Summary

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky revealed that 43,000 Ukrainian soldiers have died and 370,000 have been injured since Russia’s invasion began, marking a rare admission of the conflict’s toll.

He also claimed 198,000 Russian soldiers have been killed, though casualty figures from both sides remain unverified.

The update comes amid heightened fighting, with Russia suffering record monthly casualties in November.

Talks with French President Macron and U.S. Trump focused on a potential peace deal, with Zelensky emphasizing the need for international guarantees to secure lasting peace against Russian aggression.

  • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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    10 days ago

    the last two years have made it abundantly clear that in the battle of good, evil, and indifference, the indifferent are by far the largest faction. in many ways, they also do not truly differentiate themselves from the forces of evil given that they will stand idly by allowing the forces of evil to torture the forces of good. they’ll provide aid to either side and justify it as good, when the only real benefit is monetary in value.

    i find it so telling that america has drug its feet sending Ukraine outdated aircraft we no longer use, and immediately sent israel our very most advanced weapons systems. i find it so telling that aiding a genocide against brown people is higher priority than preventing a genocide against white people. i find it so telling that what morally should have been a blowout victory of an election for the lesser of two evils was a narrow victory for the greater of two evils with most of us sitting at home idly watching.

    it makes me deeply sad for my Ukrainian friends that the most aid we have to offer is thoughts and prayers. i am hurt to have to welcome them, as a bisexual survivor of a mass shooting enacted as an incel terrorist attack, to my daily pain of nothing ever getting done. but there is one thing that above all else i refuse to do: give in to indifference. globally, the noose is tightening around our collective necks. our choices from here are to conduct ourselves like if we don’t do everything in our power to win our freedom from this terror the world will end, or to allow the world to end.

    these, put simply, are my beliefs. i believe we can all be free. i believe that saving the world from this collapse and building something new is possible and necessary. i believe the love i have for my sisters, cousins, and brothers internationally is real and worth acting on. i believe that an international uprising of hope with the aim of everlasting peace is possible, and it will start in our homes. love for someone across the world can be expressed by giving someone here some soup.

    edit: i accidentally undercut my message by flipping america’s priorities when it comes to genocide

    • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Absolutely, I can understand indifference when it’s hard to tell who is the evil part. But in the case of the Russian invasion of Ukraine there is zero doubt for anyone with a shred of humanity left, who is the evil part.
      Ukraine did NOTHING to deserve this, on the contrary they gave up their nukes in hopes they could live in peace!!!
      The only lesson any Russian state can take from this when the Russian federation collapses is to under NO CIRCUMSTANCES give up your nukes!