Siri Imefichuka: Maafisa wa Ngazi ya Juu wa Marekani Wanamshawishi Rais wa Ukraine Afanye Mazungumzo na Putin

Siri Imefichuka: Maafisa wa Ngazi ya Juu wa Marekani Wanamshawishi Rais wa Ukraine Afanye Mazungumzo na Putin

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Baada ya kuona hakuna dalili ya vita kumalizika leo ama kesho. Maafisa wa ngazi za juu wa Marekani wanamshawishi rais Ukraine ajongelee kwenye meza ya mazungumzo iwapo rais Vladimir Putin ataendelea kuwepo madarakani. Taarifa hizo zimevuja kutoka kwenye timu iliyoundwa mahususi kwa ajili ya kushughulikia mzozo huo. Wanaeleza watu waliokuwa wakifuatilia mpango huo bila kutaja majina yao.

View attachment 2408454



Chanzo: DW kama ilivyonukuu kutoka kwenye gazeti la Washington Post.

U.S. privately asks Ukraine to show it’s open to negotiate with Russia​

The encouragement is aimed not at pushing Ukraine to the negotiating table, but ensuring it maintains a moral high ground in the eyes of its international backers​

By Missy Ryan
,
John Hudson
and
Paul Sonne

November 5, 2022 at 6:29 p.m. EDT
President Volodymyr Zelensky’s refusal to talk with Russia's leader, Vladimir Putin, has fueled concern in parts of Europe, Africa and Latin America, where the war’s disruptive effects have been severe. (Heidi Levine for The Washington Post)
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The Biden administration is privately encouraging Ukraine’s leaders to signal an openness to negotiate with Russia and drop their public refusal to engage in peace talks unless President Vladimir Putin is removed from power, according to people familiar with the discussions.

Are you on Telegram? Subscribe to our channel for the latest updates on Russia’s war in Ukraine.

The request by American officials is not aimed at pushing Ukraine to the negotiating table, these people said. Rather, they called it a calculated attempt to ensure the government in Kyiv maintains the support of other nations facing constituencies wary of fueling a war for many years to come.

The discussions illustrate how complex the Biden administration’s position on Ukraine has become, as U.S. officials publicly vow to support Kyiv with massive sums of aid “for as long as it takes” while hoping for a resolution to the conflict that over the past eight months has taken a punishing toll on the world economy and triggered fears of nuclear war.

While U.S. officials share their Ukrainian counterparts’ assessment that Putin, for now, isn’t serious about negotiations, they acknowledge that President Volodymyr Zelensky’s ban on talks with him has generated concern in parts of Europe, Africa and Latin America, where the war’s disruptive effects on the availability and cost of food and fuel are felt most sharply.
“Ukraine fatigue is a real thing for some of our partners,” said one U.S. official who, like others interviewed for this report, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive conversations between Washington and Kyiv.
Serhiy Nikiforov, a spokesman for Zelensky, did not respond to a request for comment.

In the United States, polls show eroding support among Republicans for continuing to finance Ukraine’s military at current levels, suggesting the White House may face resistance following Tuesday’s midterm elections as it seeks to continue a security assistance program that has delivered Ukraine the largest such annual sum since the end of the Cold War.

In a trip to Kyiv on Friday, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the United States supported a just and lasting peace for Ukraine and said U.S. support would continue regardless of domestic politics. “We fully intend to ensure that the resources are there as necessary and that we’ll get votes from both sides of the aisle to make that happen,” he said during a briefing.
Inside the growing Republican fissure on Ukraine aid
Eagerness for a potential resolution to the war has intensified as Ukrainian forces recapture occupied territory, pushing closer to areas prized by Putin. Those begin with Crimea, which Russia illegally annexed in 2014, and include cities along the Azov Sea that now provide him a “land bridge” to the Ukrainian peninsula. Zelensky has vowed to fight for every inch of Ukrainian territory.

Veteran diplomat Alexander Vershbow, who served as U.S. ambassador to Russia and deputy secretary general of NATO, said the United States could not afford to be completely “agnostic” about how and when the war is concluded, given the U.S. interest in ensuring European security and deterring further Kremlin aggression beyond Russia’s borders.
“If the conditions become more propitious for negotiations, I don’t think the administration is going to be passive,” Vershbow said. “But it is ultimately the Ukrainians doing the fighting, so we’ve got to be careful not to second-guess them.”
Ukrainian artillerymen, positioned near Bakhmut, in eastern Ukraine's Donetsk region, fire a 152 mm howitzer at Russian forces on Oct. 31. (Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP/Getty Images)
While Zelensky laid out proposals for a negotiated peace in the weeks following Putin’s Feb. 24 invasion, including Ukrainian neutrality and a return of areas occupied by Russia since that date, Ukrainian officials have hardened their stance in recent months.

In late September, following Putin’s annexation of four additional Ukrainian regions in the east and in the south, Zelensky issued a decree declaring it “impossible” to negotiate with the Russian leader. “We will negotiate with the new president,” he said in a video address.
That shift has been fueled by systematic atrocities in areas under Russian control, including rape and torture, along with regular airstrikes on Kyiv and other cities, and the Kremlin’s annexation decree.
Why Putin will fight for Kherson: Fresh water and land bridge to Crimea
Ukrainians have responded with outrage when foreigners have suggested they yield areas of their country as part of a peace deal, as they did last month when billionaire Elon Musk, who has helped supply Ukraine’s military with satellite communication devices, announced a proposal on Twitter that could allow Russia to cement its control of parts of Ukraine via referendum and give the Kremlin Crimea.

In recent weeks Ukrainian criticism of proposed concessions has grown more pointed, as officials decry “useful idiots” in the West whom they’ve accused of serving Kremlin interests.
“If Russia wins, we will get a period of chaos: flowering of tyranny, wars, genocides, nuclear races,” presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said Friday. “Any ‘concessions’ to Putin today — a deal with the Devil. You won’t like its price.”
Ukrainian officials point out that a 2015 peace deal in the country’s eastern Donbas region — where Moscow backed a separatist campaign — only provided Russia time before Putin launched his full-scale invasion this year. They question why any new peace deal would be different, arguing that the only way Russia will be prevented from returning for further attacks is vanquishing its military on the battlefield.

Russia, facing a poor position on the battlefield, has proposed negotiations but in the past has proved unwilling to accept much other than Ukrainian capitulation.
“Cynically, Russia and its Western supporters are holding out an olive branch. Please do not be fooled: An aggressor cannot be a peacemaker,” Andriy Yermak, head of the Ukrainian presidential administration, wrote in a recent op-ed published by The Washington Post.
White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan, right, meets Friday with Andriy Yermak, head of Ukraine's presidential office, in Kyiv. (Gleb Garanich/Reuters)
Ukrainian officials also question how they can conduct negotiations with Russian leaders who fundamentally believe in Moscow’s right to hegemony over Kyiv.
Putin has continued to undermine the notion of a sovereign and independent Ukraine, including in remarks last month when he once again asserted that Russians and Ukrainians were one people, and argued that Russia could be “the only real and serious guarantor of Ukraine’s statehood, sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

While Western officials also hold profound skepticism of Russia’s aims, they have chafed at Ukraine’s harsh public rebukes as Kyiv remains entirely dependent on Western assistance. Swiping at donors and ruling out talks could hurt Kyiv in the long run, officials say.
The maximalist remarks on both sides have increased global fears of a years-long conflict spanning the life of Russia’s 70-year-old leader, whose grip on power has only tightened in recent years. Already the war has deepened global economic woes, helping to send energy prices soaring for European consumers and causing a surge in commodity prices that worsened hunger in nations including Somalia, Yemen and Afghanistan.
Ukrainians say Democrats pressing for peace talks don’t get Putin
In the United States, rising inflation partially linked to the war has stiffened head winds for President Biden and his party ahead of the Nov. 8 midterms and raised new questions about the future of U.S. security assistance, which has amounted to $18.2 billion since the war began. According to a poll published Nov. 3 by the Wall Street Journal, 48 percent of Republicans said the United States was doing “too much” to support Ukraine, up from 6 percent in March.

Progressives within the Democratic Party are calling for diplomacy to avoid a protracted war, releasing but later retracting a letter calling on Biden to redouble efforts to seek “a realistic framework” for a halt to the fighting.
Speaking in Kyiv, Sullivan said the war could end easily. “Russia chose to start it,” he said. “Russia could choose to end it by ceasing its attack on Ukraine, ceasing its occupation of Ukraine, and that’s precisely what it should do from our perspective.”
The concerns about a longer conflict are particularly salient in nations that were already hesitant to throw their weight behind the U.S.-led coalition in support of Ukraine, either because of ties with Moscow or reluctance to fall in line behind Washington.
South Africa abstained from a recent U.N. vote that condemned Russia’s annexation decrees, saying the world must instead focus on facilitating a cease-fire and political resolution. Brazil’s new president-elect, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, has said Zelensky is as responsible for the war as Putin.


Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has tried to maintain good relations with Moscow and Kyiv, offered assistance on peace talks in a call with Zelensky last month. He was spurned by the Ukrainian leader.
Zelensky told him Ukraine would not conduct any negotiations with Putin but said Ukraine was “committed to peaceful settlement through dialogue,” according to a statement released by Zelensky’s office. The statement noted that Russia had deliberately undermined efforts at dialogue.
Ukraine lays out peace-talk demands as the West braces for escalation
Despite Ukrainian leaders’ refusal to talk to Putin and their vow to fight to retake all of Ukraine, U.S. officials say they believe that Zelensky would probably endorse negotiations and eventually accept concessions, as he suggested he would early in the war. They believe that Kyiv is attempting to lock in as many military gains as it can before winter sets in, when there might be a window for diplomacy.
Zelensky faces the challenge of appealing both to a domestic constituency that has suffered immensely at the hands of Russian invaders and a foreign audience providing his forces with the weapons they need to fight. To motivate Ukrainians domestically, Zelensky has promoted victory rather than settlement and become a symbol of defiance that has motivated Ukrainian forces on the battlefield.
While members of the Group of Seven industrialized bloc of nations seemingly threw their weight behind a Ukrainian vision of victory last month, endorsing a plan for a “just peace” including potential Russian reparation payments and security guarantees for Ukraine, some of those same countries see a potential turning point if Ukrainian forces approach Crimea.
Flames and smoke rise from the bridge connecting the Russian mainland with Crimea in early October. (AP)
Reports of a Russian withdrawal from the southern city of Kherson have raised the question of whether Ukrainian forces could eventually march on the strategic peninsula, which U.S. and NATO officials believe Putin views differently than other areas of Ukraine under Russian control, and what a likely all-out fight for Crimea would mean for Kyiv’s backers in the West.
Not only has Crimea been under direct Russian control for longer than areas seized since February, but it has long been the site of a Russian naval base and is home to many retired Russian military personnel.
Illustrating Russia’s elevation of Crimea, the Kremlin responded to an explosion last month on a bridge linking the region to mainland Russia — a symbol of Moscow’s grip of the peninsula — by launching a barrage of missiles on Ukrainian cities, including Kyiv, ending a long period of peace in the capital.
In the meantime, Ukrainian leaders continue to telegraph their intention to pursue total victory, not only to their beleaguered citizens but also to Moscow.
Zelensky told an interviewer on Wednesday that the first thing he would do after Ukraine prevails in the war would be to visit a recaptured Crimea. “I really want to see the sea,” he said.




Ukishindwa kupigana nao, ungana nao.



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Nashindwa kuelewa kama kweli jamiiforum is home of great thinker [emoji848][emoji848]..Ina maana hii statement haijaeleweka kweli?
""" The encouragement is aimed not at pushing Ukraine to the negotiating table,but ensuring it maintain a moral high ground in eyes of it's international backers"""

Hapa ni anachojaribu kukifanya marekani naweza kukilinganisha na kile hambacho wanandoa wengi hasa wanaume Huwa Wanafanya hasa pale wanapokuwa na matatizo ya kisheria na wenza wao...,wewe kama mwanaume, litakuwa ni kosa kubwa sana iwapo ukifishwa mbele ya vyombo vya Sheria na kukiri hadharani kwamba " Mimi huyu mwanamke simtaki,na siwezi kuendelea kuishi Naye,nataka tuachane maana simpendi "" hii statement inaweza kukugharimu sana iwapo una tatizo la kisheria na mwenza wako..,

Hivyo hivyo Ukraine kukataa Wazi wazi kwamba hataki mazungumzo na urusi ni kosa kubwa kimkamkati na pia inaleta taswira mbaya mbele ya jamii ya kimataifa..,hapa kinachofanyika ni kumtaka Ukraine kupretend kufanya mazungumzo ya amani na urusi.., iwapo hayo mazungumzo yatakwama hakuna wa kulaumiwa kati Yao wawili..,na kumbuka ya kwamba kati ya wote wawil yaani urusi na Ukraine..,kila mmoja anakuwa na nafasi ya kuyafanya mazungumzo yakwame,au yashindwe kufikia suluhu ya amani kwa maslahi yake mwenyewe..,na asilaumiwe kwa chochote,Bali matokeo ya jumla yatakuwa ni mazungumzo ya amani yamekwama,

Naona wengi mnacoment kwa mihemko tu na mipasho bila kusoma chochote..,au kama mnasoma, basi lugha ya mfalme ni tatizo,

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Unakopi na kupest husomi h

Umeelewa kipengele hichi au umekurupuka tuu
The request by American officials is not aimed at pushing Ukraine to the negotiating table, these people said. Rather, they called it a calculated attempt to ensure the government in Kyiv maintains the support of other nations facing constituencies wary of fueling a war for many years to come.
Anajua kusoma hiyo lugha. Hata hajui.
 
Kuhusu gharama.
Najua US kapigana kule kwa wateleban kwa miaka 20+.
Kaweka jeshi kile Iraq kwa miaka 15+
Kaweka jeshi kule kwa Assad sasa inakaribia 10+.

Nadhani kwenye suala la gharama hawa jamaa wanaweza kaa vitani hata decades 5.
Cyo head on combat na taifa kubwa kama Russia.
After Iraq war uchumi ulidrop . Hofu pia china anampiga gap kiuchumi!!…
 
Huko kote alikua anapigana na wachovu nawasiojiweza

Hao woote hawakua nalakumfanya US ila RUSSIA analo

Hao wooote walikua wanaamini kwamba US ndio kiranja wa DUNIA wakat RUSSIA anaamini kama US sii kila kitu hapa DUNIANI

Hao wote walikua wanategemea misaada ila RUSSIA 99% anajitegemea na kutegemewa

Kiranja anapaswa kwenda kumuadhibu urussi na kumtoa Putin, kama alivyomtoa Saddam
 
USA yeye anapenda vita iwepo popote pale yeye huwa ni third party wa kukopesha siraha na hawezi kujihusisha kwenye usuluhishi wowote kwa uwezo wake angeweza kuwa wazi ila kwa kuwa anataka kuwakopesha siraha na vitu vingine ili awadai baadae yeye hana hasara...sasa hivi anawapelekea miguu mipya DRC na Rwanda wasipoamka kuujua ukweli watapigana harafu yeye kama kawaida kusambaza siraha kote kwa masilahi ya baadae...
 
Mkuu umeelewa content?

Tunazungumzia gharama na sio matokeo ya vita. Kwa kumaanisha kwamba hii vita ikienda hata kwa miaka 10 mbele si ajabu hawa US wakaendelea ku-pump hela vitani maana sio jambo jipya wala gumu kwao!!!
Huko kote alikua anapigana na wachovu nawasiojiweza

Hao woote hawakua nalakumfanya US ila RUSSIA analo

Hao wooote walikua wanaamini kwamba US ndio kiranja wa DUNIA wakat RUSSIA anaamini kama US sii kila kitu hapa DUNIANI

Hao wote walikua wanategemea misaada ila RUSSIA 99% anajitegemea na kutegemewa
 
Elewa content mkuu.
Habari ni kuhusu uwezo wa US kuendelea kutoa funds kwa Ukraine.
Tofautisha kati ya watalaban na moja ya jeshi kubwa sana hapa Duniani,ulimwenguni,chini ya jua.

Watalaban hawakua na Jeshi la anga,Majini na Jeshi la ardhini,zaidi ya Guelilas./militias.
Watalabani walikua ni kikundi Cha watu Wachache sana nchini Afghanistan wala hawakua wanaungwa mkono nchi nzima.

Urusi ina Kila kitu walichonacho West na vingine kawazidi.
 
Kule kwa wavaa kobazi wa kiteliban walikua wanachukua rasimali zipi mkuu?
Inategemea rasilimali zilizopo katika nchi husika.
Hawawezi kukaa kwa kutegemea nafaka. Wanazo akili hao

Inategemea rasilimali zilizopo katika nchi husika. Hawawezi kukaa kwa kutegemea nafaka. Wanazo akili hao
 
Baada ya kuona hakuna dalili ya vita kumalizika leo ama kesho. Maafisa wa ngazi za juu wa Marekani wanamshawishi rais Ukraine ajongelee kwenye meza ya mazungumzo iwapo rais Vladimir Putin ataendelea kuwepo madarakani. Taarifa hizo zimevuja kutoka kwenye timu iliyoundwa mahususi kwa ajili ya kushughulikia mzozo huo. Wanaeleza watu waliokuwa wakifuatilia mpango huo bila kutaja majina yao.

View attachment 2408454



Chanzo: DW kama ilivyonukuu kutoka kwenye gazeti la Washington Post.

U.S. privately asks Ukraine to show it’s open to negotiate with Russia​

The encouragement is aimed not at pushing Ukraine to the negotiating table, but ensuring it maintains a moral high ground in the eyes of its international backers​

By Missy Ryan
,
John Hudson
and
Paul Sonne

November 5, 2022 at 6:29 p.m. EDT
President Volodymyr Zelensky’s refusal to talk with Russia's leader, Vladimir Putin, has fueled concern in parts of Europe, Africa and Latin America, where the war’s disruptive effects have been severe. (Heidi Levine for The Washington Post)
Listen
11 min
Comment
2266

Gift Article

Share
The Biden administration is privately encouraging Ukraine’s leaders to signal an openness to negotiate with Russia and drop their public refusal to engage in peace talks unless President Vladimir Putin is removed from power, according to people familiar with the discussions.

Are you on Telegram? Subscribe to our channel for the latest updates on Russia’s war in Ukraine.

The request by American officials is not aimed at pushing Ukraine to the negotiating table, these people said. Rather, they called it a calculated attempt to ensure the government in Kyiv maintains the support of other nations facing constituencies wary of fueling a war for many years to come.

The discussions illustrate how complex the Biden administration’s position on Ukraine has become, as U.S. officials publicly vow to support Kyiv with massive sums of aid “for as long as it takes” while hoping for a resolution to the conflict that over the past eight months has taken a punishing toll on the world economy and triggered fears of nuclear war.

While U.S. officials share their Ukrainian counterparts’ assessment that Putin, for now, isn’t serious about negotiations, they acknowledge that President Volodymyr Zelensky’s ban on talks with him has generated concern in parts of Europe, Africa and Latin America, where the war’s disruptive effects on the availability and cost of food and fuel are felt most sharply.
“Ukraine fatigue is a real thing for some of our partners,” said one U.S. official who, like others interviewed for this report, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive conversations between Washington and Kyiv.
Serhiy Nikiforov, a spokesman for Zelensky, did not respond to a request for comment.

In the United States, polls show eroding support among Republicans for continuing to finance Ukraine’s military at current levels, suggesting the White House may face resistance following Tuesday’s midterm elections as it seeks to continue a security assistance program that has delivered Ukraine the largest such annual sum since the end of the Cold War.

In a trip to Kyiv on Friday, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan said the United States supported a just and lasting peace for Ukraine and said U.S. support would continue regardless of domestic politics. “We fully intend to ensure that the resources are there as necessary and that we’ll get votes from both sides of the aisle to make that happen,” he said during a briefing.
Inside the growing Republican fissure on Ukraine aid
Eagerness for a potential resolution to the war has intensified as Ukrainian forces recapture occupied territory, pushing closer to areas prized by Putin. Those begin with Crimea, which Russia illegally annexed in 2014, and include cities along the Azov Sea that now provide him a “land bridge” to the Ukrainian peninsula. Zelensky has vowed to fight for every inch of Ukrainian territory.

Veteran diplomat Alexander Vershbow, who served as U.S. ambassador to Russia and deputy secretary general of NATO, said the United States could not afford to be completely “agnostic” about how and when the war is concluded, given the U.S. interest in ensuring European security and deterring further Kremlin aggression beyond Russia’s borders.
“If the conditions become more propitious for negotiations, I don’t think the administration is going to be passive,” Vershbow said. “But it is ultimately the Ukrainians doing the fighting, so we’ve got to be careful not to second-guess them.”
Ukrainian artillerymen, positioned near Bakhmut, in eastern Ukraine's Donetsk region, fire a 152 mm howitzer at Russian forces on Oct. 31. (Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP/Getty Images)
While Zelensky laid out proposals for a negotiated peace in the weeks following Putin’s Feb. 24 invasion, including Ukrainian neutrality and a return of areas occupied by Russia since that date, Ukrainian officials have hardened their stance in recent months.

In late September, following Putin’s annexation of four additional Ukrainian regions in the east and in the south, Zelensky issued a decree declaring it “impossible” to negotiate with the Russian leader. “We will negotiate with the new president,” he said in a video address.
That shift has been fueled by systematic atrocities in areas under Russian control, including rape and torture, along with regular airstrikes on Kyiv and other cities, and the Kremlin’s annexation decree.
Why Putin will fight for Kherson: Fresh water and land bridge to Crimea
Ukrainians have responded with outrage when foreigners have suggested they yield areas of their country as part of a peace deal, as they did last month when billionaire Elon Musk, who has helped supply Ukraine’s military with satellite communication devices, announced a proposal on Twitter that could allow Russia to cement its control of parts of Ukraine via referendum and give the Kremlin Crimea.

In recent weeks Ukrainian criticism of proposed concessions has grown more pointed, as officials decry “useful idiots” in the West whom they’ve accused of serving Kremlin interests.
“If Russia wins, we will get a period of chaos: flowering of tyranny, wars, genocides, nuclear races,” presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said Friday. “Any ‘concessions’ to Putin today — a deal with the Devil. You won’t like its price.”
Ukrainian officials point out that a 2015 peace deal in the country’s eastern Donbas region — where Moscow backed a separatist campaign — only provided Russia time before Putin launched his full-scale invasion this year. They question why any new peace deal would be different, arguing that the only way Russia will be prevented from returning for further attacks is vanquishing its military on the battlefield.

Russia, facing a poor position on the battlefield, has proposed negotiations but in the past has proved unwilling to accept much other than Ukrainian capitulation.
“Cynically, Russia and its Western supporters are holding out an olive branch. Please do not be fooled: An aggressor cannot be a peacemaker,” Andriy Yermak, head of the Ukrainian presidential administration, wrote in a recent op-ed published by The Washington Post.
White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan, right, meets Friday with Andriy Yermak, head of Ukraine's presidential office, in Kyiv. (Gleb Garanich/Reuters)
Ukrainian officials also question how they can conduct negotiations with Russian leaders who fundamentally believe in Moscow’s right to hegemony over Kyiv.
Putin has continued to undermine the notion of a sovereign and independent Ukraine, including in remarks last month when he once again asserted that Russians and Ukrainians were one people, and argued that Russia could be “the only real and serious guarantor of Ukraine’s statehood, sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

While Western officials also hold profound skepticism of Russia’s aims, they have chafed at Ukraine’s harsh public rebukes as Kyiv remains entirely dependent on Western assistance. Swiping at donors and ruling out talks could hurt Kyiv in the long run, officials say.
The maximalist remarks on both sides have increased global fears of a years-long conflict spanning the life of Russia’s 70-year-old leader, whose grip on power has only tightened in recent years. Already the war has deepened global economic woes, helping to send energy prices soaring for European consumers and causing a surge in commodity prices that worsened hunger in nations including Somalia, Yemen and Afghanistan.
Ukrainians say Democrats pressing for peace talks don’t get Putin
In the United States, rising inflation partially linked to the war has stiffened head winds for President Biden and his party ahead of the Nov. 8 midterms and raised new questions about the future of U.S. security assistance, which has amounted to $18.2 billion since the war began. According to a poll published Nov. 3 by the Wall Street Journal, 48 percent of Republicans said the United States was doing “too much” to support Ukraine, up from 6 percent in March.

Progressives within the Democratic Party are calling for diplomacy to avoid a protracted war, releasing but later retracting a letter calling on Biden to redouble efforts to seek “a realistic framework” for a halt to the fighting.
Speaking in Kyiv, Sullivan said the war could end easily. “Russia chose to start it,” he said. “Russia could choose to end it by ceasing its attack on Ukraine, ceasing its occupation of Ukraine, and that’s precisely what it should do from our perspective.”
The concerns about a longer conflict are particularly salient in nations that were already hesitant to throw their weight behind the U.S.-led coalition in support of Ukraine, either because of ties with Moscow or reluctance to fall in line behind Washington.
South Africa abstained from a recent U.N. vote that condemned Russia’s annexation decrees, saying the world must instead focus on facilitating a cease-fire and political resolution. Brazil’s new president-elect, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, has said Zelensky is as responsible for the war as Putin.


Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who has tried to maintain good relations with Moscow and Kyiv, offered assistance on peace talks in a call with Zelensky last month. He was spurned by the Ukrainian leader.
Zelensky told him Ukraine would not conduct any negotiations with Putin but said Ukraine was “committed to peaceful settlement through dialogue,” according to a statement released by Zelensky’s office. The statement noted that Russia had deliberately undermined efforts at dialogue.
Ukraine lays out peace-talk demands as the West braces for escalation
Despite Ukrainian leaders’ refusal to talk to Putin and their vow to fight to retake all of Ukraine, U.S. officials say they believe that Zelensky would probably endorse negotiations and eventually accept concessions, as he suggested he would early in the war. They believe that Kyiv is attempting to lock in as many military gains as it can before winter sets in, when there might be a window for diplomacy.
Zelensky faces the challenge of appealing both to a domestic constituency that has suffered immensely at the hands of Russian invaders and a foreign audience providing his forces with the weapons they need to fight. To motivate Ukrainians domestically, Zelensky has promoted victory rather than settlement and become a symbol of defiance that has motivated Ukrainian forces on the battlefield.
While members of the Group of Seven industrialized bloc of nations seemingly threw their weight behind a Ukrainian vision of victory last month, endorsing a plan for a “just peace” including potential Russian reparation payments and security guarantees for Ukraine, some of those same countries see a potential turning point if Ukrainian forces approach Crimea.
Flames and smoke rise from the bridge connecting the Russian mainland with Crimea in early October. (AP)
Reports of a Russian withdrawal from the southern city of Kherson have raised the question of whether Ukrainian forces could eventually march on the strategic peninsula, which U.S. and NATO officials believe Putin views differently than other areas of Ukraine under Russian control, and what a likely all-out fight for Crimea would mean for Kyiv’s backers in the West.
Not only has Crimea been under direct Russian control for longer than areas seized since February, but it has long been the site of a Russian naval base and is home to many retired Russian military personnel.
Illustrating Russia’s elevation of Crimea, the Kremlin responded to an explosion last month on a bridge linking the region to mainland Russia — a symbol of Moscow’s grip of the peninsula — by launching a barrage of missiles on Ukrainian cities, including Kyiv, ending a long period of peace in the capital.
In the meantime, Ukrainian leaders continue to telegraph their intention to pursue total victory, not only to their beleaguered citizens but also to Moscow.
Zelensky told an interviewer on Wednesday that the first thing he would do after Ukraine prevails in the war would be to visit a recaptured Crimea. “I really want to see the sea,” he said.




Ukishindwa kupigana nao, ungana nao.
"The encouragement is aimed not at pushing Ukraine to the negotiating table, but ensuring it maintains a moral high ground in the eyes of its international backers"

Huo mstari hujauona kwenye habari yako? Kumbe mpo mnakazana mmesubiri negotiation? Usupapawa uko wapi sasa mbwembwe nyingi kumbe hamna kitu. Hizo negotiations mtafanya wakijisikia na sio sasa, Putin aendelee kuzingatia kukaa mbali na majenerali wake
20221101_000418.jpg
 
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