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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will address the US Congress on Wednesday, the actor-turned-turned-wartime leader's latest video stop as he employs the West's great legislative bodies as a global stage to orchestrate support against Russia's crushing invasion.
Zelenskky's livestreamed address into the US Capitol will be among the most important in a unique and very public strategy in his fight to stop Russia.
Invoking Winston Churchill and Hamlet last week, he asked the British House of Commons whether Ukraine is to be or not to be.
On Tuesday, he appealed to Dear Justin, as he addressed the Canadian Parliament and Prime Minister Trudeau. Appearing in his now trademark olive green T-shirt, Zelenskyy called on European Union leaders at the start of the war to do the politically unthinkable and fast-track Ukraine's membership  and he has continued to push for more help to save his young democracy than world leaders have so far pledged to do. 
It was a man showing leadership while at the same time keeping his calm in the toughest of circumstances," said Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte about the address to the Europeans. "I have to say, it had an enormous impact on all the leaders.
Nearing the three-week mark in an ever-escalating war, Zelenskyy has used his public campaign to help ensure a global spotlight that might have faded amid the coronavirus pandemic and fatigue after the end of the long US war in Afghanistan.
Instead, Zelensky's video appearances are beaming the boyish but unshaven president into households and smartphones around the world as he speaks form undisclosed locations in Kyiv wile Russia bombards his country, a heroic figure at the centre of what many view as the biggest security threat to Europe since World War II. Almost 3 million refugees have fled Ukraine, the fastest exodus in modern times.
When Zelenskyy is live-streamed into the US Capitol, his speech could very likely put him at odds with President Joe Biden who has stopped short of providing a no-fly zone or facilitating the transfer of military planes from neighbouring Poland that Zelenksyy has been pleading for since the outbreak of the war. 
Zelenskyy wants the West to to close the sky  a rallying cry now in pop culture  to prevent the Russian airstrikes that are devastating his country, perhaps most dramatically in the attack last week on a maternity hospital as pregnant women fled for their lives. 
I know he will ask for more help, said Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.
Congress has been ready to push on economic sanctions.
At first, the White House resisted calls from Congress to ban Russian oil imports to the US. Then it hit the brakes on legislation to revoke Russia's normal trade status  before going ahead on both. It rejected efforts in Congress to stop the Nord Stream 2 energy pipeline, then led allies in halting it.
Biden has a very difficult line to walk here, and that is that no one wants to trigger a World War III, Sen. Warren said. You have to keep options on the table. The Ukrainians are fighting for their lives, and they are also fighting for democracy all around.
Biden has insisted there will be no US troops on the ground in Ukraine and has resisted Zelenskyy's relentless pleas for warplanes as too risky, potentially escalating into a direct confrontation with nuclear-armed Russia.
Direct conflict between NATO and Russia is World War III, Biden has said. 
The Pentagon has rejected an offer from NATO ally Poland to transfer its Soviet-era MiGs to a US base in Germany for re-transfer to Ukraine. And US defence officials say they are puzzled, at any rate, by Zelenskyy's demand for more warplanes. They say Ukraine isn't often flying the planes it has now, while making good use of Stingers and other weapons the West is providing.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Tuesday, The president has to look at decisions that are made through the prism of what is in our national security interests and global security interests. And he continues to believe that a no-fly zone would be escalatory and could prompt a war with Russia."
Even though Zelenskyy and Biden speak almost daily by phone, the Ukrainian president has found a potentially more receptive audience in Congress.
Nearly two weeks ago, Zelenskyy delivered a desperate plea to some 300 lawmakers and staff on a private call that if they could not enforce a no-fly zone, at least send more planes.
"We think the United States needs to do more," said Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., returning from a weekend visit with other lawmakers to Poland. "We need to do what we can to facilitate the delivery of the Russian-made MiGs to the Ukrainian fighter pilots so that they can wage this war themselves.
Congress has already approved USD13.6 billion in military and humanitarian aid for Ukraine, part of a broader bill that Biden signed into law Tuesday. But lawmakers expect more aid will be needed.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Zelenskyy asked for help in rebuilding his country when they spoke last week.
Zelenskky's next stop could be Spain. On Tuesday, the speaker of Spain's Congress of Deputies invited the Ukrainian president to address Spanish lawmakers via videolink. 
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16/03/2022
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