'The Middle Finger of the World': Zelensky Commented on Trump's Conversation with Putin.


The President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, reacted to the threats of the Russian leader by publishing statistics on Russia's mass strikes against Ukraine and calling on the international community to increase pressure on the aggressor. The Ukrainian president's statement appeared on social media on June 4, 2025.
'Facts are stubborn things,' Zelensky began his statement, citing shocking figures of Russian aggression.
According to Zelensky, throughout this year, the Russian army struck Ukraine with almost 27,700 air bombs, over 11,200 'Shaheds', nearly 9,000 strike drones of various types, and more than 700 missiles, including ballistic ones.
State of Relations and Call to Action
'This is less than in six months,' the President of Ukraine emphasized, evaluating the pace of Russian strikes as a consciously chosen course since the first days of the full-scale war. Zelensky accused Russia of radically restructuring its state, societal, and economic order to be able to kill people in other countries with impunity and on a massive scale. The Ukrainian leader called on the world to support Ukraine and increase pressure on Russia.
In his statement, the President of Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelensky, condemned the mass strikes of Russia against Ukraine and urged the international community to increase pressure on the aggressor, support Ukraine, and stand against unacceptable violence and violations of international law. The statistics provided by Ukraine indicate a truly impressive volume of attacks, prompting a more active response and discussion of this issue at the international level.
Read also
- Massive strike by Russia: Zelensky labeled the world's inaction as 'complicity' in the war
- Zelensky: There are no peaceful initiatives in the world that Russia has not rejected
- Absolutely Sick Beings: Zelensky Harshly Responds to the Destruction of the Kherson Regional State Administration
- Kyivstar, Vodafone, lifecell subscribers are waiting for drastic changes: how tariffs will change