‘Ukraine is alive and kicking’: Zelenskyy tells US Congress ‘we defeated Russia in the battle for the minds of the world’

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Ukraine is “alive and kicking” and “will never surrender,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said in a speech to the US Congress.

Mr Zelenskyy was greeted with a lengthy standing ovation as he entered the chamber to deliver what he billed as his “speech to Americans”.

“Against all doom and gloom scenarios, Ukraine did not fall. Ukraine is alive and kicking,” he said.

“We defeated Russia in the battle for the minds of the world.”

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Zelenskyy receives standing ovation

He pledged there would be “no compromises” in trying to bring an end to the war and vowed that Ukraine “will never surrender”.

Mr Zelenskyy said aid to Ukraine is “not charity” but an investment in global security and democracy.

He said the conflict showed how democracy worldwide was being tested and its outcome would shape the world for generations.

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“This struggle will define in what world our children and grandchildren will live and then their children and grandchildren,” he said.

He then presented the US Congress with a flag given to him by the defenders of the frontline city of Bakhmut, which he visited on Tuesday.

Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of Calif., right, react as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy presents lawmakers with a Ukrainian flag autographed by front-line troops in Bakhmut, in Ukraine's contested Donetsk province, as he addresses a joint meeting of Congress on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Dec. 21, 2022. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
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US Vice President Kamala Harris and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi with a Ukraine flag presented by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Pic: AP

House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi gifted Mr Zelenskyy a folded and framed American flag that had flown over the Capitol earlier in the day.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy holds an American flag that was gifted to him by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Pic: AP/J. Scott Applewhite
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President Zelenskyy holds an American flag after it was gifted to him by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. Pic: AP

Earlier, President Joe Biden said the US will continue to back Ukraine in its fight against Russia for “as long as it takes”.

Outlining further military support in a news conference at the White House, and stood at a podium next to Mr Zelenskyy, he paid tribute to Ukrainians’ “steel backbone, love of country and unbreakable determination to choose their own path”.

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$1.85bn support package for Ukraine

And he said: “American people are prepared to have us stand up to bullies, stand up for freedom. That’s who we are.”

Mr Biden said that Ukraine has “defied Russia’s expectations at every turn” and he went on: “The American people are with you every step of the way and we will stay with you… for as long as it takes.”

“Together we will keep the flame of liberty burning bright,” he added.

Mr Zelenskyy thanked the US and the American people for their support, in particular the Patriot surface-to-air missile defence system, saying that “every dollar of this investment for the US is going to be strengthening global security”.

“This is the only way that we can deprive the terrorist state of its main instrument of terror – the possibility to hit our cities, our energy,” Mr Zelenskyy said.

Mr Biden said the Patriot system is “a defensive system, it’s not escalatory, it’s defensive”.

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Zelenskyy and Biden laugh together

The US president and Secretary of State Antony Blinken had earlier said the United States would provide $1.85bn (£1.53bn) in additional military assistance for Ukraine, which includes a transfer of the Patriot system.

The Ukrainian president said during the conference that his country’s defence capabilities will be strengthened in the coming months but would not give further details, and he said Russia needs to be held accountable for its actions.

Mr Zelenskyy, on his first known trip outside his country since Russia invaded in February, was asked by a reporter what was his message to the American people. He replied: “My message: I wish you peace.

“To be together with us, because we really fight for our common victory against this tyranny… and we will win. And I really want to win together. Not want, sorry… I’m sure.”

Mr Zelenskyy also said the war would end once Ukraine’s sovereignty, freedom and territorial integrity were restored, as well as the “payback for all the damages inflicted by Russian aggression”.

Earlier, during a fireside welcome in the White House, Mr Zelenskyy gave Mr Biden a medal that had originally been awarded to a Ukrainian military captain for bravery. The captain said he wanted the US president to get it for his support of Ukraine.

Receiving the medal, Mr Biden said: “Oh God love you… undeserved but much appreciated.”

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President Zelenskyy gave Mr Biden a medal in the Oval Office

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The highly sensitive trip is taking place after 10 months of a brutal war that has seen tens of thousands of casualties on both sides and devastation for Ukrainian civilians.

Shortly after arriving in the US, Mr Zelenskyy posted on his Telegram account about his determination to win the war with Russia, writing: “Next year, we must return the Ukrainian flag and freedom to our entire land, to all our people.”

The United States has so far sent around $50bn (£41bn) in assistance to the Kyiv government as it defends itself against an invasion by Russia that began 10 months ago.

Former UK ambassador to Ukraine Leigh Turner told Sky News that Mr Zelenskyy’s primary goal is to combat fatigue from supporting countries for what could be a “long and grinding war”.

He said: “At the beginning, everybody was supporting Ukraine, every Western government and the people of Britain and the US were strongly supporting Ukraine, from providing arms and taking in refugees into their homes.

“Ten months later winter is drawing on, there are a lot of other crises… and even some US lawmakers mostly from the Republican Party have been voting against providing more aid to Ukraine.”

President Biden said he was “not at all worried” about holding together an international coalition supporting Ukraine and said he had never seen the NATO alliance or the European Union more united.

“I see no sign of there being any change. We all know what’s at stake here,” he said.

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