'It's absolutely more intense now,' the president of the American Foreign Policy Council, who recently returned from Ukraine, told Newsweek.
, according to Ukrainian interlocutors who recently met with an American delegation.
The trip was organized directly with Ukrainian counterparts and minus the involvement of the U.S. State Department. "Russia is perceived by Tatar representatives in exile as wanting to eliminate the Crimean Tatars altogether in a process which began with the February 2014 annexation of Crimea," according to the AFPC's trip report."We were told that just during the period of our visit, there had been Russian police raids on hundreds of Tatar homes in Crimea."
Pirchner has personally visited post-Soviet countries over 70 times, with his first trip to Ukraine in 1990. He has not visited Russia in numerous years. American Foreign Policy Council President Herman Pirchner Jr. recently traveled to Ukraine for the first time since 2021. He has traveled to post-Soviet countries over 70 times and discussed his most recent experience with Newsweek.Meetings were routinely interrupted by air raids, which was quite different to Pirchner's visit in 2021 to cities like Mariupol and areas not occupied by Russian forces.
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