- by foxnews
- 28 Nov 2024
The Ukrainian first lady, Olena Zelenska, appealed to US lawmakers on Tuesday to provide more help to her country as it struggles against a five-month-long Russian invasion she called "Russia's Hunger Games", saying US weapons could help assure a "joint great victory".
"We remain completely broken when our world is destroyed by war. Tens of thousands of such worlds have been destroyed in Ukraine," she said, through a translator, in an emotional 15-minute speech to members of the House and Senate.
The wife of the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, showed videos of children she said had been wounded or killed, including a three-year-old boy now learning to use prosthetic limbs.
"How many children like him are there in Ukraine? How many families like this may still be destroyed by war? These are Russia's Hunger Games," she said, in reference to a series of novels and movies in which people hunt one another.
"I am asking for weapons, weapons that would not be used to wage a war on somebody else's land, but to protect one's home and the right to wake up alive in that home.
"The answer is right here in Washington DC. Help us to stop this terror against Ukrainians and this will be our joint great victory in the name of life, freedom and the pursuit of happiness."
The US has provided $8bn in security assistance to Ukraine since the war began, including $2.2bn in the last month, the Biden administration says.
Members of Congress responded warmly on Wednesday and said they were ready to authorize more.
"They're not asking for US soldiers," the Republican South Carolina senator Lindsey Graham said after the speech. "They are asking for US weapons. I think now's the time to put together another aid package to go into 2023 with a supply of advanced weapons and economic assistance to stay in the fight.
Richard Blumenthal, a Democratic senator from Connecticut, said: "What we saw here was human tragedy right before our eyes, innocent people murdered. Why? Because they are Ukrainians. That's genocide. That's what happened in world war two. And that needs to be stopped."
Zelenska said: "The war is not over. The terror continues, and I appeal to all of you, on behalf of those who were killed, on behalf of those people who lost their arms and legs, on behalf of those who are still alive and well and those who wait for their families to come back from the front.
Zelenskiy said he expected "significant results" from his wife's meetings in Washington. She met on Tuesday at the White House with Joe Biden and the US first lady, Jill Biden.
Russia calls its action in Ukraine a "special military operation" to ensure its own security. Zelenska concluded her remarks by describing the Russian invasion as terrorism, and linking it to America's experiences of such attacks.
"America unfortunately knows from its own experience what terrorist attacks are and has always sought to defeat terrorism," she said.
"Help us to stop this terror against Ukrainians, and this will be our joint great victory in the name of life, freedom and the pursuit of happiness of every person, every family.
"This is what I'm asking for and what my husband is asking for, not as a presidential couple but as parents and children of their parents. Because we want every father and every mother to be able to tell their child, go to sleep peacefully, there will be no more airstrikes, no more missile strikes. Is this too much to wish for?"
Lawmakers in the room applauded as she finished her speech.
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