On First International Trip, UK’s Truss Pledges Ukraine Support

British Prime Minister Liz Truss walks through the United Nations headquarters in New York City on September 20, 2022. (AFP)
British Prime Minister Liz Truss walks through the United Nations headquarters in New York City on September 20, 2022. (AFP)
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On First International Trip, UK’s Truss Pledges Ukraine Support

British Prime Minister Liz Truss walks through the United Nations headquarters in New York City on September 20, 2022. (AFP)
British Prime Minister Liz Truss walks through the United Nations headquarters in New York City on September 20, 2022. (AFP)

Britain's Liz Truss will use her first international trip as prime minister to promise billions of pounds of more support for Ukraine next year, her office said on Tuesday ahead of Truss' speech at the United Nations this week.

In addition to addressing the UN on Wednesday, Truss hopes the trip to New York will reinvigorate the so-called special relationship with the United States after ties soured over post-Brexit trade.

Truss will pledge at the UN summit to meet or exceed in 2023 the 2.3 billion pounds ($2.6 billion) of military aid spent on Ukraine in 2022, doubling down on her support for Kyiv after Russia's invasion. She will also vow to help end Europe's dependence on Moscow for energy.

Truss departed just hours after the funeral of Queen Elizabeth, is the first event in a busy return of British politics, all but put on hold during a period of national mourning for the late monarch.

It marks the start of a packed week for Britain's new prime minister, when her government is expected to set out a new energy support package for businesses, a plan to help the National Health Service and much-promised tax cuts.

In New York, where Truss will meet Biden on Wednesday, the British leader will again pledge her support for Ukraine, which she says has managed to push back Russian forces with the help of Western military aid.

"We cannot see Russia succeed, but we also make need to make sure we're more energy independent, and we're less dependent on those authoritarian regimes," Truss told the BBC in an interview on Tuesday.

"It's about economic growth, but it's also about economic security."

Britain said it was the second-largest military donor to Ukraine, and that support next year would be determined by the Ukrainian army's needs, although it is expected to include equipment such as rocket artillery systems.

David Lammy, foreign policy chief for the main opposition Labour Party, said Truss must "bring the UK back in from the cold and begin rebuilding our country's diplomatic influence."

Special relationship

Ties between the UK and the United States have been tested in recent years, particularly over Brexit and Truss' introduction of legislation to unilaterally change a post-Brexit trade agreement with Northern Ireland.

Truss told reporters accompanying her on the plane to New York that she did not expect trade deal talks with the United States to start in the short to medium term.

Britain had viewed a trade deal with the United States as one of the biggest prizes of leaving the European Union but hopes of a quick agreement were dashed when the Biden administration made clear it was not a priority.

She is also taking a different approach on the economy than Biden, pledging tax cuts including for corporations, and shrugging off concern that policies to boost growth might widen inequality and hurt her popularity.

That divide was made clear on Tuesday when Biden publicly rejected the notion that tax cuts for the rich can benefit everyone, just as Truss was extolling the virtues of such policies.

"I am sick and tired of trickle-down economics," he said in a tweet. "It has never worked."



Father and Son Rescued after Four Days Buried Under Rubble of Venezuela's Earthquakes

Relief workers carry a survivor rescued from a building that collapsed in the earthquakes that struck La Guaira, Venezuela. (AFP) 
Relief workers carry a survivor rescued from a building that collapsed in the earthquakes that struck La Guaira, Venezuela. (AFP) 
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Father and Son Rescued after Four Days Buried Under Rubble of Venezuela's Earthquakes

Relief workers carry a survivor rescued from a building that collapsed in the earthquakes that struck La Guaira, Venezuela. (AFP) 
Relief workers carry a survivor rescued from a building that collapsed in the earthquakes that struck La Guaira, Venezuela. (AFP) 

A father and his son were pulled out alive from the rubble of a collapsed building on Sunday, four days after the devastating earthquakes that struck Venezuela.

It was a ‌scene that gave hope to the French and US rescue workers active in the area as they race against the clock to find more survivors.

Rescue workers carried the pair, visibly weakened and both wearing masks, on improvised fabric stretchers through debris-strewn streets to a waiting ambulance, as a crowd gathered around the emergency vehicles ⁠in La Guaira.

The coastal state was hardest hit by the earthquakes on Wednesday that left at least 1,450 dead and thousands missing.

Their rescue came after 12 hours of painstaking efforts by teams that combed through the ruins using specialized search cameras, carefully working through unstable rubble to reach the trapped victims.

“They are extremely weak, as any patient trapped under rubble for four days would be, so we are doing everything possible to rehydrate them and administer various medications during the extraction process, which ‌is ⁠moving very slowly,” said a member of the French Civil Security.

Before extracting the family members, rescuers prepared intravenous drips and cleared debris. Others remained beside the rubble searching for signs of life and communicating with their colleagues among ⁠the remains.

At least 33 people were rescued over the weekend, though tens of thousands remain missing, heightening fears that time is running out to find survivors.

According to ⁠specialists, after 72 hours following an earthquake, the odds of finding victims alive beneath the rubble drop dramatically.


Zelensky Proposes National Pantheon for Ukraine's Heroes

President Volodymyr Zelensky laying flowers at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Kyiv (dpa) 
President Volodymyr Zelensky laying flowers at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Kyiv (dpa) 
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Zelensky Proposes National Pantheon for Ukraine's Heroes

President Volodymyr Zelensky laying flowers at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Kyiv (dpa) 
President Volodymyr Zelensky laying flowers at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Kyiv (dpa) 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has submitted a bill to parliament to establish a national pantheon honoring the country's heroes.

“Today, I submitted to parliament a law on the Ukrainian National Pantheon,” Zelensky said on Sunday in an address marking Constitution Day, according to dpa.

“The names of all the heroes who, across different centuries and eras, fought for Ukraine and inspired Ukraine will be brought together and forever inscribed in our history,” the president said.

“Nobody will ever again dictate to Ukrainians which heroes they should honor, which holidays they should observe or which history they should learn,” added Kyrylo Budanov, the head of Zelensky's presidential office.

“Our ancestors fought for centuries for this right to free self-determination and national independence, and that is exactly what our soldiers are shedding their blood for today,” Budanov said.

The reference to self-determination was also seen as a swipe at neighboring Poland, whose president, Karol Nawrocki, had revoked a high-ranking order awarded to Zelensky amid a dispute over history.

The memorial site is to be built in Kiev.

 


Australia, Vanuatu Sign Deal Barring Foreign Military Base on Pacific Island

Prime Minister of Vanuatu Jotham Napat and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pose for photographs after signing the Nakamal agreement during the Australia–Vanuatu Leaders’ Meeting at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, June 29, 2026. AAP/Lukas Coch via REUTERS
Prime Minister of Vanuatu Jotham Napat and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pose for photographs after signing the Nakamal agreement during the Australia–Vanuatu Leaders’ Meeting at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, June 29, 2026. AAP/Lukas Coch via REUTERS
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Australia, Vanuatu Sign Deal Barring Foreign Military Base on Pacific Island

Prime Minister of Vanuatu Jotham Napat and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pose for photographs after signing the Nakamal agreement during the Australia–Vanuatu Leaders’ Meeting at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, June 29, 2026. AAP/Lukas Coch via REUTERS
Prime Minister of Vanuatu Jotham Napat and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese pose for photographs after signing the Nakamal agreement during the Australia–Vanuatu Leaders’ Meeting at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, June 29, 2026. AAP/Lukas Coch via REUTERS

Australia and Vanuatu signed a sweeping economic and security agreement on Monday that bars the establishment of any foreign military base on the Pacific island.

Vanuatu is at the center of strategic rivalry between China and US allies in the South Pacific, and Australia has expressed concern that Beijing is seeking a permanent security presence in the region.

The agreement commits Australia to greater economic support for Vanuatu, whose largest external creditor is China, and it stops a foreign military power establishing a base there, AFP reported.

"What this does do is to provide certainty for Australia that there will be no foreign military base," Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters after signing the deal in Canberra with his Vanuatu counterpart Jotham Napat.

"We have concluded a balanced agreement that will protect our collective and individual security and our sovereignty," he added.

China's navy has made repeated port calls to Vanuatu.

Beijing also funded the expansion of a wharf in Luganville, once the largest US military base in the South Pacific, fueling concern in Canberra and Washington that China wanted a navy base.

China and Vanuatu previously said the wharf was for cruise ships.

The Nakamal Agreement commits Vanuatu to rejecting the militarization of infrastructure, said Napat.

"As a country, we have in fact passed an act in parliament not to allow any militarization to actually be used for our critical infrastructure," he told reporters at a news conference after the signing.

The agreement, viewed by AFP, states that "to reinforce Pacific collective security and sovereignty Vanuatu shall not permit its territory to be used for any foreign military base or infrastructure.”

It also recognizes Australia as "Vanuatu's longstanding primary policing partner,” and says Vanuatu will prioritize policing requests to other members of the Pacific Islands Forum regional bloc.

China formed policing ties with Vanuatu in 2023, and has donated equipment including drones, patrol boats and vehicles to its police force.

The agreement says Australia and Vanuatu will elevate assistance in "police training and equipment, policing, maritime security, cyber security, intelligence cooperation, and infrastructure.”

The Vanuatu treaty is the latest in a string of agreements Australia has struck with Pacific island nations, seeking to curb China's expanding security influence.

Chinese police have maintained a presence in Solomon Islands since signing a secret security pact in 2022.

Vanuatu has said it is separately negotiating an economic agreement with China, which has built roads and government buildings in the South Pacific nation over a decade.

A former Australian diplomat in the Pacific, James Batley, said the contest between Beijing and Canberra for influence would continue.

"Vanuatu's long tradition of non-alignment means that it won't simply abandon its relationship with China. Nor will China abandon its attempts to undermine Australia's interests in Vanuatu," he told AFP.