Russia Ukraine war latest: Starmer says he is willing to put British troops in Ukraine; Kyiv recaptures frontline village

Russia Ukraine war latest: Starmer says he is willing to put British troops in Ukraine; Kyiv recaptures frontline village

Zelensky says Ukraine has ‘low chance to survive’ without US military support

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Sir Keir Starmer has confirmed he is prepared to put a British troops into Ukraine to enforce a peace deal with Russia if necessary.

The prime minister acknowledged this could put British peacekeeping forces “in harm’s way” if Vladimir Putin attacks again, but said “any role in helping to guarantee Ukraine’s security” would help guarantee “the security of this country”.

Writing in The Daily Telegraph, the Prime Minister said the UK was “ready to play a leading role” in Ukraine’s defence and security, which “means being ready and willing to contribute to security guarantees to Ukraine by putting our own troops on the ground if necessary”.

“I do not say that lightly. I feel very deeply the responsibility that comes with potentially putting British servicemen and women in harm’s way,” he said.

It is the first time he has explicitly said he was considering sending British troops to Ukraine, having previously only hinted that they could be involved in safeguarding Ukraine after a ceasefire

His statement comes before he is set to join European leaders for emergency talks in Paris as they scramble to respond to Donald Trump’s push for a deal with Putin.

Ukraine recaptures frontline village

Ukrainian forces have recaptured the village of Pischane to the southwest of Pokrovsk, according to military officials, amid growing signs that Russia’s advance is slowing.

Russian progress in Ukraine has stalled, with the high rate of Russian casualties having a demoralising effect on combat units, according to Russian bloggers.

Major Viktor Trehubov, a spokesperson for Ukraine’s ground forces in the east, told the Guardian that 7,000 Russian soldiers died in January in the battle for Pokrovsk, and 15,000 are wounded or missing.

Namita Singh17 February 2025 04:20

ICYMI: Zelensky ‘will never’ accept decisions made about Ukraine without their involvement

Zelensky has made it clear that he would never accept a peace deal negotiated by the U.S. and Russia without Ukraine having an equal place at the table

“I will never accept any decisions between the United States and Russia about Ukraine, never,” Zelenskyy told ‘Meet the Press’ moderator Kristen Welker on Friday in Munich, Germany. “This is the war in Ukraine, against us, and it’s our human losses.”

He added: “There is no any leader in the world who can really make a deal with Putin without us about us.”

Zelensky also said he told Trump not to trust Putin, and stressed that America, Europe, Ukraine and Russia all needed to be involved in ceasefire deals.

Athena Stavrou17 February 2025 04:00

Putin eager for peace deal, says Trump

Donald Trump on Sunday said he believed Vladimir Putin is eager for a deal, while also noting that Russia has historically impressed on the battlefield.

“I think he wants to stop fighting,” Mr Trump said. “They have a big powerful machine, you understand that they defeated Hitler and they defeated Napoleon. They’ve been fighting a long time.”

Heather Conley, a deputy assistant secretary of state for Central Europe during Republican President George W Bush’s administration, said that with Mr Trump’s current approach to Moscow, the US appears to be “seeking to create a new international approach based on a modern-day concert of great powers”.

US president Donald Trump listens during a press conference on 13 February 2025
US president Donald Trump listens during a press conference on 13 February 2025 (Getty Images)

“As in the 19th and early 20th centuries, it is only for the great powers to decide the fate of nations and to take — either by purchase or force — that which strengthens the great powers’ economic and security interests,” Ms Conley said.

“Each of these powers posit claims or coerce countries in their respective regional spheres of influence.

“There is some debate inside the administration about its developing approach to Moscow, with some more in favor of a rapid rapprochement and others wary that Mr Putin is looking to fray the Euro-Atlantic alliance as he aims to reclaim Russian status and wield greater influence on the continent, according to the US official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Mr Trump said last week that he would like to see Russia rejoin what is now the Group of Seven major economies. Russia was suspended from the G8 after Moscow’s 2014 annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea region.

Namita Singh17 February 2025 03:58

US attempts damage control amid mounting criticism for sidelining Europe in peace talks

White House officials on Sunday pushed back against the notion that Europe has been left out of the conversation regarding a peace deal for Ukraine.

Officials said Donald Trump spoke by phone in recent days with French president Emmanuel Macron and is expected to consult prime minister Keir Starmer this week.

During his visits to Munich and Paris, vice president JD Vance held talks with Mr Macron, British foreign secretary David Lammy, German president Frank-Walter Steinmeier, Nato secretary-general Mark Rutte as well as Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky.

Ukrainian servicemen prepare to launch precision-guided loitering munition in Kharkiv region
Ukrainian servicemen prepare to launch precision-guided loitering munition in Kharkiv region (Reuters)

“Now they may not like some of this sequencing that is going on in these negotiations but I have to push back on this … notion that they aren’t being consulted,” national security adviser Mike Waltz told Fox News.

“They absolutely are and at the end of the day, though, this is going to be under President Trump’s leadership that we get this war to an end,” Mr Waltz said.

Marco Rubio, who was in Israel on Sunday before heading to Saudi Arabia, said the US is taking a careful approach as it reengages with Moscow after the Biden administration’s clampdown on contacts with the Kremlin following the February 2022 invasion.

Namita Singh17 February 2025 03:27

Ukraine and Europe worry about being sidelined as Trump pushes direct talks with Russia

President Donald Trump’s approach to ending Russia’s war against Ukraine has left European allies and Ukrainian officials worried they are being largely sidelined by the new US administration as Washington and Moscow plan direct negotiations.

With the three-year war grinding on, Mr Trump is sending secretary of state Marco Rubio, national security adviser Mike Waltz and special envoy Steve Witkoff to Saudi Arabia for talks with Russian counterparts, according to a US official who was not authorised to publicly discuss the upcoming diplomatic efforts and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky arrives for a bilateral meeting with the German Chancellor on the sidelines of the 61st Munich Security Conference
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky arrives for a bilateral meeting with the German Chancellor on the sidelines of the 61st Munich Security Conference (Getty Images)

It is unclear to what extent Ukrainian or European officials will be represented in discussions expected to take place in Riyadh in the coming days. The official said the United States sees negotiations as early-stage and fluid, and who ultimately ends up at the table could change.

In an exchange with reporters on Sunday, Mr Trump said Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky “will be involved” in the negotiations. Mr Trump offered no further explanation.

The outreach comes after comments by top Trump advisers this past week, including vice president JD Vance, raised new concerns in Kyiv and other European capitals that the Republican administration is intent on quick resolution to the conflict with minimum input from Europe.

“Decades of the old relationship between Europe and America are ending,” Mr Zelensky said in an address on Saturday at the Munich Security Conference. “From now on, things will be different, and Europe needs to adjust to that.”

Namita Singh17 February 2025 03:22

Ukraine drone attack injures one in Russia’s Krasnodar region, governor says

A Ukrainian drone attack on Krasnodar injured one person and damaged at least 12 houses, the governor of the southern Russia region said early this morning.

In a post on the Telegram messaging app, governor Veniamin Kondratyev called the attack “massive”, but did not provide further detail.

Russia’s Shot Telegram news channel reported that Ukraine tried to attack the Ilsky oil refinery and that drone wreckage sparked a fire there.

The report could not be independently verified.

There was no immediate comment from Ukraine. It has said in the past its attacks inside Russia target infrastructure key to Moscow’s war efforts.

The refinery, which has a capacity of around 138,000 barrels per day, has been a target of numerous Ukrainian attacks since 2023, when Kyiv stepped up its drone attacks on Russian energy infrastructure.

Namita Singh17 February 2025 03:17

Ex-PM Major warns of ‘dangerous world’ if US does not stand behind allies

A world in which the United States does not support its allies will be “rather more dangerous”, former prime minister Sir John Major warned.

He said democracy is under threat and “tin-pot dictators” would be emboldened if Donald Trump rushes into a peace deal that leaves Vladimir Putin in control of Ukrainian territory.

And he said if the US “retreats towards isolation” it would leave the door open for China and Russia to wield increased influence.

“There’s no doubt in my mind that the world is changing and that it’s reshaping, that it may not be reshaping in a way that’s congenial to the West and that it’s a very unsettled time indeed,” Sir John said.

Sir John Major said a world in which the US did not back its allies would be a more dangerous one (Jonathan Brady/PA)
Sir John Major said a world in which the US did not back its allies would be a more dangerous one (Jonathan Brady/PA) (PA Wire)

Athena Stavrou17 February 2025 03:06

Zelensky travels to UAE as momentum for peace talks grows

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky traveled to the United Arab Emirates late on Sunday as momentum grows for potential peace talks ending Moscow’s war on the country.

US president Donald Trump last week suggested he would be meeting Russian president Vladimir Putin in Saudi Arabia.

The UAE, home to Abu Dhabi and Dubai, long has been floated as a possible site for peace talks as well given the large population of Russian and Ukrainian expatriates who have flooded the country since the war began, and due to the Emirates’ work on prisoner exchanges in the past.

UAE Minister of State for International Cooperation Reem Al Hashimi greeting Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelensky and his wife Olena Zelenska on their arrival in the United Arab Emirates
UAE Minister of State for International Cooperation Reem Al Hashimi greeting Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky and his wife Olena Zelenska on their arrival in the United Arab Emirates (Getty Images)

Mr Zelensky arrived in Abu Dhabi after attending the Munich Security Conference in Germany. Footage released by his office showed him and his wife, Olena Zelenska, being greeted by an Emirati official and honor guard at the airport late Sunday night.

Ms Zelenska has traveled to the UAE since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, but this trip is Mr Zelensky’s first to the UAE since the war began.”Our top priority is bringing even more of our people home from captivity,” Mr Zelensky’s office said in messages online.

“We will also focus on investments and economic partnership, as well as a large-scale humanitarian program.”

Namita Singh17 February 2025 02:59

Republican who salvaged Pete Hegseth is already ‘concerned’ with his comments on Ukraine

During the first overseas trip in his official post, Hegseth also said Wednesday that Ukraine’s NATO membership was off the table.

Read the full article here:

Athena Stavrou17 February 2025 02:02

Will the US leave Nato?

After US defence secretary Pete Hegseth told Western allies on Wednesday that European security is no longer an American priority, concern over the Trump administration’s commitment to Nato is higher than ever.

Donald Trump recently suggested the US would not protect Nato allies who did not spend enough on defence, reportedly telling allies he would “encourage” Russia to attack any Nato member that failed to meet the alliance’s target of 2% of their GDP.

The future of the Western military alliance, which was formed after the Second World War to guarantee security against the Soviet Union, has never faced bigger questions.

The US is the most powerful member of Nato, spending far more on defence than any other ally and outweighing allies in its military muscle.

As a result, the US calls the shots. But those close to the Trump administration have long questioned how much Nato membership serves in America’s interest, with European allies ostensibly failing to spend as much as they should on defence.

Earlier this week, former US National Security Advisor John Bolton told Tom Swarbrick on LBC that it is “highly probable that Trump will try and withdraw the United States from NATO”.

No one can say for sure whether a president as unpredictable as Trump will pull the US out of Nato – but he will certainly make the US a far more prickly member of the alliance than it was under former presidents.

Alex Croft17 February 2025 01:17

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