Zelenskyy addresses UK cabinet, asks Britain to convince Western allies to allow long-range strikes on Russia

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Zelenskyy renewed his call for Western allies to allow long-range strikes on Russia, saying Britain should try to convince its partners, which have taken varying approaches to how Ukraine can use weapons they supply, to remove the limits on their use read more

Zelenskyy addresses UK cabinet, asks Britain to convince Western allies to allow long-range strikes on Russia

Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy pose during a bilateral meeting at 10 Downing Street in central London, Britain, on Friday. Reuters

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy addressed British government ministers on Friday, a rare appearance by a foreign leader at a cabinet meeting that new Prime Minister Keir Starmer hopes will underline London’s support for Kyiv.

A day after hosting a forum of European leaders at Blenheim Palace, Starmer pressed on with his bid to raise Britain’s role in international affairs by inviting Zelenskyy to address his cabinet of top ministers. The last foreign leader to do so was US President Bill Clinton in 1997, Starmer’s office said.

Zelenskyy renewed his call for Western allies to allow long-range strikes on Russia, saying Britain should try to convince its partners, which have taken varying approaches to how Ukraine can use weapons they supply, to remove the limits on their use.

“Right now we are missing the main answer to this question and that is our long-range capability,” Zelenskyy said at the beginning of the meeting in Downing Street. “Please convince the other partners to remove the limits.”

Starmer told Zelenskyy Britain would speed up delivery of vital aid to Ukraine, after his defence minister said earlier this month that the deliveries promised by the former Conservative government would be delivered within 100 days.

“Ukraine is, and always will be, at the heart of this government’s agenda and so it is only fitting that President Zelenskyy will make a historic address to my cabinet,” Starmer said in a statement before the meeting.

Britain has been a vocal supporter of Ukraine since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, and Starmer swiftly reaffirmed London’s commitment to Kyiv after winning a landslide election earlier this month, telling Zelenskyy at Nato while there was a change of government, there was “no change of approach”.

He said on Thursday that Britain would pursue a new plan to try to disrupt Russia’s attempts to evade shipping sanctions. On Thursday, Britain announced sanctions on 11 vessels used to transport Russian oil.

The new measures against Russia’s so-called “shadow fleet” include plans to share data on the network of the often older tankers used in shipping Russian oil, so that individual vessels can be identified and action taken against them.

He also unveiled the Defence Export Support Treaty, to be signed by defence ministers, that will enable Ukraine to draw on 3.5 billion pounds ($4.5 billion) of export finance, to fire up both countries’ defence industrial bases and boost production.

Starmer, at NATO last week, re-committed to a pledge by his predecessor, Conservative Rishi Sunak, to deliver 3 billion pounds a year of military support to Ukraine until 2030-31 and beyond if needed.

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