Sekilas tentang perang Rusia-Ukraina: apa yang kita ketahui pada hari ke 729
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Friday, 23 February 2024 13:18 pm
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US prepares to unveil hundreds of sanctions against Russian ‘war machine’; Zelenskiy tells US conservatives that sending aid now is cheaper than confronting Putin again later

US President Joe Biden said he had met with Navalny’s wife and daughter. Speaking to reporters afterwards, he said: “ We are going to announce sanctions against Putin, who is responsible for his death, tomorrow. We are not letting up.” The White House said the sanctions were in response to “Alexei’s death, Russia’s repression and aggression, and its brutal and illegal war in Ukraine”.

The Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, called the west’s reaction to the death of Navalny “hysteria”, and said that western countries had no right to meddle in Russia’s affairs.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy called on the US Congress to approve additional aid for Kyiv, saying in an interview broadcast on Thursday that a failure to do so would cost Ukrainian lives. Republican lawmakers in the House of Representatives have stalled the approval of $60bn in new aid for Ukraine, and Zelenskiy made his appeal for action during an interview with Fox News – a favoured channel for US conservatives.

“Will Ukraine survive without Congress’ support? Of course. But not all of us,” he said in an interview near a frontline in Ukraine. The Ukrainian leader also warned that the price of helping Kyiv now is much lower than the potential cost of confronting Putin later if he succeeds in Ukraine.

The International Monetary Fund and Ukraine’s government has reached a staff-level agreement, paving the way for the release of about $880m once approved by the IMF’s board, the fund said. The agreement came after six days of meetings between Ukrainian officials and IMF staff in Warsaw as part of a third review of Ukraine’s $15.6bn four-year Extended Fund Facility Arrangement. The IMF said Ukraine’s progress on the program was “broadly on track”, and that its economy demonstrated strong growth, declining inflation and strengthening reserves in 2023, though the outlook for 2024 remained highly uncertain.

Biden endorsed the Dutch prime minister, Mark Rutte, to be the next Nato head, a US official told Reuters. The official said: “President Biden strongly endorses PM Rutte’s candidacy to be the next secretary general of Nato.” Rutte would be succeeding the current Nato chief, Jens Stoltenberg, a Norwegian national.

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