▲ US President Joe Biden (left) and NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg


Ukraine is alone in the face of the Russian attack that began at dawn on the 24th (local time), but the United States and NATO have maintained their existing position of not supporting troops.



According to major foreign media on the 25th, Western camps, such as the United States and NATO, have officially announced that they will not send combat troops to Ukraine.



Ukraine is not a member of NATO.



One of the reasons for Russia's invasion is Ukraine's push to join NATO.



The West provided weapons and military equipment to Ukraine, but troops deployed neighboring Poland and Romania as the marginal line.



It means that a 'firewall' has been put in place to prevent Ukraine's calls from spreading to NATO member states.



U.S. President Joe Biden has said that there is no plan to send U.S. troops to Russia when plans for a Russian invasion emerged at the end of last year, and he reaffirmed this on the 24th.



NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg also said at a press conference that there are no NATO troops in Ukraine and there are no plans to send them.



Russia's army, navy and air force are advancing simultaneously from eastern, northern and southern Ukraine after the operation order of Russian President Vladimir Putin was issued early in the morning of the previous day.




It is a general assessment that Russia overwhelms Ukraine in terms of military power such as the number of regular troops and weapon systems.



In the early morning of the 25th, the second day of the war, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a video speech, "We are left alone to protect our country. Who is ready to fight Russia with us? No one is visible."



He then criticized the West's passive attitude, saying, "Who will guarantee Ukraine membership in NATO? Everyone is afraid."



"Russia has targeted me as 'target number 1' and my family as 'target number 2', but I will not leave my country," he said.



President Zelensky also issued a national mobilization order the night before.



According to this measure, which will take effect for 90 days, all conscripts and reserve forces in Ukraine can be called, and even private property can be requisitioned, making the country into a wartime system.



"Today we lost 137 soldiers and civilians," Zelensky said. "There were 316 wounded."



President Zelensky also claimed that civilian installations were also attacked, contrary to Russian claims that they were only targeting their own military installations.



President Zelensky said