[gpt3]
CATEGORY
Entertainment
CATEGORY FOCUS
Film, TV, streaming, music, celebrities, awards, pop culture, creator economy, and major cultural moments. Keep it factual and verified, avoid rumor-as-fact, and protect against defamation and privacy risks.
ENTERTAINMENT REQUIREMENTS (ADDITIONAL, MANDATORY)
– Separate confirmed reporting from rumors or speculation. If something is not confirmed, label it clearly as reported and link the claim to a credible source.
– Verify all titles, names, credits, release dates/windows, tour dates, award details, chart positions, and box office/streaming performance before stating them as fact.
– Avoid defamatory framing. Do not imply wrongdoing without verified evidence and clear attribution.
– Avoid private personal details. Only include widely reported, public-interest information verified by reputable sources.
– If the story is about legal disputes, contracts, or allegations, use careful legal language and include the legal disclaimer.
ROLE
You are Marina Collins – Entertainment Editor, a veteran journalist writing specifically for archyde.com in your authentic voice.
CREDENTIALS (USE NATURALLY, NOT AS A LIST)
Senior Editor, Entertainment
Marina is a celebrated pop culture columnist and recipient of multiple media awards. She curates engaging stories about film, music, television, and celebrity news, always with a fresh and authoritative voice.
TOPIC
Write about: Munich Security Conference live: Zelenskyy criticises Orbán and joins Starmer in calling for European unity | Ukraine
SOURCE
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
Zelenskyy says he wants to prompt leaders to “ask yourselves, are you ready not only for the challenges that Russian aggression brings, the challenges of modern war, but also for the constant effort to convince the world to fight for support to defend your country’s interests every single day as Ukraine must do.”
He then references continuing Russian ballistic and drone attacks on Ukraine.
As he talks about it, he has lots of visualisations and images shown on the screens behind him – including of some strikes that took place during his stay in Munich.
“I want you to understand the real scale of these attacks on Ukraine.
As you can see, in just one month this January, we had … to defend against 6000 attack drones, most of them were Shahid drones, and 150 plus Russian missiles of different types, and more than 5000 glide bombs.
And it’s like these every month. Imagine this over your own city. Shattered streets, destroyed homes, schools built underground.
And this is daily life in Ukraine because of Russia.”
He then talks about the devastating impact of these strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure and praises the repair and rescue teams working on this emergency.
Key events
-
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
-
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
-
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
-
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
-
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Risk we face evolve and get worse as war goes on, Zelenskyy warns
-
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
-
Rubio tells Europe US wants renewed alliance, but on Trump’s terms – analysis
-
Starmer hits pro-European tones in urgent speech on unity in uncertain times – snap analysis
-
Starmer says change in EU-UK relations is of ‘some urgency’ amid Ukraine war
-
Von der Leyen, Starmer welcome Rubio’s ‘reassuring’ speech
-
Starmer warns against ‘peddlers of easy answers’ on ‘extremes of left and right’
-
Starmer says UK needs look to ‘move closer’ to EU single market
-
Adversaries must know that in crisis, they could be confronted by combined nuclear strength, Macron says hinting at cooperation with France
-
Starmer hints at more cooperation to boost Europe’s defence
-
Starmer defends US alliance, but says Europe must take ‘primary responsibility’ for its defence to strengthen alliance, Starmer says
-
Munich conference applauds Starmer’s break with Brexit years Britain
-
‘Solidity of peace is softening,’ Starmer warns, as he points to ‘warning signs’ from Russia
-
Europe needs to ‘recaliberate’ its security strategy to respond to challenges, von der Leyen says
-
’10 years from Brexit, our futures are as bound as ever,’ von der Leyen says, as she calls for closer relations with UK
-
Europe going through ‘awakening’ in response to changing global landscape, von der Leyen says
-
Europe experiences ‘shock therapy’ on security as it wakes up from decades of lull, von der Leyen says
-
Von der Leyen calls for ‘more independent’ Europe in response to global crises
-
China hopes for settlement of Ukraine war, and Europe should be involved, Wang Yi says
-
Rubio love bombs Europe in style, while issuing stark warnings on substance, and it seemed to work – snap analysis
-
Talks ‘narrowed’ issues on Ukraine, but hardest questions remain unanswered for now, Rubio says
-
End of transatlantic era ‘not our goal nor our wish,’ Rubio says
-
US does not want allies to ‘rationalise broken status quo’ but face it and fix it, Rubio says
-
US not interested in being ‘caretakers of west’s managed decline’, Rubio says in urgent call to reject ‘decline’
-
UN, international bodies need to be urgently reformed as ‘we do not live in perfect world,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio takes aim at deindustrialisation, mass migration as risks to Europe
-
US ‘little direct and urgent in counsel,’ because ‘we care deeply,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio talks about postwar delusion mistakes made ‘together’ by Europe and US
-
Postwar triumph led to ‘dangerous delusion’ on end of history, Rubio says
-
Starmer’s Munich speech alongside EU’s von der Leyen part of rapidly evolving post-Brexit relations – snap analysis
-
Morning opening: What will the US say?
Asked about his 2026 predictions, or for the next six months, Zelenskyy says his more immediate concern is about “tomorrow and the day after tomorrow.”
He says Ukraine will continue talks on peace, and hopefully they will involve more European leaders.
He also says he will keep pushing for Ukraine to join the EU, even as some EU leaders don’t seem to like his repeated requests to get a clear date for it.
He says without a clear commitment, Putin will do everything he can to derail the accession process, “by his hands or hands of some not big countries,” which can only be read as another swipe at Orbán’s Hungary.
He says he is thankful for the continued support, but “we can’t save our lives by saying thank you” as he needs strong security guarantees to keep Ukraine safe after the war.
He says unity will be critical, and the role of the US is “important” as “they only have to make Ukraine stronger than Russia.”
And that concludes the session.
Nato’s Rutte told EU lawmakers last month that if they think Europe can defend itself without the US, they are “dreaming.”
Does he still think that?
He says he sees “a total unity of vision” between the US and Europe, which makes such discussions speculative and unnecessary.
US senator Wicker offers his take on the state of negotiations, as he says that Putin “has not yet negotiated in good faith, never once.”
He says:
“Vladimir Putin started this war. He’s a war criminal, and as you’ve pointed out, he started committing more war crimes this year, by attacking civilians.
He will begin to negotiate in good faith only when he is hurting.”
Nato’s Rutte gets asked about security guarantees, and his response to the Russian claim – somewhat repeated today by China’s foreign minister Wang Yi – that there are “historical reasons” for the invasion.
He says strongly that “there was absolutely no reason whatsoever for the Russians to invade Ukraine,” whether in 2014 in Crimea or in 2022 with the full-scale invasion.
On security guarantees, he repeats his main line from this conference that there is “a huge shift in mindset within Nato” as “the Europeans take more responsibility for their own defence.”
He says the key thing is to “make sure that Putin will never, ever to try invade again.”
As is now usual for his public statements, he also defends Trump’s record on negotiating with Russia, and says he remains the only leader that can get Putin to move.
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
Zelenskyy gets asked about Trump’s latest comments, in which the US president said he should “get moving” and get a deal with Russia.
Is he feeling the pressure?
“A little bit,” he says with a bit of a smile.
He says he understands these signals from Trump, but says Ukraine keeps compromising on several issues.
He says he is ready to discuss many issues, but Ukraine cannot just “run away” from its own territory with hundreds of thousands of people as “a compromise.”
“We don’t hear compromises from Russian side. We want to hear from them something,” he says.
He also gets asked about recent media reporting that the US keeps pushing Ukraine to hold elections, and repeats his pledge from last night: if the US secures a ceasefire for two-three months, he will hold the election.
He then pointedly jokes:
“We can also [offer] ceasefire for Russians if they will do elections in Russia.”
US Republican senator Roger F. Wicker says “what we need specifically is we need to unleash the Tomahawk missiles” on Russia.
“That’s a message that will come from the Congress, [but] it’s the decision of the administration,” he says.
He also urges further sanctions on Russian oil producers.
He says the US public opinion is increasingly supportive of Ukraine, including among Republican voters.
European parliament’s president Roberta Metsola says she will sign off the EU’s €90bn loan to Ukraine next week, which she says was agreed “at an unprecedented speed.”
She highlights extraordinary levels of solidarity with Ukraine, as demonstrated by loud cheers for Ukrainian athletes during the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games earlier this month.
She says the EU continues to work on its response, working on the 20th package of sanctions against Russia, too.
And she declares her support for Ukraine’s membership of the EU (which continues to be blocked by Hungary, in particular.)
Nato’s Mark Rutte is speaking next, talking about his experience of visiting Ukraine last week as the country had to respond to extreme temperatures amid continued Russian strikes on its energy infrastructure.
He says the Ukrainians he met told him they would never give in to Russian attacks.
He then stresses that “to stay strong in this fight, we have to realise the Russians are not winning this,” as they make “very small gains,” “so small that it’s almost not relevant.”
He says the allies need to make sure the Ukrainians have everything they need to continue the fight and defend not just the frontlines, but its cities and civilians.
Asked about his wishlist, Zelenskyy says he needs more help with energy infrastructure, more missiles, and references a path to the membership of the EU, too.
Zelenskyy says the key focus in peace talks is on making sure so that “in four years, the civilised world is not forced to justify itself again, to shift the responsibility, and not forced again to look for someone else to blame” for another war.
He says “Ukraine is ready for a deal that brings real peace to us, Ukraine and Europe.”
And we go into the Q&A.
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
Zelenskyy turns to next week’s talks in Geneva.
He says he hopes they will be “serious, substantive, helpful,” but adds that “sometimes it feels like the sides are talking about completely different things.”
He says that the Russians “often speak about some spirit of Anchorage, and we can only guess what they really mean” – a reference to Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska – while “the Americans often return to the topic of concessions, too often discussed in the context of Ukraine, not Russia.”
He also says that Europe is “practically not” present at the table, and it should be. “It’s a big mistake,” he says.
He warns that Russia’s Vladimir Putin’s actions remind him of the 1938 Munich Agreement, “when previous Putin began dividing Europe.”
“It would be an illusion to believe that this war can now be reliably ended by dividing Ukraine, just as it was an illusion to believe that sacrificing Czechoslovakia would save Europe from a great war,” he says.
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
Zelenskyy also calls out former officials and politicians who are now trying to shift responsibility for not acting to prevent the war.
He stresses that “we can stand up to Russia,” bringing up the example of a Ukrainian athlete disqualified from the Olympics for planning to wear a helmet showing the face of Ukrainian athletes killed in the war.
He repeats that Russia “must not be given any hope it can get away with this crime.”
He says Moscow was most serious about negotiations when Ukraine when it was hit by Ukrainian deep strikes inside its territory.
“The stronger we are, the more realistic peace becomes,” he says.
Zelenskyy says that Ukraine tried everything to prevent the war, but he didn’t get any serious help from the previous US administration to counter the Russian aggression.
“But the most practical advice General [Mark] Milley could give Ukraine at that time was simply dig trenches, and that is the answer my commander in chief brought back.
Just imagine, hundreds of thousands of Russian troops on your borders, massive military equipment, and all you hear is: dig trenches.
So if Russian troops enter Lithuania, God bless, just [as an] example, if or another country on Nato’ss eastern flank, what will the Allies hear then? Will they hear that help is on the way?
Hope so.”
But he says Europe needs to have its own ability to respond to any threat to send a clear signal as he backs call for more defence investment.
He also says that Ukraine has “the strongest army in Europe,” and “that’s why Europe needs Ukraine.”
“I think it’s simply not smart to keep this army outside Nato,” he says, “but at least let that be your decision, not Putin’s decision.”
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
In a moving tribute to ordinary Ukrainians, Zelenskyy says “none of our people chose to be such heroes” as they worry about the war.
But he warns that Putin “is no longer interested in anything else” than the war, as “he cannot imagine life without power or after power.”
“Putin consults more with Tsar Peter and Empress Catherine about territorial gains than with any living person about real life. Can you imagine Putin without war?,” he asks.
He warns that Putin “may see himself as a tsar, but he is a slave to this war,” which is why Ukraine needs strong security guarantees.
The guarantees should answer the main question “how long there will be no war again,” as he says he hopes Trump and the US Congress hear that point clearly.
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
Zelenskyy says that in both December and January, Ukrainian forces killed and badly wounded more than 30,000 to 35,000 Russian troops.
He says that at the moment, Russia pays with lives of 156 soldiers for every kilometer of Ukraine it secures.
“Putin is not concerned about this now, but there is a level at which he will start to care,” he says.
He says Ukraine aims to get to 50,000 kills a month to raise the price of continuing the war.
He says that Ukrainians are key to stop Russian aggression as they secure free and independent Poland, the Baltics, Moldova, and Romania.
In an angry swipe at Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, with whom he’s been publicly clashing in recent weeks, he says:
“Even one Viktor can think about how to grow his belly, not how to grow his army to stop Russian tanks from returning to the streets of Budapest.”
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy goes back to drones, saying Ukraine has “more experience than anyone in the world” on how to defend about them.
He says:
“That is why while we invest in interceptors and protection, Russia invests in breaking unity between all of us, our unity with you, unity in Europe, unity in the Euro-Atlantic community, they want to break it.
Why? Because our unity is the best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans – the best one – and we still have it.”
He names several countries, thanking them for their help: Denmark, Germany, Czechia, the Nordics, the UK, France, the Netherlands, Italy, Poland, the US, Canada, Turkey and Japan.
But he says Russia also has its “accomplices”, including North Korea and Chinese companies that provide components for Russian weapons and missiles.
He also talks about the importance of stopping the Russian shadow fleet to further cut Moscow off funding for its war.
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy turns to the situation in Iran, as he picks up on demonstrations in Munich calling for a change of regime there (covered on the blog yesterday).
He says that Ukraine has no border with Iran or conflict with the Iranian regime, but points out that they continue to sell drones to Russia that kill Ukrainians.
“The Iranian regime has already done and can still do more harm than many other regimes could do in the century. … When they have time, they only kill more. They must be stopped immediately,” he says.
LIVE INTERNET ACCESS (MANDATORY FACT-CHECKING)
You have internet access. Before stating ANY claim as fact, you MUST verify it via web search. This includes every {name|person|organization}, {date|time}, {location|place}, {number|figure|amount}, {quote|statement}, and {major event detail|key detail} referenced in
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
Zelenskyy says he wants to prompt leaders to “ask yourselves, are you ready not only for the challenges that Russian aggression brings, the challenges of modern war, but also for the constant effort to convince the world to fight for support to defend your country’s interests every single day as Ukraine must do.”
He then references continuing Russian ballistic and drone attacks on Ukraine.
As he talks about it, he has lots of visualisations and images shown on the screens behind him – including of some strikes that took place during his stay in Munich.
“I want you to understand the real scale of these attacks on Ukraine.
As you can see, in just one month this January, we had … to defend against 6000 attack drones, most of them were Shahid drones, and 150 plus Russian missiles of different types, and more than 5000 glide bombs.
And it’s like these every month. Imagine this over your own city. Shattered streets, destroyed homes, schools built underground.
And this is daily life in Ukraine because of Russia.”
He then talks about the devastating impact of these strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure and praises the repair and rescue teams working on this emergency.
Key events
-
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
-
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
-
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
-
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
-
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Risk we face evolve and get worse as war goes on, Zelenskyy warns
-
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
-
Rubio tells Europe US wants renewed alliance, but on Trump’s terms – analysis
-
Starmer hits pro-European tones in urgent speech on unity in uncertain times – snap analysis
-
Starmer says change in EU-UK relations is of ‘some urgency’ amid Ukraine war
-
Von der Leyen, Starmer welcome Rubio’s ‘reassuring’ speech
-
Starmer warns against ‘peddlers of easy answers’ on ‘extremes of left and right’
-
Starmer says UK needs look to ‘move closer’ to EU single market
-
Adversaries must know that in crisis, they could be confronted by combined nuclear strength, Macron says hinting at cooperation with France
-
Starmer hints at more cooperation to boost Europe’s defence
-
Starmer defends US alliance, but says Europe must take ‘primary responsibility’ for its defence to strengthen alliance, Starmer says
-
Munich conference applauds Starmer’s break with Brexit years Britain
-
‘Solidity of peace is softening,’ Starmer warns, as he points to ‘warning signs’ from Russia
-
Europe needs to ‘recaliberate’ its security strategy to respond to challenges, von der Leyen says
-
’10 years from Brexit, our futures are as bound as ever,’ von der Leyen says, as she calls for closer relations with UK
-
Europe going through ‘awakening’ in response to changing global landscape, von der Leyen says
-
Europe experiences ‘shock therapy’ on security as it wakes up from decades of lull, von der Leyen says
-
Von der Leyen calls for ‘more independent’ Europe in response to global crises
-
China hopes for settlement of Ukraine war, and Europe should be involved, Wang Yi says
-
Rubio love bombs Europe in style, while issuing stark warnings on substance, and it seemed to work – snap analysis
-
Talks ‘narrowed’ issues on Ukraine, but hardest questions remain unanswered for now, Rubio says
-
End of transatlantic era ‘not our goal nor our wish,’ Rubio says
-
US does not want allies to ‘rationalise broken status quo’ but face it and fix it, Rubio says
-
US not interested in being ‘caretakers of west’s managed decline’, Rubio says in urgent call to reject ‘decline’
-
UN, international bodies need to be urgently reformed as ‘we do not live in perfect world,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio takes aim at deindustrialisation, mass migration as risks to Europe
-
US ‘little direct and urgent in counsel,’ because ‘we care deeply,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio talks about postwar delusion mistakes made ‘together’ by Europe and US
-
Postwar triumph led to ‘dangerous delusion’ on end of history, Rubio says
-
Starmer’s Munich speech alongside EU’s von der Leyen part of rapidly evolving post-Brexit relations – snap analysis
-
Morning opening: What will the US say?
Asked about his 2026 predictions, or for the next six months, Zelenskyy says his more immediate concern is about “tomorrow and the day after tomorrow.”
He says Ukraine will continue talks on peace, and hopefully they will involve more European leaders.
He also says he will keep pushing for Ukraine to join the EU, even as some EU leaders don’t seem to like his repeated requests to get a clear date for it.
He says without a clear commitment, Putin will do everything he can to derail the accession process, “by his hands or hands of some not big countries,” which can only be read as another swipe at Orbán’s Hungary.
He says he is thankful for the continued support, but “we can’t save our lives by saying thank you” as he needs strong security guarantees to keep Ukraine safe after the war.
He says unity will be critical, and the role of the US is “important” as “they only have to make Ukraine stronger than Russia.”
And that concludes the session.
Nato’s Rutte told EU lawmakers last month that if they think Europe can defend itself without the US, they are “dreaming.”
Does he still think that?
He says he sees “a total unity of vision” between the US and Europe, which makes such discussions speculative and unnecessary.
US senator Wicker offers his take on the state of negotiations, as he says that Putin “has not yet negotiated in good faith, never once.”
He says:
“Vladimir Putin started this war. He’s a war criminal, and as you’ve pointed out, he started committing more war crimes this year, by attacking civilians.
He will begin to negotiate in good faith only when he is hurting.”
Nato’s Rutte gets asked about security guarantees, and his response to the Russian claim – somewhat repeated today by China’s foreign minister Wang Yi – that there are “historical reasons” for the invasion.
He says strongly that “there was absolutely no reason whatsoever for the Russians to invade Ukraine,” whether in 2014 in Crimea or in 2022 with the full-scale invasion.
On security guarantees, he repeats his main line from this conference that there is “a huge shift in mindset within Nato” as “the Europeans take more responsibility for their own defence.”
He says the key thing is to “make sure that Putin will never, ever to try invade again.”
As is now usual for his public statements, he also defends Trump’s record on negotiating with Russia, and says he remains the only leader that can get Putin to move.
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
Zelenskyy gets asked about Trump’s latest comments, in which the US president said he should “get moving” and get a deal with Russia.
Is he feeling the pressure?
“A little bit,” he says with a bit of a smile.
He says he understands these signals from Trump, but says Ukraine keeps compromising on several issues.
He says he is ready to discuss many issues, but Ukraine cannot just “run away” from its own territory with hundreds of thousands of people as “a compromise.”
“We don’t hear compromises from Russian side. We want to hear from them something,” he says.
He also gets asked about recent media reporting that the US keeps pushing Ukraine to hold elections, and repeats his pledge from last night: if the US secures a ceasefire for two-three months, he will hold the election.
He then pointedly jokes:
“We can also [offer] ceasefire for Russians if they will do elections in Russia.”
US Republican senator Roger F. Wicker says “what we need specifically is we need to unleash the Tomahawk missiles” on Russia.
“That’s a message that will come from the Congress, [but] it’s the decision of the administration,” he says.
He also urges further sanctions on Russian oil producers.
He says the US public opinion is increasingly supportive of Ukraine, including among Republican voters.
European parliament’s president Roberta Metsola says she will sign off the EU’s €90bn loan to Ukraine next week, which she says was agreed “at an unprecedented speed.”
She highlights extraordinary levels of solidarity with Ukraine, as demonstrated by loud cheers for Ukrainian athletes during the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games earlier this month.
She says the EU continues to work on its response, working on the 20th package of sanctions against Russia, too.
And she declares her support for Ukraine’s membership of the EU (which continues to be blocked by Hungary, in particular.)
Nato’s Mark Rutte is speaking next, talking about his experience of visiting Ukraine last week as the country had to respond to extreme temperatures amid continued Russian strikes on its energy infrastructure.
He says the Ukrainians he met told him they would never give in to Russian attacks.
He then stresses that “to stay strong in this fight, we have to realise the Russians are not winning this,” as they make “very small gains,” “so small that it’s almost not relevant.”
He says the allies need to make sure the Ukrainians have everything they need to continue the fight and defend not just the frontlines, but its cities and civilians.
Asked about his wishlist, Zelenskyy says he needs more help with energy infrastructure, more missiles, and references a path to the membership of the EU, too.
Zelenskyy says the key focus in peace talks is on making sure so that “in four years, the civilised world is not forced to justify itself again, to shift the responsibility, and not forced again to look for someone else to blame” for another war.
He says “Ukraine is ready for a deal that brings real peace to us, Ukraine and Europe.”
And we go into the Q&A.
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
Zelenskyy turns to next week’s talks in Geneva.
He says he hopes they will be “serious, substantive, helpful,” but adds that “sometimes it feels like the sides are talking about completely different things.”
He says that the Russians “often speak about some spirit of Anchorage, and we can only guess what they really mean” – a reference to Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska – while “the Americans often return to the topic of concessions, too often discussed in the context of Ukraine, not Russia.”
He also says that Europe is “practically not” present at the table, and it should be. “It’s a big mistake,” he says.
He warns that Russia’s Vladimir Putin’s actions remind him of the 1938 Munich Agreement, “when previous Putin began dividing Europe.”
“It would be an illusion to believe that this war can now be reliably ended by dividing Ukraine, just as it was an illusion to believe that sacrificing Czechoslovakia would save Europe from a great war,” he says.
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
Zelenskyy also calls out former officials and politicians who are now trying to shift responsibility for not acting to prevent the war.
He stresses that “we can stand up to Russia,” bringing up the example of a Ukrainian athlete disqualified from the Olympics for planning to wear a helmet showing the face of Ukrainian athletes killed in the war.
He repeats that Russia “must not be given any hope it can get away with this crime.”
He says Moscow was most serious about negotiations when Ukraine when it was hit by Ukrainian deep strikes inside its territory.
“The stronger we are, the more realistic peace becomes,” he says.
Zelenskyy says that Ukraine tried everything to prevent the war, but he didn’t get any serious help from the previous US administration to counter the Russian aggression.
“But the most practical advice General [Mark] Milley could give Ukraine at that time was simply dig trenches, and that is the answer my commander in chief brought back.
Just imagine, hundreds of thousands of Russian troops on your borders, massive military equipment, and all you hear is: dig trenches.
So if Russian troops enter Lithuania, God bless, just [as an] example, if or another country on Nato’ss eastern flank, what will the Allies hear then? Will they hear that help is on the way?
Hope so.”
But he says Europe needs to have its own ability to respond to any threat to send a clear signal as he backs call for more defence investment.
He also says that Ukraine has “the strongest army in Europe,” and “that’s why Europe needs Ukraine.”
“I think it’s simply not smart to keep this army outside Nato,” he says, “but at least let that be your decision, not Putin’s decision.”
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
In a moving tribute to ordinary Ukrainians, Zelenskyy says “none of our people chose to be such heroes” as they worry about the war.
But he warns that Putin “is no longer interested in anything else” than the war, as “he cannot imagine life without power or after power.”
“Putin consults more with Tsar Peter and Empress Catherine about territorial gains than with any living person about real life. Can you imagine Putin without war?,” he asks.
He warns that Putin “may see himself as a tsar, but he is a slave to this war,” which is why Ukraine needs strong security guarantees.
The guarantees should answer the main question “how long there will be no war again,” as he says he hopes Trump and the US Congress hear that point clearly.
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
Zelenskyy says that in both December and January, Ukrainian forces killed and badly wounded more than 30,000 to 35,000 Russian troops.
He says that at the moment, Russia pays with lives of 156 soldiers for every kilometer of Ukraine it secures.
“Putin is not concerned about this now, but there is a level at which he will start to care,” he says.
He says Ukraine aims to get to 50,000 kills a month to raise the price of continuing the war.
He says that Ukrainians are key to stop Russian aggression as they secure free and independent Poland, the Baltics, Moldova, and Romania.
In an angry swipe at Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, with whom he’s been publicly clashing in recent weeks, he says:
“Even one Viktor can think about how to grow his belly, not how to grow his army to stop Russian tanks from returning to the streets of Budapest.”
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy goes back to drones, saying Ukraine has “more experience than anyone in the world” on how to defend about them.
He says:
“That is why while we invest in interceptors and protection, Russia invests in breaking unity between all of us, our unity with you, unity in Europe, unity in the Euro-Atlantic community, they want to break it.
Why? Because our unity is the best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans – the best one – and we still have it.”
He names several countries, thanking them for their help: Denmark, Germany, Czechia, the Nordics, the UK, France, the Netherlands, Italy, Poland, the US, Canada, Turkey and Japan.
But he says Russia also has its “accomplices”, including North Korea and Chinese companies that provide components for Russian weapons and missiles.
He also talks about the importance of stopping the Russian shadow fleet to further cut Moscow off funding for its war.
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy turns to the situation in Iran, as he picks up on demonstrations in Munich calling for a change of regime there (covered on the blog yesterday).
He says that Ukraine has no border with Iran or conflict with the Iranian regime, but points out that they continue to sell drones to Russia that kill Ukrainians.
“The Iranian regime has already done and can still do more harm than many other regimes could do in the century. … When they have time, they only kill more. They must be stopped immediately,” he says.
.
– If a detail cannot be verified, omit it OR clearly mark it as {unconfirmed|not independently confirmed} with neutral attribution.
– Never guess. Never fabricate. Never invent URLs, sources, quotes, or figures.
– If credible sources disagree, acknowledge the discrepancy briefly and neutrally and attribute each version with links.
TASK
{Rewrite|Rework|Recompose|Recraft} the story in
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
Zelenskyy says he wants to prompt leaders to “ask yourselves, are you ready not only for the challenges that Russian aggression brings, the challenges of modern war, but also for the constant effort to convince the world to fight for support to defend your country’s interests every single day as Ukraine must do.”
He then references continuing Russian ballistic and drone attacks on Ukraine.
As he talks about it, he has lots of visualisations and images shown on the screens behind him – including of some strikes that took place during his stay in Munich.
“I want you to understand the real scale of these attacks on Ukraine.
As you can see, in just one month this January, we had … to defend against 6000 attack drones, most of them were Shahid drones, and 150 plus Russian missiles of different types, and more than 5000 glide bombs.
And it’s like these every month. Imagine this over your own city. Shattered streets, destroyed homes, schools built underground.
And this is daily life in Ukraine because of Russia.”
He then talks about the devastating impact of these strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure and praises the repair and rescue teams working on this emergency.
Key events
-
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
-
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
-
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
-
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
-
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Risk we face evolve and get worse as war goes on, Zelenskyy warns
-
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
-
Rubio tells Europe US wants renewed alliance, but on Trump’s terms – analysis
-
Starmer hits pro-European tones in urgent speech on unity in uncertain times – snap analysis
-
Starmer says change in EU-UK relations is of ‘some urgency’ amid Ukraine war
-
Von der Leyen, Starmer welcome Rubio’s ‘reassuring’ speech
-
Starmer warns against ‘peddlers of easy answers’ on ‘extremes of left and right’
-
Starmer says UK needs look to ‘move closer’ to EU single market
-
Adversaries must know that in crisis, they could be confronted by combined nuclear strength, Macron says hinting at cooperation with France
-
Starmer hints at more cooperation to boost Europe’s defence
-
Starmer defends US alliance, but says Europe must take ‘primary responsibility’ for its defence to strengthen alliance, Starmer says
-
Munich conference applauds Starmer’s break with Brexit years Britain
-
‘Solidity of peace is softening,’ Starmer warns, as he points to ‘warning signs’ from Russia
-
Europe needs to ‘recaliberate’ its security strategy to respond to challenges, von der Leyen says
-
’10 years from Brexit, our futures are as bound as ever,’ von der Leyen says, as she calls for closer relations with UK
-
Europe going through ‘awakening’ in response to changing global landscape, von der Leyen says
-
Europe experiences ‘shock therapy’ on security as it wakes up from decades of lull, von der Leyen says
-
Von der Leyen calls for ‘more independent’ Europe in response to global crises
-
China hopes for settlement of Ukraine war, and Europe should be involved, Wang Yi says
-
Rubio love bombs Europe in style, while issuing stark warnings on substance, and it seemed to work – snap analysis
-
Talks ‘narrowed’ issues on Ukraine, but hardest questions remain unanswered for now, Rubio says
-
End of transatlantic era ‘not our goal nor our wish,’ Rubio says
-
US does not want allies to ‘rationalise broken status quo’ but face it and fix it, Rubio says
-
US not interested in being ‘caretakers of west’s managed decline’, Rubio says in urgent call to reject ‘decline’
-
UN, international bodies need to be urgently reformed as ‘we do not live in perfect world,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio takes aim at deindustrialisation, mass migration as risks to Europe
-
US ‘little direct and urgent in counsel,’ because ‘we care deeply,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio talks about postwar delusion mistakes made ‘together’ by Europe and US
-
Postwar triumph led to ‘dangerous delusion’ on end of history, Rubio says
-
Starmer’s Munich speech alongside EU’s von der Leyen part of rapidly evolving post-Brexit relations – snap analysis
-
Morning opening: What will the US say?
Asked about his 2026 predictions, or for the next six months, Zelenskyy says his more immediate concern is about “tomorrow and the day after tomorrow.”
He says Ukraine will continue talks on peace, and hopefully they will involve more European leaders.
He also says he will keep pushing for Ukraine to join the EU, even as some EU leaders don’t seem to like his repeated requests to get a clear date for it.
He says without a clear commitment, Putin will do everything he can to derail the accession process, “by his hands or hands of some not big countries,” which can only be read as another swipe at Orbán’s Hungary.
He says he is thankful for the continued support, but “we can’t save our lives by saying thank you” as he needs strong security guarantees to keep Ukraine safe after the war.
He says unity will be critical, and the role of the US is “important” as “they only have to make Ukraine stronger than Russia.”
And that concludes the session.
Nato’s Rutte told EU lawmakers last month that if they think Europe can defend itself without the US, they are “dreaming.”
Does he still think that?
He says he sees “a total unity of vision” between the US and Europe, which makes such discussions speculative and unnecessary.
US senator Wicker offers his take on the state of negotiations, as he says that Putin “has not yet negotiated in good faith, never once.”
He says:
“Vladimir Putin started this war. He’s a war criminal, and as you’ve pointed out, he started committing more war crimes this year, by attacking civilians.
He will begin to negotiate in good faith only when he is hurting.”
Nato’s Rutte gets asked about security guarantees, and his response to the Russian claim – somewhat repeated today by China’s foreign minister Wang Yi – that there are “historical reasons” for the invasion.
He says strongly that “there was absolutely no reason whatsoever for the Russians to invade Ukraine,” whether in 2014 in Crimea or in 2022 with the full-scale invasion.
On security guarantees, he repeats his main line from this conference that there is “a huge shift in mindset within Nato” as “the Europeans take more responsibility for their own defence.”
He says the key thing is to “make sure that Putin will never, ever to try invade again.”
As is now usual for his public statements, he also defends Trump’s record on negotiating with Russia, and says he remains the only leader that can get Putin to move.
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
Zelenskyy gets asked about Trump’s latest comments, in which the US president said he should “get moving” and get a deal with Russia.
Is he feeling the pressure?
“A little bit,” he says with a bit of a smile.
He says he understands these signals from Trump, but says Ukraine keeps compromising on several issues.
He says he is ready to discuss many issues, but Ukraine cannot just “run away” from its own territory with hundreds of thousands of people as “a compromise.”
“We don’t hear compromises from Russian side. We want to hear from them something,” he says.
He also gets asked about recent media reporting that the US keeps pushing Ukraine to hold elections, and repeats his pledge from last night: if the US secures a ceasefire for two-three months, he will hold the election.
He then pointedly jokes:
“We can also [offer] ceasefire for Russians if they will do elections in Russia.”
US Republican senator Roger F. Wicker says “what we need specifically is we need to unleash the Tomahawk missiles” on Russia.
“That’s a message that will come from the Congress, [but] it’s the decision of the administration,” he says.
He also urges further sanctions on Russian oil producers.
He says the US public opinion is increasingly supportive of Ukraine, including among Republican voters.
European parliament’s president Roberta Metsola says she will sign off the EU’s €90bn loan to Ukraine next week, which she says was agreed “at an unprecedented speed.”
She highlights extraordinary levels of solidarity with Ukraine, as demonstrated by loud cheers for Ukrainian athletes during the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games earlier this month.
She says the EU continues to work on its response, working on the 20th package of sanctions against Russia, too.
And she declares her support for Ukraine’s membership of the EU (which continues to be blocked by Hungary, in particular.)
Nato’s Mark Rutte is speaking next, talking about his experience of visiting Ukraine last week as the country had to respond to extreme temperatures amid continued Russian strikes on its energy infrastructure.
He says the Ukrainians he met told him they would never give in to Russian attacks.
He then stresses that “to stay strong in this fight, we have to realise the Russians are not winning this,” as they make “very small gains,” “so small that it’s almost not relevant.”
He says the allies need to make sure the Ukrainians have everything they need to continue the fight and defend not just the frontlines, but its cities and civilians.
Asked about his wishlist, Zelenskyy says he needs more help with energy infrastructure, more missiles, and references a path to the membership of the EU, too.
Zelenskyy says the key focus in peace talks is on making sure so that “in four years, the civilised world is not forced to justify itself again, to shift the responsibility, and not forced again to look for someone else to blame” for another war.
He says “Ukraine is ready for a deal that brings real peace to us, Ukraine and Europe.”
And we go into the Q&A.
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
Zelenskyy turns to next week’s talks in Geneva.
He says he hopes they will be “serious, substantive, helpful,” but adds that “sometimes it feels like the sides are talking about completely different things.”
He says that the Russians “often speak about some spirit of Anchorage, and we can only guess what they really mean” – a reference to Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska – while “the Americans often return to the topic of concessions, too often discussed in the context of Ukraine, not Russia.”
He also says that Europe is “practically not” present at the table, and it should be. “It’s a big mistake,” he says.
He warns that Russia’s Vladimir Putin’s actions remind him of the 1938 Munich Agreement, “when previous Putin began dividing Europe.”
“It would be an illusion to believe that this war can now be reliably ended by dividing Ukraine, just as it was an illusion to believe that sacrificing Czechoslovakia would save Europe from a great war,” he says.
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
Zelenskyy also calls out former officials and politicians who are now trying to shift responsibility for not acting to prevent the war.
He stresses that “we can stand up to Russia,” bringing up the example of a Ukrainian athlete disqualified from the Olympics for planning to wear a helmet showing the face of Ukrainian athletes killed in the war.
He repeats that Russia “must not be given any hope it can get away with this crime.”
He says Moscow was most serious about negotiations when Ukraine when it was hit by Ukrainian deep strikes inside its territory.
“The stronger we are, the more realistic peace becomes,” he says.
Zelenskyy says that Ukraine tried everything to prevent the war, but he didn’t get any serious help from the previous US administration to counter the Russian aggression.
“But the most practical advice General [Mark] Milley could give Ukraine at that time was simply dig trenches, and that is the answer my commander in chief brought back.
Just imagine, hundreds of thousands of Russian troops on your borders, massive military equipment, and all you hear is: dig trenches.
So if Russian troops enter Lithuania, God bless, just [as an] example, if or another country on Nato’ss eastern flank, what will the Allies hear then? Will they hear that help is on the way?
Hope so.”
But he says Europe needs to have its own ability to respond to any threat to send a clear signal as he backs call for more defence investment.
He also says that Ukraine has “the strongest army in Europe,” and “that’s why Europe needs Ukraine.”
“I think it’s simply not smart to keep this army outside Nato,” he says, “but at least let that be your decision, not Putin’s decision.”
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
In a moving tribute to ordinary Ukrainians, Zelenskyy says “none of our people chose to be such heroes” as they worry about the war.
But he warns that Putin “is no longer interested in anything else” than the war, as “he cannot imagine life without power or after power.”
“Putin consults more with Tsar Peter and Empress Catherine about territorial gains than with any living person about real life. Can you imagine Putin without war?,” he asks.
He warns that Putin “may see himself as a tsar, but he is a slave to this war,” which is why Ukraine needs strong security guarantees.
The guarantees should answer the main question “how long there will be no war again,” as he says he hopes Trump and the US Congress hear that point clearly.
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
Zelenskyy says that in both December and January, Ukrainian forces killed and badly wounded more than 30,000 to 35,000 Russian troops.
He says that at the moment, Russia pays with lives of 156 soldiers for every kilometer of Ukraine it secures.
“Putin is not concerned about this now, but there is a level at which he will start to care,” he says.
He says Ukraine aims to get to 50,000 kills a month to raise the price of continuing the war.
He says that Ukrainians are key to stop Russian aggression as they secure free and independent Poland, the Baltics, Moldova, and Romania.
In an angry swipe at Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, with whom he’s been publicly clashing in recent weeks, he says:
“Even one Viktor can think about how to grow his belly, not how to grow his army to stop Russian tanks from returning to the streets of Budapest.”
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy goes back to drones, saying Ukraine has “more experience than anyone in the world” on how to defend about them.
He says:
“That is why while we invest in interceptors and protection, Russia invests in breaking unity between all of us, our unity with you, unity in Europe, unity in the Euro-Atlantic community, they want to break it.
Why? Because our unity is the best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans – the best one – and we still have it.”
He names several countries, thanking them for their help: Denmark, Germany, Czechia, the Nordics, the UK, France, the Netherlands, Italy, Poland, the US, Canada, Turkey and Japan.
But he says Russia also has its “accomplices”, including North Korea and Chinese companies that provide components for Russian weapons and missiles.
He also talks about the importance of stopping the Russian shadow fleet to further cut Moscow off funding for its war.
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy turns to the situation in Iran, as he picks up on demonstrations in Munich calling for a change of regime there (covered on the blog yesterday).
He says that Ukraine has no border with Iran or conflict with the Iranian regime, but points out that they continue to sell drones to Russia that kill Ukrainians.
“The Iranian regime has already done and can still do more harm than many other regimes could do in the century. … When they have time, they only kill more. They must be stopped immediately,” he says.
into a {compelling|engaging|clear|high-utility}, SEO-optimized, human-sounding news article for archyde.com about Munich Security Conference live: Zelenskyy criticises Orbán and joins Starmer in calling for European unity | Ukraine.
– Preserve the core meaning and verified facts.
– Make the article {fully original|100% unique|freshly written} in structure and phrasing.
– Do NOT mention the source article, Google News, or that this is a rewrite.
– Do NOT include the original outlet name, author name, or original URL from
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
Zelenskyy says he wants to prompt leaders to “ask yourselves, are you ready not only for the challenges that Russian aggression brings, the challenges of modern war, but also for the constant effort to convince the world to fight for support to defend your country’s interests every single day as Ukraine must do.”
He then references continuing Russian ballistic and drone attacks on Ukraine.
As he talks about it, he has lots of visualisations and images shown on the screens behind him – including of some strikes that took place during his stay in Munich.
“I want you to understand the real scale of these attacks on Ukraine.
As you can see, in just one month this January, we had … to defend against 6000 attack drones, most of them were Shahid drones, and 150 plus Russian missiles of different types, and more than 5000 glide bombs.
And it’s like these every month. Imagine this over your own city. Shattered streets, destroyed homes, schools built underground.
And this is daily life in Ukraine because of Russia.”
He then talks about the devastating impact of these strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure and praises the repair and rescue teams working on this emergency.
Key events
-
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
-
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
-
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
-
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
-
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Risk we face evolve and get worse as war goes on, Zelenskyy warns
-
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
-
Rubio tells Europe US wants renewed alliance, but on Trump’s terms – analysis
-
Starmer hits pro-European tones in urgent speech on unity in uncertain times – snap analysis
-
Starmer says change in EU-UK relations is of ‘some urgency’ amid Ukraine war
-
Von der Leyen, Starmer welcome Rubio’s ‘reassuring’ speech
-
Starmer warns against ‘peddlers of easy answers’ on ‘extremes of left and right’
-
Starmer says UK needs look to ‘move closer’ to EU single market
-
Adversaries must know that in crisis, they could be confronted by combined nuclear strength, Macron says hinting at cooperation with France
-
Starmer hints at more cooperation to boost Europe’s defence
-
Starmer defends US alliance, but says Europe must take ‘primary responsibility’ for its defence to strengthen alliance, Starmer says
-
Munich conference applauds Starmer’s break with Brexit years Britain
-
‘Solidity of peace is softening,’ Starmer warns, as he points to ‘warning signs’ from Russia
-
Europe needs to ‘recaliberate’ its security strategy to respond to challenges, von der Leyen says
-
’10 years from Brexit, our futures are as bound as ever,’ von der Leyen says, as she calls for closer relations with UK
-
Europe going through ‘awakening’ in response to changing global landscape, von der Leyen says
-
Europe experiences ‘shock therapy’ on security as it wakes up from decades of lull, von der Leyen says
-
Von der Leyen calls for ‘more independent’ Europe in response to global crises
-
China hopes for settlement of Ukraine war, and Europe should be involved, Wang Yi says
-
Rubio love bombs Europe in style, while issuing stark warnings on substance, and it seemed to work – snap analysis
-
Talks ‘narrowed’ issues on Ukraine, but hardest questions remain unanswered for now, Rubio says
-
End of transatlantic era ‘not our goal nor our wish,’ Rubio says
-
US does not want allies to ‘rationalise broken status quo’ but face it and fix it, Rubio says
-
US not interested in being ‘caretakers of west’s managed decline’, Rubio says in urgent call to reject ‘decline’
-
UN, international bodies need to be urgently reformed as ‘we do not live in perfect world,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio takes aim at deindustrialisation, mass migration as risks to Europe
-
US ‘little direct and urgent in counsel,’ because ‘we care deeply,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio talks about postwar delusion mistakes made ‘together’ by Europe and US
-
Postwar triumph led to ‘dangerous delusion’ on end of history, Rubio says
-
Starmer’s Munich speech alongside EU’s von der Leyen part of rapidly evolving post-Brexit relations – snap analysis
-
Morning opening: What will the US say?
Asked about his 2026 predictions, or for the next six months, Zelenskyy says his more immediate concern is about “tomorrow and the day after tomorrow.”
He says Ukraine will continue talks on peace, and hopefully they will involve more European leaders.
He also says he will keep pushing for Ukraine to join the EU, even as some EU leaders don’t seem to like his repeated requests to get a clear date for it.
He says without a clear commitment, Putin will do everything he can to derail the accession process, “by his hands or hands of some not big countries,” which can only be read as another swipe at Orbán’s Hungary.
He says he is thankful for the continued support, but “we can’t save our lives by saying thank you” as he needs strong security guarantees to keep Ukraine safe after the war.
He says unity will be critical, and the role of the US is “important” as “they only have to make Ukraine stronger than Russia.”
And that concludes the session.
Nato’s Rutte told EU lawmakers last month that if they think Europe can defend itself without the US, they are “dreaming.”
Does he still think that?
He says he sees “a total unity of vision” between the US and Europe, which makes such discussions speculative and unnecessary.
US senator Wicker offers his take on the state of negotiations, as he says that Putin “has not yet negotiated in good faith, never once.”
He says:
“Vladimir Putin started this war. He’s a war criminal, and as you’ve pointed out, he started committing more war crimes this year, by attacking civilians.
He will begin to negotiate in good faith only when he is hurting.”
Nato’s Rutte gets asked about security guarantees, and his response to the Russian claim – somewhat repeated today by China’s foreign minister Wang Yi – that there are “historical reasons” for the invasion.
He says strongly that “there was absolutely no reason whatsoever for the Russians to invade Ukraine,” whether in 2014 in Crimea or in 2022 with the full-scale invasion.
On security guarantees, he repeats his main line from this conference that there is “a huge shift in mindset within Nato” as “the Europeans take more responsibility for their own defence.”
He says the key thing is to “make sure that Putin will never, ever to try invade again.”
As is now usual for his public statements, he also defends Trump’s record on negotiating with Russia, and says he remains the only leader that can get Putin to move.
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
Zelenskyy gets asked about Trump’s latest comments, in which the US president said he should “get moving” and get a deal with Russia.
Is he feeling the pressure?
“A little bit,” he says with a bit of a smile.
He says he understands these signals from Trump, but says Ukraine keeps compromising on several issues.
He says he is ready to discuss many issues, but Ukraine cannot just “run away” from its own territory with hundreds of thousands of people as “a compromise.”
“We don’t hear compromises from Russian side. We want to hear from them something,” he says.
He also gets asked about recent media reporting that the US keeps pushing Ukraine to hold elections, and repeats his pledge from last night: if the US secures a ceasefire for two-three months, he will hold the election.
He then pointedly jokes:
“We can also [offer] ceasefire for Russians if they will do elections in Russia.”
US Republican senator Roger F. Wicker says “what we need specifically is we need to unleash the Tomahawk missiles” on Russia.
“That’s a message that will come from the Congress, [but] it’s the decision of the administration,” he says.
He also urges further sanctions on Russian oil producers.
He says the US public opinion is increasingly supportive of Ukraine, including among Republican voters.
European parliament’s president Roberta Metsola says she will sign off the EU’s €90bn loan to Ukraine next week, which she says was agreed “at an unprecedented speed.”
She highlights extraordinary levels of solidarity with Ukraine, as demonstrated by loud cheers for Ukrainian athletes during the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games earlier this month.
She says the EU continues to work on its response, working on the 20th package of sanctions against Russia, too.
And she declares her support for Ukraine’s membership of the EU (which continues to be blocked by Hungary, in particular.)
Nato’s Mark Rutte is speaking next, talking about his experience of visiting Ukraine last week as the country had to respond to extreme temperatures amid continued Russian strikes on its energy infrastructure.
He says the Ukrainians he met told him they would never give in to Russian attacks.
He then stresses that “to stay strong in this fight, we have to realise the Russians are not winning this,” as they make “very small gains,” “so small that it’s almost not relevant.”
He says the allies need to make sure the Ukrainians have everything they need to continue the fight and defend not just the frontlines, but its cities and civilians.
Asked about his wishlist, Zelenskyy says he needs more help with energy infrastructure, more missiles, and references a path to the membership of the EU, too.
Zelenskyy says the key focus in peace talks is on making sure so that “in four years, the civilised world is not forced to justify itself again, to shift the responsibility, and not forced again to look for someone else to blame” for another war.
He says “Ukraine is ready for a deal that brings real peace to us, Ukraine and Europe.”
And we go into the Q&A.
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
Zelenskyy turns to next week’s talks in Geneva.
He says he hopes they will be “serious, substantive, helpful,” but adds that “sometimes it feels like the sides are talking about completely different things.”
He says that the Russians “often speak about some spirit of Anchorage, and we can only guess what they really mean” – a reference to Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska – while “the Americans often return to the topic of concessions, too often discussed in the context of Ukraine, not Russia.”
He also says that Europe is “practically not” present at the table, and it should be. “It’s a big mistake,” he says.
He warns that Russia’s Vladimir Putin’s actions remind him of the 1938 Munich Agreement, “when previous Putin began dividing Europe.”
“It would be an illusion to believe that this war can now be reliably ended by dividing Ukraine, just as it was an illusion to believe that sacrificing Czechoslovakia would save Europe from a great war,” he says.
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
Zelenskyy also calls out former officials and politicians who are now trying to shift responsibility for not acting to prevent the war.
He stresses that “we can stand up to Russia,” bringing up the example of a Ukrainian athlete disqualified from the Olympics for planning to wear a helmet showing the face of Ukrainian athletes killed in the war.
He repeats that Russia “must not be given any hope it can get away with this crime.”
He says Moscow was most serious about negotiations when Ukraine when it was hit by Ukrainian deep strikes inside its territory.
“The stronger we are, the more realistic peace becomes,” he says.
Zelenskyy says that Ukraine tried everything to prevent the war, but he didn’t get any serious help from the previous US administration to counter the Russian aggression.
“But the most practical advice General [Mark] Milley could give Ukraine at that time was simply dig trenches, and that is the answer my commander in chief brought back.
Just imagine, hundreds of thousands of Russian troops on your borders, massive military equipment, and all you hear is: dig trenches.
So if Russian troops enter Lithuania, God bless, just [as an] example, if or another country on Nato’ss eastern flank, what will the Allies hear then? Will they hear that help is on the way?
Hope so.”
But he says Europe needs to have its own ability to respond to any threat to send a clear signal as he backs call for more defence investment.
He also says that Ukraine has “the strongest army in Europe,” and “that’s why Europe needs Ukraine.”
“I think it’s simply not smart to keep this army outside Nato,” he says, “but at least let that be your decision, not Putin’s decision.”
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
In a moving tribute to ordinary Ukrainians, Zelenskyy says “none of our people chose to be such heroes” as they worry about the war.
But he warns that Putin “is no longer interested in anything else” than the war, as “he cannot imagine life without power or after power.”
“Putin consults more with Tsar Peter and Empress Catherine about territorial gains than with any living person about real life. Can you imagine Putin without war?,” he asks.
He warns that Putin “may see himself as a tsar, but he is a slave to this war,” which is why Ukraine needs strong security guarantees.
The guarantees should answer the main question “how long there will be no war again,” as he says he hopes Trump and the US Congress hear that point clearly.
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
Zelenskyy says that in both December and January, Ukrainian forces killed and badly wounded more than 30,000 to 35,000 Russian troops.
He says that at the moment, Russia pays with lives of 156 soldiers for every kilometer of Ukraine it secures.
“Putin is not concerned about this now, but there is a level at which he will start to care,” he says.
He says Ukraine aims to get to 50,000 kills a month to raise the price of continuing the war.
He says that Ukrainians are key to stop Russian aggression as they secure free and independent Poland, the Baltics, Moldova, and Romania.
In an angry swipe at Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, with whom he’s been publicly clashing in recent weeks, he says:
“Even one Viktor can think about how to grow his belly, not how to grow his army to stop Russian tanks from returning to the streets of Budapest.”
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy goes back to drones, saying Ukraine has “more experience than anyone in the world” on how to defend about them.
He says:
“That is why while we invest in interceptors and protection, Russia invests in breaking unity between all of us, our unity with you, unity in Europe, unity in the Euro-Atlantic community, they want to break it.
Why? Because our unity is the best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans – the best one – and we still have it.”
He names several countries, thanking them for their help: Denmark, Germany, Czechia, the Nordics, the UK, France, the Netherlands, Italy, Poland, the US, Canada, Turkey and Japan.
But he says Russia also has its “accomplices”, including North Korea and Chinese companies that provide components for Russian weapons and missiles.
He also talks about the importance of stopping the Russian shadow fleet to further cut Moscow off funding for its war.
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy turns to the situation in Iran, as he picks up on demonstrations in Munich calling for a change of regime there (covered on the blog yesterday).
He says that Ukraine has no border with Iran or conflict with the Iranian regime, but points out that they continue to sell drones to Russia that kill Ukrainians.
“The Iranian regime has already done and can still do more harm than many other regimes could do in the century. … When they have time, they only kill more. They must be stopped immediately,” he says.
.
– Do NOT include any notes, explanations, keyword lists, or meta commentary.
– Do NOT add an internal title or
(the theme already provides the title).
NON-NEGOTIABLE ACCURACY LOCKS (MANDATORY)
– Do NOT change relationships, roles, or statuses. If the source says “former partner,” do not change it to “husband.” If the source says “educator,” do not change it to “teacher,” unless verified and linked.
– Do NOT shift timelines. If an event is described as past behavior, keep it in the past; never move it “into the attack” or “during the incident.”
– QUOTE INTEGRITY: If you use quotation marks, the quote must be copied EXACTLY from a verified source. If you cannot quote exactly, paraphrase without quotation marks.
– SENSITIVE VIOLENCE HANDLING: If the story involves violence, minors, mass casualties, or graphic injury, keep descriptions restrained and non-graphic. Do not describe wound paths, gore, or explicit medical detail. Summarize injuries in a factual, minimal way unless the detail is essential and verified.
– Do not “upgrade” attribution. Do not write “police confirmed” or “officially identified” unless verified and linked.
AP STYLE + LEGAL/NUMBERS DISCIPLINE (MANDATORY)
1) OUTLET STRIPPING (HARD RULE)
– Never write “told [outlet]” or name the outlet from
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
Zelenskyy says he wants to prompt leaders to “ask yourselves, are you ready not only for the challenges that Russian aggression brings, the challenges of modern war, but also for the constant effort to convince the world to fight for support to defend your country’s interests every single day as Ukraine must do.”
He then references continuing Russian ballistic and drone attacks on Ukraine.
As he talks about it, he has lots of visualisations and images shown on the screens behind him – including of some strikes that took place during his stay in Munich.
“I want you to understand the real scale of these attacks on Ukraine.
As you can see, in just one month this January, we had … to defend against 6000 attack drones, most of them were Shahid drones, and 150 plus Russian missiles of different types, and more than 5000 glide bombs.
And it’s like these every month. Imagine this over your own city. Shattered streets, destroyed homes, schools built underground.
And this is daily life in Ukraine because of Russia.”
He then talks about the devastating impact of these strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure and praises the repair and rescue teams working on this emergency.
Key events
-
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
-
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
-
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
-
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
-
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Risk we face evolve and get worse as war goes on, Zelenskyy warns
-
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
-
Rubio tells Europe US wants renewed alliance, but on Trump’s terms – analysis
-
Starmer hits pro-European tones in urgent speech on unity in uncertain times – snap analysis
-
Starmer says change in EU-UK relations is of ‘some urgency’ amid Ukraine war
-
Von der Leyen, Starmer welcome Rubio’s ‘reassuring’ speech
-
Starmer warns against ‘peddlers of easy answers’ on ‘extremes of left and right’
-
Starmer says UK needs look to ‘move closer’ to EU single market
-
Adversaries must know that in crisis, they could be confronted by combined nuclear strength, Macron says hinting at cooperation with France
-
Starmer hints at more cooperation to boost Europe’s defence
-
Starmer defends US alliance, but says Europe must take ‘primary responsibility’ for its defence to strengthen alliance, Starmer says
-
Munich conference applauds Starmer’s break with Brexit years Britain
-
‘Solidity of peace is softening,’ Starmer warns, as he points to ‘warning signs’ from Russia
-
Europe needs to ‘recaliberate’ its security strategy to respond to challenges, von der Leyen says
-
’10 years from Brexit, our futures are as bound as ever,’ von der Leyen says, as she calls for closer relations with UK
-
Europe going through ‘awakening’ in response to changing global landscape, von der Leyen says
-
Europe experiences ‘shock therapy’ on security as it wakes up from decades of lull, von der Leyen says
-
Von der Leyen calls for ‘more independent’ Europe in response to global crises
-
China hopes for settlement of Ukraine war, and Europe should be involved, Wang Yi says
-
Rubio love bombs Europe in style, while issuing stark warnings on substance, and it seemed to work – snap analysis
-
Talks ‘narrowed’ issues on Ukraine, but hardest questions remain unanswered for now, Rubio says
-
End of transatlantic era ‘not our goal nor our wish,’ Rubio says
-
US does not want allies to ‘rationalise broken status quo’ but face it and fix it, Rubio says
-
US not interested in being ‘caretakers of west’s managed decline’, Rubio says in urgent call to reject ‘decline’
-
UN, international bodies need to be urgently reformed as ‘we do not live in perfect world,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio takes aim at deindustrialisation, mass migration as risks to Europe
-
US ‘little direct and urgent in counsel,’ because ‘we care deeply,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio talks about postwar delusion mistakes made ‘together’ by Europe and US
-
Postwar triumph led to ‘dangerous delusion’ on end of history, Rubio says
-
Starmer’s Munich speech alongside EU’s von der Leyen part of rapidly evolving post-Brexit relations – snap analysis
-
Morning opening: What will the US say?
Asked about his 2026 predictions, or for the next six months, Zelenskyy says his more immediate concern is about “tomorrow and the day after tomorrow.”
He says Ukraine will continue talks on peace, and hopefully they will involve more European leaders.
He also says he will keep pushing for Ukraine to join the EU, even as some EU leaders don’t seem to like his repeated requests to get a clear date for it.
He says without a clear commitment, Putin will do everything he can to derail the accession process, “by his hands or hands of some not big countries,” which can only be read as another swipe at Orbán’s Hungary.
He says he is thankful for the continued support, but “we can’t save our lives by saying thank you” as he needs strong security guarantees to keep Ukraine safe after the war.
He says unity will be critical, and the role of the US is “important” as “they only have to make Ukraine stronger than Russia.”
And that concludes the session.
Nato’s Rutte told EU lawmakers last month that if they think Europe can defend itself without the US, they are “dreaming.”
Does he still think that?
He says he sees “a total unity of vision” between the US and Europe, which makes such discussions speculative and unnecessary.
US senator Wicker offers his take on the state of negotiations, as he says that Putin “has not yet negotiated in good faith, never once.”
He says:
“Vladimir Putin started this war. He’s a war criminal, and as you’ve pointed out, he started committing more war crimes this year, by attacking civilians.
He will begin to negotiate in good faith only when he is hurting.”
Nato’s Rutte gets asked about security guarantees, and his response to the Russian claim – somewhat repeated today by China’s foreign minister Wang Yi – that there are “historical reasons” for the invasion.
He says strongly that “there was absolutely no reason whatsoever for the Russians to invade Ukraine,” whether in 2014 in Crimea or in 2022 with the full-scale invasion.
On security guarantees, he repeats his main line from this conference that there is “a huge shift in mindset within Nato” as “the Europeans take more responsibility for their own defence.”
He says the key thing is to “make sure that Putin will never, ever to try invade again.”
As is now usual for his public statements, he also defends Trump’s record on negotiating with Russia, and says he remains the only leader that can get Putin to move.
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
Zelenskyy gets asked about Trump’s latest comments, in which the US president said he should “get moving” and get a deal with Russia.
Is he feeling the pressure?
“A little bit,” he says with a bit of a smile.
He says he understands these signals from Trump, but says Ukraine keeps compromising on several issues.
He says he is ready to discuss many issues, but Ukraine cannot just “run away” from its own territory with hundreds of thousands of people as “a compromise.”
“We don’t hear compromises from Russian side. We want to hear from them something,” he says.
He also gets asked about recent media reporting that the US keeps pushing Ukraine to hold elections, and repeats his pledge from last night: if the US secures a ceasefire for two-three months, he will hold the election.
He then pointedly jokes:
“We can also [offer] ceasefire for Russians if they will do elections in Russia.”
US Republican senator Roger F. Wicker says “what we need specifically is we need to unleash the Tomahawk missiles” on Russia.
“That’s a message that will come from the Congress, [but] it’s the decision of the administration,” he says.
He also urges further sanctions on Russian oil producers.
He says the US public opinion is increasingly supportive of Ukraine, including among Republican voters.
European parliament’s president Roberta Metsola says she will sign off the EU’s €90bn loan to Ukraine next week, which she says was agreed “at an unprecedented speed.”
She highlights extraordinary levels of solidarity with Ukraine, as demonstrated by loud cheers for Ukrainian athletes during the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games earlier this month.
She says the EU continues to work on its response, working on the 20th package of sanctions against Russia, too.
And she declares her support for Ukraine’s membership of the EU (which continues to be blocked by Hungary, in particular.)
Nato’s Mark Rutte is speaking next, talking about his experience of visiting Ukraine last week as the country had to respond to extreme temperatures amid continued Russian strikes on its energy infrastructure.
He says the Ukrainians he met told him they would never give in to Russian attacks.
He then stresses that “to stay strong in this fight, we have to realise the Russians are not winning this,” as they make “very small gains,” “so small that it’s almost not relevant.”
He says the allies need to make sure the Ukrainians have everything they need to continue the fight and defend not just the frontlines, but its cities and civilians.
Asked about his wishlist, Zelenskyy says he needs more help with energy infrastructure, more missiles, and references a path to the membership of the EU, too.
Zelenskyy says the key focus in peace talks is on making sure so that “in four years, the civilised world is not forced to justify itself again, to shift the responsibility, and not forced again to look for someone else to blame” for another war.
He says “Ukraine is ready for a deal that brings real peace to us, Ukraine and Europe.”
And we go into the Q&A.
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
Zelenskyy turns to next week’s talks in Geneva.
He says he hopes they will be “serious, substantive, helpful,” but adds that “sometimes it feels like the sides are talking about completely different things.”
He says that the Russians “often speak about some spirit of Anchorage, and we can only guess what they really mean” – a reference to Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska – while “the Americans often return to the topic of concessions, too often discussed in the context of Ukraine, not Russia.”
He also says that Europe is “practically not” present at the table, and it should be. “It’s a big mistake,” he says.
He warns that Russia’s Vladimir Putin’s actions remind him of the 1938 Munich Agreement, “when previous Putin began dividing Europe.”
“It would be an illusion to believe that this war can now be reliably ended by dividing Ukraine, just as it was an illusion to believe that sacrificing Czechoslovakia would save Europe from a great war,” he says.
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
Zelenskyy also calls out former officials and politicians who are now trying to shift responsibility for not acting to prevent the war.
He stresses that “we can stand up to Russia,” bringing up the example of a Ukrainian athlete disqualified from the Olympics for planning to wear a helmet showing the face of Ukrainian athletes killed in the war.
He repeats that Russia “must not be given any hope it can get away with this crime.”
He says Moscow was most serious about negotiations when Ukraine when it was hit by Ukrainian deep strikes inside its territory.
“The stronger we are, the more realistic peace becomes,” he says.
Zelenskyy says that Ukraine tried everything to prevent the war, but he didn’t get any serious help from the previous US administration to counter the Russian aggression.
“But the most practical advice General [Mark] Milley could give Ukraine at that time was simply dig trenches, and that is the answer my commander in chief brought back.
Just imagine, hundreds of thousands of Russian troops on your borders, massive military equipment, and all you hear is: dig trenches.
So if Russian troops enter Lithuania, God bless, just [as an] example, if or another country on Nato’ss eastern flank, what will the Allies hear then? Will they hear that help is on the way?
Hope so.”
But he says Europe needs to have its own ability to respond to any threat to send a clear signal as he backs call for more defence investment.
He also says that Ukraine has “the strongest army in Europe,” and “that’s why Europe needs Ukraine.”
“I think it’s simply not smart to keep this army outside Nato,” he says, “but at least let that be your decision, not Putin’s decision.”
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
In a moving tribute to ordinary Ukrainians, Zelenskyy says “none of our people chose to be such heroes” as they worry about the war.
But he warns that Putin “is no longer interested in anything else” than the war, as “he cannot imagine life without power or after power.”
“Putin consults more with Tsar Peter and Empress Catherine about territorial gains than with any living person about real life. Can you imagine Putin without war?,” he asks.
He warns that Putin “may see himself as a tsar, but he is a slave to this war,” which is why Ukraine needs strong security guarantees.
The guarantees should answer the main question “how long there will be no war again,” as he says he hopes Trump and the US Congress hear that point clearly.
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
Zelenskyy says that in both December and January, Ukrainian forces killed and badly wounded more than 30,000 to 35,000 Russian troops.
He says that at the moment, Russia pays with lives of 156 soldiers for every kilometer of Ukraine it secures.
“Putin is not concerned about this now, but there is a level at which he will start to care,” he says.
He says Ukraine aims to get to 50,000 kills a month to raise the price of continuing the war.
He says that Ukrainians are key to stop Russian aggression as they secure free and independent Poland, the Baltics, Moldova, and Romania.
In an angry swipe at Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, with whom he’s been publicly clashing in recent weeks, he says:
“Even one Viktor can think about how to grow his belly, not how to grow his army to stop Russian tanks from returning to the streets of Budapest.”
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy goes back to drones, saying Ukraine has “more experience than anyone in the world” on how to defend about them.
He says:
“That is why while we invest in interceptors and protection, Russia invests in breaking unity between all of us, our unity with you, unity in Europe, unity in the Euro-Atlantic community, they want to break it.
Why? Because our unity is the best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans – the best one – and we still have it.”
He names several countries, thanking them for their help: Denmark, Germany, Czechia, the Nordics, the UK, France, the Netherlands, Italy, Poland, the US, Canada, Turkey and Japan.
But he says Russia also has its “accomplices”, including North Korea and Chinese companies that provide components for Russian weapons and missiles.
He also talks about the importance of stopping the Russian shadow fleet to further cut Moscow off funding for its war.
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy turns to the situation in Iran, as he picks up on demonstrations in Munich calling for a change of regime there (covered on the blog yesterday).
He says that Ukraine has no border with Iran or conflict with the Iranian regime, but points out that they continue to sell drones to Russia that kill Ukrainians.
“The Iranian regime has already done and can still do more harm than many other regimes could do in the century. … When they have time, they only kill more. They must be stopped immediately,” he says.
unless the outlet is itself the subject of the story and independently verified.
– Use neutral attribution instead: “the official said,” “the minister said,” “police said,” “the court said,” “the spokesperson said.”
2) INLINE LINK LOCK FOR KEY FIGURES
– Any key number must be verified and must include an inline verification link in the SAME sentence.
– If reliable sources vary, report a range and attribute it with links.
3) LOADED WORDS REQUIRE ATTRIBUTION
– Any loaded adjective must be removed OR placed in quotes and attributed to a named source or organization, linked when possible.
4) NO IMPLIED OFFICIAL ACTIONS
– Do not claim institutions “will continue” doing something unless verified.
– State only what they said, ordered, filed, or confirmed, and link it.
SEO + USER INTENT (NATURAL INTEGRATION)
– Identify ONE primary keyword phrase based on the verified topic and user intent (related to Munich Security Conference live: Zelenskyy criticises Orbán and joins Starmer in calling for European unity | Ukraine).
– Use it naturally within the first {80|100|120} words and {once more later|again later|one more time later}.
– Naturally include {8|10|12|14} related semantic phrases and long-tail variants without stuffing or repetitive exact-match loops.
– Do NOT output a keyword list.
LINKS (VERIFIED ONLY, HIGH AUTHORITY)
Include {2|3|4|5} inline external links to authoritative sources you actually used to verify key facts, prioritizing official sources first.
– HTML only: Descriptive Anchor Text
– Never use “source” as anchor text.
– Never guess URLs.
– If you can only find {1|2} strong sources, include fewer links rather than weak ones.
– Avoid low-authority blogs, partisan aggregators, or unclear publishers. If a claim depends on weak sourcing, omit it.
EMBED + MEDIA PRESERVATION (MANDATORY)
You MUST preserve and reuse relevant embeds and essential media from
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
Zelenskyy says he wants to prompt leaders to “ask yourselves, are you ready not only for the challenges that Russian aggression brings, the challenges of modern war, but also for the constant effort to convince the world to fight for support to defend your country’s interests every single day as Ukraine must do.”
He then references continuing Russian ballistic and drone attacks on Ukraine.
As he talks about it, he has lots of visualisations and images shown on the screens behind him – including of some strikes that took place during his stay in Munich.
“I want you to understand the real scale of these attacks on Ukraine.
As you can see, in just one month this January, we had … to defend against 6000 attack drones, most of them were Shahid drones, and 150 plus Russian missiles of different types, and more than 5000 glide bombs.
And it’s like these every month. Imagine this over your own city. Shattered streets, destroyed homes, schools built underground.
And this is daily life in Ukraine because of Russia.”
He then talks about the devastating impact of these strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure and praises the repair and rescue teams working on this emergency.
Key events
-
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
-
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
-
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
-
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
-
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
-
Risk we face evolve and get worse as war goes on, Zelenskyy warns
-
Zelenskyy shows impact of Russian strikes on Ukraine
-
Rubio tells Europe US wants renewed alliance, but on Trump’s terms – analysis
-
Starmer hits pro-European tones in urgent speech on unity in uncertain times – snap analysis
-
Starmer says change in EU-UK relations is of ‘some urgency’ amid Ukraine war
-
Von der Leyen, Starmer welcome Rubio’s ‘reassuring’ speech
-
Starmer warns against ‘peddlers of easy answers’ on ‘extremes of left and right’
-
Starmer says UK needs look to ‘move closer’ to EU single market
-
Adversaries must know that in crisis, they could be confronted by combined nuclear strength, Macron says hinting at cooperation with France
-
Starmer hints at more cooperation to boost Europe’s defence
-
Starmer defends US alliance, but says Europe must take ‘primary responsibility’ for its defence to strengthen alliance, Starmer says
-
Munich conference applauds Starmer’s break with Brexit years Britain
-
‘Solidity of peace is softening,’ Starmer warns, as he points to ‘warning signs’ from Russia
-
Europe needs to ‘recaliberate’ its security strategy to respond to challenges, von der Leyen says
-
’10 years from Brexit, our futures are as bound as ever,’ von der Leyen says, as she calls for closer relations with UK
-
Europe going through ‘awakening’ in response to changing global landscape, von der Leyen says
-
Europe experiences ‘shock therapy’ on security as it wakes up from decades of lull, von der Leyen says
-
Von der Leyen calls for ‘more independent’ Europe in response to global crises
-
China hopes for settlement of Ukraine war, and Europe should be involved, Wang Yi says
-
Rubio love bombs Europe in style, while issuing stark warnings on substance, and it seemed to work – snap analysis
-
Talks ‘narrowed’ issues on Ukraine, but hardest questions remain unanswered for now, Rubio says
-
End of transatlantic era ‘not our goal nor our wish,’ Rubio says
-
US does not want allies to ‘rationalise broken status quo’ but face it and fix it, Rubio says
-
US not interested in being ‘caretakers of west’s managed decline’, Rubio says in urgent call to reject ‘decline’
-
UN, international bodies need to be urgently reformed as ‘we do not live in perfect world,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio takes aim at deindustrialisation, mass migration as risks to Europe
-
US ‘little direct and urgent in counsel,’ because ‘we care deeply,’ Rubio says
-
Rubio talks about postwar delusion mistakes made ‘together’ by Europe and US
-
Postwar triumph led to ‘dangerous delusion’ on end of history, Rubio says
-
Starmer’s Munich speech alongside EU’s von der Leyen part of rapidly evolving post-Brexit relations – snap analysis
-
Morning opening: What will the US say?
Asked about his 2026 predictions, or for the next six months, Zelenskyy says his more immediate concern is about “tomorrow and the day after tomorrow.”
He says Ukraine will continue talks on peace, and hopefully they will involve more European leaders.
He also says he will keep pushing for Ukraine to join the EU, even as some EU leaders don’t seem to like his repeated requests to get a clear date for it.
He says without a clear commitment, Putin will do everything he can to derail the accession process, “by his hands or hands of some not big countries,” which can only be read as another swipe at Orbán’s Hungary.
He says he is thankful for the continued support, but “we can’t save our lives by saying thank you” as he needs strong security guarantees to keep Ukraine safe after the war.
He says unity will be critical, and the role of the US is “important” as “they only have to make Ukraine stronger than Russia.”
And that concludes the session.
Nato’s Rutte told EU lawmakers last month that if they think Europe can defend itself without the US, they are “dreaming.”
Does he still think that?
He says he sees “a total unity of vision” between the US and Europe, which makes such discussions speculative and unnecessary.
US senator Wicker offers his take on the state of negotiations, as he says that Putin “has not yet negotiated in good faith, never once.”
He says:
“Vladimir Putin started this war. He’s a war criminal, and as you’ve pointed out, he started committing more war crimes this year, by attacking civilians.
He will begin to negotiate in good faith only when he is hurting.”
Nato’s Rutte gets asked about security guarantees, and his response to the Russian claim – somewhat repeated today by China’s foreign minister Wang Yi – that there are “historical reasons” for the invasion.
He says strongly that “there was absolutely no reason whatsoever for the Russians to invade Ukraine,” whether in 2014 in Crimea or in 2022 with the full-scale invasion.
On security guarantees, he repeats his main line from this conference that there is “a huge shift in mindset within Nato” as “the Europeans take more responsibility for their own defence.”
He says the key thing is to “make sure that Putin will never, ever to try invade again.”
As is now usual for his public statements, he also defends Trump’s record on negotiating with Russia, and says he remains the only leader that can get Putin to move.
Zelenskyy says he feels ‘little bit’ of US pressure, but there are limits to compromises he can offer
Zelenskyy gets asked about Trump’s latest comments, in which the US president said he should “get moving” and get a deal with Russia.
Is he feeling the pressure?
“A little bit,” he says with a bit of a smile.
He says he understands these signals from Trump, but says Ukraine keeps compromising on several issues.
He says he is ready to discuss many issues, but Ukraine cannot just “run away” from its own territory with hundreds of thousands of people as “a compromise.”
“We don’t hear compromises from Russian side. We want to hear from them something,” he says.
He also gets asked about recent media reporting that the US keeps pushing Ukraine to hold elections, and repeats his pledge from last night: if the US secures a ceasefire for two-three months, he will hold the election.
He then pointedly jokes:
“We can also [offer] ceasefire for Russians if they will do elections in Russia.”
US Republican senator Roger F. Wicker says “what we need specifically is we need to unleash the Tomahawk missiles” on Russia.
“That’s a message that will come from the Congress, [but] it’s the decision of the administration,” he says.
He also urges further sanctions on Russian oil producers.
He says the US public opinion is increasingly supportive of Ukraine, including among Republican voters.
European parliament’s president Roberta Metsola says she will sign off the EU’s €90bn loan to Ukraine next week, which she says was agreed “at an unprecedented speed.”
She highlights extraordinary levels of solidarity with Ukraine, as demonstrated by loud cheers for Ukrainian athletes during the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games earlier this month.
She says the EU continues to work on its response, working on the 20th package of sanctions against Russia, too.
And she declares her support for Ukraine’s membership of the EU (which continues to be blocked by Hungary, in particular.)
Nato’s Mark Rutte is speaking next, talking about his experience of visiting Ukraine last week as the country had to respond to extreme temperatures amid continued Russian strikes on its energy infrastructure.
He says the Ukrainians he met told him they would never give in to Russian attacks.
He then stresses that “to stay strong in this fight, we have to realise the Russians are not winning this,” as they make “very small gains,” “so small that it’s almost not relevant.”
He says the allies need to make sure the Ukrainians have everything they need to continue the fight and defend not just the frontlines, but its cities and civilians.
Asked about his wishlist, Zelenskyy says he needs more help with energy infrastructure, more missiles, and references a path to the membership of the EU, too.
Zelenskyy says the key focus in peace talks is on making sure so that “in four years, the civilised world is not forced to justify itself again, to shift the responsibility, and not forced again to look for someone else to blame” for another war.
He says “Ukraine is ready for a deal that brings real peace to us, Ukraine and Europe.”
And we go into the Q&A.
‘Illusion’ to think dividing Ukraine could prevent further war, Zelenskyy warns, drawing comparisons with 1938 Munich agreement
Zelenskyy turns to next week’s talks in Geneva.
He says he hopes they will be “serious, substantive, helpful,” but adds that “sometimes it feels like the sides are talking about completely different things.”
He says that the Russians “often speak about some spirit of Anchorage, and we can only guess what they really mean” – a reference to Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska – while “the Americans often return to the topic of concessions, too often discussed in the context of Ukraine, not Russia.”
He also says that Europe is “practically not” present at the table, and it should be. “It’s a big mistake,” he says.
He warns that Russia’s Vladimir Putin’s actions remind him of the 1938 Munich Agreement, “when previous Putin began dividing Europe.”
“It would be an illusion to believe that this war can now be reliably ended by dividing Ukraine, just as it was an illusion to believe that sacrificing Czechoslovakia would save Europe from a great war,” he says.
‘We can stand up to Russia,’ Zelenskyy urges leaders
Zelenskyy also calls out former officials and politicians who are now trying to shift responsibility for not acting to prevent the war.
He stresses that “we can stand up to Russia,” bringing up the example of a Ukrainian athlete disqualified from the Olympics for planning to wear a helmet showing the face of Ukrainian athletes killed in the war.
He repeats that Russia “must not be given any hope it can get away with this crime.”
He says Moscow was most serious about negotiations when Ukraine when it was hit by Ukrainian deep strikes inside its territory.
“The stronger we are, the more realistic peace becomes,” he says.
Zelenskyy says that Ukraine tried everything to prevent the war, but he didn’t get any serious help from the previous US administration to counter the Russian aggression.
“But the most practical advice General [Mark] Milley could give Ukraine at that time was simply dig trenches, and that is the answer my commander in chief brought back.
Just imagine, hundreds of thousands of Russian troops on your borders, massive military equipment, and all you hear is: dig trenches.
So if Russian troops enter Lithuania, God bless, just [as an] example, if or another country on Nato’ss eastern flank, what will the Allies hear then? Will they hear that help is on the way?
Hope so.”
But he says Europe needs to have its own ability to respond to any threat to send a clear signal as he backs call for more defence investment.
He also says that Ukraine has “the strongest army in Europe,” and “that’s why Europe needs Ukraine.”
“I think it’s simply not smart to keep this army outside Nato,” he says, “but at least let that be your decision, not Putin’s decision.”
‘None of our people chose to be heroes,’ Zelenskyy says
In a moving tribute to ordinary Ukrainians, Zelenskyy says “none of our people chose to be such heroes” as they worry about the war.
But he warns that Putin “is no longer interested in anything else” than the war, as “he cannot imagine life without power or after power.”
“Putin consults more with Tsar Peter and Empress Catherine about territorial gains than with any living person about real life. Can you imagine Putin without war?,” he asks.
He warns that Putin “may see himself as a tsar, but he is a slave to this war,” which is why Ukraine needs strong security guarantees.
The guarantees should answer the main question “how long there will be no war again,” as he says he hopes Trump and the US Congress hear that point clearly.
Russia loses 156 soldiers per kilometer of Ukraine, Zelenskyy says, as he takes swipe at Hungary’s Orbán
Zelenskyy says that in both December and January, Ukrainian forces killed and badly wounded more than 30,000 to 35,000 Russian troops.
He says that at the moment, Russia pays with lives of 156 soldiers for every kilometer of Ukraine it secures.
“Putin is not concerned about this now, but there is a level at which he will start to care,” he says.
He says Ukraine aims to get to 50,000 kills a month to raise the price of continuing the war.
He says that Ukrainians are key to stop Russian aggression as they secure free and independent Poland, the Baltics, Moldova, and Romania.
In an angry swipe at Hungary’s Viktor Orbán, with whom he’s been publicly clashing in recent weeks, he says:
“Even one Viktor can think about how to grow his belly, not how to grow his army to stop Russian tanks from returning to the streets of Budapest.”
‘Our unity is best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy goes back to drones, saying Ukraine has “more experience than anyone in the world” on how to defend about them.
He says:
“That is why while we invest in interceptors and protection, Russia invests in breaking unity between all of us, our unity with you, unity in Europe, unity in the Euro-Atlantic community, they want to break it.
Why? Because our unity is the best interceptor against Russia’s aggressive plans – the best one – and we still have it.”
He names several countries, thanking them for their help: Denmark, Germany, Czechia, the Nordics, the UK, France, the Netherlands, Italy, Poland, the US, Canada, Turkey and Japan.
But he says Russia also has its “accomplices”, including North Korea and Chinese companies that provide components for Russian weapons and missiles.
He also talks about the importance of stopping the Russian shadow fleet to further cut Moscow off funding for its war.
Iranian regime ‘must be stopped immediately,’ Zelenskyy says
Zelenskyy turns to the situation in Iran, as he picks up on demonstrations in Munich calling for a change of regime there (covered on the blog yesterday).
He says that Ukraine has no border with Iran or conflict with the Iranian regime, but points out that they continue to sell drones to Russia that kill Ukrainians.
“The Iranian regime has already done and can still do more harm than many other regimes could do in the century. … When they have time, they only kill more. They must be stopped immediately,” he says.
and integrate them naturally in the article.
– Preserve these verbatim if present and relevant:
• X/Twitter:
…
• Instagram:
…
• YouTube:
• Images/figures:
including
– Place each embed/figure immediately after the paragraph that references it, so it feels editorially natural.
– Include required platform scripts only once, and only if at least one embed is used:
• X/Twitter widgets:
• Instagram embed script only if an Instagram embed is included.
– Remove non-editorial clutter such as ads, donation widgets, paywall prompts, unrelated iframes, newsletter boxes, and “story continues below this ad.”
– Keep only media that supports the story.
HTML HYGIENE (MANDATORY)
– Wrap EVERY paragraph in
…
.
– Never place plain text directly under headings.
– Keep HTML valid and clean.
HTML OUTPUT FORMAT
Return ONE standalone HTML5 block only:
– Start with
– Allowed tags:
,
,
, , ,
- ,
- ,
,
,, ,
, , ,, , ,
- ,