Zelenskyy pressures US and Europe for more 'air defense' assistance amid ongoing war with Russia
European security questions expose tensions between alliance obligations and American interests.
Zelenskyy is doing what he's done for three years now: standing in front of a camera and asking for more. More missiles, more air defense, more of everything except a plan for how this war actually ends. At some point the ask itself stops being news.
New Republican Times Editorial Board

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy urges the U.S. and Europe to provide more missiles to help Ukraine amid the ongoing war with Russia.
Original source:
Read at Fox NewsHow We See It
New Republican Times Editorial Board
Zelenskyy is doing what he's done for three years now: standing in front of a camera and asking for more. More missiles, more air defense, more of everything except a plan for how this war actually ends. At some point the ask itself stops being news.
Nobody's pretending Russian strikes on Ukrainian cities are anything but brutal. But American patience isn't infinite, and neither is the taxpayer money that's been flowing into this conflict with no clear off-ramp. Every few months brings another urgent appeal, another round of headlines, another expectation that Washington and Brussels just keep writing checks because saying no feels unthinkable.
At some point somebody in Kyiv has to answer a harder question than "what do you need." What does winning even look like, and how much more are Ukraine's backers supposed to spend finding out? Openended requests without an endgame aren't a strategy. They're a habit.
We're not against helping an ally. We're against writing blank checks for a war nobody in charge seems interested in actually finishing.
Commentary written with AI assistance by the New Republican Times Editorial Board.

