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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
World
Foster Wong and Daryna Krasnolutska

Sunak visits Ukraine to offer major UK air defense package

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak pledged the U.K. will provide air defense equipment worth 50 million pounds ($59 million) to help protect Ukrainians from a barrage of Russian strikes on critical infrastructure.

The U.K. government announced the plan after a previously announced visit to Kyiv by Sunak on Saturday, his first since taking office in October.

“While Ukraine’s armed forces succeed in pushing back Russian forces on the ground, civilians are being brutally bombarded from the air,” Sunak said after meeting with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

“We are today providing new air defense, including anti-aircraft guns, radar and anti-drone equipment, and stepping up humanitarian support for the cold, hard winter ahead.”

The package comprises 125 anti-aircraft guns and technology to counter Iranian-supplied drones, including dozens of radars and anti-drone electronic warfare capability, the U.K. said.

“With friends like you by our side, we are confident in our victory. Both of our nations know what it means to stand up for freedom,” Zelenskyy said on Twitter.

Ukraine’s leader told Sunak that as of now, almost 50% of the nation’s energy infrastructure has been damaged by relentless Russian missile and drone attacks.

Top Ukrainian officials have repeatedly called on allies to help the nation step up its air defenses.

“This Russian terror is not just another enemy’s cruelty toward Ukrainians. It is a display of a cynical Russian anti-European policy, anti-human policy,” Zelenskyy said.

He added that Ukraine had been preparing to export more electricity to the European Union, and that “Russian attacks also aimed at destroying our energy connection” to Europe. “Every strike at Ukraine’s energy is a strike at the energy security of the whole continent,” he said.

Sunak told Zelenskiy that the U.K. “will stand with you until Ukraine has won the peace and security it needs and deserves, and then we will stand with you as you rebuild.”

“This year alone we have provided 2.3 billion pounds of military support and we will do the same again next year,” he said.

Sunak’s visit followed high-profile trips to Kyiv by former U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson, one of the first leaders to travel to Ukraine following Russia’s invasion in February.

After Ukraine’s counteroffensive forced Russian troops to retreat, Kremlin forces have engaged in a massive missile and drone campaign that’s pummeled power stations, grid networks and other civilian facilities. Russia has also hit gas extraction facilities, Ukrainian officials said.

Air attacks on Tuesday were the most widespread to date, and the onslaught has continued in the country’s east and south, including Odesa on the Black Sea.

More than 10 million Ukrainians — about a quarter of the prewar population — are without electricity, Zelenskyy said in his overnight address Thursday, as the season’s first snow fell on Kyiv.

Multiple emergency blackouts this week hit the capital with the heaviest power shortages since the war started, local grid company Yasno said. Temperatures in Kyiv are expected to plunge to minus 6 degrees Celsius (21 Fahrenheit) on Sunday.

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