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US cites safety concerns regarding Ukrainian president

This handout photograph taken and released by the Ukrainian presidential press-service on July 5, 2022, shows Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky as he addresses the opening ceremony of the 26th rank round table of The Economist magazine, from an undisclosed location in Kiev. (Photo by AFP)

US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan has voiced concern regarding the safety of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Sullivan said on Friday that Washington was worried about the personal safety of Zelensky and was assisting with the security of the Ukrainian leader after the conflict started with Russia.

The US security official said Russia was “capable of just about anything”.

“President Zelensky’s personal safety is something that concerns us,” Sullivan told the Aspen Security Forum in Colorado. “This is a leader in wartime, dealing with an enemy in Russia that is ruthless, brutal and capable of just about anything.”

Sullivan said the US was helping to “facilitate” the Ukrainian leader’s security.

Asked whether he was worried about declining public support for Ukraine at home, Sullivan said that he worried “about literally everything,” except the continued supply of weapons to Kiev. 

The US has spent $8 billion on military aid to Kiev since the start of Russia's military campaign on Feb. 24.

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Zelensky, in the meantime, has claimed on several occasions that assassins have threatened his life.

Ukrainian officials have said numerous times that Russia intends to have the president killed. Moscow, however, denies the allegations.

Zelensky has recently fired the head of the country’s powerful domestic security service, the SBU, and the prosecutor general, citing security and military concerns and accusing them of collaborating with the Russians.

Russia launched its special military operation in Ukraine in late February with an aim to “de-Nazify” the county.

The Russians' move followed Kiev’s years-long failure to implement the terms of the Minsk agreements and Moscow’s recognition of the two eastern Donbas breakaway regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.


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