Ukraine Delegation in Arizona Seeks Broader US Support as War Escalates with Russia

Ukraine Delegation in Arizona Seeks Broader US Support as War Escalates with Russia
Ukrainian Parliament member Dmytro Liubota stands outside St. Mary's Protectress Ukraine Orthodox Church in Phoenix on March 12, 2023. Allan Stein/The Epoch Times
Allan Stein
Updated:
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PHOENIX—Ukrainian parliament member Dmytro Liubota scrolled through dozens of images on his cellphone showing bombed-out buildings in the Kharkiv region, where he lives.

Some buildings were still on fire; many had gaping holes or whole parts blown away.

In several photos, pieces of Russian missiles lay in the streets.

The missile attacks are an almost daily occurrence, according to Liubota, who lost his house and his family business to the bombardment.

Members of St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Phoenix participate in a liturgical service on March 12, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
Members of St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Phoenix participate in a liturgical service on March 12, 2023. Allan Stein/The Epoch Times

“We have a big line of defense as they try to occupy our territory. The Russians are very strong, but our guys are stronger. Ukrainians are stronger,” Liubota said while standing outside St. Mary’s Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Phoenix on March 12.

Liubota said the situation is dire as the war enters the second year since the Russian invasion on Feb. 24, 2022.

On March 12, Liubota and other Ukrainian dignitaries visited Phoenix to meet with state and local officials to seek additional support for Ukraine’s humanitarian and military war effort.

“Our government is doing everything it can to support [the Ukrainian people] and give them food and clothes. But you understand, there are troop and missile attacks every day,” Liubota told The Epoch Times.

“It’s very hard to say it’s OK. It’s not OK.”

Ukrainian diplomat and human rights advocate Volodymyr Dzhydzhora (L) listens to a liturgical service at St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Phoenix on March 12, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
Ukrainian diplomat and human rights advocate Volodymyr Dzhydzhora (L) listens to a liturgical service at St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Phoenix on March 12, 2023. Allan Stein/The Epoch Times

Liubota is a People’s Deputy of Ukraine from the political party “Servant of the People” and a member of the Committee of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine regarding its proposed integration into the European Union (EU).

He also serves as chairman of the subcommittee on economic, sectoral cooperation, and the comprehensive free trade zone between Ukraine and the European Union.

The Ukrainian delegation included diplomat and human rights advocate Volodymyr Dzhydzhora.

The Arizona House of Representatives Office of International Affairs and the Phoenix Committee on Foreign Relations invited the delegation to Arizona.

At noon, the delegation attended a divine liturgy and reception at St. Mary’s. Later, they met with Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs, lawmakers, business members, and representatives of Arizona State University’s IT, bioengineering, and climate disciplines.

A woman listens to members of a delegation from Kyiv at St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Phoenix on March 12, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
A woman listens to members of a delegation from Kyiv at St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Phoenix on March 12, 2023. Allan Stein/The Epoch Times

The focus of the visit was to build support for more humanitarian and military aid to Ukraine and to identify institutional donors for the redevelopment and restoration of the affected areas of the devastated country.

Dzhydzhora said the goal also was to “bring information about what’s going on in Ukraine to explain how people suffer, how the country suffers, and to make deeper connections between regions of Ukraine” and to “bring more American potential to Ukraine.”

“Russia now abuses all human rights and all international conventions on human rights. There is no single international code that Russia did not violate against Ukraine,” Dzhydzhora said.

“They occupied Crimea. They occupied the eastern territories of Ukraine. And after eight years, they saw that they could not break us. They decided to go in full.”

After multiple failed talks, Dzhydzhora said Ukrainian officials don’t see a diplomatic solution to the conflict.

A priest performs the divine liturgy at St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Phoenix on March 12, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
A priest performs the divine liturgy at St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Phoenix on March 12, 2023. Allan Stein/The Epoch Times

“Unfortunately, there is no diplomatic solution for this. The key for peace lies in Moscow ... [which] doesn’t want peace,” Dzhydzhora told The Epoch Times.

“For them, it means [Ukraine’s] surrender, and that’s it. For us, we will win. We will restore our territorial integrity and state serenity and human rights.”

Liubota said the key to peace is Russia’s willingness to return to the borders of 1991 and return Crimea and the breakaway republics in the Donbas region to Ukraine.

“They came to us with a war on our historical territory,” he said. “There’s only one [response]. Get out of my house.”

Liubota said millions of Ukrainians have fled the country since the war began.

St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church community organizer Svetlana-Nikole Jeholen asks for donations for humanitarian efforts in Ukraine on March 12, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church community organizer Svetlana-Nikole Jeholen asks for donations for humanitarian efforts in Ukraine on March 12, 2023. Allan Stein/The Epoch Times

“It’s bad,” he said. “Many people have no place to live.”

Given the state’s large Ukrainian community, the delegation agreed to come to Arizona to seek broader support. The Ukrainian population in the United States is currently about 893,000.

Liubota said the war will continue until Russian troops withdraw from Ukraine.

“I am not a military man. We hope it will be as soon as possible,” he said.

“It depends on your support—the support of the American and European people. If you give us the weapons we need—supplies we need—we'll have enough power to kick Putin’s [expletive].”

Two members of St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Phoenix discuss the situation in Ukraine on March 12, 2023. (Allan Stein/The Epoch Times)
Two members of St. Mary's Protectress Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Phoenix discuss the situation in Ukraine on March 12, 2023. Allan Stein/The Epoch Times

According to the U.S. Defense Department, Washington has committed $51 billion in security aid to Ukraine since 2014, more than $24.2 billion of that since the Russian invasion began in February 2022.

“There is no opposition [to the war] in our country,” Liubota said. “We have enough manpower. We have enough people who want to fight. We want to win this war.

“We will fight to the last Ukrainian.”

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