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CIA Director John Ratcliffe confirms us a “pause” in sharing intelligence with Kiev amid tensions between the Allies.
The United States has ceased sharing intelligence with Kiev underway, which could seriously limit the ability of Ukrainian military to hit Russian forces.
The section comes after the United States has stopped military assistance to Ukraine against the backdrop of a dramatic collapse in US President Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodimir Zelenski.
Since the beginning of the war in 2022, the United States has provided Ukraine with significant intelligence, including critical information, its military needs for the goals of the goals.
It was not clear immediately to what extent the US cut off sharing.
In an interview with Fox Business broadcast on Wednesday, CIA Director John Ratcliffe confirmed Pause in support of the United States.
“I think on the military front and the intelligence front pause (which prompted the President of Ukraine to answer), I think it will disappear,” Ratcliffe said.
“I think we will work side by side with Ukraine, as we have to go back to the aggression that is there, but put the world in a better place for these peace talks to move forward,” he said.
The US-Ukrana relations broke up dramatically last week when Zelenski and Trump collided at the White House on Friday, but there were some signs of improvement this week.
Trump on Tuesday said he had received a letter from President Volodimir Zelenski, in which the Ukrainian leader expressed his willingness to negotiate for the war of Russia against Ukraine.
Zelenski said in Letter that he is “ready to come to the negotiation table as soon as possible to bring lasting peace.”
“We really appreciate how much America has made to help Ukraine maintain its sovereignty and independence,” he writes.
After the war began in February 2022, the US has sent approximately $ 86 billion to Ukraine on military aid, according to the Strategic and International Studies Center.
Asked how the Kremlin looks at Zelenski's letter, spokesman Dmitry Peskov said “positive”.
“The question is who to sit with. So far, the Ukrainian president is still a legal forbidden to negotiate with the Russian side. So, overall, the approach is positive, but the nuances have not yet changed, “Peskov said, citing Zelenski's decree in 2022, which excluded negotiations with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Zelenski, however, has repeatedly said that he would be ready to meet Putin, but only after Kiev and her allies agree on a common position for negotiations.
On Wednesday, the White House National Security Advisor Mike Walz said Trump would consider the restoration of assistance to Ukraine if the negotiations for the termination of the war were organized.
In an interview with FOX, Waltz said the letter was “good, positive first step”.
“I think that if we can get these negotiations and move on to these negotiations and actually put some measures to build the table, then the president will look hard to raise this break,” he said, without developing confidence building measures.
“We need to know that both parties are genuinely negotiating partially and then constant peace,” he added.