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Zelensky thanks Denmark for promising Ukraine F-16 jets to fight Russia

 Volodymyr Zelensky greeting Danish members of parliament
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky greets lawmakers after his speech in the Danish parliament in Copenhagen on Monday.
(Mads Claus Rasmussen / Ritzau Scanpix)
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky thanked Danish lawmakers Monday for helping his country resist Russia’s invasion, a day after Denmark and the Netherlands announced that they would provide Kyiv with U.S.-made F-16 warplanes that could be delivered around the end of the year.

Zelensky told the lawmakers that if Russia’s invasion succeeds, other parts of Europe would be at risk from the Kremlin’s military aggression.

“All of Russia’s neighbors are under threat if Ukraine does not prevail,” he said in a speech in Copenhagen before heading to Greece, the fourth European country he is visiting in three days, for talks with the government in Athens.

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Zelensky frequently portrays Ukraine as defending Western values of freedom and democracy against tyranny. He has argued that Ukraine needs to be properly provisioned to fend off Russia’s much bigger military.

Ukraine has been pressing its Western allies for months to give it F-16s. Its armed forces are still using aging Soviet-era combat planes from the 1970s and ‘80s, and its counteroffensive against Russian positions is advancing without air support, which analysts say is a major handicap.

In downtown Kyiv on Monday, people welcomed the news about the F-16s though they also expressed frustration that the decision hadn’t been taken sooner.

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The move is expected to make 166,700 Ukrainians eligible for Temporary Protected Status, up from about 26,000 currently.

“Finally,” said 33-year-old Larysa Shymko, who is from a Russia-occupied area of the southern Kherson region. “I think every Ukrainian has been waiting for this for a long time.”

Yurii Lymar, a 38-year-old lawyer, said Ukraine’s Western allies “could approve such decisions a little faster, because every day in this ... war means lots of Ukrainian people dying.”

Zelensky said on Telegram that Ukraine would get 42 jets. Denmark pledged 19 F-16s, which could be delivered around the end of the year when pilot training lasting four to six months is completed.

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However, getting Ukrainian squadrons battle-ready could take much longer. U.S. Air Force Gen. James Hecker, commander of U.S. air forces in Europe and Africa, said last week that he did not expect the F-16s to be a game-changer for Ukraine. Preparing F-16 squadrons could take “four or five years,” he said.

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While some training has already begun for Ukrainian pilots, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said Sunday that it was only language lessons so far.

Training Ukrainian pilots is just one of the challenges in the anticipated deployment of F-16s. Questions also remain over who will carry out crucial aircraft maintenance, the supply of spare parts, runway maintenance and protective shelters for the planes on the ground, and what weapons the West will supply to arm the fighter jets.

Ukrainian Air Force spokesman Yuriy Ihnat said the F-16s would help Ukraine “change the course of events” in the war.

“Air superiority is the key to success on the ground,” he said in televised remarks.

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Denmark rolled out the red carpet for Zelensky’s trip to Copenhagen. He also met at the Christiansborg Palace, the building housing the Danish parliament, with Denmark’s 83-year-old figurehead monarch, Queen Margrethe, who returned from vacation for the occasion. Afterward, he spoke from the parliament steps to thousands of cheering people who waved Danish and Ukrainian flags in the palace’s courtyard.

The U.S. last week announced its approval for the Netherlands and Denmark to deliver the F-16s. That is needed because the aircraft are made in the United States.

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On Sunday, Zelensky visited the Netherlands and inspected two gray F-16s parked in a hangar at a Dutch base in the southern city of Eindhoven together with Rutte.

He also visited an air base in southern Denmark where Ukrainian pilots will receive training on F-16s.

Rutte didn’t provide a number or time frame for deliveries, saying it depended on how soon Ukrainian crews and infrastructure were ready.

Zelensky started his trip Saturday in Sweden, where he asked Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson for Swedish Gripen fighter jets. Sweden has said that it would allow Ukrainian pilots to test the planes but that it had not made any commitments to hand them over.

Kristersson said Monday that Sweden needed the Gripen planes for its own defense, noting that the country’s bid to join NATO had not been finalized.

“We don’t rule anything out in the future,” he told the TV4 channel. “We will do everything we can to support them also with aircraft. But right now there are no new commitments to provide Swedish aircraft to Ukraine.”

The ruble has tumbled to its lowest value since early in the Ukraine war as Russia ups military spending and Western sanctions weigh on its exports.

On Monday, Russian air defenses jammed a Ukrainian drone west of Moscow and shot down another one on the outskirts of the city, Russia’s Defense Ministry said.

Two people were injured and one of them was hospitalized when drone fragments fell on a private house, Andrei Vorobyov, the governor of the Moscow region, said.

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Such drone attacks have become an almost daily occurrence in Russia in recent weeks.

Also, Russian rail officials said that a relay cabinet used to run train traffic was set ablaze on the outskirts of Moscow, causing delays, according to the state RIA Novosti news agency.

Russia thwarted an attack by 20 Ukrainian drones targeting Moscow-annexed Crimea overnight, according to the Russian Defense Ministry.

Russian authorities have reported multiple similar incidents across the country, some of which have been blamed on acts of sabotage encouraged by Ukrainian security agencies.

In Ukraine, at least four civilians were killed and 25 others wounded by the latest Russian attacks, according to Zelensky’s office.

The dead included a 71-year-old man killed by Russian shelling in the northeastern Kharkiv region, near the border with Russia.

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