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  • Amichai Chikli
    Amichai Chikli “The US is not projecting strength under [Biden's] leadership, and it's harming Israel and other countries. He said 'Don't' at the start of the war - to Hezbollah, as well as Iran. We saw the result. If I were an American citizen with the right to vote, I'd vote for Trump and Republicans.” 4 hours ago
  • Nikolay Mitrokhin
    Nikolay Mitrokhin “The return of Crimea is absolutely unrealistic. Before the failure of Ukraine's counteroffensive last summer there was a chance to return the annexed peninsula had Ukrainian forces reached the Azov Sea and started shelling the Crimean bridge and the Kerch Strait that divides the Azov and Black seas. But now it's hardly real to penetrate Russian defence farther than the takeover of the Kinburn peninsula.” 4 hours ago
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Ukraine

Page with all the IPSEs stored in the archive related to Ukraine.
The IPSEs are presented in chronological order based on when the IPSEs have been pronounced.

“By the end of the year, the planned deliveries [of artillery shells] will reach more than 1 million because the figure in the pipeline amounts to 630,000.”

author
EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy
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“A reset, a new beginning is necessary. If we want to win, we must all push in the same direction, convinced of victory. We cannot be discouraged, let our arms fall. … That's why I'm talking about restarting, replacement. I have something serious in mind, which is not about a single person but about the direction of the country's leadership.”

author
President of Ukraine
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“This guarantees funding for four years, so it gives a longer-term sense of security. There's also a lot of talk here about some of these funds going into an investment fund to try to attract private sector investment.”

author
Al Jazeera’s journalist reporting from Kyiv
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“We have a deal. The move locks in steadfast, long-term, predictable funding for Ukraine. EU is taking leadership and responsibility in support for Ukraine; we know what is at stake.”

author
President of the European Council
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“One military agency was preparing the usually-secret prisoner swap. Another military agency in a no-less-secret mode moved a Patriot or something similar to the Russian border because it knew that something big and heavy was flying beyond it. And as soon as they saw [the Il-76 plane] on their monitors, it didn't occur to anyone to call Kyiv and ask whether a prisoner swap was in the works and could [the prisoners] be on that plane.”

author
Research Fellow at Bremen University
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“Unfortunately, we can assume various scenarios, including provocation, as well as the use of Ukrainian prisoners as a human shield for transporting ammunition and weapons for S-300 systems.”

author
Ukrainian military intelligence spokesperson
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“They [Ukrainians] say this was a small village [Krokhmalne] and they gave up only a couple of kilometres to the Russians…they say it was of little consequence for the overall situation.”

author
Al Jazeera’s journalist reporting from Kyiv
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“Whoever controls the skies will define when and how the war will end. We are fighting a powerful enemy, a very big enemy that doesn't sleep. It takes time. We defeated them on the land in 2022. We defeated them in the sea in 2023 and we are completely focused on defeating them in the air in 2024.”

author
Foreign Minister of Ukraine
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“I am confident that the United States will not let us down and that what we have agreed upon with the United States will be fully implemented. As for the [EU's] 50 billion euros, I'm confident that a decision will be made in the very near future when they convene. It has been arranged in a way that … there are other mechanisms in place to ensure that Ukraine receives these 50 billion.”

author
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“Any discussion about the necessity of continuing military assistance to Ukraine must invariably be based on the sole (catastrophic) alternative - a 'frozen conflict'. This 'frozen' state is not in some abstract realm of 'political expediency,' but against the backdrop of a large-scale massacre of civilians, a major war, an enormous number of unequivocal war crimes and crimes against humanity … and the persisting insane desire of the Russian Federation to obliterate Ukraine's agency.”

author
Advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy
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“Firepower and passive defences - minefields, trenches for instance - seem to have neutralised the capabilities of mechanised and airborne forces. If there is a critical development it will be a collapse due to exhaustion - like a boxing match where one fighter simply can't take the blows, but not from a knock-out punch.”

author
Professor of geopolitics and weapons systems at the Hellenic Army Academy
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“The winter is just going to reinforce the misery … neither side is going to have a tactical or operational breakthrough. I think they're going to try to push through in the winter. The ground freezes, [they'll] try to make some moves because they're desperate. I don't mean the Ukrainians. I mean the Russians. The soldiers won't want to do it. It will be a disaster. There will be more dead bodies.”

author
Colonel who has led special forces detachments in Afghanistan and the Middle East - Vice president for Global Guardian
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“We have to continue, we have to keep fighting. Ukraine is not going to back down. The issue here is not just Ukraine's security, it is the security and safety of the entire Euro-Atlantic space.”

author
Foreign Minister of Ukraine
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“I'm confident that the United States will continue to provide support because it is in the security interest of the United States to do so and it's also in line with what we have agreed. I urge allies, and allies are also committed to continue to deliver support.”

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Secretary General of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
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“I'm here to discuss Ukraine's accession path to the EU. The EU's financial support to rebuild Ukraine as a modern, prosperous democracy. And how we will continue to make Russia pay for its war of aggression.”

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President of the European Commission
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“The conflict had reached a transitional phase where both sides hold the initiative in different parts of the front. Overall, Ukraine's offensive in the south has either culminated or is about to. My sense is that the artillery advantage that Ukraine had for much of its offensive is now going to recede, and that Ukraine's ammunition availability is going to be constrained. Russia will also be forced to conserve ammunition, but will now increasingly benefit from the influx of supply coming from North Korea.”

author
Senior Fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
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“Ukraine's actions have wrested control of Ukraine's western territorial waters back from Russia and prevented the Black Sea Fleet from threatening Odesa with amphibious assault or providing tactical fires and logistical support to Russian forces in Kherson.”

author
Retired US army Major General
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“The Russian terror should be stopped. Now we are talking with European leaders, in particular, about strengthening our air defence, about strengthening our soldiers, about giving our country protection from terror.”

author
President of Ukraine
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“Manufacturers of weapons and military equipment from all over the world can join its basic declaration and demonstrate that they are ready to build the arsenal of the free world together with Ukraine. The fund will be replenished from dividends from state defence assets and from profits from sale of confiscated Russian assets.”

author
President of Ukraine
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“As long as Ukraine is able to certify that the grain is going to get to the country of destination, through the trucks and trains, the domestic use ban is not really going to put a dent in Ukraine's ability to get exports out.”

author
Senior agricultural strategist for Marex
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“The Ukrainians are gradually gaining ground...They have been able to breach the defensive lines of the Russian forces, and they are moving forward. No one ever said that this was going to be easy. Hardly any time in history we have seen more mines on the battlefield than we are seeing in Ukraine today. So it was obvious that this was going to be extremely difficult. They are making progress. Not perhaps as much as we hoped for but they are gaining ground gradually. Some hundred meters per day, meaning that when the Ukrainians are gaining ground, the Russians are losing ground.”

author
Secretary General of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
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“We want to make sure that Ukraine has what it needs, not only to succeed in the counteroffensive, but has what it needs for the long term, to make sure that it has a strong deterrent.”

author
U.S. Secretary of State
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“It is the Ukrainians, and only the Ukrainians, who can decide when there are conditions in place for negotiations and who can decide at the negotiating table what is an acceptable solution.”

author
Secretary General of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
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“I think it will not be an exaggeration to say that President Erdogan is probably the only man in the world who can convince President Putin to return to the Black Sea Grain Initiative.”

author
Foreign Minister of Ukraine
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“This is very important because, on issues such as food security, the fate of millions of people in Africa, Asia and other parts of the world directly depends on how fast the world moves to implement the peace formula.”

author
President of Ukraine
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“Russia's overnight attacks on Ukraine's ports are further proof that the country-terrorist wants to endanger the lives of 400 million people in various countries that depend on Ukrainian food exports.”

author
Ukraine's presidential chief of staff
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“We must all understand very clearly - as clearly as possible - that the Russian forces on our southern and eastern lands are investing everything they can to stop our warriors. Every thousand metres we advance, every success of each of our combat brigades deserves gratitude.”

author
President of Ukraine
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“We are seeing their weakness, which we so badly need. The weaker Russia is, and the more its bosses fear mutinies and uprisings, the more they will fear to irritate us. Russia's weakness will make it safe for others.”

author
President of Ukraine
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“Russia's weakness is obvious and that the longer Moscow keeps its troops and mercenaries in Ukraine, the more chaos it would invite back home. And the longer Russia keeps its troops and mercenaries on our land, the more chaos, pain and problems it will have for itself later.”

author
President of Ukraine
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“Some people believe this is a Hollywood movie and expect results now. It's not. What's at stake is people's lives. In the Kupiansk sector, whatever the Russian terrorists might be planning, we are destroying the enemy. In the south, we are moving forward ... In the east, we are holding our defences.”

author
President of Ukraine
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