“We want to look at all the details, everything,” he stressed. “That’s why our experts must participate in the international investigation work and gain access to all the evidence available to our partners, as well as (allowing them to go) to the site of the explosion,” he said in his video message.
President Volodymyr Zelensky has demanded that Ukrainian experts be given access to “all data” held by Western partners, as well as being allowed to visit the site of the explosion caused by the missile that landed in Poland, near the Ukrainian border.
“We want to look at all the details, everything,” he stressed. “That’s why our experts must participate in the international investigation work and gain access to all the evidence available to our partners, as well as (allowing them to go) to the site of the explosion,” he said in his video message tonight.
These statements appear to reflect a change in position by Zelensky, who earlier insisted that the missile in question belonged to Russia, contradicting NATO and Washington who believe it was a Ukrainian anti-aircraft missile.
“I have no doubt that this missile was not ours,” the Ukrainian president said on television at the time. “I believe it was a Russian missile.”
The White House, for its part, said it “has seen nothing to contradict” the assessment made by Warsaw, according to which the missile that fell in Poland “most likely” came from Ukrainian air defenses.
RES-EMP
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