Ukraine must be supported for as long as it takes, UK's Cleverly to tell UN

Foreign Secretary will tell Security Council that international support will never be 'time-limited'

British Foreign Secretary James Cleverly walks outside Downing Street in London. Reuters
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Foreign Secretary James Cleverly will use an address at the UN Security Council on Friday to call for Ukraine’s allies to support the country for “as long as it takes”.

The UN meeting comes a year after Russia first invaded Ukraine, with the anniversary due to be marked in the UK and countries around the world.

Mr Cleverly is expected to use his speech at a special session of the Security Council to stress the need to send a “clear message” that Ukraine will be backed for as long as is required, with the conflict showing no sign of ending soon.

“One year into this terrible war, let us send this clear message: our support for Ukraine is not, and will never be, time-limited,” he is expected to say.

“We will keep the promises we made to the UN Charter and the Ukrainian people, and will give the Ukrainians all the help they need for as long as it takes until Ukraine prevails.”

Mr Cleverly is set to meet his Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba, as well as UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres, while in New York.

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Over the past year, the UK has been among the most vocal supporters of Ukraine’s efforts to push back the Kremlin’s troops, with Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announcing earlier this year that Britain would be the first country to supply tanks to its armed forces.

Mr Sunak said 14 Challenger 2 tanks will be supplied, with the war machines set to arrive in Eastern Europe next month.

Ukraine has over the last 12 months benefited from a broad coalition of support led by the US, UK and a host of European states amid international condemnation of Russia’s invasion.

The Security Council meeting will follow a session of the UN General Assembly on Thursday, at which the conflict in Ukraine took centre stage.

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Yet there are fears that as winter turns to spring, and with Russian President Vladimir Putin showing no sign of relenting, the war could drag on for at least another year.

“When Putin invaded Ukraine on February 24 2022, he expected his brutal assault to succeed and international support to crumble within weeks. He has been proven gravely wrong,” Mr Cleverly will say.

“Twelve months on, the international community remains resolute that Ukraine will win the war, end Russia’s threat to Ukraine’s sovereignty and forge a sustainable peace.

“Ukraine is turning the tide and Putin is losing. One year into this terrible war, our support will continue for as long as it takes.”

Updated: February 24, 2023, 12:01 AM