G-7 vows to support Ukraine for as long as it takes

KYIV Leaders of the Group of Seven (G-7) nations on Tuesday pledged to help Ukraine for as long as it takes, as they vowed to hold Russian President Vladimir Putin to account for raining down cruise missiles across Ukraine, killing at least 19 people.

We will continue to provide financial, humanitarian, military, diplomatic and legal support and will stand firmly with Ukraine for as long as it takes, the G-7 leaders said in a joint statement.

They said they were undeterred and steadfast in this commitment.

Addressing Russias intense aerial assaults on cities in Ukraine, including the capital Kyiv, they said they condemn these attacks in the strongest possible terms and recall that indiscriminate attacks on innocent civilian populations constitute a war crime.

We will hold President Putin and those responsible to account, they said.

Joining them in a virtual meeting, Mr Zelensky asked the G-7 leaders to urgently supply his forces with air defence weapons to neutralise the threat Russia poses.

He also sought tough, new sanctions against Russia, and again ruled out talks with Mr Putin.

When Ukraine receives a sufficient quantity of modern and effective air defence systems, the key element of Russias terror rocket strikes will cease to work, he said, thanking German Chancellor Olaf Scholz for speeding up delivery of the Iris-T air defence system and United States President Joe Biden for his promise to deliver more advanced air defence systems.

Mr Dmitry Peskov, a Kremlin spokesman, said on Tuesday that deploying these weapons systems will only extend the conflict and inflict more pain for Ukraine, and will not change Moscows goals in its “special military operation” in Ukraine.

Mr Zelensky likewise asked the G-7 to support an international mission to the Ukraine-Belarus border.

Belarus this week announced its troops would be deployed with Russian forces near Ukraine, signalling a potential further escalation of the war.

Ukraine has no plans to attack Belarus, said Mr Zelensky, but it wants to make sure there is no threat from its northern neighbour.

His appeal to the leaders of the worlds most developed nations came just hours after Russia once again launched long-range air strikes on Tuesday, mostly targeting Ukraines energy infrastructure. More On This Topic G-7 condemns Russia's 'escalatory steps', plans new sanctions In Pictures: Multiple Russian missiles strike Kyiv Ukrainians took shelter underground after air raid sirens blared nationwide, and the countrys Emergency Ministry warned of a high probability of rocket attacks throughout the day.

By early afternoon, the intensity of the missile strikes did not appear to be as severe as on Monday.

Ukraine claimed to have shot down several of the missiles, but more than 300 of its localities were still without power.

There were also reports on Tuesday of Kyivs forces striking a substation in the southern region of the Belgorod on the border with Ukraine, leaving some 2,000 people without electricity.

Mass retaliatory strikes hit Ukraine nationwide on Monday, after Moscow blamed Kyiv for a blast on a bridge connecting Russia to Crimea, a peninsula Moscow annexed from Ukraine in 2014. Remote video URL Ukraine said Russian forces fired more than 80 missiles at its cities, damaging energy facilities in particular. Parks, tourist sites and busy rush-hour streets were also hit.

Kyiv and its allies condemned Mondays attacks.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said the main targets on Tuesday were energy facilities.

Theyve hit many yesterday, and they hit the same and new ones today. These are war crimes planned well in advance and aimed at creating unbearable conditions for civilians Russias deliberate strategy since months, he wrote on Twitter. More On This Topic Russia warns it will respond to greater Western aid to Ukraine China expresses concern on Ukraine after Russian missile strikes The governor of the southern town of Mykolayiv said Russia seemed to have changed tactics.

They launch rockets more than once, so that our people can wait and our air defence can work. But, at intervals, they launch significantly fewer rockets and keep people in shelters. What is this if not terror? he said on national television.

In Zaporizhzhia, Ukraines sixth-largest city, apartment blocks have been struck overnight at least three times in the past week, killing civilians while they slept.

In an overnight video address from the scene of one of the attacks in Kyiv, Mr Zelensky promised that Ukraine would keep fighting.

We will do everything to strengthen our armed forces. We will make the battlefield more painful for the enemy, he said. REUTERS, NYTIMES More On This Topic Defiant Ukraine reopens eastern rail link despite missiles Top diplomat says Russia open to talks with West, awaiting serious proposal