Ukraine claims TV channel hacked by Russians, used to broadcast false Zelenskyy statement
The Ukrainian Center for Strategic Communications & Information Security claimed Wednesday that “Russian hackers broke the news feed on Ukraine 24 TV and launched a false ‘statement’ by President Volodymyr Zelenskyy about the need to lay down weapons.”
“Friends, we have been warned repeatedly about this. No one is going to give up. Especially, in conditions when the Russian army suffers defeat in battles with the Ukrainian army!” the station reportedly said in a Telegram post.
Ukrainian MP on peace talks: Russian diplomacy ‘trying to catch up’ with losses
Ukrainian Parliament member Inna Sovsun joins ‘Fox & Friends First’ to discuss Russia’s claims about peace talks with Ukraine.
Lavrov: ‘There are concrete formulations that in my view are close to being agreed’
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Wednesday that a “business-like spirit” is emerging at talks with Ukraine that are now focused on a neutral status for the war-torn country.
“A neutral status is being seriously discussed in connection with security guarantees,” Lavrov said on Russian channel RBK TV. “There are concrete formulations that in my view are close to being agreed.”
He didn’t elaborate, but said “the business-like spirit” starting to surface in the talks “gives hope that we can agree on this issue.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Russia attacks Ukraine refugee hub, official claims
The Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia — where people fleeing Mariupol have been taking refuge — has come under fire Wednesday by the Russian military, an official in the area is claiming.
“Civilian objects have been bombed for the first time in Zaporizhzhia,” regional governor Alexander Starukh reportedly wrote on Telegram. “The rockets landed in the area of the Zaporozhye-2 railway station.”
There were no immediate reports of casualties.
Russian ground troops appear to be stalled by Ukrainian resistance
Former intelligence officer with the Defense Intelligence Agency, Matt Shoemaker, discussed the Russian strategy as the invasion into Ukraine continues.
US Army vet on aiding Ukraine: It’s ‘heart wrenching’
Army veteran Anthony Pate joins ‘Fox & Friends First’ to describe his trip to Ukraine to aid civilians affected by the country’s war with Russia.
Zelenskyy says Ukraine won’t put down its arms until victory
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, in an Instagram video posted Wednesday, urged Russia’s army to “put down their arms and go back home.
“And we are already home,” he said. “We are defending our land, our kids, our families, so we are not planning to put down any arms until our victory.”
Australian news station drone footage shows destruction in Kyiv
Footage posted on Twitter by 7NewsAustralia shows the extent of damage in Kyiv, with a reporter standing on top of an apartment building that was hit by a Russian military airstrike.
Ukraine claims it has killed a fourth Russian general
Russian Maj. Gen. Oleg Mityaev, who commanded the 150th motorized rifle division and had fought in Syria, has been killed in Ukraine, according to Interior Ministry adviser Anton Gerashchenko.
Gerashchenko published a photo on Telegram of what he said was the 46-year-old dead officer, claiming he was killed Tuesday in the area of Mariupol.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy reported the death of another Russian general in his nighttime address on Tuesday but didn’t name him.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Boris Johnson: ‘There is no way Ukraine is going to join NATO any time soon’
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Wednesday that Ukraine won’t become a member of NATO “any time soon.”
The remark comes a day after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zalenskyy said he knows his country does not have an open door to NATO membership and should instead find ways to protect itself with the help of security guarantees.
Johnson said “the reality of the position” is that “there is no way Ukraine is going to join NATO any time soon,” according to the Associated Press.
Russia has opposed Ukraine’s aspirations
to join NATO.
Russian negotiator claims Ukraine is discussing this possible compromise
Russia’s chief negotiator in talks with Ukraine said Wednesday that Ukraine is discussing a possible compromise in which it would have a smaller, non-aligned military going forward, the Associated Press reports, citing Russian news agencies.
“A whole range of issues tied with the size of Ukraine’s army is being discussed,” Russian negotiator Vladimir Medinsky reportedly said. “Ukraine is proposing an Austrian or Swedish option of a neutral state, but a state that has its own army and navy.”
Medinsky said the issues are being discussed in the Russian and Ukrainian defense ministries.
The report comes as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Wednesday that Russia’s demands were becoming “more realistic.” Talks are expected to continue today.
On Tuesday, Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak tweeted that the talks were a “very difficult and viscous negotiation process.
“There are fundamental contradictions. But there is certainly room for compromise,” he said.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
President Zelenskyy set to address Congress today at 9 a.m.
Ukraine war upended China’s plan to invade Taiwan, alleged FSB whistleblower says
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine upended Chinese President Xi Jinping’s timetable to invade Taiwan, according to documents purportedly written by a Russian intelligence analyst in one of Moscow’s security agencies.
“Xi Jinping was at least considering taking over Taiwan in the fall – he needs his own little victory to get re-elected for a third term – there the struggle within the elite is colossal,” an agent in Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB), the successor agency to the KGB, allegedly wrote on March 9.
China will hold its 20th Communist Party Congress this fall, and Xi has said it will be a “major event.” Analysts have predicted that Xi will either be re-elected as the general secretary of the Communist Party or be elected to the chairmanship of the party, a position that has not existed since 1982.
“Now, after the Ukrainian events, this window of opportunity has been closed to him, which gives the United States the opportunity to both blackmail Xi and negotiate with its competitors on favorable terms,” the FSB agent added. “It was in this case that we launched a trap mechanism for China with our actions.” (READ MORE)
Ukrainians in shelled cities like Mariupol facing ‘inhuman suffering’: official
Russian forces attacking the port city of Mariupol have left its residents “on the verge of survival,” a Ukrainian coordinator for the humanitarian corridors told Fox News Digital.
“In cities like Mariupol, where there’s no light, water, air, heat, food, mobile communications, people are on the verge of survival,” Tetiana Lomakina said. “According to eyewitnesses, their only saving grace is that relatives, friends and neighbors are helping each other, cooking on fires, taking water from streams or melting… the snow, lighting their homes with kerosene lamps, sleeping on the cold floor, which has caused mass illnesses among children and the elderly.”
“There is no medicine. This is inhuman suffering,” she added.
Click here to read more.
President Zelenskyy awarded 139 state awards to Ukrainian soldiers
Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy awarded 139 state awards to Ukrainian soldiers, 32 of them posthumously, “For personal courage and selfless actions shown in defense of the state sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine, loyalty to the military oath.”
Russia is “systematically destroying” Ukrainian infrastructure, govt says
“Russia is systematically destroying Ukraineʼs civilian infrastructure, it destroyed 3,500 infrastructure facilities: transport, social, health care facilities, educational and social institutions. More than 2700 houses were destroyed,” said the Ukrainian Emergency State Service.
NJ woman, a ‘proud’ Ukrainian, sells varsity sweater jackets to support home country amid war
As the Russia-Ukraine war drags on, one small business owner from New Jersey with deep roots in Ukraine is doing her part to help Ukrainian refugees any way she can.
Lana Riggins, a Ukraine-born knitwear designer, is selling blue and yellow varsity sweater jackets to benefit a local charity that’s supporting Ukraine.
“Kyiv and Kharkiv are very dear to my heart. I have friends in both towns,” Riggins said in a phone interview.
Riggins moved to the U.S. from Ukraine in 1994 to study at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City, she said.
Click here to read more.
US allies have seen that Biden makes promises he ‘doesn’t keep’: Radcliffe
Ukrainian artillerymen fire volley: video
Translation: “Uninvited guests will not sleep peacefully on Ukrainian soil – our artillerymen greet them warmly everywhere,” Ukraine Defense Ministry said.
Humanitarian aid arrives in Ukraine
Humanitarian cargo weighing 15 tons has arrived in Ukraine, including baby food from Italy, canned soups from Germany, sewing materials and medicines from the USA.
“In times of difficult trials, each of us must do our best for our joint victory. And now it is very important to provide assistance to the civilian population, because people will understand that they will not be left in trouble and will always be remembered,” said Lieutenant General Sergey Naev.
Zelenskyy set to address Congress via Zoom
President Zelenskyy invites world leaders to Kyiv to see destruction first-hand
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during an address following 20 days of war: “I invite all friends of Ukraine to visit Kyiv. It can be dangerous here, because our skies are not yet closed from Russian missiles and planes.”
Negotiations are ‘very difficult’ but will continue, a Ukrainian official said
A Ukrainian official said said negotiations with Russia to end the war were “very difficult” as there are “fundamental contradictions,” but said they would continue.
Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, added: “There is certainly room for compromise.”
“We’ll continue tomorrow. A very difficult and viscous negotiation process. There are fundamental contradictions. But there is certainly room for compromise,” tweeted Podolyak.
Now-deleted Kamala Harris tweet claimed US is supporting Ukraine ‘in defense of the NATO alliance’
A social media account for Vice President Kamala Harris stated Tuesday in a now-deleted tweet that the United States is supporting Ukraine “in defense of the NATO alliance,” which the Ukraine is not a part of.
“When I was in Poland, I met with U.S. and Polish service members, thanking them for standing with our NATO allies for freedom, peace, and security,” a tweet from the @KamalaHarris account stated. “The United States stands firmly with the Ukrainian people in defense of the NATO alliance.”
The remarks made in the tweet, which featured a photo of Harris greeting American and Polish service members, come on the heels of similar statements she made while addressing House Democrats over the weekend at the Democratic National Committee’s (DNC) winter meeting in D.C.
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Zelenskyy speech to Congress could be most important by a foreign leader since Churchill in 1941
Ukrainian Leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy won’t be the first world leader to speak to both the House and Senate when he speaks virtually tomorrow. But this could be the most any world leader has had on the line when they spoke to Congress in 81 years.
British Prime Minister Winston Churchill spoke to Congress on December 26, 1941 — weeks after the U.S. entered World War II following the bombing of Pearl Harbor.
Churchill addressed lawmakers in the Senate chamber before movie cameras and added klieg lights. Multiple microphones from NBC, CBS and MBS (the Mutual Broadcasting System) sprang up in front of Churchill on the Senate dais.
Biden promises more aid to Ukraine
After signing a massive $1.5 trillion government funding bill Tuesday (which includes $13.5 billion in Ukraine assistance), President Biden will announce over $1 billion in military assistance to Ukraine.
The president will announce an additional $800 million in funding, in addition to the $200 million announced on Saturday.
The funding comes as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is set to deliver a remote address to Congress Wednesday, during which he is expected to outline a list of equipment the Ukrainians feel they need to fend off the Russian invasion.
Read more here.