Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha has called on NATO to extend a formal invitation for Kyiv to join the alliance at its upcoming meeting in Brussels.
In a letter seen by Reuters, Sybiha argued that such a step would demonstrate Russia’s inability to prevent Ukraine’s NATO membership, a key goal of its 2022 invasion.
Ukraine acknowledges it cannot join NATO while at war but sees an invitation as a symbolic move to deter Russian aggression and reinforce Kyiv’s "victory plan," outlined by President Volodymyr Zelenskiy.
Zelenskiy proposed granting NATO membership to the part of Ukraine under Kyiv’s control, with the invitation applying to the country's internationally recognised borders.
However, NATO diplomats confirm a lack of consensus among its 32 member states for such a move. While NATO affirms Ukraine's "irreversible" path to membership, no formal timeline or invitation has been set, reflecting divisions among allies on how to proceed amid the ongoing conflict.
US President-elect Donald Trump said on Sunday that Russia's abandonment of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad led to his downfall, adding Moscow never should have protected him in the first place and then lost interest because of a war in Ukraine that never should have started.
Syrian rebels declared President Bashar al-Assad ousted after seizing control of Damascus on Sunday, forcing him to flee and ending his family's decades of rule after more than 13 years of civil war in a seismic moment for the Middle East.
South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol survived an impeachment vote in the opposition-led parliament on Saturday that was prompted by his short-lived attempt to impose martial law this week, after members of his party boycotted the session.
Syrian rebels said they seized control of the southern city of Daraa on Saturday, the birthplace of a 2011 uprising against President Bashar al-Assad and the fourth city his forces have lost in a week.
US President-elect Donald Trump returns to the world stage on Saturday to join leaders for the reopening of the Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris, still a private citizen but already preparing to tackle a host of international crises.
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