(C) U.S. State Dept This story was originally published by U.S. State Dept and is unaltered. . . . . . . . . . . From the Secretary’s Desk: Why We Are Not Giving Up on Ukraine [1] [] Date: 2024-02 In this war, there is an aggressor and there is a victim. One side is attacking the core principles of the UN Charter; the other fights to defend them. We will continue to rally countries around the world to support Ukraine’s freedom and independence and to ensure that Russia’s aggression remains a strategic failure. Putin has already failed to achieve his principal objective in Ukraine: erasing it from the map, subsuming it into Russia. It’s been a hard year on the battlefield, but, once again, Ukrainians have done what no one thought was possible: They stood toe to toe with one of the world’s biggest militaries, they pushed Russia’s navy back in the Black Sea, and opened a corridor to allow them to export their grain and other products to the world. One year after I touched down in Kyiv – Ukraine still stands. When Putin ordered his tanks to roll into Ukraine, he thought the world would roll over. But the Ukrainians were too strong. Our coalition too unified. And Democracy too durable. Let’s keep proving him wrong. pic.twitter.com/K9os7s0y4l — President Biden (@POTUS) February 23, 2024 For two years, Russia has shredded the major tenets of the United Nations Charter, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, international humanitarian law, and flouted one Security Council resolution after another. President Putin is betting that if he keeps doubling down on the violence, that if he’s willing to inflict enough suffering on enough people, the world will cave on its principles and Ukraine will stop defending itself. But Ukrainians are not giving up. They’ve seen what life would look like if they submit to Russian control. It’s families having their children torn away from them and deported to Russia. It’s the rubble of Mariupol. It’s the mass graves of Bucha. We are not giving up either. Indeed, the United States has rallied our allies and partners to support Ukraine in the face of Russia’s full-scale aggression. We stand with Ukraine. 🇺🇦 🇺🇸 🇪🇺 🇨🇦 🇫🇷 🇩🇪 🇮🇹 🇯🇵 🇬🇧 pic.twitter.com/Z74lwmqMnn — Secretary Antony Blinken (@SecBlinken) February 24, 2024 The G7 has led the world in galvanizing support, enduring support for Ukraine. With Secretary of Defense Austin’s leadership, more than 50 countries are cooperating to support Ukraine’s defense and build a Ukrainian military strong enough to deter and beat back future attacks. We’ve aligned scores of countries in imposing an unprecedented set of sanctions, export controls, and other economic costs on Russia. On multiple occasions, we’ve marshaled 140 nations at the United Nations – more than two-thirds of all the member states – to affirm Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and condemn Russia’s aggression and atrocities. The actions we took against Russia today in the wake of Aleksey Navalny's death and the two year anniversary of Russia's aggression against Ukraine represent the largest number of people or entities designated in a single action taken by the United States. pic.twitter.com/1gUIySND9Z — Secretary Antony Blinken (@SecBlinken) February 24, 2024 We’ve rallied donors, philanthropies, humanitarian groups to get lifesaving assistance to millions of displaced Ukrainians. Russia is weaker militarily, economically, diplomatically, while NATO is bigger and stronger and more united than at any point in its nearly 75-year history. Some argue that continuing to stand with Ukraine and holding Russia accountable distracts us from addressing other priorities, like confronting the climate crisis, expanding economic opportunity, strengthening health systems. That is a false choice. We can and we must do both; we are doing both. We’re also seeing something else that’s incredibly powerful – and that is the extraordinary resilience of the Ukrainian people. Ukraine stands for values we all share: Democracy, Self-determination, Freedom. Two years after Putin’s full-scale invasion, we stand united with Ukraine. pic.twitter.com/Tb2SYKSFw7 — Department of State (@StateDept) February 24, 2024 Working together, volunteering to rebuild their communities. Getting rid of the ordnance and the mines, recovering the land that was taken from them. The United States is very proud to be a partner with Ukraine in all of these efforts, not just in the military effort, to make sure that Ukrainians have what they need to defend against aggression, but also for rebuilding and recovery. Because of the remarkable bravery and resilience of the Ukrainian people and our support, Putin’s war continues to be a strategic failure for Russia. Our goal is to ensure Ukraine not only survives, but thrives, as a vibrant, prosperous democracy, so that Ukrainians can write their own future – and stand on their own. The United States and so many other countries around the world are standing side by side with Ukraine. Our people, Ukraine’s people, the people of all nations, get to write their own future. We cannot, we will not let one man write that future for us. Slava Ukraini. Note to Readers This DipNote was adapted from the most recent edition of the flagship email “From the Secretary’s Desk,” which features the Secretary’s remarks and speeches on important current events. Sign up to receive this email. [END] --- [1] Url: https://www.state.gov/dipnote-u-s-department-of-state-official-blog/from-the-secretarys-desk-why-we-are-not-giving-up-on-ukraine/?utm_source=homepage&utm_medium=hero&utm_campaign=dipnote&utm_id=123 Published and (C) by U.S. State Dept Content appears here under this condition or license: Public Domain. via Magical.Fish Gopher News Feeds: gopher://magical.fish/1/feeds/news/usstate/