
Joly promises Ukraine financial help as it stares down threat of Russian invasion
CBC
Canada's foreign minister landed in Kyiv Monday promising more economic assistance to help keep the Ukrainian government afloat in the face of uncertainty caused by the threat of a Russian invasion.
Mélanie Joly met yesterday with Ukraine's Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal. She said her visit was meant to show Canada's unwavering solidarity in the ongoing crisis.
In a later interview with Radio Canada, Joly said the federal government is still firmly committed to seeing Ukraine join NATO — despite Russia's insistence that extending membership in the western military alliance to Ukraine would cross one of its so-called red lines.
"I [will] tell them that, first of all, Canada's position has not changed. We believe that Ukraine should be able to join NATO," Joly said in French when asked what her message to officials in Kyiv would be over the next two days.
"At the same time, there must be democratic reforms taking place here, reforms of the judicial system taking place here in Ukraine."
The German and French foreign ministers are also meeting with the government in Kyiv this week. Germany's Annalena Baerbock and France's Jean-Yves Le Drian are seeking to revive the four-nation (Germany, Russia, Ukraine and France) "Normandy format" talks.
Those negotiations have so far failed to produce a peaceful resolution to the conflict in eastern Ukraine, where Russian-backed proxies have been fighting Ukrainian forces for seven years.
The Normandy format was set up to support implementation of the 2015 Minsk agreements brokered by Germany and France. Those agreements were supposed to end Russia's proxy separatist war in Ukraine's Donbas region, which erupted after Moscow annexed the Crimea from Ukraine in 2014.
A bipartisan delegation of U.S. senators also arrived in Ukraine on Monday to show support.
Moscow has positioned more than 100,000 troops on three sides of Ukraine and has kept them at combat-ready status — all while denying it's planning an invasion.
The government of Russian President Vladimir Putin has demanded that NATO end its eastward expansion and deny membership in the alliance to both Ukraine and Georgia, another former Soviet-era republic. It also insisted that western military deployments in eastern Europe be rolled back to 1997 levels.
The United States and NATO have rejected those demands but say they're willing to discuss other confidence-building measures, including a renewed treaty limiting missile deployments in Europe.
A massive cyber attack — believed to have been launched from Russia's ally Belarus — struck Ukrainian government computers on Friday with a message warning Ukrainians to "be afraid and expect the worst."
The ongoing crisis has put a major strain on Ukraine's finances.

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