KYIV – US envoys to the Ukrainian War visited injured Ukrainian soldiers on Friday and thanked them for their sacrifices. .
Previously serving as the national security adviser to the National Security Council's Vice President and Chief of State Staff in the first Trump administration, Kellogg, has been involved in nearly three years of war at Ilpin Military Hospital just outside the country. I met with veterans. Kiev is suffering from life-changing injuries protecting Ukraine from the Russian President of Ukraine.
“The biggest reason I came here is that President Trump said he wanted to stop the murder and you say you're going to say what the murder looks like, how death is. “Who have to see what you can see and see the young man and the woman who were injured in the battle,” Kellogg told the Post.
“As a soldier, you owe them that respect,” he added. “As a leader, you owe that respect.”
Kellogg, 80, has been joined by the US ambassador from Ukrainian Bridget Brink, a medical facility. There, Ukrainian troops with amputations of the legs and arms were treated and equipped with prosthetics.
Visit, Kellogg Explained in x post “Emotional” was held against the backdrop of tense negotiations between the Trump administration and Ukrainian officials over access to mineral rights worth hundreds of millions of dollars. The government of Volodymyr Zelensky considers it a shakedown.
He stopped at a military hospital in Kellogg, during which he asked questions, had individual discussions with wounded soldiers, invaded the United States into Zelensky, bringing Ukrainian officials closer to agreeing to the rare earth mineral trade. The familiar source told the Post.
One soldier named Andrii met by Kellogg, who lost both legs, eyes and hearing, and suffered traumatic brain damage.
Andri lived in Spain for 17 years, but left his wife and three children there to fight the Kremlin forces.
In one of the most powerful exchanges, a Ukrainian soldier who said his name was “Dennis,” asked Trump administration officials and Vietnam War veterans if they could ask questions.
“He has earned that right,” replied Kellogg.
Dennis then said, “In your opinion, can we trust Russia? What are they going to negotiate?”
The retired general explained throughout history that “all wars end through negotiations.”
“The ultimate victory on the battlefield ends in diplomacy, and the world today is the same,” he continued.
“Do you think the better question is to trust people you are with and to make sure you are with you? It's like you ask a deeper question – you can do it with us Is it the same? And the answer is, yes, we are,” Kellogg told the soldiers.
“Soldier's diplomacy is messy at times, but what a soldier does is give him time for politicians and diplomats to reach a conclusion. That's what I make a comment that Ukraine owes you. “The world owes you,” he added, “Because you basically sacrifice to allow the diplomat to find the… good conclusions – the conclusions you fought,” he added. “We owe it to you in that position. We need to make sure we finish this right.”
“That's the reason for your sacrifice [matters.] You gave us time to do the right thing [deal]Kellogg said.
Dennis then argued that Ukraine must continue to have a “strong army” and feared after negotiations that “five years, a maximum of ten years of peace, and then back to the next stage of war.” Ta.
Kellogg replied, “Well, I don't think there will be another war.”
“We want that,” Dennis told the former general.
“Me too,” replied Kellogg.





