually work, bearing in mind that the institution of the president in the United States is somehow bound by certain obligations. It is somehow bound by those people who contributed to his rise to power,” he added.

ALSO READ: Europe Braces For Complexities Of Trump 2.0

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US Unveils $425M Military Aid For Ukraine

This is the 69th tranche of equipment to be provided from the US Defense Department inventories for Ukraine since August 2021.

The US Defense Department has announced additional security assistance for Ukraine worth an estimated $425 million.

The Pentagon in a statement on Friday said that the aid under the Presidential Drawdown Authority (PDA) package is meant to meet Ukraine’s critical security and defence needs.

The tranche of equipment to be provided under the aid include munitions for National Advanced Surface-to-Air Missile Systems (NASAMS); Stinger missiles; Counter-Unmanned Aerial Systems (c-UAS) equipment and munitions; Air-to-ground munitions; Ammunition for High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS); 155mm and 105mm artillery ammunition; Tube-launched, Optically tracked, Wire-guided (TOW) missiles; Javelin and AT-4 anti-armour systems; Stryker Armored Personnel Carriers; Small arms and ammunition; Medical equipment; and Demolitions equipment and munitions.

It is the 69th tranche of equipment to be provided from the US Defense Department inventories for Ukraine since August 2021.

“The United States will continue to work together with some 50 Allies and partners through the Ukraine Defense Contact Group and its associated Capability Coalitions to meet Ukraine’s urgently needed battlefield requirements and defend against Russian aggression,” the Pentagon said in the statement.

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NATO Must Not Be Party To War: Scholz

German Chancellor made these statements during a joint presser with visiting US President Joe Biden in Berlin.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz reaffirmed his unwavering support for Ukraine during a joint press conference with US President Joe Biden in Berlin, but Scholz stressed that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) must not become a party to the war.

“We stand with Ukraine as long as it is needed,” Scholz said on Friday, adding that actions have been very closely coordinated across the Atlantic.

Scholz stressed that NATO must not become a party to the war to prevent it from causing a greater disaster, reports Xinhua news agency.

Biden noted that the two sides would hold talks to discuss ongoing efforts to surge support to Ukraine’s military, shore up Ukraine’s civilian energy infrastructure, and help Ukraine recover by unlocking the value of frozen Russian assets.

Biden arrived in Berlin on Thursday night for the final time before leaving office.

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Pope names 21 new cardinals, including one from Ukraine 

Pope Francis named the head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church in Australia, Bishop Mykola Bychok, in recognition of the ongoing war in Ukraine…reports Asian Lite News

The pope named the head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church in Australia, Bishop Mykola Bychok, in recognition of the ongoing war in Ukraine.

Pope Francis named the head of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church in Australia, Bishop Mykola Bychok, in recognition of the ongoing war in Ukraine.

With the nominations, the pontiff has significantly increased the size of the College of Cardinals and further cemented his mark on the group which will one day elect his successor.

The nomination of 44-year-old Bychok, the youngest nominee, gave Ukraine its only cardinal and sent a subtle political message as Russia’s war grinds on.

Ukraine’s ambassador to the Holy See, Andrii Yurash, praised the move, even though Pope Francis chose the head of Ukraine’s Greek Catholic Church in Australia over the Kyiv-based head, His Beatitude Sviatoslav Shevchuk.

The oldest to be named was Monsignor Angelo Acerbi, a 99-year-old retired Vatican diplomat who was once held hostage for six weeks in Colombia by leftist guerrillas.

The new cardinals will receive their red hats at a ceremony known as a consistory on 8 December, an important feast day on its own that officially kicks off the Christmas season in Rome.

It will be Pope Francis’ 10th consistory to create new princes of the church and the biggest infusion of voting-age cardinals into the college in his 11-year pontificate. Acerbi is the only one of the new intake who is over 80 and hence too old to vote for the new pope.

Usually, the college has a limit of 120 voting-age cardinals, but popes often temporarily exceed the cap to keep the body robust as existing cardinals age out. As of 28 September, there were 122 cardinal-electors. The new infusion brings their number to 142.

Among those named by history’s first Latin American pope were the heads of several major dioceses and archdioceses in South America. They are the archbishop of Santiago del Estero in Argentina, Vicente Bokalic Iglic; the archbishop of Brazil’s Porto Alegre, Jaime Spengler; the archbishop of Santiago, Fernando Natalio Chomali Garib; the archbishop of Guayaquil, Ecuador, Luis Gerardo Cabrera Herrera; and the archbishop of Lima, Carlos Gustavo Castillo Mattasoglio.

That stands in sharp contrast to the lone new cardinal from North America: the archbishop of Toronto, Francis Leo. Showing the universality of the church around the world, Francis also tapped the archbishop of Tehran, Monsignor Dominique Joseph Mathieu, and the bishop of Bogor, Indonesia, Monsignor Paskalis Bruno Syukor. They both belong to the Franciscan religious order and are two of the four new Franciscan cardinals.

In addition to Syukor, Asia gets two more cardinals: Monsignor Tarcisio Isao Kikuchi, the archbishop of Tokyo, and Monsignor Pablo Virgilio Sinogco David, the bishop of Kalookan in the Philippines. Aside from Asia, the other region where the church is growing is Africa, which got two new cardinals: the archbishop of Abidjan, Monsignor Ignace Bessi Dogbo, and the bishop of Algiers, Monsignor Jean-Paul Vesco.

“Francis has again continued to extend the reach of the college of cardinals,” said Christopher Bellitto, a church historian at Kean University in Union, New Jersey. “Like his predecessors, but even more so, he’s making sure that Catholic leaders from the church’s edges have a voice at the big table.” Even before Sunday’s announcement, Pope Francis had already named the vast majority of the voting-age cardinals who will one day vote in a conclave.

According to Vatican statistics, before Sunday, 92 of the cardinals under 80 had been named by Francis, compared with 24 named by Pope Benedict XVI and six by St John Paul II.

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Biden to convene Ukraine Defense Contact Group meeting in Oct

Biden stated that Ukraine has won the battle of Kyiv and reclaimed more than half of the territory that Russia had seized at the beginning of the war….reports Asian Lite News

President Joe Biden has announced a “surge” in security assistance for Ukraine and a series of additional actions to help Ukraine win its war against Russia. He also announced the decision to convene a leader-level meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group in Germany next month.

In a statement released by the White House, Biden stated, “I will convene a leader-level meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group in Germany next month to coordinate the efforts of the more than 50 countries supporting Ukraine in its defense against Russian aggression.”

Biden stated that Ukraine has won the battle of Kyiv and reclaimed more than half of the territory that Russia had seized at the beginning of the war.

In a statement, Biden stated, “I am proud to welcome President Zelenskyy back to the White House today. For nearly three years, the United States has rallied the world to stand with the people of Ukraine as they defend their freedom from Russian aggression, and it has been a top priority of my Administration to provide Ukraine with the support it needs to prevail.”

“In that time, Ukraine has won the battle of Kyiv, reclaimed more than half the territory that Russia seized at the start of the war, and safeguarded its sovereignty and independence. But there is more work to do. That is why, today, I am announcing a surge in security assistance for Ukraine and a series of additional actions to help Ukraine win this war,” he added.

Biden stated that he has directed the US Department of Defence to allocate all of its remaining security assistance funding that has been appropriated for Ukraine by the end of my term in office.

“As part of this effort, the Department of Defense will allocate the remaining Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative funds by the end of this year. I also have authorized USD 5.5 billion in Presidential Drawdown Authority to ensure this authority does not expire, so that my Administration can fully utilize the funding appropriated by Congress to support the drawdown of US equipment for Ukraine and then replenish US stockpiles,” Biden said.

In a statement, Biden noted that the US Department of Defence is announcing USD 2.4 billion in security assistance through the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative, which will provide Ukraine with additional air defence, unmanned aerial systems, and air-to-ground munitions, as well as strengthen Ukraine’s defence industrial base and support its maintenance and sustainment requirements.

In order to enhance Ukraine’s long-range strike capabilities, Biden said that he has decided to provide Ukraine with the Joint Standoff Weapon (JSOW) long-range munition.

Biden stated that he has directed the US Department of Defence to refurbish and provide Ukraine with an additional Patriot air defence battery and to provide Ukraine with additional Patriot missiles.

He noted, “This builds on my decision earlier this year to divert US air defence exports to Ukraine, which will provide Ukraine with hundreds of additional Patriot and AMRAAM missiles over the next year and will help Ukraine defend its cities and its people.”

He has also asked the US Department of Defence to expand training for Ukrainian F-16 pilots, including by supporting the training of an additional 18 pilots next year.

Furthermore, Biden informed that the US Department of Justice, the Department of the Treasury, and the US Secret Service, in order to counter Russian sanctions evasion and money laundering, have taken action to disrupt a global cryptocurrency network, in coordination with international partners.

Earlier, US Secretary of Defence Lloyd Austin announced that US has announced security assistance package to help Ukraine meet its battlefield needs.

Taking to X, Austin stated, “Today, we announced another security assistance package to help Ukraine meet its immediate battlefield needs. The U.S. and our coalition of some 50 allies and partners will continue to help Ukraine defend its sovereign territory against Russian aggression–today and for the long haul.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met with US President Joe Biden on the sidelines of the 79th United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday, where he briefed Biden on the current situation on the frontlines and raised the Plan of Victory, which he will discuss it in detail during negotiations in Washington.

During their meeting, Zelenskyy also expressed his gratitude for the US’s support in Ukraine’s defence efforts.

In a post on X, Zelenskyy stated, “I met with President Biden @POTUS on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly and expressed my gratitude for the unwavering U.S. support, which is saving lives and helping Ukraine defend its independence. I told President Biden about the situation on the frontlines and raised the Plan of Victory. We agreed to discuss it in detail during negotiations in Washington tomorrow.” (ANI)

Harris slams Ukraine ‘surrender’ policy

Kamala Harris has criticized her US election rival Donald Trump’s stance on Ukraine, describing it as a policy of “surrender” to Russia as she told President Volodymyr Zelensky that he could rely on her support.

Zelensky also met President Joe Biden to present his “victory plan,” with the White House announcing a fresh military aid package worth nearly $8 billion for Kyiv as it struggles on the battlefield in the third year of Moscow’s invasion.

Zelensky’s visit has been clouded by a blazing row with Republican presidential candidate Trump that underscored how November’s US election could upend the support that Ukraine receives from its biggest backer. Harris did not mention Trump by name but said there were “some in my country who would instead force Ukraine to give up large parts of its sovereign territory, who would demand that Ukraine accept neutrality.”

“These proposals are the same of those of [President Vladimir] Putin. And let us be clear, they are not proposals for peace. Instead, they are proposals for surrender,” she said with Zelensky by her side. During a separate meeting in the Oval Office with Zelensky, Biden pledged that “Russia will not prevail” in the war it launched in February 2022.

“Ukraine will prevail, and we’ll continue to stand by you every step of the way,” Biden said after thanking him for presenting the so-called victory plan. Dressed in his trademark military-style outfit, Zelensky replied, “we deeply appreciate that Ukraine and America have stood side by side.”

Zelensky is looking to shore up support for his war effort as Biden tries to lock in aid for Ukraine, ahead of the white-knuckle US election on November 5.

Biden pledged nearly $8 billion in military aid on Thursday, including $5.5 billion to be authorized before it expires at the end of the US fiscal year on Monday. Biden said in a statement that the “surge in security assistance for Ukraine” would “help Ukraine win this war.”

Biden also announced Washington would provide Ukraine with the Joint Standoff Weapon (JSOW) long-range munition and called a summit of allies in Germany in October. The White House however played down Ukraine’s hopes that Zelensky’s visit would achieve his long-held goal of getting permission to fire long-range Western-made missiles into Russian territory. “I’m not expecting there to be any new announcements on this particular action or a decision coming out of this meeting,” Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters.

Zelensky also visited the US Congress – where his government said he had also presented his victory plan – and gave a defiant address at the UN General Assembly on Wednesday.But Zelensky’s visit has prompted fresh nuclear saber-rattling from Moscow, which has repeatedly warned the West against giving Ukraine long-range arms.

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Starmer lambasts Russia over Ukraine at UNSC

Keir Starmer accused Russia of violating the UN charter because its invasion of Ukraine was illegal…reports Asian Lite News

Keir Starmer has told Russia he does not know how it can show its face at the United Nations after invading Ukraine and treating its own citizens as “bits of meat to fling into the grinder”.

Addressing the UN security council, of which Russia is one of five permanent members, Starmer delivered a direct message to Moscow that it should not be present at the meeting.

He accused Russia of violating the UN charter because its invasion of Ukraine was illegal, threatened global security and had caused “colossal human suffering”.

“We must ensure accountability for those violating the UN charter and this council must recommit to the values that it sets out,” he said. “This should go without saying. Yet, the greatest violation of the charter in a generation has been committed by one of this council’s permanent members.”

He drew attention to the 35,000 civilians who have been killed or injured, the 6 million forced to flee and almost 20,000 Ukrainian children kidnapped by Russia.

The British prime minister added: “I think of Yaroslav Bazylevych, whose wife and three daughters were killed earlier this month by a Russian strike on civilians in Lviv. And I wonder how Russia can show its face in this building.

“Six hundred thousand Russian soldiers have also been killed or wounded in this war. And for what? The UN charter, which they sit here to uphold, speaks of human dignity. Not treating your own citizens as bits of meat to fling into the grinder.”

As well as calling for accountability for Russia, Starmer also addressed the conflicts in the Middle East, saying the region was “on the brink”.

He called for diplomacy and an immediate ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, and an immediate, full and complete ceasefire in relation to Israel’s war in Gaza with the release of all the hostages.

“We need a political route to that agreement, which provides a bridge to a better future. A credible and irreversible path towards a viable Palestinian state,” he said. “Alongside a safe and secure state of Israel. This is the only way to provide security and justice for both Israelis and Palestinians.”

Starmer’s trip to the United Nations general assembly in New York is his third trip to the US in three months. The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, is also attending to present his “victory plan” to Joe Biden and the US presidential candidates, Donald Trump and Kamala Harris.

Zelenskyy has been seeking permission to use British-French made Storm Shadow missiles on Russian territory, with UK support, but negotiations with the US are still continuing as the weapons use some US technology.

Pressed on when a decision would be made about the use of UK-supplied Storm Shadow missiles within Russia, Starmer said: “We will have discussions about a whole range of issues, and we will listen carefully to what President Zelenskyy’s got to say, and that’s what’s going to happen in the next few days.”

He added the discussions would not be about the “sole issue like long-range missiles” but a “strategic, overarching route for Ukraine to find a way through this and succeed against Russian aggression”.

Addressing the UN security council on Tuesday, Zelenskyy accused Moscow of committing “international crimes” by targeting Ukrainian civilians and energy infrastructure, and claimed he had proof that Putin was plotting to target three Ukrainian nuclear power plants to further degrade the country’s energy grid.

PM wants to meet Trump and Harris before polls

Starmer has said he wants to meet Kamala Harris and Donald Trump before the US presidential election in November. It comes amid reports No 10 aides are hoping to set up meetings with both candidates this week, whilst the prime minister attends a UN summit in New York.

Asked whether he would meet them during the trip, he replied it would be “very good to meet both of them at some stage” before the poll. “We’ll just have to see what’s possible,” he told reporters on his flight over.

“But I’m going for the [UN] General Assembly. I don’t doubt that a lot of time is going to be spent on the Middle East and Ukraine,” he added.

Starmer has not met either candidate in person, although he spoke to Trump on the phone in the wake of the assassination attempt against him in July. His suggestion he would like to meet the Republican candidate in the coming weeks, however, comes amid an awkward spat with one of his Labour ministers.

According to the Guardian, Home Office minister Angela Eagle told a fringe event at Labour’s annual conference that Trump had emboldened racists in Britain through his own “anti-immigrant rhetoric”.

“If you look at some of the memes that he’s using with the wall stuff at the moment, it’s astonishing, quite the level of vitriol that it has created,” she added.

Her remarks have been dismissed by the Trump campaign, with spokesman Steven Cheung telling news website Politico: “Nobody knows who this random person is or cares what comes out of her mouth”. “Who is she and what does she do?” he added.

Asked by reporters whether he agreed with Eagle’s remarks, Sir Keir dodged the question, replying that responsibility for this summer’s riots, which had been fuelled by far-right sentiment, lay with “thugs”.

Harris’s Democrat party is more politically aligned with Sir Keir’s Labour, whilst the pair also share professional backgrounds as former public prosecutors.

But Labour has also been preparing for the possibility of another Trump presidency, with Foreign Secretary David Lammy meeting Trump campaign advisers and Republican members of Congress earlier this year.

Lammy has also made comments about Trump in the past that could cause diplomatic awkwardness if the former president returns to power.

Back in 2018, Lammy called the former US president “a woman-hating, neo-Nazi-sympathizing sociopath” and a “profound threat to the international order”.

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Russia can end war now, says UK Prime Minister

Starmer’s comments come a day after it emerged that the US and UK had made the decision to allow Ukraine to use partly British-made Storm Shadow missiles to strike targets deeper inside Russia

Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said Vladimir Putin started the war in Ukraine and can end it at any time. Speaking to reporters on a plane en route to Washington for talks with US President Joe Biden, Starmer said Ukraine has a right to self-defence.

“Russia started this conflict. Russia illegally invaded Ukraine. Russia can end this conflict straight away,” he said. He said the UK had provided “training and capability” to help Ukraine push back Russian troops and said he was visiting Biden because “there are obviously further discussions to be had about the nature of that capability”.

Those comments come a day after the British newspaper The Guardian reported that the US and UK had made the decision behind closed doors to allow Ukraine to use partly British-made Storm Shadow missiles to strike targets deeper inside Russia.

But on Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin warned that if Ukraine is allowed to use long-range Western-provided missiles to strike targets inside Russia, it would mean the direct participation of NATO countries in the conflict.

Western long-range precision weapons can only be used with intelligence data from NATO satellites and flight assignments entered by NATO military personnel, he claimed.

“This is their direct participation, and this, of course, significantly changes the very essence, the very nature of the conflict. This will mean that NATO countries, the United States and European countries are fighting against Russia,” Putin said.

“And if this is so, then, bearing in mind the change in the very essence of this conflict, we will make appropriate decisions based on the threats that will be created for us.”

Also on Thursday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy met with leaders of the Baltic States in Kyiv.

According to the president’s press service, the parties discussed the strengthening of military and technical cooperation during a meeting with Latvian Prime Minister Evika Sillina.

“We face hybrid attacks almost every day from Belarus; now drones are flying over our country, so we are here to learn from you as well,” Sillina told Zelenskyy during the meeting.

Lithuania’s President Gitanas Nausėda told Zelenskyy that the West needs to “push away” red lines and allow Ukraine to use Western-supplied weapons against military targets on Russian soil. “The sooner we understand that we have to push away those red lines that we draw too many times in our heads, the sooner Ukraine’s victory will come,” Nausėda said. Military assistance was also on the agenda during the meeting with the Estonian President Alar Karis.

“We appreciate Estonia’s decision to allocate 0.25% of GDP to Ukraine’s defence needs every year,” Zelenskyy wrote on his social media page following the meeting with Karis.

But while Zelenskyy has continually pushed for permission from western allies to use the weapons they provide to strike inside Russia, he said the world must face up to some uncomfortable questions for the war in Ukraine to end.

“It is very easy to condemn a Russian rocket that flies into our school. But it is not so easy to admit that this rocket can have parts from America, Europe, Asia, from any part of the world,” he said at the fourth First Ladies and Gentlemen Summit in Kyiv.

On Sunday, the day after the prime minister returns from Washington, he will fly to Rome to meet the Italian Prime Minister, Georgia Meloni.

Italy currently holds the rotating presidency of the G7 group of industrialised countries. A week later world leaders will gather in New York for the annual UN General Assembly.

There has long been a hesitancy to allow Ukraine to fire Western missiles into Russia because of fears it could be seen as provocative and draw the US, European countries and others directly into the conflict.

But with winter approaching and Russia getting extra support from Iran, minds appear to be changing.

When asked about the prospect of allowing the Anglo-French cruise missile called Storm Shadow to be used, the public remarks of senior figures remain guarded.

“There are really important developments likely in the next few weeks and months, both in Ukraine and the Middle East, and therefore a number of tactical decisions ought to be taken,” the prime minister told reporters, without disputing the issue is on the agenda.

He noted that both Blinken and Lammy had recently visited Ukraine.

“They’re obviously with us to report into the process on a really important joint trip.”

Speaking earlier in the day, Putin said: “This isn’t about allowing or banning the Kyiv regime from striking Russian territory. It does that already with drones and by other means.

“But when we talk about high-precision, long-range weapons made in the West this is a completely different matter… The Ukrainian army is not able to strike with modern, high-decision, long-range systems. It can’t do this.

“It is only possible with intelligence data from satellites that Ukraine doesn’t have, data that’s only from satellites of the European Union, the USA, Nato satellites.”

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‘Arms donated to Ukraine would cost £2.71bn to replace’

The value of the donations is not included in previously announced Ukraine war budgets, and the costs are only accounted for as replenishment contracts are issued…reports Asian Lite News

Britain has donated arms and equipment to Ukraine that would cost £2.71bn to replace, largely in addition to the £7.8bn committed by prime ministers since Russia’s full-scale invasion, according to a National Audit Office report.

The cost of replacing missiles, artillery and other munitions also significantly exceeds their £171.5m value on the government’s books, because the Ministry of Defence wants to replace the old weapons supplied at current prices.

But, the auditors add, the rate of UK weapons donations has slowed dramatically because surplus stockpiles are nearly exhausted. The Army warned in January last year that donations risked leaving it “temporarily weaker”.

Gareth Davies, head of the NAO, said the MoD now has to “balance the UK’s strategic interests with maintaining the UK’s own military capabilities” – and ensure there are appropriate stockpiles in case of any future military crisis.

The figures are contained in the first audit into UK military spending in support of Ukraine, in a review of the cash and donations allocated by successive prime ministers since the full-scale invasion by Russia in February 2022.

It does not ask whether the war in Ukraine represents value for money, as that would amount to a commentary on government policy beyond the audit office’s remit, but it does highlight the additional costs of replenishing stockpiles.

The value of the donations is not included in previously announced Ukraine war budgets, and the costs are only accounted for as replenishment contracts are issued. That means that the UK will have spent more than the £2.46bn budgeted for Ukraine in 2022/23, because that year only included £75m for replacing kit donated.

Using a different calculation, the cash cost of all military operations was £2.9bn in 2022/23. That is the largest sum spent on war by the UK in any year since 2011/12, a high point of the fighting in Afghanistan. In the year after, when the UK was also engaged in bombing Houthi rebels in Yemen, the total dipped to £2.57bn.

Weapons donated by the UK to Ukraine include 14 Challenger 2 tanks, 700 armoured vehicles, 140 howitzers, at least 3,100 missiles – though the number of long range Storm Shadow weapons is a secret – and more than 10m rounds of ammunition.

Donations of arms to Ukraine have tumbled since the start of the invasion. The value fell from £130m in 2022/23 to £15.9m in 2023/4 and in future the UK will have to manufacture the bulk of any weapons it wants to send to Ukraine.

Funding for replenishment will come in future years, at least initially, from contingency reserves allocated by the Treasury. So far, replenishment contracts to replace £1bn of arms have been allocated out of a total request of £2.71bn.

The UK has also trained more than 46,000 Ukrainian soldiers, though the auditor noted there have been complaints of a lack of training in drones. Military and civil aviation restrictions largely prevent the use of large numbers of drones in the UK, even on military sites.

The MoD wants to replace equipment at a time when there are shortfalls in its overall equipment budget of £3bn this year and £3.9bn in 2025/6, part of a cumulative £16.9bn 10-year deficit the auditors have previously described as “unaffordable”.

Labour is expected to hold its first budget on 30 October, with the MoD also facing a further cost pressure of about £1.1bn to meet a 6% pay deal announced by the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, in late July. The Treasury may fund those cost pressures, though this has not yet been announced.

John Healey, the defence secretary, told MPs that Labour “will increase spending on defence” from the existing level of 2.32% of GDP to about 2.5% of GDP, in a debate on Ukraine held before the report was published. But he would not commit to extra spending on Ukraine if Donald Trump was elected to the White House in November.

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