"The evidence of Russia’s war crimes is well-documented," said Ambassador Wood. "Nevertheless, Ukraine continues to develop a formula for a just and durable peace that is in line with the principles of the UN Charter.”
The United States is “deeply troubled by the continued arrests of members of Azerbaijani civil society,” said State Department Spokesperson Matthew Miller.
“Each launch informs the DPRK of its capability gaps and allows Pyongyang to further advance its weapons programs,” said Ambassador Wood.
Speaking in Prague at the meeting of NATO foreign ministers, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said, “This is a critical moment for transatlantic security.”
“Against fierce headwinds, we have seen young people all over the world mobilize to respond to these challenges, and become the architects of their futures,” said Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield.
"The ruling party’s actions and anti-Western rhetoric threaten Georgia’s democratic trajectory, future economic security, EU membership, and also put the U.S-Georgia relationship at risk,” said Spokesperson Miller.
"Since last December, Russian forces have used DPRK-supplied ballistic missiles to strike Ukraine nearly a dozen times, firing upwards of 40 DPRK ballistic missiles," said Ambassador Kelley.
"Until Russia ceases its attacks and withdraws from Ukraine, the United States will remain committed to providing Ukraine what it needs to defend itself," said USUN Ambassador Wood.
The United States has “a single goal: to enable Ukraine not only to win the war, but … to win the future,” said Deputy Administrator Coleman.
“The spirit of Ukrainians cannot be destroyed by a bomb or buried in a mass grave. It cannot be bought with a bribe or repressed with a threat,” said Secretary Blinken. “That’s why Ukraine will succeed.”
A key U.S. cyberspace priority “is the effort to build digital solidarity – working together to offer mutual assistance to the victims of malicious cyber activity and other digital harms,” wrote Secretary Blinken.
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