Kyiv Post

Prince Harry Tells Putin Ukraine War Offers ‘No Victory’

On his third visit to Ukraine, the Duke of Sussex urged the US and Europe to match Kyiv’s resolve, saying “history will not ask what we said, it will ask what we did.” Make us preferred on Google

On his third visit to Ukraine, the Duke of Sussex urged the US and Europe to match Kyiv’s resolve, saying “history will not ask what we said, it will ask what we did.” Make us preferred on Google Share Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn Bluesky Email Copy Copied Britain's Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, delivers a speech during the Kyiv Security Forum , in Kyiv on April 23, 2026. (Photo by Genya SAVILOV / AFP) Content Share Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn Bluesky Email Copy Copied Flip Make us preferred on Google Prince Harry made an unannounced visit to Kyiv on Thursday, his third trip to Ukraine since the war began, delivering a powerful address in which he issued direct messages to Russian President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump. Speaking at the Kyiv Security Forum, the Duke of Sussex told Putin there was “still a moment, now, to stop this war.” Follow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official . “President Putin, no nation benefits from the continued loss of life we are witnessing,” Harry said. “Years into this war, with immense losses and limited gains, it is increasingly clear that this path offers no victory. Only more loss.” Harry did not mention Trump by name, but called for “American leadership,” saying the US has a “singular role” because it was among the countries that gave Ukraine security assurances when Kyiv gave up its nuclear weapons. “This is a moment for American leadership – a moment for America to show that it can honor its international treaty obligations, not out of charity, but out of its enduring role in global security and strategic stability,” he said. Prince Harry said he was “not here as a politician,” but as someone who understood the human cost of conflict. “I am here as a soldier who understands service, as a humanitarian who has seen the human cost of conflict, and as a friend of Ukraine who believes the world must not grow used to this war or numb to its consequences.” Other Topics of Interest EU Finalizes Ukraine Loan, Signals Next Steps on Accession Talks EU leaders backed the loan and new sanctions after a trilateral meeting in Cyprus, while signaling next steps toward opening Ukraine’s EU accession talks. He said Russia’s war was not only about land, but about the future of democratic values. “What is happening here is not simply a war about territory, it is a war about values, about sovereignty, about whether the principles that underpin our shared democracy shall hold meaning.” Harry warned that democracy itself must be actively defended. “There was a time, not so long ago, when many believed that we had reached a kind of historical endpoint, that liberal democracy had prevailed, and that major ideological conflict was behind us,” he said. “But history has a way of reminding us otherwise.” “Democracy is not inevitable. It is not self-sustaining, and it is not immune to challenge,” Harry said. “It must be defended, actively, consistently, and collectively.” He praised Ukraine’s resilience and leadership, saying the country had “earned the respect of the world.” “Respect really matters,” Harry said. “Because when leaders act without respect for sovereignty, for international law, for human life, respect once lost is rarely recovered, and never quickly.” He said Ukraine had already answered whether it could withstand Russia’s invasion. “Few believed that would be possible, and yet here you are, still standing, still fighting, and still leading,” Harry said. He also highlighted Ukraine’s battlefield innovation. “Ukraine is now at the forefront of modern warfare, developing some of the most advanced drone capabilities anywhere in the world,” he said. Harry warned that the human cost of the war would last long after the fighting ends. “The human toll of this war is truly staggering,” he said. “Behind every statistic is a life, a family, and a future changed forever.” “War is not only fought on the battlefield. It is fought in the mind, through disinformation, through fatigue, and through the slow erosion of hope,” he added. Prince Harry also accused Russia of systemic crimes in occupied territories, including the forced deportation of Ukrainian children. “This is not collateral damage. This is not the chaos of war spilling over,” he said. “This is organized, systemic, intentional, and designed to endure long after the fighting stops.” He said Ukraine was not standing alone, but urged the West to move faster. “The question is no longer whether Ukraine will stand. You have already answered that,” Harry said. “The question is, will the West and the rest of the world match your resolve?” “History will not ask what we said. It will ask what we did,” he said, ending with: “Slava Ukraini.” Prince Harry arrived in Kyiv by overnight train from Poland and is set to meet senior Ukrainian military officials and wounded soldiers. Harry will also see the work of the de-mining charity, The Halo Trust, which is close to his heart because of his mother’s work with them in Angola shortly before she died. Princess Diana was famously filmed walking through a cleared minefield with a flak jacket and visor. Sevinj Osmanqizi is a journalist covering US foreign policy, security, and geopolitics, with a focus on the broader post-Soviet space. She reports on Washington’s decision-making and its implications for Ukraine and regional stability.