John Kirby, US Defense Department Spokesman: “The repositioning of a a small percentage of the troops and the battalion tactical groups that Russia had arrayed against Kyiv, probably in the neighborhood of 20 percent of what they had, they are beginning to reposition. Some of those troops, we assess, are repositioning into Belarus. We don’t have an exact number for you, but that’s our early assessments. None of them — we have seen, none of them repositioned to their home garrison. And that’s not a small point. If the Russians are serious about de-escalating — because that’s their claim here — then they should send them home. But they’re not doing that, at least not yet. So that’s not what we’re seeing.”
Alex Mundt, UNHCR senior emergency coordinator in Poland: “Look, I think it’s a tragic milestone. It’s hard to describe in an interview what four million people totally traumatized by war looks like or feels like, and what it means for their future, when six weeks ago they were living a completely normal life and now they’re completely uprooted. I think four million people is roughly the population of Los Angeles – I’m from the U.S. – but imagine every single person in a massive metropolis suddenly being forced from their homes, their communities, everything they know. So we mark this is a milestone, but it’s really, I think, a tragic indicator. But it also doesn’t even capture the full scale of the conflict. We have seven million IDPs (internally displaced persons) within Ukraine. We have maybe 10 million people trapped and can’t move. So actually four million, it’s massive. But even that doesn’t capture the true scale of what we’re facing.”