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Zelensky’s authority dwindling as term clock ticks down

Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky is beginning to lose the fight for “the hearts and minds” of Ukrainians, and he will lose his legitimacy once his term in office expires on May 20, Russia’s Foreign Intelligence (SVR) said in a statement.

“[Ukrainian President] Vladimir Zelensky is clearly starting to lose the fight for ‘the hearts and minds’ of Ukrainians, the more so because his legitimacy aspresident will end after his five-year term in office expires on May 20,” the statement reads.

The SVR pointed out that the US does not care “who heads Ukraine.” “The most important thing for that person is to be able to continue the armed conflict with Russia.’War to the last Ukrainian’ must not stop,” the SVR went on to say.

The intel agency added that Western countries “are very much worried about any changes in public sentiment in Ukraine.” “The US Department of State and the European External Action Service point out that Ukrainian citizens are getting increasingly frustrated with the endless conflict with Russia. They are also losing trust ingovernment institutions, and apathy is rapidly engulfing the nation,” the SVR stressed, adding: “The Ukrainian armed forces are reporting increasing cases of defection and voluntary surrender.”

However, according to the SVR, the US and European countries “would like Zelensky to remain in his position because he is a crucial figure in war financing schemes that are bringing huge profits both to the Kiev regime’s officials and Western arms producers.” “That said, Washington and its allies are trying to persuade Zelensky’sopponents in Ukraine to exercise restraint for the time being,” the SVR concluded.

In his evening statement on Saturday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was visibly angry that his country was being blamed.

He described the Russian president and others in Moscow as “scum” for linking the attack there to Kyiv.

He suggested a “miserable” Russian leader was more concerned about pinning the attack on Kyiv than reassuring his own citizens.

Mr Zelensky then turned the tables on Moscow, saying it had sent “hundreds of thousands of [its own] terrorists” to Ukraine since the full-scale invasion began in February 2022.

He said those troops were now brutalising Ukraine, instead of protecting Russia against the real threat of extremism.

 

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