<p>Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived in Hiroshima for talks with the G7 Saturday, after winning long-sought access to advanced US fighter jets and training for Kyiv's pilots.</p>.<p>Zelenskyy's surprise summit appearance -- he had previously been expected to appear by video -- came after he welcomed a "historic" White House decision to allow Ukraine to get F-16 jets.</p>.<p>Until now US President Joe Biden had effectively vetoed the transfer of F-16s, with US officials citing long pilot training times and the risk of escalating the 15-month-old conflict with Russia.</p>.<p>National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan insisted there was no about-turn in US policy but the decision was based on the "exigencies of the conflict".</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/national/pm-modi-to-meet-ukraines-zelenskyy-on-sidelines-of-g7-summit-1220184.html" target="_blank">PM Modi to meet Ukraine's Zelenskyy on sidelines of G7 summit</a></strong></p>.<p>"We've reached a moment where it's time to look down the road and to say 'What is Ukraine going to need... to be able to deter and defend against Russian aggression?'</p>.<p>"F-16s, fourth-generation fighter aircraft, are part of that mix," he said, adding that Ukraine had committed to not use US military equipment to hit targets inside Russia.</p>.<p>"We are going to do everything we can to support Ukraine in its defence of its sovereignty and territorial integrity, and we are also going to proceed in a way that avoids World War III," he added.</p>.<p>Military experts say the aircraft would be a significant upgrade from Ukraine's ageing Soviet-era fleet, offering greater ability to strike targets in the air or on the ground.</p>.<p>With the US veto lifted, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak quickly announced that Britain would "work together with the USA and the Netherlands, Belgium and Denmark to get Ukraine the combat air capability it needs".</p>.<p>It is Zelensky's first post-war trip to the Asia-Pacific -- and offers a chance to confer with allies, but also to woo key unaligned powers also joining the summit, including India and Brazil.</p>.<p>"There is an opportunity for Zelenskyy to engage with these non-Western actors, to try to bolster support, or at least weaken what may be seen as ambivalence towards the conflict," Ian Lesser, vice president of the German Marshall Fund think-tank, told <em>AFP.</em></p>.<p>"And they do matter. They matter especially in terms of sanctions, of course," he added.</p>.<p>The Ukrainian leader, wearing his trademark olive-green hoodie, touched down at Hiroshima airport, arriving on a French state plane and greeted on the tarmac with a red carpet and a phalanx of officials.</p>.<p>His departure from Ukraine and flight from Poland was a closely guarded secret until he appeared in the Saudi Arabian city of Jeddah, where he met leaders from the Arab League.</p>.<p>Zelenskyy's looming arrival has dominated the G7 summit, stealing the spotlight from a long list of other thorny subjects, including how to address concerns about China's growing military and economic power.</p>.<p>G7 leaders Saturday did issue a joint statement denouncing efforts to "weaponise" trade and supply chains, warning they would "fail and face consequences" -- a thinly veiled warning to China.</p>.<p>The bloc said it would also address vulnerabilities in supply chains for "critical goods" like minerals, semiconductors and batteries.</p>.<p>"What we have done over 20 years with China, encouraging development, was right, but maybe we should have been more careful on critical material, supply chains and those elements," an EU official said.</p>.<p>"I think the aim of all G7 leaders is to say that China has followed a systematic policy of acquiring critical raw materials, controlling supply chains... and we are responding to this by diversifying."</p>.<p>There will also be talks with non-members as G7 leaders try to convince developing nations they can offer diplomatic and economic alternatives to China.</p>
<p>Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived in Hiroshima for talks with the G7 Saturday, after winning long-sought access to advanced US fighter jets and training for Kyiv's pilots.</p>.<p>Zelenskyy's surprise summit appearance -- he had previously been expected to appear by video -- came after he welcomed a "historic" White House decision to allow Ukraine to get F-16 jets.</p>.<p>Until now US President Joe Biden had effectively vetoed the transfer of F-16s, with US officials citing long pilot training times and the risk of escalating the 15-month-old conflict with Russia.</p>.<p>National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan insisted there was no about-turn in US policy but the decision was based on the "exigencies of the conflict".</p>.<p><strong>Also Read: <a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/national/pm-modi-to-meet-ukraines-zelenskyy-on-sidelines-of-g7-summit-1220184.html" target="_blank">PM Modi to meet Ukraine's Zelenskyy on sidelines of G7 summit</a></strong></p>.<p>"We've reached a moment where it's time to look down the road and to say 'What is Ukraine going to need... to be able to deter and defend against Russian aggression?'</p>.<p>"F-16s, fourth-generation fighter aircraft, are part of that mix," he said, adding that Ukraine had committed to not use US military equipment to hit targets inside Russia.</p>.<p>"We are going to do everything we can to support Ukraine in its defence of its sovereignty and territorial integrity, and we are also going to proceed in a way that avoids World War III," he added.</p>.<p>Military experts say the aircraft would be a significant upgrade from Ukraine's ageing Soviet-era fleet, offering greater ability to strike targets in the air or on the ground.</p>.<p>With the US veto lifted, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak quickly announced that Britain would "work together with the USA and the Netherlands, Belgium and Denmark to get Ukraine the combat air capability it needs".</p>.<p>It is Zelensky's first post-war trip to the Asia-Pacific -- and offers a chance to confer with allies, but also to woo key unaligned powers also joining the summit, including India and Brazil.</p>.<p>"There is an opportunity for Zelenskyy to engage with these non-Western actors, to try to bolster support, or at least weaken what may be seen as ambivalence towards the conflict," Ian Lesser, vice president of the German Marshall Fund think-tank, told <em>AFP.</em></p>.<p>"And they do matter. They matter especially in terms of sanctions, of course," he added.</p>.<p>The Ukrainian leader, wearing his trademark olive-green hoodie, touched down at Hiroshima airport, arriving on a French state plane and greeted on the tarmac with a red carpet and a phalanx of officials.</p>.<p>His departure from Ukraine and flight from Poland was a closely guarded secret until he appeared in the Saudi Arabian city of Jeddah, where he met leaders from the Arab League.</p>.<p>Zelenskyy's looming arrival has dominated the G7 summit, stealing the spotlight from a long list of other thorny subjects, including how to address concerns about China's growing military and economic power.</p>.<p>G7 leaders Saturday did issue a joint statement denouncing efforts to "weaponise" trade and supply chains, warning they would "fail and face consequences" -- a thinly veiled warning to China.</p>.<p>The bloc said it would also address vulnerabilities in supply chains for "critical goods" like minerals, semiconductors and batteries.</p>.<p>"What we have done over 20 years with China, encouraging development, was right, but maybe we should have been more careful on critical material, supply chains and those elements," an EU official said.</p>.<p>"I think the aim of all G7 leaders is to say that China has followed a systematic policy of acquiring critical raw materials, controlling supply chains... and we are responding to this by diversifying."</p>.<p>There will also be talks with non-members as G7 leaders try to convince developing nations they can offer diplomatic and economic alternatives to China.</p>