By Jamey Keaten, DAVOS
Switzerland
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy came out swinging Tuesday against Russian leader Vladimir Putin at the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting in Davos, while urging political and business leaders facing war fatigue in the West to enforce sanctions, help rebuild his country and advance the peace process.
Zelenskyy is trying to keep
his country’s long and largely stalemated defense against Russia on
the minds of political leaders, as Israel’s war
with Hamas, which passed the 100-day mark this week, siphons off much of
the world’s attention and has sparked concerns about a wider conflict in the Middle East.
He sought to center Ukraine as
a pillar in defense of democracies.
“Anyone thinks this is only
about us, this is only about Ukraine, they are fundamentally mistaken,”
Zelenskyy said in a speech at the Swiss ski resort.
“Putin embodies war,” he said, lashing out
at the Kremlin leader for leveling cities and imposing “the terrifying feeling
that the war may never end.” He also offered criticism for a world that told
him not to worsen tensions ahead of Russia’s
full-scale invasion in 2022.
“After
Feb. 24th, nothing harmed our coalition more than this concept. Every ‘Don’t
escalate’ to us, sounded like ‘You will prevail’ to Putin,” Zelenskyy said.
He thanked allies for
sanctions on Moscow but urged them to ensure they work. He said he believed the
European Union and U.S. would come through in “a matter of weeks” with more aid
that has been held up by political infighting within his two biggest allies.
U.S. Secretary of State Antony
Blinken, who along with U.S. National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan met with
Zelenskyy in Davos, said Washington is determined to keep supporting Ukraine, and “we’re working very closely
with Congress in order to do that.”
It was Zelenskyy’s first trip
to Davos since the war began — he spoke by video in previous years — and he
rushed between meetings with political and business elites. Surrounded by a
large security contingent, he’s drawn the attention of media and others angling
to meet him.
Putin, meanwhile, described
calls for peace talks as an “attempt to force us to give up the gains we have
made,” calling that “impossible.”
Speaking at a meeting of
municipal officials from across Russia, he also described Zelenskyy’s “peace formula” as an effective ban on
peace talks with Moscow because “it’s a set of demands banning a negotiation
process. Well, they don’t want it, and so be it.”
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