Vue normale
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UKR Inform
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79 clashes on frontline, hardest battles are near Pokrovsk and Novopavlivka
Since the beginning of the day, there have been 79 combat clashes between the Ukrainian Defense Forces and Russian troops. Fighting continues on four fronts, with the heaviest fighting taking place in Novopavlivka.
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UKR Inform
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Expert: Poland–Ukraine relations to remain stable under Nawrocki, with shift in emphasis
Relations between Kyiv and Warsaw will not change radically under President Karol Nawrocki; only the emphasis will be different.
Expert: Poland–Ukraine relations to remain stable under Nawrocki, with shift in emphasis
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Euromaidan Press
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Ukraine is not real estate deal: Ukrainians see Trump’s land concession proposal as betrayal
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has firmly rejected US President Donald Trump’s proposal to exchange part of Ukraine’s territory in return for peace. Trump’s suggestion, which did not specify which areas might be swapped, struck a nerve with many Ukrainians, The New York Times reports. The results of ongoing US–Russia negotiations over the war in Ukraine remain largely secret, fueling uncertainty over what security guarantees the West might offer Ukraine in exchange for concessions to R
Ukraine is not real estate deal: Ukrainians see Trump’s land concession proposal as betrayal
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has firmly rejected US President Donald Trump’s proposal to exchange part of Ukraine’s territory in return for peace. Trump’s suggestion, which did not specify which areas might be swapped, struck a nerve with many Ukrainians, The New York Times reports.
The results of ongoing US–Russia negotiations over the war in Ukraine remain largely secret, fueling uncertainty over what security guarantees the West might offer Ukraine in exchange for concessions to Russia. Kyiv warns that without firm security guarantees, Moscow will quickly break any deal, as it did with the Minsk agreements, which ended in all-out war and “temporary ceasefires” that turned into bloodshed.
Zelenskyy’s direct refusal risks angering, who has made brokering a peace deal between Kyiv and Moscow one of the central goals of his foreign policy, even if the deal would disadvantage Ukraine.
“Peace as trap”: Ukraine may face pressure from US and Russia to accept Kremlin’s demands, says diplomat
This could leave Ukraine vulnarable to concessions it may need to make amid Kyiv’s dependency on Western aid and weapons in the struggle against Russia.
Trump pushes for concessions
Trump has previously accused Ukraine of making excessively tough demands for a ceasefire. This time, he stated that some territories would need to be swapped and returned. There will be an exchange of territories for the benefit of both sides, he said. His vague comments sparked widespread outrage among Ukrainians.
Ukraine refuses to give up land
Zelenskyy’s stance reflects the overwhelming sentiment in Ukrainian society: territorial concessions are unacceptable. A Kyiv International Institute of Sociology poll found that over half of Ukrainians believe the country should not cede any land “even if this makes the war last longer and threatens the preservation of independence.”
Military experts warn that such a deal would mean abandoning a key fortified defensive line in northern Donetsk Oblast, between Sloviansk and Kostiantynivka, which has so far held back Russian advances.
Peace talks in Alaska and Moscow’s advantage
Trump has agreed to hold peace talks next Friday in Alaska. For now, Moscow’s approach, not Kyiv’s, appears to have the upper hand on the diplomatic front.
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Zelenskyy to Trump-Putin’s plan for Ukraine to cede territory to Russia: Ukrainian land is not yours to trade
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Axios: US, Ukraine, and NATO allies rush to high-stakes UK meeting to forge united stance before Trump meets Putin
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ISW: Give up your fortress belt shield, take nothing in return—Putin’s ceasefire pitch to Ukraine
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Euromaidan Press
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Old Czechoslovak Z-137 AgroTurbo cropduster goes from crop fields to Ukraine’s drone battlefront
Ukraine has begun using the Czechoslovak Z-137 AgroTurbo to intercept Russian drones in its ongoing air defense campaign. Militarnyi reports that the agricultural aircraft has been modified with air-to-air missiles and is now working in coordination with radar teams to protect Ukrainian skies. This comes amid Russia’s daily drone and missile attacks, targeting Ukrainian cities. Guided from the ground, the light aircraft adapted for combat Local residents recently filmed a modernized Czechoslovak
Old Czechoslovak Z-137 AgroTurbo cropduster goes from crop fields to Ukraine’s drone battlefront
Ukraine has begun using the Czechoslovak Z-137 AgroTurbo to intercept Russian drones in its ongoing air defense campaign. Militarnyi reports that the agricultural aircraft has been modified with air-to-air missiles and is now working in coordination with radar teams to protect Ukrainian skies.
This comes amid Russia’s daily drone and missile attacks, targeting Ukrainian cities.
Guided from the ground, the light aircraft adapted for combat
Local residents recently filmed a modernized Czechoslovak Z-137 AgroTurbo flying with two short-range R-73 missiles mounted under its wings. The single-engine turboprop, originally designed for cropdusting, has been repurposed for air defense missions. Its tail now carries two white cross stripes, a marking typical of army aviation, Militarnyi notes.
Missile system allows flexible deployment
Militarnyi says that the R-73 missile does not require complex radar integration. It uses an infrared homing system to lock onto a heat-emitting target on launch. The conversion requires only a power feed and a launch command link to the pylon. Once fired, the missile’s seeker head automatically tracks its target.
According to Militarnyi, pilots of the modified Z-137 can receive target updates from officers at combat control points who have access to ground-based radar data. These controllers can direct the aircraft’s heading and altitude to position it for interception.
Designed for low-speed interceptions
The Z-137 AgroTurbo can reach speeds of 200–250 km/h. Militarnyi reports that this makes it suitable for engaging Russian Shahed drones and short-range reconnaissance UAVs. Using such turboprops allows the Air Force to conserve faster fighter jets for higher-priority missions.
Part of a growing light aviation program
Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Oleksandr Syrskyi previously confirmed that light aircraft are now in service for counter-drone operations. He said the projects are funded with foreign partner support and will be expanded. The military is also receiving modern light aircraft equipped with advanced weapons and navigation systems to increase the effectiveness of countering Russian drones.
In June, Ukraine had received its first light aircraft configured for electronic reconnaissance and warfare against Shahed-type drones. The Czechoslovak Z-137 AgroTurbo’s new role adds to this growing network of non-traditional aerial defense assets.
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Ukraine unveils Magura v7 naval drone, which downed two Russian Su-30 fighter jets in early May
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Ukraine’s mad scientists marry Soviet R-73 with Western missiles in hybrid air defense system
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UK engineers turn Soviet R-73 missiles into Ukraine’s new Gravehawk air defense
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First electronic warfare Shark aircraft received by Ukraine for anti-drone missions
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UKR Inform
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Drone hits furniture store in Kharkiv, six people injured
In Kharkiv, an enemy drone hit a furniture store, and six people are currently known to have been injured.
Drone hits furniture store in Kharkiv, six people injured
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UKR Inform
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Woman killed in Zaporizhzhia by Russian strike in her yard
In the Zaporizhzhia region, a 61-year-old woman was killed in her yard as a result of a Russian army strike on the Stepnohirsk community.
Woman killed in Zaporizhzhia by Russian strike in her yard
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Euromaidan Press
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Russia creates diplomatic crisis, stranding 96 Ukrainian prisoners from occupied territories at Georgian border
Kyiv is working to resolve a humanitarian crisis near the Georgian border, which the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry says was deliberately designed by Russia. Ukrainian citizens ended their hunger strike after meeting with Ukrainian representatives at the Dariali crossing, but 96 people are still remain trapped at the facility without food, shelter, and medical support. Since June, Russia has deported nearly a hundred Ukrainian citizens, primarily former prisoners from occupied Ukrainian territories
Russia creates diplomatic crisis, stranding 96 Ukrainian prisoners from occupied territories at Georgian border
Kyiv is working to resolve a humanitarian crisis near the Georgian border, which the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry says was deliberately designed by Russia. Ukrainian citizens ended their hunger strike after meeting with Ukrainian representatives at the Dariali crossing, but 96 people are still remain trapped at the facility without food, shelter, and medical support.
Since June, Russia has deported nearly a hundred Ukrainian citizens, primarily former prisoners from occupied Ukrainian territories, to the Georgian border, instead of directly repatriating them to Ukraine. Meanwhile, Tbilisi denies their entry due to security and documentation concerns. The situation can worsen the relations between two countries, which try to break away from Russia’s influence.
“Our state is ready to take its people directly, rather than via Georgia and Moldova,” Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry states.
Russia is ignoring Kyiv’s request, which indicates Moscow’s desire to deliberately create a humanitarian crisis on the Russian-Georgian border, authorities say.
96 Ukrainians trapped in border limbo
This systematic campaign has resulted in 96 Ukrainians being stranded in a buffer zone at the Dariali checkpoint. Desperation mounted as some deportees announced a hunger strike on 5 August, demanding permission to cross into Georgia after being held in cramped conditions.
Many deportees are former prisoners with criminal backgrounds, creating legitimate security concerns for Georgian authorities while leaving the individuals trapped without legal status.
Ukrainian diplomacy breaks immediate crisis
A representative of the deported Ukrainian citizens “expressed gratitude to the diplomatic mission for efforts to resolve the humanitarian crisis artificially created by the Russian side,” Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry reported after the hunger strike ended.
Ukraine successfully evacuated 44 citizens from the border zone since late June, but Russian deportations continue outpacing rescue efforts as Moscow maintains pressure on regional cooperation mechanisms.
Russia’s systematic pressure operation
The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry notes that most deportees are “people who have previously been brought to criminal responsibility,” including those who served sentences in occupied Ukrainian territories and were forcibly transferred to Russian facilities, as well as Ukrainian citizens convicted of crimes within Russia.
The crisis intensified when Moldova temporarily suspended transit for this category of deportees, eliminating the main evacuation route and leaving more people stranded at Dariali with no clear path home.
Georgian authorities have expressed willingness to transport the deportees to Tbilisi Airport, but only after Moldova confirms readiness to receive them as transit passengers, according to reports.
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Georgia denies military honors to Ukraine war volunteer in unprecedented snub
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EU declares Georgia’s path to bloc effectively frozen until free elections, as protests rage for eighth consecutive month
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EU declares Georgia’s path to bloc effectively frozen until free elections, as protests rage for eighth consecutive month
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UKR Inform
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Zelensky discusses with Macron ways to achieve peace and security for Europe
President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky and President of France Emmanuel Macron exchanged views on the diplomatic situation.
Zelensky discusses with Macron ways to achieve peace and security for Europe
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UKR Inform
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Zelensky discusses diplomatic situation and communication with partners with Danish PM
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky discussed the diplomatic situation and communication with partners with the Prime Minister of Denmark, Mette Frederiksen.
Zelensky discusses diplomatic situation and communication with partners with Danish PM
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Euromaidan Press
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Ukraine’s best drones hit Russia hard only half the time—until Germany paid for 75kg warheads
Ukraine’s deep strikes are becoming more destructive. The main reason, it seems, is the combination of a largely German-funded attack drone—and the powerful warhead, or warheads, it can carry. As recently as last year, the Ukrainian military and its supporting agencies—in particular, the state security service, or SBU—struggled to make an impact with long-range drones. “More than half of the recorded strikes between September and February had limited impact,” Ukrainian analysis group Frontell
Ukraine’s best drones hit Russia hard only half the time—until Germany paid for 75kg warheads
Ukraine’s deep strikes are becoming more destructive. The main reason, it seems, is the combination of a largely German-funded attack drone—and the powerful warhead, or warheads, it can carry.
As recently as last year, the Ukrainian military and its supporting agencies—in particular, the state security service, or SBU—struggled to make an impact with long-range drones. “More than half of the recorded strikes between September and February had limited impact,” Ukrainian analysis group Frontelligence Insight concluded in a March study.
But that’s changing as more and better drones with bigger and better-designed warheads strike more frequently many hundreds of kilometers inside Russia.
Tatarigami, Frontelligence Insight’s founder, recently sensed the change. “Based on an early look at several dozen hits over the past two weeks, both the success rate and damage from Ukrainian long-range drones have gone up compared to late 2024 [to] early 2025,” he wrote. “I haven’t put together the data set yet, but even at a glance, the results already look different.”
In recent weeks, Ukrainian drones have hit Russian airfields—destroying several warplanes and helicopters—while also blowing up key components of the refinery in Novokuibyshevsk, which accounts for around 3% of annual refining in Russia.

One Ukrainian drone keeps smashing Russia’s top war factories—so Germany’s paying for 500 more
Thanks in large part to German largess, Ukrainian firm Ukroboronprom is building hundreds more of its best An-196 Liutyi attack drones than it had planned earlier this year.
According to German newspaper Die Welt, the government of German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is providing around $100 million to pay for 500 of the propeller-driven, satellite-guided Liutyi drones. A Liutyi carries an approximately 50-kg warhead farther than 800 km. The $200,000 drone can follow a complex flight path and change altitude in order to avoid Russian air-defenses.
Early Liutyi models may have had comparatively simple and light warheads. “One contributing factor” in the limited effectiveness of drone strikes in 2024 and early 2025, Frontelligence Insight concluded, “is the relatively small warhead size of certain Ukrainian drones, such as the Liutyi.”
For comparison, a Russian Shahed drone carries a 90-kg warhead.
It’s possible Ukroboronprom has been improving and enlarging the warhead on the An-196. Roy, a Canadian drone expert, recently observed a 60-kg OFB-60 warhead apparently recovered from the wreck of a crashed Liutyi. “The 60-kg high-explosive shaped-charge munition has a concave metal face for forming an … explosively formed projectile” that can punch through metal, Roy noted.

Warhead options
It’s not clear that all Liutyi drones have the 60-kg shaped-charge warhead. The drones are often described as carrying just 50 kg of explosives. It’s actually possible the drones can carry even bigger payloads. Missile expert Fabian Hoffman even claimed some An-196s are now packing 75-kg warheads.
A bigger warhead comes at a cost, however. “Given the long distances these [Ukrainian] drones must travel, increasing their warhead size would require adjustments to weight, fuel capacity and overall design,” Frontelligence assessed. In short, there’s a direct tradeoff. A bigger warhead means more destruction but a shorter range.
The reported recent development of a Liutyi model capable of traveling 2,000 km may imply some of the drones are carrying lighter warheads rather than heavier ones—trading away explosive payload in order to add fuel capacity.
So when Tatarigami senses Ukrainian drone strikes are becoming more destructive, there may be caveats. The most destructive raids might be the one striking closest to the Ukrainian border. Yes, a few An-196s or other drone types may range 2,000 km into Russia. But the ones dealing the real damage—potentially with the most powerful shaped-charge warheads—are probably hitting targets no more than 800 km from Ukraine.
Not coincidentally, SBU drones pummeled Saky air base in Russian-occupied Crimea on 3 August, reportedly destroying one Sukhoi Su-30 fighter jet and damaging another—and also damaging three Sukhoi Su-24 bombers. Saky is fewer than 300 km from the front line in southern Ukraine.
That’s well within range of a harder-hitting Liutyi drone.
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UKR Inform
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MFA calls on international community to condemn Russia's repressive policy toward Indigenous Peoples of Ukraine
On the occasion of the International Day of the World's Indigenous Peoples, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs called on the international community to condemn Russia's repressive and discriminatory policy toward the Indigenous Peoples of Ukraine.
MFA calls on international community to condemn Russia's repressive policy toward Indigenous Peoples of Ukraine
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UKR Inform
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Joint security and EU integration: Zelensky holds telephone conversation with Estonian Prime Minister
Prime Minister of Estonia Kristen Michal agrees that decisions regarding Ukraine's security are important for everyone in Europe.
Joint security and EU integration: Zelensky holds telephone conversation with Estonian Prime Minister
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Euromaidan Press
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Russia’s Iskanders from occupied Zaporizhzhia Oblast hit Dnipro — three civilians in hospital after dawn strike
Russia launched two Iskander-K missiles and 47 drones overnight, hitting multiple cities and towns in the morning. The Russian strikes left one person dead and four others injured across Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, damaging homes, businesses, and power lines. The air assault is part of Russia’s daily drone and missile attacks against Ukrainian civilians, aiming to break Ukrainian morale. As US President Donald Trump pushes for peace talks between Kyiv and Moscow, Russia continues to target Ukrainian
Russia’s Iskanders from occupied Zaporizhzhia Oblast hit Dnipro — three civilians in hospital after dawn strike
Russia launched two Iskander-K missiles and 47 drones overnight, hitting multiple cities and towns in the morning. The Russian strikes left one person dead and four others injured across Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, damaging homes, businesses, and power lines.
Missile strike hits Dnipro at dawn
Head of the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Military Administration Serhii Lysak said Russian forces struck Dnipro with two Iskander-K missiles from occupied Zaporizhzhia Oblast early on 9 August. One missile was intercepted, but the other hit an industrial site.
Three civilians — a 41-year-old woman and two men aged 21 and 29 — were hospitalized in moderate condition. The blast destroyed vehicles, damaged a disused building, and set parts of the facility on fire.
Civilian killed in Nikopol artillery strike
Lysak reported that Russian artillery and drones continued attacking Nikopol, Myrivska, Marhanetska, and Pokrovska communities through the night.
In Nikopol, artillery fire killed a 56-year-old woman when her home collapsed. Rescue workers recovered her body from the rubble. A 62-year-old man was seriously injured and taken to hospital.
Six more houses were damaged, one was partially destroyed, and two farm buildings and a power line were hit. In Myrivska community, an FPV drone strike on 8 August set a farm building ablaze and damaged a car.
Attacks also targeted Mezhivska community in Synelnykove district. Lysak said drones struck both a detached house and an apartment building, sparking fires that emergency crews later contained.
Kharkiv Oblast
In Balakliia, Kharkiv Oblast, the head of the Balakliia City Military Administration, Vitalii Karabanov, said Russian drones struck the city center, damaging residential and nonresidential buildings and igniting a fire.
Suspilne reported that a series of explosions occurred in Chuhuiv, Kharkiv Oblast, overnight.
Strikes hit multiple oblasts overnight
Ukraine’s Air Force reported that air defenses intercepted 16 of the 47 Shahed-type and decoy drones launched from Russia’s Kursk, Millerovo, and Shatalovo areas, along with one of the two Iskander-K missiles from occupied Zaporizhzhia Oblast.
In total, the Air Force reported that 31 drones hit 15 locations, with Chernihiv, Sumy, Kharkiv, and Donetsk oblasts also coming under attack.
“As of 09:00, air defenses shot down or suppressed an Iskander-K cruise missile, 16 enemy Shahed-type drones, and various types of decoy drones in the north and east of the country. Hits from 31 drones were recorded at 15 locations,” the report reads.
Ongoing attacks despite Kremlin’s ceasefire talk
The Institute for the Study of War noted that Russia’s continued strikes on major Ukrainian cities show the Kremlin’s lack of interest in good-faith negotiations. T
Read also
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Lozova’s worst drone strike: Russia kills railway worker, injures teenagers
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Trump’s Russia deadline expires without sanctions — now he’s flying Putin to Alaska for “peace” talks
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Zelenskyy to Trump-Putin’s plan for Ukraine to cede territory to Russia: Ukrainian land is not yours to trade
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Nightly assaults become routine as Russian drones swarm Ukrainian skies, injuring civilians
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UKR Inform
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Zelensky discusses with Starmer the “danger of Russia's plan”
President Volodymyr Zelensky discussed with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer the need for lasting peace in Ukraine and the danger of Russia's plan to reduce everything to a discussion of the impossible outcome.
Zelensky discusses with Starmer the “danger of Russia's plan”
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UKR Inform
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Germany reminds Lukashenko of demand to release over thousand political prisoners
On the fifth anniversary of the elections in Belarus, Germany reminds the Lukashenko regime of over 1,000 political prisoners and demands their release.
Germany reminds Lukashenko of demand to release over thousand political prisoners
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The Independent Ukraine
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Starmer vows ‘unwavering support’ for Ukraine after defiant Zelensky rules out giving up land to Russia
Labour foreign secretary David Lammy and US Vice President JD Vance will host meeting of national security advisers on Saturday, as Trump prepares to meet Putin next week
Starmer vows ‘unwavering support’ for Ukraine after defiant Zelensky rules out giving up land to Russia
Labour foreign secretary David Lammy and US Vice President JD Vance will host meeting of national security advisers on Saturday, as Trump prepares to meet Putin next week
© PA Wire
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Euromaidan Press
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Canada joins EU and UK in slashing Russian oil price cap to $47.60 — Japan and US stay out for now
Canada joins EU and UK to lower the Russian oil price cap to $47.60 in a move aimed at cutting Kremlin revenues while avoiding shocks to global markets. The change, due in early September, leaves Japan and the US as the only G7 members not adopting the reduced limit. Shortly after Russia launched its full-scale invasion in 2022, Canada banned direct imports of Russian oil on 10 March that year. As a net crude exporter, Ottawa does not rely on Russian supply, but the lower oil price cap is intend
Canada joins EU and UK in slashing Russian oil price cap to $47.60 — Japan and US stay out for now
Canada joins EU and UK to lower the Russian oil price cap to $47.60 in a move aimed at cutting Kremlin revenues while avoiding shocks to global markets. The change, due in early September, leaves Japan and the US as the only G7 members not adopting the reduced limit.
Canada aligns with European allies on oil sanctions
On 8 August, the Department of Finance of Canada confirmed Ottawa will match the European Union and United Kingdom in reducing the price cap on seaborne Russian-origin crude oil from $60 to $47.60 per barrel. The measure is part of the G7-led sanctions mechanism introduced in December 2022 to restrict Moscow’s war funding. The coalition also includes Australia and New Zealand.
Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne said the cut would increase economic pressure on Russia and limit a crucial source of funding for its war in Ukraine. Foreign Minister Anita Anand stressed Canada’s commitment to applying sustained pressure on Moscow. Kyiv has pressed for an even lower $30 limit.
Japan and US not joining the cut
Most G7 members will introduce the lower cap in September. Japan and the US have not signed on, but Canada remains part of the Price Cap Coalition and may follow future reductions agreed within the group.
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UKR Inform
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Russians attack private yard in Huliaipole with drone, woman wounded
Russian troops struck a private household in Huliaipole, Zaporizhzhia region, with a drone. A 68-year-old woman was wounded.
Russians attack private yard in Huliaipole with drone, woman wounded
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UKR Inform
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SSU drones strike Shahed storage terminal in Tatarstan
Drones belonging to the Security Service of Ukraine have struck a storage terminal for Shahed drones in Tatarstan.
SSU drones strike Shahed storage terminal in Tatarstan
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Euromaidan Press
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Ukraine resolving Russian-designed humanitarian crisis at Georgia border
Ukraine is working to resolve a humanitarian crisis reportedly designed by Russia near the Georgian border, after Moscow intensified deportations of Ukrainian citizens in what Kyiv calls a systematic pressure campaign against neighboring countries. The Georgia border crisis represents how Russia weaponizes individual Ukrainian suffering to destabilize regional cooperation, creating impossible choices for neighboring countries between humanitarian obligations and security concerns. Ukrainian depo
Ukraine resolving Russian-designed humanitarian crisis at Georgia border
Ukraine is working to resolve a humanitarian crisis reportedly designed by Russia near the Georgian border, after Moscow intensified deportations of Ukrainian citizens in what Kyiv calls a systematic pressure campaign against neighboring countries.
The Georgia border crisis represents how Russia weaponizes individual Ukrainian suffering to destabilize regional cooperation, creating impossible choices for neighboring countries between humanitarian obligations and security concerns.
Ukrainian deportees stranded at the Russia-Georgia border ended their 3-day hunger strike on August 8 after Ukrainian Embassy representatives gained access to the checkpoint, but 96 people remain trapped in basement conditions at the Dariali crossing as Russia’s broader strategy continues.
“Our state is ready to take its people directly, rather than via Georgia and Moldova,” Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry stated. “The Russian Federation is ignoring this request, which indicates Moscow’s desire to deliberately create a humanitarian crisis on the Russian-Georgian border.”
Since mid-June, Russia has significantly escalated the deportation of Ukrainian citizens — primarily former prisoners who served sentences in occupied Ukrainian territories and were forcibly transferred to Russian detention facilities, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Moscow then deports these individuals through the Georgia border rather than allowing direct repatriation to Ukraine, creating complications for regional cooperation. The operation transforms individual Ukrainian citizens into pressure tools against Georgia’s sovereignty and Ukraine’s diplomatic relationships.
96 Ukrainians trapped in border limbo
This systematic campaign has resulted in 96 Ukrainians being stranded in a buffer zone at the Dariali checkpoint. People are being held with inadequate shelter, food, medical care, and legal support in basement conditions designed for much smaller numbers.
Desperation mounted as some deportees announced a hunger strike on August 5, demanding permission to cross into Georgia after being held in cramped conditions since mid-June.
Meanwhile, entry into Georgia is largely denied due to concerns over security and documentation. Many deportees are former prisoners with criminal backgrounds, creating legitimate security concerns for Georgian authorities while leaving the individuals trapped without legal status.
Deportation operations intensify at Georgia crossing
Since mid-June, Russia has significantly intensified deportations across the Georgia border.. While Ukraine successfully evacuated 44 citizens since late June, 96 remain stranded as Russian deportations continue.
The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry noted this “may indicate a deliberate Russian operation” designed to overwhelm Georgia’s capacity to handle deportees.
The crisis intensified in July when Moldova temporarily suspended transit for this category of deportees, leaving more people stranded at the Dariali checkpoint with no clear exit route to Ukraine.
Ukrainian diplomacy breaks immediate crisis
Ukrainian Embassy intervention ended the hunger strike on August 8 after consular representatives gained access to the stranded deportees. The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry confirmed that diplomatic contact provided temporary relief from the protest.
A representative of the deported Ukrainian citizens “expressed gratitude to the diplomatic mission for efforts to resolve the humanitarian crisis artificially created by the Russian side,” Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry reported after the hunger strike ended.
Ukraine successfully evacuated 44 citizens from the border zone since late June, but Russian deportations continue outpacing rescue efforts as Moscow maintains pressure on regional cooperation mechanisms.
Russia’s systematic pressure operation
The Ukrainian Foreign Ministry noted that most deportees are “people who have previously been brought to criminal responsibility,” including those who served sentences in occupied Ukrainian territories and were forcibly transferred to Russian facilities, as well as Ukrainian citizens convicted of crimes within Russia.
According to the Foreign Ministry, rather than allowing direct repatriation across the Russia-Ukraine border, Moscow deliberately routes deportees through Georgia to create complications for both countries. This forces Georgia to choose between humanitarian obligations and legitimate security concerns while straining Ukraine’s diplomatic resources.
The crisis intensified when Moldova temporarily suspended transit for this category of deportees, eliminating the main evacuation route and leaving more people stranded at Dariali with no clear path home.
Regional cooperation under Russian pressure
Georgian authorities have expressed willingness to transport deportees to Tbilisi Airport, but only after Moldova confirms readiness to receive them as transit passengers, according to the MFA. This dependency on third-party coordination demonstrates how Russia’s strategy complicates regional cooperation.
The Dariali crossing represents the only viable exit route for Ukrainians deported from Russia, making Georgia’s cooperation essential while placing the country in an impossible position between humanitarian duties and security concerns.
Ukraine continues working with international organizations including the Red Cross, UNHCR, and International Organization for Migration to address the crisis, but Russia’s systematic approach suggests pressure will continue as Moscow weaponizes human suffering for strategic advantage.
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Euromaidan Press
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G4Media: Romania investigates Russia over chlorine-tainted Azerbaijani oil bound for Europe
Romania is investigating Russia over chlorine-tainted Azerbaijani oil after refinery testing revealed contamination that could have caused severe equipment damage and major fuel shortages. G4Media reports, citing official sources, that the suspected sabotage has disrupted shipments, triggered an official crisis declaration, and raised alarm in Italy and Czechia. This incident comes in the context of the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine. The EU has been working to end its former reliance on
G4Media: Romania investigates Russia over chlorine-tainted Azerbaijani oil bound for Europe
Romania is investigating Russia over chlorine-tainted Azerbaijani oil after refinery testing revealed contamination that could have caused severe equipment damage and major fuel shortages. G4Media reports, citing official sources, that the suspected sabotage has disrupted shipments, triggered an official crisis declaration, and raised alarm in Italy and Czechia.
Romania probes suspected Russian sabotage of oil supply
According to G4Media’s official sources, Romanian authorities are examining whether Russia deliberately contaminated Azerbaijani crude intended for OMV Petrom’s Petrobrazi refinery. The oil, transported through the Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline and shipped onward to Romania, was found to contain chlorine levels high enough to corrode refinery systems. Officials believe such damage could have led to prolonged shutdowns and serious disruption of the country’s fuel supply.
Contamination reaches other European countries
G4Media notes that part of the chlorine-tainted Azerbaijani oil had already reached Italy, where energy company Eni confirmed contamination in one of its refineries, according to Reuters. The Czech company Orlen Unipetrol, which was also due to process the batch, halted all operations involving the shipment.
Sources cited by G4Media say the contamination could have been carried out through a relatively simple sabotage operation along the 1,770 km pipeline route. The suspected method involved injecting several tankloads of chlorine into the crude stream during transit, a step that could have been executed without major technical obstacles.
Wider European energy risks
The Baku–Tbilisi–Ceyhan pipeline operator BTC Co., managed by BP, acknowledged being informed of possible quality issues linked to organic chlorides in some loads of its crude mix. BTC Co. stated it is assessing oil quality at all facilities along the route. Organic chlorides are sometimes used in oil extraction but must be removed before pipeline transport, as they can cause severe corrosion to refinery equipment.
Similar contamination incidents have had serious market impacts in the past. In 2019, Russian oil exports via the Druzhba pipeline were halted after high levels of chlorides were detected, forcing buyers to seek alternative supplies at short notice.
Strategic response and ongoing investigation
Romania’s emergency release of fuel stocks is intended to cover domestic demand until uncontaminated shipments arrive. G4Media reports that swift action by the Ministry of Energy helped avert immediate shortages, but concerns remain over the spread of contaminated crude in storage tanks and processing units across Europe.
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Euromaidan Press
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Axios: US, Ukraine, and NATO allies rush to high-stakes UK meeting to forge united stance before Trump meets Putin
Senior officials from the US, Ukraine, and several European countries will meet this weekend in a high-stakes UK meeting to coordinate positions before President Trump’s planned talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Axios reported on 8 August. Diplomats are working to align strategies and prevent any agreement that could cement Russian territorial gains in Ukraine. This comes as Trump’s 8 August ceasefire deadline for Russia passed without sanctions, with the US president instead setting
Axios: US, Ukraine, and NATO allies rush to high-stakes UK meeting to forge united stance before Trump meets Putin
Senior officials from the US, Ukraine, and several European countries will meet this weekend in a high-stakes UK meeting to coordinate positions before President Trump’s planned talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Axios reported on 8 August. Diplomats are working to align strategies and prevent any agreement that could cement Russian territorial gains in Ukraine.
Allies push for unity before Trump-Putin summit
Axios said the weekend gathering was arranged after a series of conference calls between US, Ukrainian, and European officials, the third in as many days. The idea for an in-person meeting in the UK came up during a call on Friday, 8 August. Discussions will focus on producing a common stance that could shape Trump’s approach when he meets Putin.
According to Axios, the urgency stems from concerns among Ukraine and NATO allies that Trump might accept Kremlin proposals without fully taking their positions into account. The Kremlin’s reported offer would freeze Russian control over occupied parts of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia oblasts, including the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, as well as areas of Luhansk and Donetsk oblasts Russia has held since the invasion.

Trump’s Russia deadline expires without sanctions — now he’s flying Putin to Alaska for “peace” talks
Confusion over Russian proposal
Axios cited two sources saying that during a call on 6 August, White House envoy Steve Witkoff briefed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders on his meeting with Putin in Moscow. The initial impression among some participants was that Putin might drop his claim to partially occupied Kherson and Zaporizhzhia oblasts, a shift from earlier Russian demands.
However, Axios said that in a follow-up video call the next day, Witkoff clarified that Putin had agreed only to freeze positions in those oblasts, leaving large portions under Russian occupation. Ukrainian officials remain unsure about the exact details of the Kremlin’s terms and the US position. One

ISW: Give up your fortress belt shield, take nothing in return—Putin’s ceasefire pitch to Ukraine
Stakes for Ukraine’s security
Trump announced that he will meet with Putin in Alaska on 15 August. The US President claimed the sides are “getting very close” to a deal. He has spoken of “some swapping of territories to the betterment of both countries” and suggested returning some occupied areas to Ukraine. According to Trump, Zelenskyy is preparing a legal arrangement that would allow him “to sign something” without violating Ukrainian law.
Western officials cited by Axios view the UK meeting as an opportunity to present a united message to Trump before his high-profile summit with Putin. The White House has declined to comment on the planned ally meeting.
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Pivnenko inspects units performing tasks related to defense of Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant
Commander of the National Guard of Ukraine Oleksandr Pivnenko inspected units performing tasks related to the protection and defense of the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant and the exclusion zone.
Pivnenko inspects units performing tasks related to defense of Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant
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New Polish President to meet Trump in Washington
U.S. President Donald Trump has invited the new Polish President, Karol Nawrocki, to Washington for a meeting on September 3.
New Polish President to meet Trump in Washington
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Three police officers injured in repeated Russian strike on minibus in Kherson
Three police officers were injured in a repeated strike by a Russian drone on a bus in the suburbs of Kherson.
Three police officers injured in repeated Russian strike on minibus in Kherson
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The Independent Ukraine
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Trump reveals where and when he will meet Putin for Ukraine peace talks
The meeting between the two leaders will be the first US-Russia summit since 2021
Trump reveals where and when he will meet Putin for Ukraine peace talks
The meeting between the two leaders will be the first US-Russia summit since 2021
© AP
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Euromaidan Press
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Zelenskyy to Trump-Putin’s plan for Ukraine to cede territory to Russia: Ukrainian land is not yours to trade
The Ukrainian president has predictably rejected Trump-Putin’s plan to cede territory to Russia, calling any such move unconstitutional and unacceptable. Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine will not give land to the occupier in exchange for a ceasefire, stressing that its borders are already defined in the Constitution and cannot be altered. This comes as US President Donald Trump’s 10-day deadline for the Kremlin to respond on peace talks expired without new US secondary sanctions on Russia on 8 A
Zelenskyy to Trump-Putin’s plan for Ukraine to cede territory to Russia: Ukrainian land is not yours to trade
The Ukrainian president has predictably rejected Trump-Putin’s plan to cede territory to Russia, calling any such move unconstitutional and unacceptable. Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine will not give land to the occupier in exchange for a ceasefire, stressing that its borders are already defined in the Constitution and cannot be altered.
Zelenskyy rules out territorial concessions in peace talks
In his 9 August morning video address, Zelenskyy said the answer to Ukraine’s territorial question is already in the Constitution.
“No one will retreat from this and no one can. Ukrainians will not gift their land to the occupier,” he stated.
He described any settlement reached without Ukraine’s participation as a “dead decision” that would never work, warning that real and lasting peace must be respected by all parties.
The President said Ukraine is ready to work with US President Donald Trump and international partners to secure agreements that will hold over time.
“We are ready together with President Trump, together with all partners, to work for real, and most importantly, lasting peace – peace that will not fall apart because of Moscow’s wishes,” he noted.
According to earlier reports, the Kremlin’s proposal would see Ukraine cede unoccupied, strategically important areas of Donetsk Oblast to Russia while freezing the frontline elsewhere. Analysts assess that such a move would leave Kyiv in a weaker defensive position and give Moscow a better launch point for future offensives.

ISW: Give up your fortress belt shield, take nothing in return—Putin’s ceasefire pitch to Ukraine
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Euromaidan Press
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ISW: Give up your fortress belt shield, take nothing in return—Putin’s ceasefire pitch to Ukraine
Kremlin officials are reportedly demanding that Ukraine surrender the Ukrainian “fortress belt” in Donetsk Oblast before any ceasefire, a move the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) says is deliberately designed to be unacceptable. The think tank assessed that Moscow “lacks the means to capture” the fortified cities and instead wants Kyiv to abandon them “in exchange for nothing.” This comes after US President Donald Trump’s deadline for Russia to agree to a ceasefire, which ended up in nothin
ISW: Give up your fortress belt shield, take nothing in return—Putin’s ceasefire pitch to Ukraine
Kremlin officials are reportedly demanding that Ukraine surrender the Ukrainian “fortress belt” in Donetsk Oblast before any ceasefire, a move the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) says is deliberately designed to be unacceptable. The think tank assessed that Moscow “lacks the means to capture” the fortified cities and instead wants Kyiv to abandon them “in exchange for nothing.”
Putin’s demands target Ukraine’s strongest defense line
Bloomberg reported on 8 August that Vladimir Putin’s proposal would require Ukraine to withdraw from Ukrainian-controlled areas in Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, along with Crimea, before any negotiations. The plan makes no mention of Russian withdrawal from the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant or from positions in Kharkiv, Sumy, Dnipropetrovsk, and Mykolaiv oblasts.
According to the Wall Street Journal, two European officials briefed on the offer said it included two phases: Ukraine would first withdraw from Donetsk Oblast and freeze the frontline, followed by a peace plan to be agreed between Putin and US President Donald Trump, and later negotiated with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Trump said at a press conference on 8 August that “there will be some swapping of territories to the betterment of both,” adding there would be “no further announcements until August 9 or later.”

Trump’s Russia deadline expires without sanctions — now he’s flying Putin to Alaska for “peace” talks
ISW stressed that conceding the Ukrainian fortress belt—a line of four major cities and several towns reinforced since 2014—would allow Russian forces to avoid “a long and bloody struggle for the ground.”
The belt, stretching dozens of kilometers along the H-20 highway from Sloviansk to Kostiantynivka, has blocked Moscow’s advance for over a decade. Losing it would push the front 82 kilometers deeper into Ukraine, positioning Russian forces within striking range of Kharkiv and Dnipropetrovsk oblasts.

Risk of new offensives after a ‘ceasefire’
The think tank warned that Russian forces “will almost certainly violate any future ceasefire or peace agreement” without robust monitoring and security guarantees. Ceding the belt would also force Ukraine to urgently fortify open terrain at the Donetsk Oblast border, which ISW described as “significantly less defensible than the current line.”
Russian troops have repeatedly failed to seize Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, and Druzhkivka since 2022. ISW noted that taking them now would require years of combat and high losses, making a negotiated surrender far more advantageous for Moscow. It would also spare Russian forces from costly battles for Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad, and allow them to bypass Ukraine’s westernmost Dobropillia-Bilozerske defensive line.
Ongoing strikes signal lack of good faith
While the proposal circulated, the Ukrainian Air Force said Russia launched four jet-powered drones and 104 Shahed-type strike and decoy drones overnight on 7–8 August. Of these, 79 were downed, but 26 struck ten locations, damaging civilian and industrial infrastructure in Kharkiv City’s Saltyvskyi Raion, Bucha Raion in Kyiv Oblast, and in Sumy and Odesa oblasts.
ISW concluded that these continued strikes, combined with Kremlin messaging that “only Putin will dictate the terms of peace,” show the Russian leader “remains disinterested in good-faith negotiations” and still seeks Ukraine’s capitulation.
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German diplomat: Trump should discuss ending Russian aggression at meeting with Zelensky and Putin
U.S. President Donald Trump, holding a bilateral meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska, risks falling into the political trap of the Russian leader again, who, however, may find himself in an awkward position due to the choice of the summit venue.
German diplomat: Trump should discuss ending Russian aggression at meeting with Zelensky and Putin
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FM: Ukraine is ready to cooperate with all international partners for just and lasting peace
Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha emphasized Ukraine's readiness to cooperate with the United States and other international partners to achieve a just and lasting peace.
FM: Ukraine is ready to cooperate with all international partners for just and lasting peace
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The Independent Ukraine
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Zelensky warns he won’t give up land ahead of Trump-Putin meeting
Volodymyr Zelensky has warned that Ukraine will not give up land, following Donald Trump’s claim that a peace deal with Russia may involve “some swapping of territories”.
Zelensky warns he won’t give up land ahead of Trump-Putin meeting
Volodymyr Zelensky has warned that Ukraine will not give up land, following Donald Trump’s claim that a peace deal with Russia may involve “some swapping of territories”.
© Volodymyr Zelensky
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Main Intelligence Directorate shows how Nexus unit destroys Russian drones
The Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense showed how Nexus Unit destroys Russian drones.
Main Intelligence Directorate shows how Nexus unit destroys Russian drones
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Euromaidan Press
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Trump’s Russia deadline expires without sanctions — now he’s flying Putin to Alaska for “peace” talks
After his own deadline for Moscow to accept a ceasefire expired without any sanctions, US President Donald Trump said he will meet Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Alaska on 15 August. Speaking after signing a peace declaration with the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan on 8 August, Trump said the talks would include proposals for Ukraine to cede territory to Russia. This comes as Russia has escalated its air attacks against Ukrainian civilians in rear cities, while pushing hard in attempts to s
Trump’s Russia deadline expires without sanctions — now he’s flying Putin to Alaska for “peace” talks
After his own deadline for Moscow to accept a ceasefire expired without any sanctions, US President Donald Trump said he will meet Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Alaska on 15 August. Speaking after signing a peace declaration with the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan on 8 August, Trump said the talks would include proposals for Ukraine to cede territory to Russia.
Trump abandons sanctions threat for Alaska summit
Trump had earlier warned Putin that failing to meet his ceasefire deadline would trigger US sanctions. The deadline silently expired on 8 August. Instead, he told reporters,
“I will be meeting very shortly with President Putin. It would have been sooner… I guess there are security arrangements that unfortunately people have to make.”
Later the same day, he confirmed on his Truth Social account that the summit would take place in Alaska next Friday, 15 August.
The US President claimed the discussions were ostensibly “getting very close” to a deal and said the arrangement would allegedly bring “betterment” to both sides.
“We’re looking at territory that has been fought over for 3.5 years… We will get some back. We will get some — some switched. There will be some swapping of territories,” he said, calling it “very complicated” but ultimately positive.
Kremlin confirms date and location
Russian presidential aide Yuri Ushakov told Russian media the meeting would happen on 15 August in Alaska, describing it as “logical” because the two countries are close neighbors. He added that the Arctic and Alaska are where their economic interests meet, with potential for large-scale joint projects. Ushakov said the key topic would be options for a “long-term settlement” of Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Secret envoy visit before announcement
The Wall Street Journal reported that US special representative Steve Witkoff met Putin in Moscow on 6 August for three hours. Sources told the paper that Putin had presented a two-stage proposal: first, the withdrawal of Ukrainian forces from Donetsk Oblast and a freeze of the front line, and second, a final peace deal to be agreed with Trump and later discussed with Ukraine.
Plan mirrors earlier Russian demands
The Wall Street Journal, citing a senior European diplomat and a Ukrainian official, said Putin could propose that Russia officially control part of the occupied Ukrainian territories in exchange for pulling troops from other areas. This aligns with Trump’s public stance.
“He has to get everything he needs. He is getting ready to sign something, and I think he is working hard to get that done,” Trump suggested of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Trump repeats false aid claim and praises NATO
During his remarks, Trump again repeated his debunked claim that the United States had spent $350 billion on Ukraine, saying,
“$350 billion… the United States has spent on that. It should have spent nothing. It should have never happened.”
He praised NATO allies for increasing their defense spending from 2% to 5% of GDP, adding,
“Europe wants to see peace. European leaders want to see peace. President Putin, I believe, wants to see peace and President Zelensky wants to see peace.”
Although Russia’s 2014 invasion continued throughout Trump’s pre-Biden first term, he again claimed the war would “never have happened” if he had been president earlier, blaming Biden and citing destruction in Ukraine:
“Magnificent towers, the spires… considered the most beautiful in the world… they are all in a million pieces laying on the ground… So sad. Millions of people have died.”
It is unclear what “towers and spires” Trump had in mind, as Ukraine has not lost any such world-famous landmarks in the war — the image appears to exist only in his imagination, though Russia has indeed obliterated entire cities like Popasna, Bakhmut, Mariupol, and Vovchansk.
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Ex-UK Defense Chief demands seat at Ukraine peace talks to counter two “bulliyng” leaders
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White House reportedly preparing trilateral meeting between Trump, Zelenskyy and Putin
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Bloomberg: US, Russia discuss deal to secure occupied Ukrainian territories for Russia
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New Pentagon memo may put Ukraine aid on hold, as weapons may stay in US unless Trump says “go”
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ISW: Ahead of Trump’s 8 August deadline, Russian propagandists fuel White House division to avoid sanctions
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UKR Inform
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Alaska Governor says state is ready to host Trump-Putin meeting
On Saturday, Alaska Governor Mike Dunlap said that the state is ready to host a meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin.
Alaska Governor says state is ready to host Trump-Putin meeting
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The Independent Ukraine
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South Korea claims North Korea has removed speakers from tense border
South Korea's military says North Korea has started removing some loudspeakers from the inter-Korean border
South Korea claims North Korea has removed speakers from tense border
© Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
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Number of people injured in strike on minibus in Kherson rises to 16
In Kherson, the number of people injured in a Russian drone strike on a bus has risen to 16, with two in severe condition.
Number of people injured in strike on minibus in Kherson rises to 16
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UKR Inform
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Russian forces attack minibus in Kherson with drone, two dead, six wounded
On the morning of August 9, Russian troops attacked a minibus in the suburbs of Kherson with a drone.
Russian forces attack minibus in Kherson with drone, two dead, six wounded
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Russians strike car in Zaporizhzhia region with drone, kill two
Russian military attacked a car in the Zaporizhzhia region with a drone, killing two people.
Russians strike car in Zaporizhzhia region with drone, kill two
Putin to meet Trump in Alaska for Ukraine talks
© Sputnik
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Euromaidan Press
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Locals watch Lithuanian coast guard chasing Russian marine drone launched from Kaliningrad
Lithuania may have become the target of a Russian underwater drone, right off its own coast. In early August, near the resort town of Nida, the drone likely entered Lithuanian territorial waters from the direction of Russia, Delfi reports. As of August 2025, Lithuania’s relations with Russia remain extremely tense. The country’s government is allocating more than €1.1 billion to strengthen its borders with Russia and Belarus and to bolster national defense. Locals noticed the unusual behavio
Locals watch Lithuanian coast guard chasing Russian marine drone launched from Kaliningrad
Lithuania may have become the target of a Russian underwater drone, right off its own coast. In early August, near the resort town of Nida, the drone likely entered Lithuanian territorial waters from the direction of Russia, Delfi reports.
Locals noticed the unusual behavior of a border patrol boat. A coast guard vessel was seen chasing an unidentified object in the Curonian Lagoon, an area where active operations are rarely conducted.
Underwater provocation near Nida
Aistė Žalneraitienė, senior specialist at the State Border Guard Service, confirmed the incident: on 2 August, a suspicious object was indeed detected in the reported place and is currently being examined by the Criminal Investigation Department.
Preliminary assessments suggest the drone may have been launched from Russia’s Kaliningrad Oblast, which is one of the main hubs of Russian military activity near NATO borders.
“Gerbera” strikes again
This is not the first incident involving Russian unmanned systems in Lithuania. On 1 August, debris from a Gerbera drone, widely used in Ukraine’s war, was found at the Gaižiūnai military training ground in the Jonava District. The drone was likely launched from Belarus. The incident was confirmed by Lithuania’s Minister of National Defense, Dovilė Šakalienė.
A week earlier, another drone of the same type crashed near the closed Šumskas border checkpoint, almost directly on the Belarusian border.
In July, a Russian drone also violated Lithuanian airspace near Vilnius. It flew at an altitude of 200 meters and remained in Lithuanian airspace for about half an hour.
Following this series of violations, Lithuanian armed forces will implement additional security measures.
Earlier, Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service Head, Sergey Naryshkin, warned that Poland and the Baltic states would be the first to suffer in the event of a war between Moscow and NATO. In 2025, Russia plans to train and station up to 150,000 additional troops in Belarus.
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New Pentagon memo may put Ukraine aid on hold, as weapons may stay in US unless Trump says “go”
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Ukraine, Poland, and Lithuania form new alliance to counter Putin’s weaponized historic narratives amid war of attrition
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Bloomberg: US, Russia discuss deal to secure occupied Ukrainian territories for Russia
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Russia spy chief warns NATO: Poland and Baltic States to “suffer first” in event of war
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UKR Inform
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Ukraine ready for real peace decisions but will not cede land to invaders, says Zelensky
Ukraine is ready for real decisions that can bring peace, but Ukrainians will not give their land to invaders, says President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Ukraine ready for real peace decisions but will not cede land to invaders, says Zelensky
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UKR Inform
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Russian army attacks Dnipro with missiles in morning, injuring three
Three people were injured in Dnipro this morning as a result of a rocket attack, and there is damage to the territory of the enterprise.
Russian army attacks Dnipro with missiles in morning, injuring three
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Euromaidan Press
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Russo-Ukrainian war, day 1262: Ukrainian territory concessions at table amid US-Russia peace talks
Exclusives Boosting work efficiency with Mini PCs: A smart solution for modern businesses. These devices offer a unique combination of space-saving design and robust performance, making them suitable for a wide range of applications in the workplace Blue hair, drones, and evac crews: Ukraine’s fallen women fighters (Part 1). Nobody drafted them; nobody forced them. These women fighters chose to go to war and face death. This NATO defense minister tried to stop Russian prop
Russo-Ukrainian war, day 1262: Ukrainian territory concessions at table amid US-Russia peace talks
Exclusives
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Boosting work efficiency with Mini PCs: A smart solution for modern businesses. These devices offer a unique combination of space-saving design and robust performance, making them suitable for a wide range of applications in the workplace |
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Blue hair, drones, and evac crews: Ukraine’s fallen women fighters (Part 1). Nobody drafted them; nobody forced them. These women fighters chose to go to war and face death. |
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This NATO defense minister tried to stop Russian propaganda. His country fell anyway. Slovakia proved democracy can be bought with fake news, Martin Sklenar reveals |
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Russia found 1,000 rusty tanks in Siberia—it’s all that’s left. Russia’s 1970s tanks are back in style—because everything newer is getting blown up in Ukraine. |
Military
Ukrainian GRU attack kill 12 in bold strike on Russian air defense base in Krasnodar Krai. Ukraine’s intelligence service struck deep into Russian territory on 8 August, killing 12 members of an air defense unit and injured dozens more
Russia hunts 13-year-old Ukrainian boy with drone in Kherson, as fears grow Kremlin may try to recapture liberated city. Drone attacks, artillery, and infrastructure strikes hit hard as the Kremlin eyes recapturing the only regional capital it seized during the all-out war.
Intelligence and Technology
Baykar’s Akıncı drone successfully tests smart missiles using Ukrainian engine
. Türkiye’s Bayraktar Akıncı drone completed successful weapons testing using Ukrainian AI-450T engines, demonstrating the readiness of a 5-year defense partnership between the two nations.
Ukraine shoots down two new Russian Shahed-type drones. Two new Russian Shahed-type drones shot down by Ukrainian forces this week were packed with Chinese technology, including flight controllers and navigation systems from a single company
International
Bloomberg: US, Russia discuss deal to secure occupied Ukrainian territories for Russia. Putin reportedly is demanding Ukraine surrender the entire Donbas and Crimea as part of a deal that would potentially freeze the war along current battle lines.
Latvia joins Europe’s Trump-proof weapons funding mechanism for Ukraine. First weapons deliveries under the new PURL initiative will arrive in Ukraine within weeks.
New Pentagon memo may put Ukraine aid on hold, as weapons may stay in US unless Trump says “go”
. Despite public support for NATO arms deal, behind-the-scenes bureaucracy may stall lifeline supplies to Kyiv.
British volunteer killed by Russian drone strike one month into Ukraine deployment. A British volunteer with no military background was killed by four Russian drones during his first combat operation in Ukraine
Ex-UK Defense Chief demands seat at Ukraine peace talks to counter two “bulliyng” leaders. European nations must secure representation in planned US-Russia-Ukraine peace negotiations to prevent Ukrainian President from facing pressure from “two bullies,” former UK Defence Secretary Sir Ben Wallace said
White House reportedly preparing trilateral meeting between Trump, Zelenskyy and Putin. Trump administration sources reveal the White House is actively organizing a three-way presidential summit that could bring together the US, Ukraine’s and Russia’s presidents as early as next week
Humanitarian and Social Impact
Kyiv buried journalist Victoria Roshchyna, murdered in Russian captivity
. She never abandoned what she started,” former editor Angelina Karyakina said at the August 8 funeral of journalist Victoria Roshchyna, who died in one of Russia’s most brutal places of detention.
Five people injured after Russian attack on Kyiv, Odesa and Sumy oblasts overnight. Ukraine’s air defense downed over 80 Russian drones during a coordinated Russian assault on civilian targets that damaged residential buildings, infrastructure, a kindergarten across 3 oblasts.
Political and Legal Developments
Russia sentences Mariupol defender for 21 years as Russian court labels him terrorist. Russian prosecutors secured a 21-year sentence against Vladislav Shpak by classifying his enlistment in Ukraine’s National Guard as terrorist activity, after the soldier was captured defending Mariupol’s Azovstal plant.
Russia accidentally admits what it denied for three years: war is breaking its economy. Russia just admitted something it has spent three years denying: the war is breaking its economy. According to Russian Finance Ministry data, Moscow’s federal deficit hit $62 billion by July, already 25% over its yearly target with five months still to go.
Read our earlier daily review here.
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UKR Inform
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Russian army loses 940 troops in one day of war against Ukraine
The total combat losses of Russian troops since the start of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, from February 24, 2022, to August 9, 2025, amount to approximately 1,062,290 people, including 940 people over the past day.
Russian army loses 940 troops in one day of war against Ukraine
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UKR Inform
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Journalists identify nearly 123,000 Russian soldiers killed in war against Ukraine
Journalists have identified the names of 122,883 Russian soldiers who died during Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which is more than 2,500 more than two weeks ago.
Journalists identify nearly 123,000 Russian soldiers killed in war against Ukraine
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UKR Inform
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Two injured in drone attack on Chuhuiv
On the night of August 9, Russian occupation forces attacked Chuhuiv, Kharkiv region, with drones. As a result of the strike, two civilians were injured and an apartment building was damaged.
Two injured in drone attack on Chuhuiv
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UKR Inform
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Trump to meet Putin on August 15 in Alaska
President Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin will meet on August 15 in Alaska.
Trump to meet Putin on August 15 in Alaska
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UKR Inform
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Over 5 million patients benefit from Affordable Medicines Program
More than 5 million patients have benefited from the Affordable Medicines Program since its inception.
Over 5 million patients benefit from Affordable Medicines Program
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UKR Inform
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Russians attack two districts of Dnipropetrovsk region 40 times, four people injured
The Russian army attacked communities in the Nikopol and Synelnykove districts of the Dnipropetrovsk region about 40 times during the day, injuring four people.
Russians attack two districts of Dnipropetrovsk region 40 times, four people injured
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The Independent Ukraine
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Russian nationalists have long demanded the return of Alaska. Now Trump has invited ICC-indicted Putin to the state
The Last Frontier state was purchased from the Russians by the U.S. for a sum of $7.2 million in 1867
Russian nationalists have long demanded the return of Alaska. Now Trump has invited ICC-indicted Putin to the state
The Last Frontier state was purchased from the Russians by the U.S. for a sum of $7.2 million in 1867
© AP