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Tag: War
‘A moral wreckage that we need to face’: Peter Beinart on being Jewish after Gaza’s destruction | Israel-Gaza war
Author Peter Beinart speaks at an event in Atlanta in 2012. Photograph: David Goldman/AP Peter Beinart has spent a lifetime talking about Palestine and Israel. In the early 2000s he was regarded as among Israel’s most prominent American defenders. He has since broken with just about every tenet commonly associated with Zionism – from rejecting the argument that Israel can be simultaneously democratic and Jewish to arguing that Palestinian refugees must be allowed to return to historic Palestine. Few people have moved as far in so short a time.
A professor of journalism and political science at the City University of New York, Beinart once edited the New Republic and is now an editor-at-large at Jewish Currents and a contributing opinion columnist for the New York Times. He has built a reputation for being an incisive writer and public intellectual, with a knack for admitting when he’s wrong – on Israel, his early support for the Iraq war and what he has described as his previous complicity in tolerating workplace sexual harassment.
In Beinart’s latest book, he appeals to his fellow Jews to grapple with the morality of their defense of Israel. The book, titled Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza: A Reckoning, begins with a “note to my former friend”, with whom he has broken over the issue. “By reading these words, you have agreed to walk with me,” he writes. “I hope to lure you beyond established boundaries.”
Beinart relies on Jewish texts and draws lessons from South Africa, where his family is from, to confront Zionism and what he sees as complicity from the American Jewish establishment in Palestinian oppression. He argues for a Jewish tradition that has no use for Jewish supremacy and treats human equality as a core value.
I spoke with Beinart before the declaration of a ceasefire earlier this month. I followed up to ask his view on the development.
Ahmed Moor: Hi, Peter. We’ve all been casting about for resources and things to help us understand how the world has changed after Gaza. Your book aims to address some of that but, as the title states, it’s also about “being Jewish”. So who is the audience for the book?
PB: First and foremost, I suppose it’s written for my community, my friends and even my family. I live inside a pretty traditional Jewish world. And I feel like there is a kind of pathology that exists in many Jewish spaces, among people who in other aspects of their lives are humane and thoughtful. Yet when it comes to the question of Gaza, and more generally the question of Palestinians and their right to be free, a certain set of blinders come down.
My hope is that I can get them to see that something has gone very profoundly wrong in the way we think about what it means to be Jewish. I felt like I needed for my own sanity to write something which addressed this moral catastrophe in the hopes that maybe I will change some people’s minds. Maybe there is also a whole group of younger Jews who are themselves profoundly alienated and bewildered and deeply angry. There’s a kind of moral, cultural, even theological wreckage that Jews now have to face. I want to help them think about how they rebuild.
AM: I’m on the outside, but from where I sit it appears that Jews are quite divided, both politically and religiously. Yet in the book you write as though you’re speaking to a single community. What are the values that anchor that community – and what happens when Israel enters the mix?
PB: That’s a big question. What’s complicated about Judaism is that it is a religion with a universal kind of message like Christianity or Islam, but also embedded within Judaism is the metaphor of family. In the book of Genesis, you have the story of a family that in the book of Exodus becomes a people or a nation. In some ways, being Jewish can be analogous to being both Catholic and Italian, in the sense that proudly atheistic Jews still feel very intensely Jewish.
People walk past the rubble of the Al-Hassan Benna mosque on Friday in Gaza City. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images It’s one thing for Jews to feel these bonds of communal solidarity outside of the state framework, when they often had to depend on one another while living in states that were dangerous to them. But when you take a very powerful state and you inject that with this notion of uncritical solidarity, it leads to a series of rationalizations as that state commits what I think can be rightly called a genocide. Something terrible has gone wrong because Judaism also has a moral message. I feel like that gets lost in all of this.
I think more relevant to the book is the question of how we tell a story about what it means to be Jewish that recognizes our obligations to one another, but also never loses sight of the fact that the first people created according to Torah are not Jews. All human beings are created in the image of God, and that precedes the Jewish story.
What Israel has done in Gaza is the most profound desecration of the central idea of the absolute and infinite worth of every human being. And yet the organized American Jewish community acts as if Palestinians in Gaza have essentially no value. Their deaths are dismissed on the flimsiest of pretexts. These people are basically saying that the state has absolute value, but the human beings who live in this state, if they have the misfortune of being Palestinian, don’t have value.
AM: One of the major themes of the book is complicity. How do you perceive complicity with what Israel is doing, and has been doing for decades, within American Jewish life?
PB: I think the organized American Jewish community, especially since 1967, has been built around unconditional support for Israel as a central feature of what it means to live a Jewish life. You support the basic structure of the state even though the state is fundamentally unequal and fundamentally oppressive when it comes to Palestinians. It comes in many forms. It can come in participation in a group like Aipac, which is pressuring the government to maintain unconditional US support. It can come in more symbolic ways, like a prayer for the Israel Defense Forces which is common in many American synagogues. It also comes through the unwillingness to engage with Palestinians.
Most American Jewish institutions – schools, synagogues, camps, whatever – don’t bring Palestinian speakers in to actually give people a genuine understanding of what Zionism looks like from the standpoint of its victims. These are all forms of complicity.
AM: I’ve been reading your work since at least 2008. I wrote for you in 2012 at the Daily Beast when you were still recognized as a prominent liberal Zionist voice. Over the years, you’ve shown a willingness to change your mind and to do it publicly. Not a lot of people are willing to publicly admit they were wrong. Why do you think that is?
PB: I always feel a little embarrassed when people ask me about these changes in a way that allows me to look good. The truth is that there were a lot of people who knew things much earlier that I took a long time to learn. Obviously many of them are Palestinians from whom I’ve learned, but there are also Jews and others.
My learning process has been slow partly because of fear. I think perhaps that I was too comfortable living in an environment where I was not really exposed to many things, a relatively privileged and cloistered existence. But I’ve also always been afraid of what the consequences would be, career-wise and interpersonally, if I became too radically out of step with people around me. It’s still something I worry about all the time.
For me, there was a process of unpeeling, like an onion, that began when I first went to the West Bank more than 20 years ago. It’s one thing to know in an abstract way that it’s not great for Israel to be occupying people. And I kind of knew that, and I supported two states, but there was always a notion of wanting to give Israel the benefit of the doubt. But the more one looked, the more that was just unsustainable.
The Shuafat refugee camp is seen behind a section of Israel’s separation barrier in Jerusalem. Photograph: Oded Balilty/AP I was also forced to confront the degree to which I had dehumanized Palestinians. I didn’t think of myself as someone who did that. But I realized that I wasn’t engaging with Palestinians as human beings. I was engaging with Palestinians as a kind of an abstract group of people about whom I was making various judgments.
There was a real shock that came with engagement with ordinary people and the realization that these were human beings who were enduring these things that I and the people around me would never be willing to tolerate. I was able to shed the preconceptions that I was raised with, that so many Jews are raised with, about Palestinians, that they have a tendency towards violence. I was able to unlearn those things. So that has been for me an experience of liberation.
That’s part of what the book is about: I want other Jews to have that experience of liberation because first of all it means that we can stop being complicit in these horrors, but also we don’t have to carry the burden of this fear based on dehumanizing and often racist views.
AM: This is a really thorny topic, but a lot of people see overt displays of traditionally Jewish symbols as signifiers of Zionism, which is militaristic and chauvinistic in my lived experience as a Palestinian who has spent time in both Gaza and the West Bank. For example, there was that infamous story of Israeli soldiers branding the Star of David on to a detainee’s face. So how do you unwind the association of Zionism with Judaism?
PB: Zionism has this very strange relationship with Judaism. In one way it was a rebellion against Judaism. Normative notions of Jewish law said that Jews pray for the Messiah to come and once the Messiah comes, Jews will return to what we call the land of Israel. But then, in an era of nationalism and imperialism in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the Zionist movement said: “We are going to have our own nationalist project.” In the beginning the vast majority of Jewish religious authorities were hostile to Zionism. But then Zionism also plays on these traditional notions in Jewish texts of a connection to this place called the land of Israel.
But now, Zionism in the form of Jewish ethnonationalism risks swallowing Judaism or becoming so enmeshed with it that the two cannot be distinguished. The Israeli flag is designed to look like a tallit, the prayer shawl that Jews wear when they pray. It has the star of David, a traditional Jewish symbol. The menorah is also used in Israeli symbols.
Jews want opponents of Zionism to make this distinction – I don’t want people to go up to a Jew on the street who is wearing a kippah or some Jewish symbol and make that person responsible for what the state of Israel does.
Yet at the same time, Jewish leaders in America are constantly conflating these two things by saying Zionism is inherent in Judaism. On the one hand, they say, supporting the state of Israel is inherent in being Jewish. On the other, they’re asking the anti-Zionist or pro-Palestine activist to live up to a standard that they themself violate.
Many American Jews will decide they want to be Zionists. They will decide they want to support the state of Israel. I may argue with them. They have the right to make that choice. But it is not an inherent part of being Jewish.
AM: You write: “Hostility to Israel has become so pervasive in progressive circles that Zionist students sometimes feel like ideological pariahs.” How should the Palestinian rights movement interact with Zionist students, especially since the overwhelming weight of institutional opprobrium is directed at anti-Zionist students?
PB: I wrestled with how to write that chapter a lot. I think some Jewish students arrive at college from an environment in which Zionism and support for the state of Israel is normative. It’s what they have experienced, what they have learned. They’ve probably had almost no interaction with Palestinians – no understanding of what Zionism looks like from the standpoint of its victims. So then the question is: how do you engage with those students?
I think there is a great opportunity for education. Engaging with those students, talking to them, trying to create environments where they hear Palestinians and they hear scholarly work on Israel/Palestine is a better path than the path of exclusion. I don’t think the path of exclusion – basically saying you’re the equivalent of a white supremacist, we will not talk to you – is antisemitism. But I don’t think it is the most effective way of bringing about the change that we want.
I think I can understand that it’s not easy for a Palestinian to sit down with a Jewish student and explain to the Jewish student why they are fully human and why they’re fully deserving of equality. In the same way that I think Black Americans often don’t really appreciate having to do that with white Americans. I understand that not everyone is going to want to play that role, but at the very least I don’t think people should shut down those spaces.
A book by Beinart under the chair of an audience member as Beinart speaks in at Atlanta in 2012. Photograph: David Goldman/AP It’s a strategic argument. I don’t think that exclusion is the best way to bring about the change that we want.
AM: Since we first spoke, a tenuous ceasefire has come into effect. How do you interpret its terms and how it came about?
PB: To me the ceasefire shows that US pressure works. I’m glad that some hostages will be released and that Palestinians in Gaza will get some reprieve from the bombing and some additional aid. But even though Israel destroyed Gaza, Hamas will remain there, because the Palestinian problem is a political problem, not a military one. Israel never had a strategy, and will likely go back to destroying Gaza.
AM: In your book, you end on a hopeful note, writing that Jews can contribute to humanity by “liberating ourselves from supremacy so, as partners with Palestinians, we can help liberate the world”. Do you really draw hope at this time?
PB: I don’t think that hope is something one draws from material circumstances. Optimism is something you look for evidence for. I have none of that. I see Israel moving towards an American-style solution to the Palestinian question. In the 19th century, the American solution to the Native population was to destroy their societies so that they couldn’t function as a political entity.
But hope comes from wherever it comes from. It’s just something that human beings need. Like we need oxygen. For me, maybe it comes from belief in God. I don’t know. I have glimpsed, myself, little episodes of this potential liberation as a child of South Africans. Imagine if this story of Palestine and Israel, which is now a story of unbelievable horror, of genocide, of apartheid – if it were instead a story of collective liberation. I do really believe in my soul that Israeli Jews and Palestinians could live together in full equality with a true process of reconciliation and full refugee return and historical justice that would unleash things that would be miraculous for people around the world.
Will I see it? I have no idea. But that’s the dream.
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Ahmed Moor is a writer and fellow at the Foundation for Middle East Peace. He is a plaintiff in a lawsuit that charges the US state department with circumventing the law to fund Israeli military units accused of human rights abuses
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Peter Beinart is editor-at-large of Jewish Currents and professor of journalism and political science at City University of New York. Being Jewish After the Destruction of Gaza: A Reckoning is out on 28 January
In his recent article, Peter Beinart delves into the moral complexities of being Jewish in the aftermath of the destruction in Gaza during the Israel-Gaza war. He grapples with the internal conflict of feeling a deep connection to his Jewish identity while also feeling immense sorrow and guilt over the devastation caused by the conflict.Beinart highlights the importance of facing the harsh realities of the situation, urging the Jewish community to confront the moral wreckage that has been left in the wake of the war. He emphasizes the need for introspection and self-reflection, acknowledging the pain and suffering that has been inflicted on both sides of the conflict.
As a prominent voice in the Jewish community, Beinart’s words carry weight and significance. His call for accountability and empathy serves as a powerful reminder of the ethical responsibilities that come with being Jewish, especially in times of conflict and crisis.
Ultimately, Beinart’s thoughtful and thought-provoking analysis challenges us to confront the moral complexities of our identities and to strive for a more just and compassionate world, even in the face of destruction and devastation.
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- Peter Beinart
- Jewish identity
- Israel-Gaza war
- Moral wreckage
- Gaza destruction
- Jewish perspective
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- Jewish community
- Gaza crisis
- Israel-Palestine conflict
#moral #wreckage #face #Peter #Beinart #Jewish #Gazas #destruction #IsraelGaza #war
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Sony Leak Teases an Exciting Pivot For the God of War Series
A new leak suggests that Sony may be taking its God of War franchise in an exciting new direction. A new game will apparently be set in Egyptian mythology. The Game Post reported the leak, which came from well-known insider Daniel Richtman’s Patreon.
“Sony is casting Middle Eastern actors for an unknown AAA game, which is likely to be the next God of War that explores Egyptian mythology,” Richtman wrote. The news has yet to be confirmed by Sony or its Santa Monica Studio, so there is a chance that things could ultimately go in a different direction. A new game for the franchise has also not been officially announced at this time.
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A live-service God of War game was previously in development by Bluepoint Games — the company that ported the original God of War and God of War II to the PS3 in 2009 and also worked on Ragnarök from 2020 to 2022. It was reported that Sony shelved the God of War live-service title after Concord, its first-person hero shooter game, was released to unprecedentedly low sales in August 2024. The Concord project was shut down two weeks after launch, with all sold copies refunded and Sony closing Firewalk Studios (the game’s developer) the following month.
It appears that instead of going into uncharted territory, Sony would rather stick with successful formulas like that of God of War and its action-adventure hack-and-slash gameplay. Since its inception in 2005, God of War has been lauded for producing some of the best action games of all time and has sold over 66 million games worldwide, making it PlayStation’s most profitable first-party brand.
Egyptian Mythology Can Easily Expand the God of War Franchise
If the recent leak ends up being correct, God of War‘s shift to Egyptian mythology for its upcoming game will mark the second time the franchise has switched up its plot. The series follows Kratos, a Spartan warrior who becomes the God of War in various mythologies, with early games based on Greek Mythology and its respective gods. In 2018, the PlayStation 4 game God of War transitioned the franchise over to Norse mythology.
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In 2022, a sequel game titled God of War: Ragnarök was released and concluded the Norse era of the series — giving Sony the perfect opportunity to transition Kratos’ journey to Ancient Egypt and its rich mythological characters with a future release.
God of War has continued to enjoy strong sales over the years, which has allowed the franchise to expand into other media, including comic series published by both DC and Dark Horse, a tabletop card game, and documentaries about the game’s various eras. An Amazon Prime Video live-action series has been in development since 2022.
The God of War franchise games are available on PlayStation and Windows.
Source: The Game Post
God of War
- Released
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April 20, 2018
- ESRB
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M for Mature: Blood and Gore, Intense Violence, Strong Language
- Developer(s)
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Santa Monica Studio
- Publisher(s)
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Sony
Recently, a leak from Sony has hinted at a major pivot for the beloved God of War series. Fans of the franchise have been eagerly awaiting news on the next installment, and this leak has sparked excitement and speculation about what’s to come.The leak suggests that the next game in the series will take a bold new direction, potentially shifting away from the traditional hack-and-slash gameplay that the series is known for. While details are still scarce, many fans are speculating that this pivot could involve a more narrative-driven approach, deepening the story and character development of protagonist Kratos.
This news has sparked a flurry of excitement among fans, who are eager to see how the series will evolve and what new gameplay mechanics and storytelling elements will be introduced. With the success of 2018’s God of War, which received critical acclaim for its narrative depth and emotional storytelling, it’s clear that fans are hungry for more of this type of experience.
While nothing has been officially confirmed yet, this leak has certainly piqued the interest of fans and has set the stage for what could be a groundbreaking new chapter in the God of War series. Stay tuned for more updates as we await official news from Sony.
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#Sony #Leak #Teases #Exciting #Pivot #God #War #Series
God of War 6 location revealed, unveiling franchise’s next mythology – Playstation
After months of speculation, it seems we finally know the mythology the next God of War game will delve into.
Having touched upon Greek and Norse mythology, God of War fans have been hoping for a fresh set of legends to be explored as Kratos and Atreus continue their journey.
It’s an adventure that will purportedly see the duo visit the Middle East, as Sony’s award-winning franchise shifts its attention to Egyptian folklore.
This claim comes from Daniel Richtman, as per Insider Gaming; due to Richtman’s Patreon being behind a paywall, we can’t confirm these details for ourselves.
In this leak, it’s said that Sony is casting for “Middle Eastern actors”.
Kratos has finally made his way onto your PC in God of War Ragnarök.
“Sony is casting Middle Eastern actors for an unknown AAA game,” the report reads. “Which is likely to be the next God of War that explores Egyptian mythology.”
This would align with the potential settings teased by the ending of God of War Ragnarök, which suggested several viable locations.
What is more, fans have wanted to see Egypt play a significant role in the series, believing it to be the “most badass setting” for the next game.
As if that wasn’t enough, we also know that Santa Monica thought about setting the last God of War adventure in Egypt before it eventually pivoted to Norse mythology instead, as mentioned in the documentary about the development of the game.
Still, while the report supports previous theories, it’s the “unknown AAA game” bit that we need to bear in mind.
Without knowing specifically which title is casting these actors, we can’t say with 100 percent certainty that this new game is God of War 6.
Therefore, we need to view this claim like any other unofficial announcement: false until proven otherwise.
Now all we can do is sit and wait for Kratos’ return, wherever that may take him.
Featured Image Credit: Sony Interactive Entertainment
Topics: God Of War, PC, PlayStation, Santa Monica Studio, Sony, PlayStation 5
The highly anticipated God of War 6 has just revealed its location, giving fans a glimpse into the franchise’s next mythology. The game will take place in the ancient land of Egypt, a setting that promises to bring a whole new level of excitement and adventure to the series.Players will once again take on the role of Kratos, the god of war himself, as he embarks on a journey through the mysterious and dangerous world of Egyptian mythology. From battling mythical creatures to uncovering ancient secrets, God of War 6 is sure to deliver an epic gaming experience like never before.
With stunning graphics, intense gameplay, and a captivating storyline, fans can expect nothing less than the best from this latest installment in the beloved franchise. Stay tuned for more updates and get ready to immerse yourself in the world of God of War like never before.
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- God of War 6
- God of War 6 location
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#God #War #location #revealed #unveiling #franchises #mythology #Playstation
Sony Reportedly Developing New God of War Game Set in Egyptian Mythology
A new report suggests Sony PlayStation is working on a new AAA God of War game set in Egyptian mythology.
The God of War franchise is one of the most beloved in gaming, with a history spanning decades and a fanbase that only continues to grow. After the release of 2018’s God of War and expanding the Norse saga with Ragnarok in 2022, Sony Santa Monica delivered not just critical acclaim but a deeply emotional narrative that resonated with players.
With the Norse saga seemingly complete, fans have been wondering what lies ahead for Kratos. Now, it seems we finally have a hint about what the next mainline God of War installment could be.
Source: SIE/Santa Monica Studio New God of War Game in Development?
According to a new report, Sony is “likely” working on a brand-new God of War game set in Egyptian mythology. This information comes from Daniel Richtman, a well-known source for insider scoops in entertainment, who shared the news through a post on his Patreon.
Richtman revealed that Sony is currently casting Middle Eastern actors for an unknown AAA title. He added that the project is “likely to be the next God of War that explores Egyptian mythology.”
The post reads: “Sony is casting Middle Eastern actors for an unknown AAA game, which is likely to be the next God of War that explores Egyptian mythology.” (thanks, VISCERAL)
Interestingly, this isn’t the first time the idea of God of War exploring Egyptian mythology has come up. In the “Making Of” God of War (2018) documentary, creative director Cory Barlog revealed that the studio initially considered setting the game in Egyptian mythology before ultimately choosing the Norse path.
Image: Sony While this is exciting news, it’s worth noting that Sony has not confirmed any of this information. Until we hear something official, we suggest taking everything with a grain of salt.
This comes after Sony canceled a live-service God of War game in development by Bluepoint Games. That project had been in the works for two years before being shelved. On a more positive note, fans of the series can also look forward to the upcoming God of War TV adaptation, which is currently in development at Amazon Prime.
What do you think about the possibility of Kratos stepping into Egyptian mythology? Share your thoughts in the comments below!
Rumors have been swirling that Sony is working on a new installment in the God of War series, this time set in Egyptian mythology. According to sources close to the project, the game will follow Kratos as he navigates the rich and mysterious world of ancient Egypt, facing off against powerful gods and mythical creatures.Fans of the franchise are already buzzing with excitement at the prospect of exploring a new pantheon of gods and monsters in the signature visceral combat style of the God of War series. The shift in setting from Norse mythology to Egyptian mythology promises to bring a fresh and captivating experience to players, with stunning visuals and a compelling story to boot.
While Sony has yet to officially confirm the development of a new God of War game set in Egypt, the rumors have certainly piqued the interest of fans and gamers alike. Stay tuned for more updates on this exciting new chapter in the God of War series!
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- God of War
- Egyptian mythology
- New game
- Sony game development
- Video game news
- Gaming industry
- Rumors
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- Kratos in Egypt
#Sony #Reportedly #Developing #God #War #Game #Set #Egyptian #Mythology
Zelensky believes Trump could end Russia’s war but only if Ukraine included in peace talks
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Volodymyr Zelensky has stated his belief that a deal to end Russia’s war in Ukraine could be made under Donald Trump’s presidency but demanded Kyiv be included in any peace talks.
The Ukrainian president also said on Saturday that the terms of any deal that might arise under the new US president were still unclear – and might not even be clear to Trump himself – because Vladimir Putin had no interest in ending the war.
However, the Russian president has emphasised that he is open for talks with Trump on a broad range of issues including his country’s war in Ukraine, telling a state TV journalist on Friday: “We believe the current president’s statements about his readiness to work together. We are always open to this and ready for negotiations.”
Trump, who took office on Monday, has, in turn, expressed willingness to speak to Putin about ending the war, a contrast with the outgoing administration of Joe Biden, who shunned the Russian leader. Trump even promised during his election campaign to end the war within his first 24 hours in the White House – without saying how, and aides have since suggested that a deal could take months.
And Zelensky has now stressed that ending the war would not be possible unless Trump includes Ukraine itself in any negotiations.
Volodymyr Zelensky has stated his belief that a deal to end Russia’s war in Ukraine could be made under Donald Trump’s presidency but demanded Kyiv be included in any peace talks (EPA) Speaking at a press conference on Saturday alongside Moldova’s president, Maia Sandu, a visiting ally, Zelensky said: “Otherwise it will not work. Because Russia does not want to end the war, while Ukraine wants to end it.”
In a separate interview broadcast later that day, Zelensky said he believed Trump truly wanted to see an end to the war, nearing the three-year mark next month, describing the US president as understanding all the challenges associated with the peace process and “simply saying this has to end or it will get worse”.
Speaking to Italian journalist Cecilia Sala, who was released this month after being detained for 21 days in Iran, Zelensky added: “For now, we don’t know how this will happen because we don’t know the details. I believe President Trump himself does not know all the details. Because I would say so much depends on what sort of just peace we can achieve. And whether Putin wants, in principle, to stop the war. I believe he doesn’t want to.”
Ukrainian residents walk past a building damaged by Russian military strikes in Pokrovsk, Donetsk region, on Saturday (REUTERS) Kyiv, long worried about the prospect of its fate being decided by bigger powers without its participation, has said it is working to arrange a meeting between Zelensky and Trump.
Addressing journalists earlier alongside Sandu, Zelensky said he believed European allies should also be included in any future peace talks.
“As for what the set-up of the talks will be: Ukraine, I really hope Ukraine will be there, America, Europe and the Russians,” he said. “Yes, I would really want that Europe would take part, because we will be members of the European Union.” Ukraine and Moldova both submitted applications to join the EU days after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022.
Zelensky spoke at a press conference on Saturday alongside Moldova’s president, Maia Sandu, a visiting ally (AFP via Getty Images) On Friday, Putin said he would like to meet Trump to talk about Ukraine but cited a 2022 decree from Zelensky barring talks with Putin as a barrier to negotiations.
Zelensky said on Saturday he had introduced this ban to stop Putin from forming channels of communication with other groups in Ukraine, which he said Russia had attempted, particularly those advocating separatist views.
“I therefore took an absolutely fair decision,” he said. “I am the president of Ukraine and the leader of these or any other talks and I banned all the others.”
The Russian President has emphasised that he is open for talks with Trump on a broad range of issues including his country’s war in Ukraine (Anton Vaganov/Pool Photo via AP, File) On Sunday, Zelensky said Russia had used 1,250 aerial bombs, over 750 attack drones and more than 20 missiles to attack Ukraine over the past week, calling on his country’s partners “to act in unity”.
Ukraine’s military said its air defences downed 50 of 72 drones launched by Russia overnight, with no casualties or damage reported.
Meanwhile, Kyiv’s general staff said its forces attacked one of Russia’s largest oil refineries in the city of Ryazan again overnight, with explosions and fire reported in the target area.
Russia’s Defence Ministry said its air defence systems destroyed 15 Ukrainian drones over Russia and two sea drones in the Black Sea on Sunday.
Russian troops, meanwhile, have seized the town of Zelene and the village of Velyka Novosilka in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region, Russian news agencies reported on Sunday, citing the defence ministry, in battlefield reports that could not be independently verified.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky believes that former President Donald Trump could potentially help end Russia’s war on Ukraine, but only if Ukraine is included in peace talks. Zelensky has expressed his willingness to work with Trump to find a resolution to the conflict, but insists that Ukraine must have a seat at the table in any negotiations.In a recent interview, Zelensky stated, “I believe that President Trump could play a crucial role in bringing an end to the war in Ukraine, but it is essential that Ukraine be included in any peace talks. We cannot allow our country to be sidelined in discussions about our own future.”
Zelensky’s comments come as tensions continue to escalate between Russia and Ukraine, with ongoing fighting in the eastern region of Donbas and fears of a potential full-scale invasion by Russian forces. The Ukrainian president has called for international support in standing up to Russian aggression and has emphasized the importance of a diplomatic solution to the conflict.
While Trump’s exact role in resolving the conflict remains unclear, Zelensky’s willingness to engage with the former president highlights the urgency of finding a peaceful resolution to the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. Only time will tell if Trump will take up Zelensky’s offer and use his influence to help bring an end to the war.
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- Trump
- Russia
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- Ukraine
- Peace talks
- Conflict resolution
- International relations
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Russia Ukraine war latest: Putin rejects talks with ‘illegitimate’ Zelensky as North Korean cannon deployed
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Vladimir Putin has refused to directly engage with his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky, calling him “illegitimate”.
The Russian president said Ukraine will have to find a legal way to hold the peace talks as Kyiv has not held any elections since Russia started the war on its smaller neighbour.
In response, Mr Zelensky said the Russian leader’s statements showed he was afraid of talks and sought to keep the conflict going indefinitely.
On the war front, more than a hundred drones targeted Russian oil facilities, including a nuclear power plant, in a major Ukrainian attack this morning, Russian officials said. The Russian defence ministry said that 104 drones were involved in raids across western Russia, 11 of which were destroyed over the Smolensk region.
This comes as North Korea is set to send more than 100 artillery systems to be used against Ukraine’s forces in the war, officials in Kyiv said.
A close ally of Russia, North Korea is about to double the number of artillery systems it has deployed to Russia’s Kursk region, said Kyrylo Budanov, Ukraine’s military intelligence chief.
Zelensky asks Trump to be on Ukraine’s side and reject Putin
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has urged US president Donald Trump to be on Ukraine’s side as the US attempts to broker a peace deal.
“We want him (Trump) to be on the side of justice, on the side of Ukraine,” Mr Zelensky said in the interview aired last night. “Putin is not afraid of Europe,” he said.
Mr Zelensky added Ukraine cannot recognise Russia’s occupation, but it preferred a diplomatic resolution.
The White House had no immediate comment.
Mr Trump has expressed willingness to speak to Mr Putin about ending the war, a contrast with the administration of Democratic former president Joe Biden, who shunned the Russian leader.
Arpan Rai29 January 2025 07:38
Russia shuts output at petrochemical plant after drone attack
Russian petrochemicals giant Sibur said it has temporarily suspended production today at its plant in the Nizhny Novgorod region due to a Ukrainian drone attack.
The company said debris had fallen onto the plant and caused a fire but there were no casualties. Emergency services were working at the site, it said.
Arpan Rai29 January 2025 06:54
Australian soldier Oscar Jenkins is alive, foreign minister says
Oscar Jenkins, an Australian soldier who was previously feared dead in Russia, is alive and in Russian custody, Australia’s foreign minister Penny Wong has announced.
Mr Jenkins, 32, signed up to fight for Ukraine against Russian forces before he was taken captive. A video showed him with hands bound and being struck by a Russian interrogator earlier this month, sparking fears for his life.
“The Australian government has received confirmation from Russia that Oscar Jenkins is alive and in custody,” Ms Wong said today.
Australia still holds “serious concerns for Mr Jenkins as a prisoner of war,” she said. “We have made clear to Russia in Canberra and in Moscow that Mr Jenkins is a prisoner of war and Russia is obligated to treat him in accordance with international humanitarian law, including humane treatment,” the minister said.
A foreign soldier who trained him said earlier this month that he believed Mr Jenkins had been executed in captivity to make an example of him, according to a report by The Sydney Morning Herald on 14 January.
Arpan Rai29 January 2025 06:21
More than 100 Ukrainian drones hit Russian power, oil facilities
More than a hundred drones hit Russian oil facilities, including a nuclear power plant, in a major Ukrainian attack this morning, Russian officials said.
The Russian defence ministry said that 104 drones were involved in raids across western Russia, 11 of which were destroyed over the Smolensk region.
The Smolensk nuclear power plant, the largest power generating plant in Russia’s northwest, was working normally, RIA state news agency reported, citing the plant’s press service.
Air defence systems destroyed a drone attempting to strike a nuclear power facility in the western region of Smolensk bordering Belarus, governor Vasily Anokhin said on the Telegram app.
In total, Russian air defences destroyed drones over nine regions, nearly half of them over Kursk where Russian forces are fighting to drive out Ukrainian troops that have occupied several villages.
Arpan Rai29 January 2025 06:04
Drone debris falls near metro station in Kyiv, mayor says
Debris from a destroyed Russian drone fell near a metro station in the Darnytskyi district of Kyiv this morning, said mayor Vitali Klitschko.
“All emergency services heading to the site,” Mr Klitschko said on his Telegram channel. Kyiv was under an air raid alert for about half an hour starting at 3.55am GMT, according to data from Ukraine’s air force.
Arpan Rai29 January 2025 05:30
Why Ukraine-Russia peace talks are not as simple as Trump makes out
Tom Watling29 January 2025 05:00
North Korea sends cannons and artillery – designed to attack Seoul – to Ukraine war
North Korea is set to send more than 100 artillery systems to be used against Ukraine’s forces in the war, officials in Kyiv said.
A close ally of Russia, North Korea is about to double the number of artillery systems it has deployed to Russia’s Kursk region, said Kyrylo Budanov, Ukraine’s military intelligence chief.
North Korea has already given at least 120 North Korean-made M1989 Koksans, as well as another 120 of its M1991 multiple-launch rocket systems, the Ukrainian military intelligence official said.
Pyongyang was preparing to send another tranche of at least the same amount, Lt Gen Budanov said, adding that open source analysts have spotted some already on their way to the war.
The 170mm M1989 Koksan howitzers were manufactured by North Korea to attack the South Korean capital in the event of a war. It is among the longest-range artillery systems in the world.
Arpan Rai29 January 2025 04:39
In the latest development of the Russia Ukraine war, Russian President Vladimir Putin has rejected calls for talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, labeling him as ‘illegitimate’. This comes as tensions continue to escalate between the two countries, with Russia’s recent deployment of North Korean cannons adding to the already volatile situation.The decision to refuse talks with Zelensky is a clear signal of Putin’s hardline stance towards Ukraine, as he continues to push for his own agenda in the region. The deployment of North Korean cannons further complicates the situation, raising concerns about the potential for increased violence and instability in the region.
The international community has expressed deep concern over the deteriorating situation in Ukraine, with calls for dialogue and de-escalation growing louder. However, Putin’s rejection of talks with Zelensky and the deployment of North Korean cannons indicate that a peaceful resolution to the conflict may be further out of reach.
As the situation continues to unfold, the world watches anxiously, hoping for a peaceful resolution to the Russia Ukraine war. Stay tuned for more updates on this developing story.
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Ukraine war briefing: Putin refuses direct talks with Zelenskyy | Ukraine
Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Vladimir Putin was “afraid” of negotiations on ending the war after the Russian president ruled out direct talks with his Ukrainian counterpart. “Today, Putin once again confirmed that he is afraid of negotiations, afraid of strong leaders, and does everything possible to prolong the war,” Zelenskyy said. Putin on Tuesday ruled out speaking directly with Zelenskyy, whom he called “illegitimate” because elections have not been held since Russia started the war. Because of the war, Ukraine is under martial law, during which the Ukrainian constitution does not allow elections. Ukraine has warned against it being excluded from any peace talks between Russia and the US, accusing Putin of wanting to “manipulate” Donald Trump, the US president.
Ukrainian drones targeted oil and power facilities in western parts of Russia, officials and media outlets reported on Wednesday. Baza, a Russian social media channel close to Russia’s security services, reported that an oil refinery was on fire at Kstovo in Nizhny Novgorod, east of Moscow. In the western region of Smolensk, which borders Belarus, there was a “massive” drone attack and air defence systems destroyed a drone threatening a nuclear power facility, said the governor, Vasily Anokhin. Dozens more drones targeted the Bryansk region that borders Ukraine, and the Tver region that borders the Moscow region to its south, regional governors said. Flights were halted for safety at the Kazan airport in the Republic of Tatarstan, 830km (516 miles) east of Moscow, officials said.
The US transferred about 90 Patriot air defence interceptors from Israel to Poland this week to then deliver them to Ukraine, Axios reported on Tuesday, citing three sources with knowledge of the operation. “We have seen the reports but have nothing to provide at this time,” a Pentagon spokesperson said in response. A spokesperson for Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office confirmed to Axios that a Patriot system had been returned to US hands, adding: “It is not known to us whether it was delivered to Ukraine.”
Zelenskyy said multiple humanitarian projects in Ukraine had suspended operations due to Donald Trump’ freeze on foreign aid and that Kyiv would replace funding where possible. “Today I instructed government officials to report on those US support programmes that are currently suspended. These are humanitarian programmes. There are many projects. We will determine which of them are critical and need solutions now. We can provide part of this funding through our public finances. We will definitely support the priority items, those that concern Ukrainian children, our veterans, and programmes to protect our infrastructure.”
Donald Trump’s secretary of state, Marco Rubio, and the EU foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, have discussed the Ukraine war in their first phone call since the Trump administration took office. An EU official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: “They agreed on the necessity of maintaining maximum pressure on Moscow to move towards a just and sustainable peace in Ukraine.”
A row over arms procurement has erupted in Ukraine’s government after the defence minister, Rustem Umerov, criticised the system as having failed to deliver results for frontline troops. Umerov sacked a deputy defence minister, Dmytro Klimenkov, and levelled criticism at the Defence Procurement Agency, which was set up to coordinate weapons purchases and is meant to guard against corruption. Umerov said the agency had “inexplicably transformed into an ‘Amazon’”, its purchases were too publicly visible and he was replacing its chief – which the agency denied. On Tuesday, the National Anti-Corruption Bureau of Ukraine said it had opened a probe into Umerov after a public appeal. In a statement on Monday, G7 diplomats in Ukraine urged officials to quickly resolve the dispute, calling for “consistency with good governance principles and Nato recommendations”.
The European Commission on Tuesday proposed further tariffs on additional farm imports from Russia and its ally Belarus. “Once adopted by the council, all agricultural imports from Russia would be the subject of EU tariffs,” a statement said. Currently, 15% of Russian farm goods are not affected by sweeping EU tariffs that came into force last July. The new tariffs would continue to spare Russian agricultural goods and fertiliser transiting to non-EU countries, to ensure that food supplies for elsewhere, notably Africa and Asia, were not affected. In addition to denting Russia’s war coffers, the commission said the proposal aimed to reduce dependencies on imports from Russia and Belarus, particularly of fertilisers, that “make the EU vulnerable to potential coercive actions by Russia and thus present a risk to EU food security”.
As the conflict in Ukraine continues to escalate, Russian President Vladimir Putin has refused to engage in direct talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. This decision comes as tensions between the two countries reach a critical point, with reports of increased military activity in the region.Despite calls for peaceful negotiations, Putin has remained adamant in his stance, insisting that Ukraine must meet certain conditions before any discussions can take place. This refusal to engage in direct talks has raised concerns about the possibility of further escalation and the potential for a full-scale war.
As the situation unfolds, the international community is closely monitoring developments and working towards a peaceful resolution. With both sides unwilling to back down, the future remains uncertain and the risk of conflict looms large.
Stay tuned for more updates on the Ukraine war and the efforts to de-escalate the situation.
Tags:
Ukraine war, Putin, Zelenskyy, Russia-Ukraine conflict, direct talks, international relations, diplomatic relations, Ukraine crisis, political news, world news.
#Ukraine #war #briefing #Putin #refuses #direct #talks #Zelenskyy #UkraineThe War I Finally Won – Hardcover By Bradley, Kimberly Brubaker – VERY GOOD
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Overall, I would highly recommend The War I Finally Won to anyone looking for a moving and beautifully written historical fiction novel. It is a story of resilience, love, and the strength of the human spirit. I give this book a solid rating of VERY GOOD and urge you to pick up a copy for yourself.
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