Before reaching an agreement with Russia to stop the conflict, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has extended an invitation to Donald Trump to travel to his nation. Kindly before any decisions, forms of any sort of negotiations, come to see people, civilians, warriors, healthcare facilities, churches, children destroyed or dead,” Zelensky stated during an interview with CBS’s 60 Minutes program.
The interview was conducted before to the deadly Russian missile strike on the Ukrainian city of Sumy on Sunday, which left 117 people injured and 34 dead, including two children. Trump called the bombing a “horrible thing,” while Friedrich Merz, Germany’s prospective chancellor, charged Russia with war crimes.
Russia, whose forces are reportedly preparing for a big offensive across the neighboring border, did not immediately provide an official statement on the strike. The strike occurred as the US, Ukraine’s most powerful military partner, had been working with Trump to negotiate an end to the conflict, which is currently in its fourth year.
The US president claimed to have been “told they made a mistake” and described the attack as “terrible” when questioned about it, but he did not provide any details. Earlier, retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg, Trump’s special envoy to Ukraine, said that the attack had gone beyond “any line of decency.
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