SEOUL, South Korea
United States Secretary of State, Antony Blinken said Monday that North Korea and China are the “biggest ongoing drivers” allowing Russia to carry out its war in Ukraine, and that security assurances will need to be a part of potential future negotiations ending the conflict.
Speaking during a visit to
South Korea, Blinken said North Korean supplies of artillery, ammunition and
troops, along with Chinese support for Russia’s military industrial base are
giving the Russian military the backing it needs to continue carrying out the
fight it started in February 2022.
He said North Korea is already
seeing a return on its involvement in the conflict in the form of Russian
military equipment and training for North Korea troops.
“We believe it has the intent
to share space and satellite technology with the DPRK,” Blinken said.
With only two weeks left in
the Biden administration, the United States has been rushing to send remaining
authorized aid to Ukraine amid uncertainty about how President-elect Donald
Trump may approach the war.
Blinken said Monday the U.S.
has been trying to make sure Ukraine has what it needs to defend itself, and to
have the “strongest possible hand” at a future negotiating table with Russia.
"If there is going to be,
at some point, a ceasefire, it's not going to be, in Putin's mind, 'game
over'," Blinken said. "His imperial ambitions remain, and what he
will seek to do is to rest, to refit, and eventually to re-attack.”
Blinken said it is necessary
to have an "adequate deterrent in place so that he doesn't do that, so
that he thinks twice – three times – before engaging in any re-aggression.”
Ukraine’s military said Monday
it shot down 79 of the 128 drones that Russian forces deployed overnight in
attack targeting multiple Ukrainian regions.
The intercepts took place over
the Cherkasy, Chernihiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Kharkiv, Kirovohrad, Kyiv, Mykolaiv,
Poltava, Sumy, Vinnytsia and Zhytomyr regions, the Ukrainian air force said.
Officials in Cherkasy reported
damage to residential buildings and a grain warehouse from falling drone
debris.
Russia’s Defense Ministry said
it destroyed 12 Ukrainian aerial drones, all in areas along the Russia-Ukraine
border.
Vyacheslav Gladkov, governor
of the Belgorod region, said the attacks injured three people and damaged
several residential buildings.
No comments:
Post a Comment