Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky has criticized the lack of “unity” among Western countries more than three months following the start of Russia’s special operation in Ukraine.
He pointed out, in a video intervention within the framework of the Davos Economic Forum in Switzerland, that “my question is the following: is there practical unity (in the West)? I do not touch it,” noting that “it needs the support of a united Europe.”
And the Ukrainian president asked, “Is there unity regarding the accession of Sweden and Finland to NATO? No. So is the West united? No,” noting that “our strength was the unity within the country, and now this depends on the unity of the West to be strong and strongly support Ukraine” versus Russia, and then “we will have superiority over Russia when we are actually united.”
The Ukrainian president once more expressed his “gratitude” to US President Joe Biden for the massive new financial aid worth $40 billion. He stressed his regime’s need for “the support of a united Europe.” He also deplored the position of Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban due to what he described as his reluctance at this stage to impose an embargo on Russian oil, saying that “something is not going well with Hungary.”