logo
My airline led rescue efforts in Ukraine – Trump's peace deal will fail

My airline led rescue efforts in Ukraine – Trump's peace deal will fail

Yahoo16-03-2025

An airline boss who helped rescue almost 1,000 people from Ukraine as Russian tanks crossed the border in 2022 said he is pessimistic about prospects for peace.
Peter Foster, chief executive at Air Astana, the flag carrier of Kazakhstan, said progress towards a ceasefire in talks brokered by the US appears a distant prospect.
Mr Foster said he is keen to restore flights to Ukraine should the conflict end, but regards the 'wildly changing' views emanating from Washington, Moscow and Kyiv as a negative sign.
He said: 'I can't see it. If it happens it happens, but we are not counting on it. Just like everybody else, we wake up every morning and the news has changed overnight.'
Mr Foster found himself caught up in the 2022 invasion after joining an Air Astana flight to Kyiv to evacuate Kazakh expatriates. Russia mobilised just hours after he landed, however, forcing the plane to leave and scuppering plans for an airlift.
The Briton instead helped organise a fleet of buses and cars which carried 896 evacuees on the slow journey to the Polish border as Moscow's forces began pounding Ukraine.
He said: 'We landed at 10 past midnight, that aircraft left an hour later, and the bombs and missiles started falling at about 4:50am.
'So we had to bus them out and fly them from Poland. I remember driving late at night after about an hour and a half's sleep, trying to negotiate my way down the autoroute.'
Air Astana has not flown to Ukraine or Russia since, while its network of services to Europe, formerly the focus of operations, remains disrupted by the closure of Russian airspace.
Mr Foster said the airline, which he has led for almost 20 years, is not currently planning for a lifting of the flight ban and the restoration of once lucrative routes that would permit.
He said 'Fundamentally we don't see any immediate change to that Russian overflight situation.
'We can't see any clarity of what's going to happen, so there's no point as a business planning for something. Everyone is entitled to a political view but we are business people.'
Mr Foster said that if the war was to end, however, there would be sufficient demand for flights to Ukraine even after the exodus of Kazakhs from the country.
He said: 'There are tons and tons of Ukrainians here. If the war ended and things got back to some sort of normality we'd fly to all of these places, there'd be a market.
'There has always been a lot of movement between countries of the CIS [Commonwealth of Independent States], for study or work or because of marriage. So we would like to fly there again one day.'
Air Astana's UK services remain popular despite disruption from airspace closures, with the airline having added an extra fuel tank to a long-range Airbus jet in order to carry on flying direct. London services previously had to refuel at an airport near the Caspian Sea.
Air Astana also flies to Germany. Mr Foster said flights to France and Italy might be viable in future, though most growth now is coming from Asia and the Middle East, helping to increase earnings 16pc last year.
The airline's London-listed stock remains down around a third following a float last year, however.
Mr Foster said a lack of liquidity is holding it back – a common complaint as the market falls far behind historic rival New York – and announced a dividend he said was among the highest in the airline industry to help spur investor interest.
Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New Russian ambassador tells Trump he will work to restore relations
New Russian ambassador tells Trump he will work to restore relations

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

New Russian ambassador tells Trump he will work to restore relations

(Reuters) -The new Russian ambassador to the United States, Alexander Darchiev, pledged to work to fully restore relations with Washington as he formally presented his credentials to President Donald Trump on Wednesday, Russian news agencies reported. "Russia and the United States are destined, as great powers, to have non-confrontational peaceful existence," the agencies quoted Darchiev as telling a reception at Russian embassy after returning from the White House. "It was a great honour for me, as Russian ambassador, to speak with President Trump and I assured him that I and this embassy under my direction will do everything to restore Russian-American relations and bring them back to normality and common sense." He said Trump had found time to receive him on the eve of the Russia Day holiday - which marks Russia's 1990 declaration of sovereignty, more than a year before the Soviet collapse. Darchiev has already completed two diplomatic stints in the United States and served as ambassador to Canada from 2014 to 2021. Like other senior Russian diplomats, he has in recent years issued strong public denunciations of the United States and the West. Washington's relations with Moscow plunged to their lowest in decades under Trump's predecessor, Joe Biden, over the Kremlin's invasion of Ukraine. Ties have improved since Trump took office, with the two sides in contact to discuss a possible resolution to the conflict. "We have at last moved from monologues under the previous administration and a general absence of discussion to quite a pragmatic conversation, a complicated conversation," Darchiev was quoted as saying. The ambassador said his meeting with the U.S. president was a short one as dictated by protocol. "Nonetheless, our discussion was very constructive," the agencies quoted him as saying.

Hegseth defends $961.6B Defense Department budget request
Hegseth defends $961.6B Defense Department budget request

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Hegseth defends $961.6B Defense Department budget request

June 11 (UPI) -- The proposed Department of Defense budget puts "America first" while addressing Ukraine, the Indo-Pacific and the Middle East, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told the Senate Appropriations Committee on Wednesday. Hegseth and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Dan Caine fielded questions during a more than 2-hour hearing regarding the proposed $961.6 billion DOD budget for the 2026 fiscal year. The Defense Department is improving pay, housing, healthcare and other services to improve the quality of life for military members and their families, Hegseth told committee members. "This budget puts America first and gives our warriors what they need," he said during his opening statement. The proposed budget request also would "end four years of chronic underinvestment in our military by the Biden administration," Hegseth added. Russia and the Ukraine war Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., opened the hearing with questions about the Ukraine War, including who is the aggressor and preferred outcomes. Hegseth said Russia is the aggressor and China would prefer to keep the conflict going as long as possible to distract from its moves in the Indo-Pacific region. Europe needs to do more to defend its territory against Russian aggression, Hegseth said, and the United States must remain strategic in its handling of the war while addressing matters in the Indo-Pacific region. Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., cited ongoing Russian aggression against civilian targets in Ukraine as evidence that Russia has no intention of ending the war there. The 2026 budget request eliminates aid to Ukraine, while senators are working to impose more sanctions on Russia, Coons said. "What message do you think it sends" when Russia "attacks civilian centers in Ukraine and the United States does not send additional air defense and interceptors to Ukraine?" Coons asked. Hegseth said arms are still flowing to Ukraine, but other NATO allies are not doing enough to end the war. "You're not a real coalition, you're not a real defense alliance, unless you have real defense capability and real armies that can bring those to bear," Hegseth said. "That's a reality that Europe is waking up to quickly," he added, "and we're glad." Coons said the United States should not negotiate a cease-fire in Ukraine "at any cost" and instead should continue supporting Ukraine to achieve an enduring peace. "Putin will only stop when we stop him," Coons said. "The best way to stop him is through a stronger NATO." Chinese military threats and Hegseth's DOD leadership Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, said China has more than 400 warships and is rapidly expanding its fleet versus 293 ships for the United States. She asked why the Defense Department only seeks funding to build two submarines and an ocean surveillance ship, plus some destroyers. Hegseth said the 2026 budget request reflects a 13% increase for investing in national defense over the current fiscal year. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., then questioned Hegseth's leadership. "I am repeatedly hearing that your policy and personnel changes at the Pentagon are only undermining [and] not strengthening our military's preparedness to protect our country," Murray said. She accused Hegseth of using the military to police areas in the United States, including sending the National Guard and Marines to California to use against "peaceful protesters." Murray then asked Hegseth if the Defense Department would continue to fire shipbuilders, which he denied it has done. "We are investing historically in our shipbuilding defense industrial base and workforce and ships in this budget," Hegseth said. Murray said the Navy is firing shipbuilder staff in the state of Washington and accused it of asking welders if they ever donated to the Democratic Party. Hegseth said no welders are subject to litmus tests to work on naval projects and denied that political questions are asked. Iranian, Russian, Chinese and North Korean coalition Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., asked Hegseth and Caine if the world is underestimating Iran's intent to "kill all the Jews," including using a nuclear weapon against Israel if Iran had one. Caine said Iran would use one to pressure Israel but doesn't know if Iran would use it to "wipe out Israel." Hegseth said a radical cleric in Iran would use one to wipe out Israel. "They're going to use a nuclear weapon if they get it," Graham said. He also asked if China intends to "take Taiwan by force if necessary." Hegseth said the DOD doesn't know that China has made the decision to do so. Caine suggested China might use military force against Taiwan, and the United States needs to prepare for it. Coons said China, Russia, North Korea and Iran are aligned and pose the greatest threat to world peace since the Cold War. He cited Ukraine as an example of the future of warfare, but said the Department of Defense is "internally divided" and operating on a continuing resolution for the first time. The current state within the Defense Department "cannot continue," Coons added. Next-generation fighter and collaborative drones are planned The Defense Department also wants to spend $4 billion during the 2026 fiscal year to develop the F-47 fighter and "collaborative combat" drone aircraft, according to DefenseScoop. The $4 billion request is just part of the 2026 budget request, but the amount of the entire proposed budget has not been released. The Air Force wants to spend $3.5 billion on the F-47 fighter project, which would give it a fighter capable of exceeding Mach 2 with a range of more than 1,000 nautical miles. The current F-22 and F-35A fighter jets have top speeds of greater than Mach 2 and Mach 1.6 and ranges of 590 and 670 nautical miles, respectively. The Air Force wants to buy up to 185 F-47 fighters during the program's duration. The Air Force's Collaborative Combat Aircraft program would promote the development of next-generation drone aircraft that are capable of flying with the manned F-47 and other next-generation fighters.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store