
by Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Europe Bureau Chief
KYIV/BUDAPEST (Worthy News) – Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Thursday he has yet to receive a “clear, unequivocal answer” from European allies on whether they would militarily defend Ukraine if Russia launched new attacks after a future peace deal, as Moscow unleashed fresh deadly strikes across the war-torn country.
Zelenskyy’s remarks followed another wave of Russian attacks late Wednesday that knocked out electricity almost entirely in two southeastern regions amid plunging winter temperatures.
European leaders and U.S. envoys said earlier this week they had agreed on “key security guarantees” for Kyiv, including plans for a European multinational force to be deployed should a ceasefire be reached. Yet Zelenskyy said assurances remain vague.
“I personally very much want to get a very simple answer: yes, if there is aggression again, all partners will give a strong response to the Russians,” Zelenskyy said. “So far, I haven’t received a clear, unequivocal answer.”
He stressed that while there is strong “political will” among Ukraine’s allies, Kyiv needs legally binding security guarantees, approved by parliaments and backed by the U.S. Congress, before it can rely on them.
BRITISH DEBATE OVER TROOP DEPLOYMENT
Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer said lawmakers would have an opportunity to vote on the deployment of British troops to Ukraine if a peace deal is reached. However, he could not confirm whether such a vote would occur before any deployment.
Starmer told Parliament that British forces could conduct deterrence operations and help build and protect military hubs. However, he acknowledged uncertainties over troop numbers and parliamentary approval.
During the debate, Conservative lawmaker Ben Obese-Jecty warned that Western “boots on the ground” could be seen by Moscow as a red line, potentially undermining peace efforts.
Russia’s overnight strikes left the Dnipropetrovsk and Zaporizhzhia regions almost entirely without electricity, Ukraine’s Energy Ministry said.
Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko warned that snowfalls and temperatures dropping to minus 20 degrees Celsius could worsen power and heating disruptions.
RUSSIAN STRIKES KILL AT LEAST ONE
Separately, Russian attacks on the Black Sea ports of Chornomorsk and Pivdennyi in Ukraine’s Odesa region killed at least one person and wounded eight others, officials said. The ports are critical to Ukraine’s agricultural exports.
“This is yet another attack by a terrorist country on port infrastructure that helps ensure global food security,” Deputy Prime Minister Oleksiy Kuleba said.
Despite the ongoing war, Ukraine’s foreign currency reserves rose to a record $57.3 billion at the start of January, the central bank reported, driven by sustained international financial support.
Ukraine’s military spending has surged from about $7 billion in 2021 to more than $70 billion last year.
The government remains heavily dependent on foreign aid to fund defense, humanitarian relief, and social services as the armed conflict grinds on.
More than one million people are believed to have been killed or injured since Russia’s full-scale invasion began in February, 2022.
Copyright 1999-2026 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
Israel expanded its military campaign against Hezbollah on Monday, striking more than 70 targets across Lebanon as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed to increase pressure on the Iranian-backed terror group following a sharp rise in drone and rocket attacks on northern Israel.
A federal appeals court is weighing whether Kansas City can use its public accommodation ordinance to require Christian counselors to counsel gay married couples despite the counselors’ biblical convictions on marriage and sexuality.
Tens of thousands of evangelical Christians gathered in the Netherlands for one of Europe’s largest multi-day Christian events, with organizers and participants expressing hopes for spiritual revival in the nation and across Europe.
President Donald Trump pushed back Monday against sharp criticism from Republicans and former administration officials over a potential U.S.-Iran agreement, insisting that any final accord must prevent Tehran from obtaining a nuclear weapon or it will not be signed.
President Donald Trump said Monday that countries involved in negotiations over Iran should be required to join the Abraham Accords, signaling that the White House is seeking to turn a possible Iran agreement into a wider regional realignment that includes normalization with Israel.
Tensions remained high in Serbia’s capital Belgrade on Sunday after at least tens of thousands of people demanded elections and rallied against what they view as the increasingly authoritarian rule of President Aleksandar Vučić, with violence erupting after the protest and more than 20 people arrested.
Investigations were ongoing Sunday into the killing of three senior Kuki-Thadou Christian church leaders by unidentified gunmen in India’s northeastern Manipur State, Christian investigators told Worthy News.