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UK and allies ready to back Ukraine before and after peace deal

Sarah RainsfordBBC South and Eastern European Reporter

BBC John Healey is wearing a dark jacket, white shirt and wearing a red dot tie Sarah Rainsford Red TopBBC

Britain and its allies are ready to support Ukraine before the negotiations to end the war and make a final peace agreement.

On the eve of a senior meeting in Paris, John Healey said that the BBC in Kiev would help Ukraine’s allies “to secure the sky, to secure the seas and to secure the land.”

A few minutes ago, however, Russian President Vladimir Putin gave a message from China, promising to continue full -scale invasion.

Healey insisted that Russia was under pressure, claiming that Putin was a blush in his words. In addition, Trump praised US President Donald Trump, whom Trump said last month, despite his criticism of the Russian leader in Alaska, “brought Putin to talks” and “he did not close any option”.

Tuesday late Tuesday, Trump said he was “disappointed” in Putin, but he said it before. He also threatened to punish the Russian leader for refusing to end the war, or even meet Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky for peace talks.

When asked if the war in Ukraine would soon end on Wednesday, Putin said, “There is a certain light at the end of the tunnel.”

“It seems to me that if the common sense prevails, it will be possible to agree on an acceptable solution to end this conflict,” he said, “If not, then we’ll have to solve all our tasks military.”

He continued to list the maximalist demands of Russia as usual to end what the authorities in Kiev call Ethnic Russians, as usual – one of the allegations mentioned as an excuse for the full -scale invasion of the neighbor he initiated in February 2022.

As for meeting Zelensky, Putin seemed to imitate the idea that Trump said he was ready.

Beijing, “I have never excluded the possibility of such a meeting. But does it have any meaning? Putin said Putin.

Zelensky could always go to Moscow to see him, he said – an “unconsciously unacceptable” idea, the Ukrainian Foreign Minister quickly pointed to.

Last week, France’s president Emmanuel Macron Putin “playing” Trump claimed.

However, John Healey emphasized that the US President “another action, including economic measures, did not refuse more action to put more pressure on Putin”.

“We are ready to make extra economic pressure on Putin in the willing coalition, such as England. We are ready to give extra help to continue Ukraine in the war.

“Therefore, we went to £ 1 billion ($ 1.24 billion) of the Russian assets seized today, and the military aid and the kite were recycled to Ukraine. If you want, Putin’s dirty money returned with interest.”

On Thursday, Macron will host a meeting of a willing coalition – a grouping of Ukrainian allies, determined to put any peace agreement into effect.

A source in Macron’s office, élysée, said that the group is now ready to provide security guarantees for Ukraine and expects the US to approve it as a final return.

The proposed agreement involves continuing to educate and supply Ukraine’s own army.

It also predicts the deployment of Ukraine – with not specified numbers – to determine any future of the Russian aggression of European troops – a signal that can rely on “full solidarity and commitment to Ukraine’s allies.

Such a distribution will need a ceasefire.

John Healey refused to give details despite the pressure, “because it will only make Putin smarter.”

The German government also reduces the expectation of any major announcement at the meeting on Thursday.

For now, Berlin, like Italy and other coalition members, refused to send troops to Ukraine and send any future peace to the police.

A German government spokesman BBC told BBC that the priority was to ensure that Russia accept a ceasefire – Putin constantly rejected.

President Trump put pressure on Putin during his peaks in Alaska last month, and then appeared to claim that finding a final agreement of Putin would be a better way than conflict.

Reuters two firefighters with black uniform and yellow translucent lane in front of a building where an attack is hitReuters

Instead of peace talks, Russia intensified its attacks on the cities of Ukraine

Meanwhile, Russia’s air strikes concentrated on both frequency and scale. On Wednesday night, 500 Russian drones and 24 navigation missiles were launched in Ukraine.

Throughout the country, civilians are protected in basements or subway, while air defense weapons went to work.

As usual, the government did not say that any military target was hit, but the influence of civilians is often destructive.

Last week, a Russian missile hit a circle block that killed 22 people, including four children in one of the most deadly strikes since Russia’s full -scale invasion in Kiev.

Now there is a pile of toys in the ruins and photos.

From the shredded stairs, the inhabitants come out with potted plants and some way with dust -covered dress bags that survived the strike. A few steps away, others stand and look at the wreckage.

A young girl said she had left the bomb shelter that morning because she was full of smoke after the first missile kick. Then he landed in a second road and his sister was killed.

Ihor Maharynsky survived only because he was out of town that night. His wife Natalia was in his fifth floor apartment and did not go to the shelter. He had to define his body in the morgue.

“What kind of strategic target is there here?” He asked by looking at a parking lot and a nearby technical college. “There is nothing.”

Currently, Ihor has no possibility in peace with Russia.

And like many Ukrainians, Donald Trump is angry at Donald Trump because he launched the red carpet in Alaska for Vladimir Putin last month.

“Is peace with Putin? This ****?” Ihor wanted to know with a number of expludes. “Peaceful people who die.”

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