Mario Draghi said Italy’s decision to send weapons had received almost unanimous support in parliament. “The terms of the question are clear: on the one hand it is a people who have been attacked, on the other an aggressive army,” he said in an interview published in the newspaper. Corriere della Sera. Draghi said sanctions were necessary but not enough to stop Russian troops in the short term. “We have to help the Ukrainians immediately and that is what we are doing,” he said in his first interview with an Italian newspaper since taking office 14 months ago. “Not