Authorities in Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast have expanded the mandatory evacuation zone for families with children, adding five new settlements due to intensifying Russian attacks. The decision was announced by Vadym Filashkin, head of the Donetsk Regional Military Administration (RMA), on 14 August.
Why Druzhkivka matters
Druzhkivka, an industrial city of strategic importance, lies about 80 km northeast of Donetsk City and has remained under Ukrainian control since 2014. Once home to nearly 5
Authorities in Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast have expanded the mandatory evacuation zone for families with children, adding five new settlements due to intensifying Russian attacks. The decision was announced by Vadym Filashkin, head of the Donetsk Regional Military Administration (RMA), on 14 August.
Why Druzhkivka matters
Druzhkivka, an industrial city of strategic importance, lies about 80 km northeast of Donetsk City and has remained under Ukrainian control since 2014. Once home to nearly 54,000 residents, its population has dropped sharply due to displacement. Its position along key transport routes makes it a vital defensive and logistical hub.
The new mandate covers Druzhkivka, Andriivka, Varvarivka, Novoandriivka, and Rohanske in the Andriivka community, where about 1,879 children currently live.
Escalating threats and governor’s warning
The evacuation decision followed a meeting of the regional commission on technogenic and environmental safety and emergency situations. Filashkin cited relentless Russian shelling—around 3,000 strikes daily—and urged parents to act:
“Take care of your loved ones — your children. Evacuate in time. Evacuate while it is still possible. Protect your loved ones and do not put them in danger.”
Children will be evacuated only with parents or legal guardians, using a coordinated process involving regional authorities, law enforcement, and local administrations.
Donetsk Oblast expanded mandatory evacuation to five more settlements amid rising Russian attacks. Photo: Vadym Filashkin via Facebook
Russian breakthrough near Pokrovsk raises alarm
Recent battlefield developments have amplified the urgency. Russian forces achieved a narrow but significant breakthrough north of Pokrovsk, advancing up to 17 km and seizing positions threatening Ukrainian supply lines. Another push near Dobropillia reached the Dobropillia–Kramatorsk highway, a key route for military logistics.
While Ukrainian commanders report stabilizing the front with reinforcements, analysts warn these advances could shift the strategic balance and increase risks for nearby civilian areas, including Druzhkivka.
Map: Deep State
Background on evacuations in Donetsk
Mandatory evacuations began in March 2023 in Bakhmut during heavy fighting. Since then, similar operations have taken place in Kryvorizka, Dobropilska, Druzhkivska, Lymanska, and Bilozerska communities as the front line has approached.
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When Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin meet in Alaska this Friday, the headlines will focus on the show: a US president hosting the Russian leader in a state once sold by the Russian Empire, with Ukraine’s fate hanging in the balance. But what’s invisible to many is a fundamental problem. The two men are not even negotiating the same war.
Trump and his advisers frame the war as a territorial dispute.
In Trump’s mind, ending the war is a matter of finding the right chunk of land to trade, a
When Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin meet in Alaska this Friday, the headlines will focus on the show: a US president hosting the Russian leader in a state once sold by the Russian Empire, with Ukraine’s fate hanging in the balance. But what’s invisible to many is a fundamental problem. The two men are not even negotiating the same war.
Trump and his advisers frame the war as a territorial dispute.
In Trump’s mind, ending the war is a matter of finding the right chunk of land to trade, a deal that can be signed quickly, sold to voters, and wrapped up before the next election cycle.
Putin’s view is entirely different. For him, this war is not about lines on a map. It is about the structure of Europe’s security order. His core demand, repeated for more than a decade, is a legally binding halt to NATO expansion, not just for Ukraine, but as a principle. That means rewriting the post–Cold War rules so that Moscow has a permanent veto over the alliances its neighbors may join.
It is, in effect, a constitutional rewrite of Europe’s security system.
But Putin’s demands go far beyond strategic reordering. According to Russian officials, Moscow seeks Ukraine’s complete “demilitarization,” “denazification”—Putin’s euphemism for regime change—and permanent “neutrality” barring any Western security guarantees.
Russia also wants all sanctions lifted and NATO forces rolled back from Eastern Europe entirely.
In other words, Putin is not negotiating over Ukrainian territory. He is negotiating over whether Ukraine will continue to exist as an independent state.
Trump is playing a game of Monopoly;
Putin is erasing countries from the map.
A protest against the Putin-Trump meeting in Alaska at the US embassy in Prague, 13 August 2025. Photo: Jana Plavec
What Ukraine cannot accept
This fundamental mismatch leaves Ukraine in an impossible position. Trump is willing to trade away frozen conflict lines, delayed NATO membership, and limited sanctions relief. But Ukraine needs what Putin refuses to give: genuine security guarantees, territorial integrity, and the sovereign right to choose its own alliances.
For Ukraine, accepting Putin’s terms would mean national suicide disguised as negotiation.
These are not positions Ukraine can compromise on—they are requirements for survival as an independent nation. Yet they are precisely what Trump’s deal-making approach treats as negotiable.
History’s warnings
There is no shortage of historical warnings about what happens when talks are built on such mismatches. Land swaps have been tried before as a way to paper over deeper disputes.
Kosovo and Serbia explored trading territory to normalize relations; it collapsed under nationalist backlash.
Serbia and Croatia’s postwar boundary negotiations left core tensions untouched, producing only fragile arrangements.
Estonia and Russia agreed to a border treaty in 2005; Moscow withdrew when Estonia joined NATO.
In each case, the failure came from mistaking a strategic conflict for a cartographic one.
Negotiating with shadows
There is a deeper risk that analysts have largely overlooked: Trump is negotiating with his own misunderstanding of Putin’s objectives. Because he believes the dispute can be solved by trading territory, he will interpret any territorial discussion as progress.
Putin, meanwhile, will see territorial concessions only as a means to secure the larger prize of a rewritten security order.
This misunderstanding becomes Putin’s greatest asset. Russian analysts describe Trump’s dealmaking approach as a “can’t-lose proposition” for Moscow. Putin can appear reasonable and open to compromise while presenting terms designed to eliminate Ukrainian independence.
Even if Trump rejects specific demands, Putin achieves his goal of being treated as Ukraine’s equal in determining the country’s future.
Trump and Putin will leave Alaska believing they have moved closer to a deal, but they will be moving along two separate tracks that never meet.
Trump will think he has made progress toward a territorial settlement;
Putin will have advanced his goal of erasing Ukraine as a sovereign state.
Asymmetry in preparation
If this were merely a matter of clashing goals, careful preparation could at least surface the differences and test for overlap. But here too, the asymmetry is visible. Putin arrives in Alaska with a tightly controlled plan, informed by months of private discussions with his closest advisers, and with clear red lines. Trump arrives without a detailed framework.
Successful summits rarely happen spontaneously.
Camp David in 1978 followed 13 days of intense, private negotiation and years of backchannel talks.
The 1986 Reykjavik meeting between Reagan and Gorbachev, itself considered a failure at the time, was built on months of arms control groundwork.
Alaska has none of this. The meeting was triggered by a visit from Steve Witkoff, a real estate developer turned envoy, who came back from Moscow with little more than a handshake agreement to meet.
That imbalance gives Putin the advantage. He can use the summit to appear open and constructive while presenting terms designed to lock in strategic gains.
Even if Trump refuses those terms, Putin will have succeeded in demonstrating to his domestic audience, and to wavering countries in the Global South, that Russia is negotiating directly with Washington, sidelining Kyiv.
A protest against the Putin-Trump meeting in Alaska at the US embassy in Prague, 13 August 2025. Photo: Jana Plavec
A timeline mismatch
Time itself favors Putin. Trump is thinking in months, hoping for a quick foreign policy win before the 2026 midterms.
Putin thinks in decades. His inner circle, according to Russian sources, has told him that Ukrainian resistance will collapse within months if Russia maintains military pressure.
Even a temporary ceasefire would allow his forces to regroup, while sanctions fatigue erodes Western unity.
For Putin, a pause is not a compromise. It is a tactical stage in a longer campaign.
For Trump, a pause can be sold as peace.
This is why a meeting that produces no concrete concessions from Moscow can still be useful to both men, but deeply damaging to Ukraine.
The real danger of Alaska is not that it produces a signed surrender. The danger is that it produces the illusion of progress.
The symbolism problem
Then there is Alaska itself. Meeting on American soil might seem like a show of strength from Trump, but to Putin, it means something else. Alaska was once Russian territory. Hosting the summit there sends an unintended message: that borders are temporary and land can be transferred through negotiation. In a war where Russia’s central claim is that borders can be rewritten by force, this is a gift.
Diplomats understand the power of location. In 2010, Serbia and Kosovo’s EU-sponsored talks were held in Brussels precisely to avoid symbolic claims to sovereignty. Choosing Alaska to discuss Ukraine’s future undermines the very principle the US claims to defend: that states have the right to keep their internationally recognized borders.
The real danger of Alaska is not that it produces a signed surrender. The danger is that it produces the illusion of progress.
Trump could emerge declaring the talks a first step toward peace, while Putin uses the meeting to reinforce his narrative: that Washington, not Kyiv, is the true counterparty in this war, and that Russia’s demands are the baseline for any serious negotiation.
A protest against the Putin-Trump meeting in Alaska at the US embassy in Prague, 13 August 2025. Photo: Jana Plavec
What success would require
Could Alaska succeed? Only if both leaders arrived with a shared understanding of the core dispute, a set of pre-negotiated principles, and Ukraine’s active participation.
None of those conditions exist.
Without them, the meeting is not a step toward resolution but a set piece in two domestic political dramas: Trump’s need to appear as the great dealmaker, and Putin’s need to appear as the indispensable architect of Europe’s future.
But the stakes are higher than political theater. Trump’s misunderstanding could lead him to pressure Ukraine into accepting a “peace” that eliminates its independence while allowing Putin to claim he negotiated rather than conquered.
The summit’s real risk is that Trump will declare victory while Putin advances his goal of eliminating Ukrainian independence, creating a framework that destroys Ukraine while calling it diplomacy.
That is why the Alaska summit may be remembered not as a turning point toward peace, but as the moment when the West negotiated away a democracy’s right to exist.
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A Russian Su-30SM multirole fighter jet has likely crashed in the Black Sea southeast of Zmiinyi (Snake) Island (Odesa Oblast), according to the Ukrainian Navy.
Naval intelligence intercepted radio communications indicating the loss of contact with the aircraft during a mission. The cause of the incident remains unknown.
Russian forces have launched a search-and-rescue operation; debris has been spotted on the sea surface, but the pilot has not been found.
Why this loss matters for Russ
A Russian Su-30SM multirole fighter jet has likely crashed in the Black Sea southeast of Zmiinyi (Snake) Island (Odesa Oblast), according to the Ukrainian Navy.
Naval intelligence interceptedradio communications indicating the loss of contact with the aircraft during a mission. The cause of the incident remains unknown.
Russian forces have launched a search-and-rescue operation; debris has been spotted on the sea surface, but the pilot has not been found.
Why this loss matters for Russia’s air force
The Su-30SM is one of the Russian military’s most capable 4th-generation fighters, used for air superiority, long-range patrols, escort missions, radar surveillance, and command-and-control.
FlightGlobal’s 2025 world air forces directory lists 365 Su-27/30/35 fighters in Russian service (exact Su-30SM numbers are not public). Each Su-30SM is estimated to cost between $35 million and $50 million, making every loss a major hit to Russia’s high-value combat fleet.
The aircraft has been used extensively in the war against Ukraine, including for the launch of Kh-31P and Kh-58 anti-radiation missiles aimed at suppressing Ukrainian air defenses.
Documented Su-30SM losses since 2022
Ukraine has reported multiple Su-30SM shootdowns and ground destructions since the full-scale invasion began:
Feb–Mar 2022: Several Su-30SMs downed over the Black Sea, Odesa, Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Mykolaiv regions — some crashed into the sea, and in one case a pilot was captured.
Aug 9, 2022 — Saky/Novofedorivka, Crimea: Satellite imagery confirmed 8–9 aircraft destroyed, including around three Su-30SMs.
Sept 2024 — Black Sea: Ukraine reported downing a Su-30SM that had just fired a Kh-31P missile.
Apr 24, 2025 — Rostov-on-Don: Ukraine’s military intelligence (HUR) released video showing a Su-30SM (tail “35”) burning after a sabotage attack.
Aug 4, 2025 — Saky airbase, Crimea: The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) said one Su-30SM was destroyed and another damaged, alongside strikes on Su-24s and an ammunition depot.
May 2, 2025 — Novorossiysk (claim): Ukraine claims naval drones armed with air-to-air missiles downed two Su-30s over the Black Sea — independent verification is pending.
Aug 14, 2025 — Zmiinyi (Snake) Island area: The latest suspected Su-30SM loss.
Strategic шmplications
The possible downing of another Su-30SM underscores Ukraine’s ability to inflict attrition on Russia’s front-line combat aviation. With high unit costs and a shrinking pool of trained aircrews, each loss erodes Russia’s air combat capability — particularly in contested zones like the Black Sea.
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The upcoming summit between US President Trump and Russian President Putin in Anchorage, Alaska, has reignited Russian imperial rhetoric precisely as Moscow seeks to demonstrate its global reach while pressuring Ukraine to cede territory.
The summit venue has brought renewed attention to longstanding Russian territorial claims, with statements resurfacing in which Russian state and media figures suggest the US state belongs to Moscow ahead of Friday’s meeting.
https://twitter.com/Gerashch
The upcoming summit between US President Trump and Russian President Putin in Anchorage, Alaska, has reignited Russian imperial rhetoric precisely as Moscow seeks to demonstrate its global reach while pressuring Ukraine to cede territory.
The summit venue has brought renewed attention to longstanding Russian territorial claims, with statements resurfacing in which Russian state and media figures suggest the US state belongs to Moscow ahead of Friday’s meeting.
Russian officials have a history of territorial claims
State television propagandist Olga Skabeyeva has referred to the state as “our Alaska” during broadcasts in 2024. The same year, Deputy Security Council Chair Dmitry Medvedev joked on social media about going to war with the US over the territory.
Kremlin negotiator Kirill Dmitriev described Alaska as “an American of Russian origin” during recent summit discussions. State Duma Speaker Vyacheslav Volodin previously warned that Moscow would lay claim to the state if Washington froze Russian assets abroad.
In 2022, Billboards reading “Alaska Is Ours!” appeared in Krasnoyarsk, Siberia.
Alaska was colonized by Russia from 1799 to 1867, and was administered by about 700 Russians across a territory larger than Texas. Russia sold Alaska to the United States in 1867 for $7.2 million following Russia’s defeat in the Crimean War. Nearly all Russian settlers left after the purchase, though Russian Orthodox churches remain throughout the state.
The state’s closest point lies just 3.8 kilometers from Russia across the Bering Strait, between Little Diomede Island (US) and Big Diomede Island (Russia). There are 89 kilometers between the mainlands of the two countries.
A plaque installed in the Crimean city of Evpatoria after the Russian annexation of Crimea. It reads: “We returned Crimea. You must return Alaska.” Image: slavicsac.com
Trump-Putin summit
Trump and Putin will meet Friday in Anchorage to discuss ending Russia’s war in Ukraine. Trump has indicated he expects “some land-swapping” in any potential deal, while Putin demands Ukraine abandon NATO aspirations and recognize Russian territorial conquests.
In the press conference about the summit on 11 August, President Trump appeared to slip up, referring to the meeting location as “Russia”.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was not initially invited to the summit, though the White House is considering extending an invitation.
The summit will reportedly include discussions of a potential minerals deal, with Trump expected to present resource partnership proposals to Putin during the meeting, according to The Telegraph.
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Today, there are important updates from the Pokrovsk direction. Here, on the eastern flank, the Russian forces conducted a massive push to cut off Ukrainian supply lines to Pokrovsk and starve out the defenders. However, Russians quickly got stuck in fortifications that guard the back of the Ukrainian defense line, with intense close-quarters battles breaking out.
Russia shifts focus to encircle Pokrovsk from the east
In the latest adjustment of their summer offensive, Russian forces are
Today, there are important updates from the Pokrovsk direction. Here, on the eastern flank, the Russian forces conducted a massive push to cut off Ukrainian supply lines to Pokrovsk and starve out the defenders. However, Russians quickly got stuck in fortifications that guard the back of the Ukrainian defense line, with intense close-quarters battles breaking out.
Russia shifts focus to encircle Pokrovsk from the east
In the latest adjustment of their summer offensive, Russian forces are now concentrating their efforts on encircling Pokrovsk from the east. Despite being initially promising, the failed encirclement efforts from the west and unsuccessful infiltration attempts from the south were both successfully pushed back by Ukrainian defenders.
Russian forces shift summer offensive to encircle Pokrovsk from the east. Photo: Screenshot from the video
Ukrainians stall momentum but face new pressure on the eastern flank
Ukrainians improved their tactical standing, stalling further enemy momentum, which changed Russia’s strategy toward targeting logistics on the western flank. However, the same cannot be said for the eastern flank. After making headway there, Russian forces rapidly shifted their focus to this sector, capitalizing on their momentum to push deeper and reach the strategically vital settlement of Rodynske.
Rodynske emerges as a strategic target
Their objective is now clear: cut supply lines, threaten Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad from behind, and force the Ukrainian defense into a semi-encircled position. Rodynske has emerged as a focal point in Russia’s operational plan due to its position directly behind Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad, which allows it to serve as a logistical and tactical keystone for both towns. Capturing it would open a dangerous axis of advance from the rear, collapsing supply routes and placing additional pressure on Ukrainian units holding the line.
Rodynske’s position behind Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad makes it a key logistical and tactical hub. Photo: Screenshot from the video
Russian reinforcements and urban warfare in Rodynske
Recognizing this, Russian commanders are pouring reinforcements into the area, prioritizing the capture of the dense urban environment of Rodynske, which would offer both protection for troop concentrations and ideal conditions for the launch of drone operations. If secured, Russian drone teams positioned in Rodynske could launch strikes with ease across a 15 to 25 kilometer radius, hitting key Ukrainian staging areas and logistical hubs.
Threat to Hryshyne and high ground control
If we look at the topographic map, we can see that the immediate threat could easily extend west toward Hryshyne, which sits in a lowland and would be vulnerable to attack. Additionally, this would allow the Russians to gain access to the same high ground that Pokrovsk is sitting on and would open up attack routes directly from behind.
Control of Hryshyne’s lowland could give Russians Pokrovsk’s high ground and open rear attack routes. Photo: Screenshot from the video
Fierce battles on the eastern approaches
For now, however, the main Russian effort remains squarely focused on breaking Ukrainian resistance in Rodynske. The fierce battle for the settlement has already begun, with high-intensity engagements playing out on its eastern approaches. Geolocated combat footage paints a clear picture of the fighting, as in one clip, a Ukrainian marine fires an AT-4 grenade launcher at point-blank range into an underground cellar where Russian soldiers had holed up in. After the explosion had opened up the underground area, a Vampire hexacopter was then able to drop a heavy mine from above, obliterating the Russian position.
Combat footage shows a Ukrainian marine firing an AT-4 into a cellar, followed by a drone dropping a mine to destroy the position. Photo: Screenshot from the video
Drone strikes and close-quarters combat
Elsewhere, the Starfall unit of the 14th Operational Brigade of Ukraine’s National Guard is shown operating east of Rodynske, targeting Russian troops hiding near a mine with drone-dropped explosives to stop their advance.
More particularly brutal GoPro footage captures two Ukrainian soldiers responding to signs of an enemy presence. Calm and calculated, they discover two Russian assault troops hiding in a cellar. Speaking fluent Russian, the Ukrainians momentarily confuse the intruders before eliminating them with grenades tossed inside. The same team later clears a nearby house, eliminates the Russian soldiers inside, and seizes a captured assault rifle.
GoPro footage shows Ukrainian soldiers flushing two Russian troops from a cellar with grenades after a brief deception. Photo: Screenshot from the video
Pokrovsk remains the hottest frontline sector
Overall, Pokrovsk remains the hottest section of the frontline and the focal point of Russia’s summer campaign. The Russians are determined to establish a foothold in the paved neighborhoods before the fall rains make any approach on soft ground impossible, and their pivot to the east has already yielded dangerous momentum.
Rodynske’s defense could decide the fate of Pokrovsk
Yet this shift is now being met with fierce Ukrainian resistance centered on Rodynske, quickly growing to be of extreme importance. Its defense is about protecting the entire Pokrovsk–Myrnohrad sector from collapse, as if Rodynske falls, the door to encirclement opens. For now, however, Ukrainian forces are holding, fighting from house to house, and striking back with every tool available. The battle is far from over, but the outcome in Rodynske may well decide the fate of Pokrovsk.
In our regular frontline report, we pair up with the military blogger Reporting from Ukraine to keep you informed about what is happening on the battlefield in the Russo-Ukrainian war.
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Ukrainian reinforcements are rushing to the Pokrovsk area in an urgent effort to defeat a Russian infiltration that threatens one of two main supply roads into the besieged city in Donetsk Oblast.
The reinforcements include one of Ukraine’s new multi-brigade corps—and at least one Leopard 1A5 tank.
The Ukrainian army’s 508th Separate Repair and Restoration Battalion—which retrieves, repairs and returns armored vehicles—loaded one of the 40-ton, four-person Leopard 1A5 tanks onto a heavy tr
Ukrainian reinforcements are rushing to the Pokrovsk area in an urgent effort to defeat a Russian infiltration that threatens one of two main supply roads into the besieged city in Donetsk Oblast.
The reinforcements include one of Ukraine’s new multi-brigade corps—and at least one Leopard 1A5 tank.
The Ukrainian army’s 508th Separate Repair and Restoration Battalion—which retrieves, repairs and returns armored vehicles—loaded one of the 40-ton, four-person Leopard 1A5 tanks onto a heavy transport truck and hauled the tank into the Pokrovsk sector under the cover of darkness on Wednesday.
“We’ve been a little quiet the last few days,” the battalion stated on social media, “but another Leopard 1A5 with full ammunition … is successfully delivered to one of the hottest places [in the] Pokrovsk direction.”
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It’s obvious where the German-made tank wound up: somewhere along the roughly 10-km front stretching from Rodynske in the south to Nove Shakhove in the north. That front, just northeast of Pokrovsk, is the current locus of the fighting after Russian troops slipped past under-manned—or entirely empty—Ukrainian trenches last week and hooked left to threaten Dobropillya, which sits astride the T0515 road threading into Pokrovsk.
Two of the seven Ukrainian brigades that operate the 1980s-vintage—but heavily upgraded and up-armored—Leopard 1A5s are holding the line around Dobropillya: the national guard’s 4th Rubizh Brigade and the army’s 142nd Mechanized Brigade.
Each brigade probably owns a dozen Leopard 1A5s out of 170 that a German-Dutch-Danish consortium has pledged to Ukraine. Around 100 of the tanks have shipped; the Russians have knocked out at least 14 of them. Others have been damaged.
A Leopard 1A5 arrives around Pokrovsk. 508th Separate Repair and Restoration Battalion photo.
Repaired tank
It’s likely the Leopard 1A5 the 508th Separate Repair and Restoration Battalion sneaked into the Pokrovsk area was a damaged tank that the battalion fetched from the front line and fixed up at its workshop before hauling it back to its operator.
After losing around 4,000 tanks in action in the first 42 months of its wider war on Ukraine, Russia has all but ceased deploying heavy armor along the 1,100-km front line. Production of new T-90M tanks, and the restoration of old Cold War T-72s moldering in long-term storage, simply can’t make good all those losses.
Today, the Russians mostly attack on foot or on motorcycles, counting on these hard-to-spot and fast-moving forces to slip through thinly manned Ukrainian trenches and past Ukraine’s ever-present drones. The Ukrainians still use tanks, however, fearlessly rolling the hulking vehicles from their drone-proof dugouts for close fights with infiltrating Russians.
Ukrainian Pres. Volodymyr Zelensky insisted the Russian infiltrators threatening Dobropillya marched north and then turned west “only with weapons in their hands.” They’re lightly armed and poorly supplied, potentially making them easy targets for tanks. Assuming, of course, the tanks can shrug off any Russian drones patrolling the Russian salient northeast of Pokrovsk.
There’s a good reason for the Ukrainian tankers to be optimistic. The Leopard 1A5 and Leopard 2A4 tanks that are helping to defend the Pokrovsk sector have proved that, with enough add-on armor, they can survive repeated drone strikes—and keep fighting.
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Ukraine’s Security Service head just explained exactly how Ukraine had smuggled attack drones into Russia and hit four military bases simultaneously in their most audacious operation yet.
The 1 June mission—codenamed “Spider Web”— hit 31 and destroyed 21 Russian aircraft worth over $7 billion. That’s roughly a third of Russia’s cruise missile carriers wiped out in a single coordinated strike.
But the real story isn’t the destruction. It’s how Ukrainian intelligence spent 18 months building
Ukraine’s Security Service head just explained exactly how Ukraine had smuggled attack drones into Russia and hit four military bases simultaneously in their most audacious operation yet.
The 1 June mission—codenamed “Spider Web”— hit 31 and destroyed 21 Russian aircraft worth over $7 billion. That’s roughly a third of Russia’s cruise missile carriers wiped out in a single coordinated strike.
But the real story isn’t the destruction. It’s how Ukrainian intelligence spent 18 months building a fake logistics company inside Russia to pull it off.
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Ukrainian spies rent office space next to enemy headquarters
SBU chief Vasyl Maliuk revealed the operation’s mechanics in a recent interview. His agents didn’t just sneak across the border—they set up shop in Chelyabinsk, renting offices and warehouses practically next door to the local FSB headquarters.
Why Chelyabinsk? The industrial city over 2000 km from the front line provided perfect cover for a logistics operation. The Ukrainians bought five cargo trucks, hired Russian drivers, and started moving equipment.
The weapon? What Maliuk calls “hunting lodges”—wooden structures mounted on truck beds, equipped with solar panels and EcoFlow batteries to continuously power concealed drones. Russian customs saw camping gear. Inside were 117 combat drones waiting to strike.
FPV drone launch from a truck container during operation Spiderweb, 1 June 2025. Credit: Militarnyi
When Russians drinking vodka delayed a covert op
The original plan called for a May strike. What went wrong? Russian drinking culture.
“We planned to do this before May 9, but they went on a drinking binge during Easter,” Maliuk explained.
The Ukrainian handlers couldn’t reach their Russian drivers for weeks. “One driver was missing, then another. Then May 1st—their May holidays—and they’re lying around for a week.”
The operation lost an entire month to spring festivities.
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The moment everything almost collapsed
Picture this: Ukrainian agents preparing their weaponized hunting lodges when someone accidentally hits the wrong button. The roof opens. A 63-year-old Russian truck driver sees rows of military drones lined up for combat.
Panic. The field agents called headquarters immediately. “We have an emergency situation. What are we going to do?”
Malyuk’s solution? Instant cover story. Tell the driver these are wildlife surveillance drones used to track animal populations and catch poachers. The 63-year-old knew nothing about modern technology. He bought it. A bonus payment helped seal the deal.
Vasyl Maliuk, Head of the Security Service of Ukraine, who orchestrated the Spider Web drone operation in 2025 that destroyed or damaged 41 Russian aircraft, used to attack Ukrainian cities.
The Russian drivers who transported the drones never knew what they were carrying. They’re now in Russian detention centers, according to Maliuk, facing torture for crimes they didn’t know they were committing.
“In reality, they did nothing illegal and there was no intent in their actions,” he said. “We paid them very generously.”
All Ukrainian operatives who organized the mission have been evacuated from Russia with new identities.
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Ukraine hit Russian bombers that attack civilians
The targets weren’t random. These aircraft form part of Russia’s nuclear triad—the bombers that have been launching cruise missiles at Ukrainian cities and infrastructure throughout the war.
The strike hit A-50 early warning aircraft and Tu-95, Tu-22M3, and Tu-160 strategic bombers across four bases: Belaya, Dyagilevo, Olenya, and Ivanovo. The operation required coordination across three time zones.
At the predetermined moment, the hunting lodge roofs opened remotely. The drones emerged and flew to their targets.
Lessons from drug cartels
How did Ukrainian intelligence learn to smuggle military equipment past Russian customs? They studied international drug cartels, Maliuk said in the interview.
Russian customs corruption made the mission possible, he believes. His agents had to navigate what he called “seven circles of hell” due to international sanctions, but corrupt officials provided the opening they needed.
Maliuk also noted the parallels between this operation and the 2022 Crimean Bridge attack, where Ukraine used a truck loaded with 21 tons of explosives.
“If you read between the lines and look professionally, I think many noticed certain parallels.”
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Fresh satellite images have confirmed extensive damage to Russia’s Unecha oil pumping station in Bryansk Oblast and the Skala-M radar complex in occupied Crimea. The confirmation follows earlier reports of Ukrainian strikes on both facilities.
The attacks were part of Ukraine long-range drone campaign, targeting Russia’s military, military-industrial, and fuel facilities both inside Russia and in the occupied territories of Ukraine.
Satellite proof of Unecha oil pumping station destruction
Milit
Fresh satellite images have confirmed extensive damage to Russia’s Unecha oil pumping station in Bryansk Oblast and the Skala-M radar complex in occupied Crimea. The confirmation follows earlier reports of Ukrainian strikes on both facilities.
The attacks were part of Ukraine long-range drone campaign, targeting Russia’s military, military-industrial, and fuel facilities both inside Russia and in the occupied territories of Ukraine.
Satellite proof of Unecha oil pumping station destruction
Militarnyi reports that Dnipro Osint published satellite images showing burn scars and destroyed infrastructure at the Unecha oil pumping station in Bryansk oblast. The facility is part of the Druzhba pipeline, which carries Russian crude to European countries. According to the images, the damage is concentrated near the booster pump station, where a large fire left the site unable to operate.
Two days ago, local residents reported that Ukrainian strike drones targeted the station on 12 August at around 22:00.
Unecha is located in the settlement of Vysokoye, about 60 km from the Ukrainian border, making it vulnerable to Ukrainian long-range strikes.
Satellite images confirm destruction of Skala-M radar in Crimea
Dnipro Osint also released a satellite photo showing the Russian TRLK-10 Skala-M radar complex in Abrykosivka, occupied Crimea, before and after it was hit. The strike reportedly happened overnight on 9–10 August and was carried out by Ukrainian Special Operations Forces working with local resistance. The agency did not specify, what weapons were used to hit the facility.
Explore further
Ukraine’s special forces slip into Crimea overnight — and erase Russia’s Skala-M radar from the map
The Skala-M is a Soviet-Russian stationary route radar system with both primary and secondary detection capabilities, used for monitoring air traffic on routes and in approach zones. Its operational range reaches 350 km, making it a key element in Russia’s air traffic control network over Crimea. The new images show the radar system visibly damaged.
Before and after: Skala-M radar complex in Abrykosivka, occupied Crimea, showing dome and antenna destroyed. Source: Dnipro Osint.
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United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has placed Israel and Russia “on notice” that they could be listed next year among parties “credibly suspected of committing or being responsible for patterns of rape or other forms of sexual violence,” according to his annual report to the Security Council on conflict-related sexual violence obtained by Reuters.
The warning stems from “significant concerns regarding patterns of certain forms of sexual violence that have been consistently documen
United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has placed Israel and Russia “on notice” that they could be listed next year among parties “credibly suspected of committing or being responsible for patterns of rape or other forms of sexual violence,” according to his annual report to the Security Council on conflict-related sexual violence obtained by Reuters.
The warning stems from “significant concerns regarding patterns of certain forms of sexual violence that have been consistently documented by the United Nations,” Guterres wrote in the report released.
Regarding Russian forces, Guterres said he was “gravely concerned about credible information of violations by Russian armed and security forces and affiliated armed groups” primarily against Ukrainian prisoners of war in 50 official and 22 unofficial detention facilities across Ukraine and Russia.
“These cases comprised a significant number of documented incidents of genital violence, including electrocution, beatings and burns to the genitals, and forced stripping and prolonged nudity, used to humiliate and elicit confessions or information,” the Secretary-General said.
The report notes that Russian authorities have not engaged with Guterres’ special envoy on sexual violence in conflict since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
Israel faces similar scrutiny over documented violations in Palestinian detention facilities. Guterres expressed grave concern about “credible information of violations by Israeli armed and security forces” against Palestinians in several prisons, a detention center and a military base.
“Cases documented by the United Nations indicate patterns of sexual violence such as genital violence, prolonged forced nudity and repeated strip searches conducted in an abusive and degrading manner,” the report states.
Russia’s mission to the United Nations in New York did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment on the report.
Officially, several hundred cases of sexual crimes committed by the Russian army against Ukrainian prisoners of war have been documented, including various forms of sexual violence against women, men, and minors. Ukrainian authorities reported 342 cases of sexual violence by Russians in 2024, with victims including 236 men, 94 women, and 12 minors, while many cases remain unreported due to stigma and fear.
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Ukrainian prosecutors have concluded their investigation into the forced deportation of children from an occupied special school, gathering evidence that will be used in both domestic and international legal proceedings.
Fifteen children from the Novopetrivka special school in southern Mykolaiv Oblast were tracked, seized, and shipped to Russia through a carefully orchestrated route across occupied territories, according to the Prosecutor General’s Office.
In the spring of 2022, Russian tr
Ukrainian prosecutors have concluded their investigation into the forced deportation of children from an occupied special school, gathering evidence that will be used in both domestic and international legal proceedings.
Fifteen children from the Novopetrivka special school in southern Mykolaiv Oblast were tracked, seized, and shipped to Russia through a carefully orchestrated route across occupied territories, according to the Prosecutor General’s Office.
In the spring of 2022, Russian troops occupied Novopetrivka for almost nine months, torturing locals and looting their homes. The village was liberated on 9 November and now it’s located close to the front line.
The children included ten without parental care, two orphans, two placed due to difficult circumstances, and one girl who had been adopted by US citizens but remained at the school when the full-scale invasion began in 2022.
Ukraine concluded a war crimes investigation proving Russia deported 15 children from a special school and subjected them to forced cultural conversion — Prosecutor's Office.
The children were forced to sing Russia's anthem, attend pro-Russian events, and were banned from… pic.twitter.com/A2xjknbiMY
Russian soldiers storms the school, forcibly remove kids
Russian soldiers weren’t subtle. From day one of occupying Novopetrivka village, they showed up at the school. Regular visits. Head counts. Making sure every child stayed put.
The school director watched this pattern for months. July 2022 rolled around, and she’d seen enough. Time to get these kids out—quietly move them to Ukrainian-controlled territory where they’d be safe.
Someone talked.
Armed Russians stormed the school. They grilled the director. What was she planning? Where were the children going? Then they posted guards. No one leaves.
Twenty soldiers arrived the next morning. Children, director, her husband—everyone loaded up. Destination: Stepanivka village, deep in occupied Kherson Oblast nearby. Three months of waiting. For what?
Two collaborators threatened violence to organize the children’s transport through a complex route: from Stepanivka to occupied Crimea and then to Anapa in Russia’s Krasnodar Oblast.
Ukrainian children are forced into cultural conversion
Ukrainian investigators asked the obvious question. Did these children need evacuation?
No medical emergencies. No additional health screening required. The school had a functioning bomb shelter, food stocks, medicine, hygiene supplies. The village remained stable throughout.
So why move them?
The Prosecutor General’s Office reported that the children faced daily ideological pressure, including forced participation in singing Russia’s anthem, attending pro-Russian events, prohibition of Ukrainian language use, and bans on Ukrainian symbols. Fifteen children became test subjects in forced cultural conversion.
Russia also incorporates thousands of Ukrainian children from Russian-occupied territories into its military-patriotic youth movement called Yunarmia (Youth Army). This youth army, under the Russian Ministry of Defense, teaches children military skills like assembling assault rifles and marching, as well as propagates anti-European sentiments and portrays Ukraine as the enemy.
The militarization and assimilation efforts by Russia are likened to historical fascist youth indoctrination, with the aim of creating obedient future soldiers for the Russian regime. Ukrainian authorities and international observers have condemned these practices as war crimes and acts of genocide against Ukrainian identity and society.
Ukraine documents systematic Russian war crimes
The charges qualify the actions as war crimes under international humanitarian law, specifically citing violations of Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 regarding forcible displacement of civilians from occupied territory.
The children? All rescued through coordinated efforts between Ukrainian law enforcement, international partners, and volunteer networks. Every single one now lives safely abroad. The adopted girl reunited with her American family.
Explore further
“Putin’s Hitler-Jugend.” Russia builds tomorrow’s army with stolen Ukrainian children, Yale lab reveals
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Ukraine’s hydroelectric reservoirs managed by Ukrhydroenergo have reached their lowest water levels in a decade due to poor spring flooding this year, the company’s press service reports.
The state enterprise faces a dual challenge as it not only generates electricity but also ensures water supply to consumers across the country. This requires maintaining stable water levels, which currently stand significantly lower than last year’s figures, according to Ukrhydroenergo.
“We are doing everything
Ukraine’s hydroelectric reservoirs managed by Ukrhydroenergo have reached their lowest water levels in a decade due to poor spring flooding this year, the company’s press service reports.
The state enterprise faces a dual challenge as it not only generates electricity but also ensures water supply to consumers across the country. This requires maintaining stable water levels, which currently stand significantly lower than last year’s figures, according to Ukrhydroenergo.
“We are doing everything possible to accumulate sufficient reserves by autumn,” the company reported. To achieve this goal, water will be used “as rationally as possible” while preparing hydroelectric power plants (HPPs) and pumped-storage power plants (PSPPs) for the winter season.
The company is simultaneously conducting reconstruction work and scheduled repairs of its hydroelectric facilities while restoring and protecting its infrastructure from ongoing damage.
“For hydropower specialists, this is a unique experience ofconducting all these measures and implementing projects simultaneously,” Ukrhydroenergo wrote.
The water shortage coincides with broader energy storage challenges facing Ukraine. As of 5 August, the country had accumulated over 10 billion cubic meters of gas in underground storage facilities, marking the lowest reserves in at least 12 years
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The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) reported on 13 August that Russian officials will arrive at the 15 August Trump-Putin summit in Alaska with the same war aims they have maintained for years — the complete political and military capitulation of Ukraine.
According to ISW, Russian Foreign Ministry Deputy Director of the Information and Press Department Alexei Fadeev said the Kremlin’s position had not shifted since Vladimir Putin’s 14 June 2024 speech. Fadeev claimed the delegation’s goals
The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) reported on 13 August that Russian officials will arrive at the 15 August Trump-Putin summit in Alaska with the same war aims they have maintained for years — the complete political and military capitulation of Ukraine.
According to ISW, Russian Foreign Ministry Deputy Director of the Information and Press Department Alexei Fadeev said the Kremlin’s position had not shifted since Vladimir Putin’s 14 June 2024 speech. Fadeev claimed the delegation’s goals were dictated “exclusively by national interests” and indicated that Russia would not consider any territorial concessions.
Demands include land Russia doesn’t even control
ISW noted that Putin’s 14 June list of ultimatums remains the blueprint for Russia’s stance. It orders Ukraine to withdraw entirely from Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson oblasts — including territories Russian forces do not occupy. It also requires Ukraine’s demilitarization and the so-called “denazification” of its government and society, a phrase ISW said the Kremlin uses to justify removing the country’s democratically elected leadership. Another demand is Ukraine’s “neutrality,” which ISW assessed is aimed at preventing NATO membership.
ISW: Kremlin shows no interest in real negotiations
ISW says Fadeev’s remarks confirm that Moscow “maintains its long-standing objectives in the war against Ukraine that amount to Ukraine’s full military and political capitulation to Russia and has not adjusted its position ahead of the Alaska summit.”
“Russian officials reiterated that Russia’s objectives in Ukraine remain unchanged ahead of the Alaska summit on August 15, once again demonstrating that the Kremlin remains uninterested in pursuing serious peace negotiations,” ISW wrote.
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German public opinion is split on whether Ukraine should surrender occupied territories to end the war, according to a ZDF Politbarometer survey conducted ahead of a planned Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska.
The poll, conducted by telephone and online among 1,370 randomly selected voters between 11-13 August 2025, found 42% believe Ukraine should give up parts of its territory if this would end the war. However, a slightly larger group—45%—think Ukraine should continue fighting to liberate these te
German public opinion is split on whether Ukraine should surrender occupied territories to end the war, according to a ZDF Politbarometer survey conducted ahead of a planned Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska.
The poll, conducted by telephone and online among 1,370 randomly selected voters between 11-13 August 2025, found 42% believe Ukraine should give up parts of its territory if this would end the war. However, a slightly larger group—45%—think Ukraine should continue fighting to liberate these territories. The remaining 13% responded “don’t know.”
The survey comes before the scheduled meeting for 15 August between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska to discuss the Ukraine war. Only 13% of Germans believe Trump can broker a ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine during this encounter, while 84% doubt such an outcome.
Germans show profound skepticism toward Putin’s intentions. Just 14% consider the Russian president genuinely interested in a lasting ceasefire, while 82% reject this notion. The distrust spans across party lines, with “different-sized majorities in all party affiliations” expressing doubt, according to the survey.
An overwhelming 89% of respondents consider it important or very important that Ukraine and President Volodymyr Zelensky participate directly in talks between Trump and Putin to achieve a lasting ceasefire. Only 9% view Ukrainian participation as unimportant.
Ukrainian President Zelenskyy recently confirmed he will not accept any territorial concessions in possible peace negotiations and “will be guided by the Constitution.” US President Trump has “expressed dissatisfaction” with these arguments from Zelensky.
The survey reveals the complexity of German public opinion as diplomatic efforts intensify to resolve the conflict that has lasted since Russia’s full-scale invasion began.
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Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala announced that Ukraine has received over one million large-calibre ammunition rounds this year through his country’s ammunition supply initiative, Novinky reported.
Speaking during a meeting of the “coalition of the willing,” Fiala detailed the progress of the Czech-led ammunition program.
“As of today, we have already delivered one million units of large-calibre ammunition to Ukraine this year under the Czech ammunition supply initiative,” he said.
The Prime Mi
Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala announced that Ukraine has received over one million large-calibre ammunition rounds this year through his country’s ammunition supply initiative, Novinky reported.
Speaking during a meeting of the “coalition of the willing,” Fiala detailed the progress of the Czech-led ammunition program.
“As of today, we have already delivered one million units of large-calibre ammunition to Ukraine this year under the Czech ammunition supply initiative,” he said.
The Prime Minister also praised coordination efforts with US President Donald Trump and welcomed the first-time participation of US Vice President J.D. Vance in the coalition meeting.
The Czech ammunition initiative secured sufficient resources in April to maintain monthly ammunition deliveries to Ukraine through September 2025. The program represents part of broader Czech military support, which includes participation in the drone coalition for Ukraine.
In August, Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavsky opened a diplomatic mission in Dnipro, expanding the country’s presence in Ukraine beyond traditional diplomatic channels
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Ukraine has already received one million large-caliber artillery shells this year under the Czech ammunition initiative, Czechia’s Prime Minister Petr Fiala said on 13 August during an online meeting of the “coalition of willing.”
The announcement came days before US President Donald Trump is set to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on 15 August, allegedly to discuss ending the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war.
Czech-led coalition marks major supply milestone
České Noviny reports that F
Ukraine has already received one million large-caliber artillery shells this year under the Czech ammunition initiative, Czechia’s Prime Minister Petr Fiala said on 13 August during an online meeting of the “coalition of willing.”
The announcement came days before US President Donald Trump is set to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on 15 August, allegedly to discuss ending the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war.
Czech-led coalition marks major supply milestone
České Noviny reports that Fiala confirmed the deliveries during a virtual session that, for the first time, included US Vice President J. D. Vance. The coalition of willing — a group of states actively supporting Ukraine against Russian aggression — coordinated positions ahead of the Trump–Putin meeting.
Fiala said the artillry shell initiative has already sent one million shells to Ukraine in 2025.The Czech‑led ammunition initiative is a coalition‑backed program in which Czechia leverages its diplomatic and defense procurement networks to buy and deliver large‑caliber artillery shells from global suppliers to Ukraine, funded by NATO and partner nations.
Last year, the Czech ammunition program supplied 1.5 million rounds. Fiala praised the close coordination with Trump.
Praise from Ukraine and Germany
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said after the videoconference with European leaders, including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, that European and Ukrainian security interests must be preserved in the upcoming US–Russia talks. Merz has previously called the Czech ammunition program “exemplary” support for Ukraine, noting that Germany contributes “out of conviction.”
Zelenskyy also expressed gratitude last week on the social platform X. He thanked the Czech Republic for its artillery supply initiative, saying it had saved many lives and strengthened Ukrainian positions.
Pro-Russian opposition in Prague
The program faces strong domestic opposition from former Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš. About a month ago, Babiš told Reuters that if his ANO party wins the autumn elections, it will cancel the initiative. He labeled it “nontransparent,” “overpriced,” and “rotten,” questioning the level of Czech contributions. According to Fiala’s government, the Czech Republic provided around €35 million to the program last year.
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Ukraine and Russia executed a major prisoner exchange today, each side returning 84 individuals. The exchange included Ukrainian soldiers, civilians, and Mariupol defenders, as well as Russian servicemen, and was facilitated by the United Arab Emirates.
The swap comes as the world turns its attention to a one-on‑one summit between President Donald Trump and President Vladimir Putin, scheduled for Friday, 15 August, at Joint Base Elmendorf‑Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska. Trump characterizes i
Ukraine and Russia executed a major prisoner exchange today, each side returning 84 individuals. The exchange included Ukrainian soldiers, civilians, and Mariupol defenders, as well as Russian servicemen, and was facilitated by the United Arab Emirates.
The swap comes as the world turns its attention to a one-on‑one summit between President Donald Trump and President Vladimir Putin, scheduled for Friday, 15 August, at Joint Base Elmendorf‑Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska. Trump characterizes it as a “listening exercise”, aimed at exploring a ceasefire in Ukraine, though critics warn the meeting may sideline Ukraine and favor Russia.
Ukraine and Russia swapped 84 prisoners each in a UAE-brokered deal — releasing Mariupol defenders and civilians held since 2014.
The exchange, under the Istanbul framework, lands just 24 hours before Trump and Putin meet in Alaska to discuss a potential Ukraine ceasefire.… pic.twitter.com/KzKUwhHR3s
Among those released was Captain Oleksandr Boychuk, commander of Ukraine’s only minesweeper, Henichesk, who resisted Russian seizure of his ship during the 2014 annexation of Crimea.
Journalist and serviceman Bohdan Kutiepovhailed his release:
“Free! My friend, a defender of Mariupol, is finally home after years in captivity. Miracles happen!”
Boychuk had been missing since March 2022, last seen in a Russian “filtration camp” near Mariupol.
Captain Oleksandr Boychuk. Photo: Bohdan Kutiepov via Facebook
Civilians held for years among freed Ukrainians
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said many released civilians had been held since 2014, 2016, or 2017. Human Rights Commissioner Dmytro Lubinetsnoted, “This return includes 51 civilians — political prisoners, men and women, some held for nearly a decade.” The youngest freed was 26, the oldest 74.
Ukraine and Russia executed a major prisoner exchange, each side returning 84 individuals, 14 August 2025. Photo: Zelenskyy via Facebook
Mykola Fedorian released to enable swap
Ukraine handed Russia Mykola Fedorian, a Russian-appointed former deputy head of Crimea’s Interior Ministry. Convicted of treason in October 2024 and sentenced to 12 years in prison, he was released by a Kyiv court to allow the exchange.
Mykola Fedorian, a Russian-appointed former deputy head of Crimea’s Interior Ministry. Photo: Sudovyi Reporter
Part of a series of recent swaps
This exchange is part of an ongoing series of prisoner swaps carried out under the framework agreed during the Istanbul talks earlier this year. In those negotiations, Ukraine and Russia committed to prioritizing specific humanitarian categories — such as severely wounded and gravely ill prisoners of war, young soldiers aged 18–25, and the return of thousands of bodies of fallen troops — over strict number matching.
Since then, multiple exchanges have been conducted, with mediators like the United Arab Emirates facilitating individual deals.
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As the Trump–Putin summit in Alaska draws near, one demand threatens to overshadow diplomacy: Russia insists Ukraine withdraw entirely from Donbas as part of a ceasefire deal. At first glance, giving up this embattled region might seem a way to halt a war with no clear endpoint.
Yet the push for withdrawal raises a pressing question: can Ukraine truly afford to abandon Donbas? The stakes go beyond shifting lines on a map—it’s about the survival of Ukraine’s defenses, the fate of its heartland
As the Trump–Putin summit in Alaska draws near, one demand threatens to overshadow diplomacy: Russia insists Ukraine withdraw entirely from Donbas as part of a ceasefire deal. At first glance, giving up this embattled region might seem a way to halt a war with no clear endpoint.
Yet the push for withdrawal raises a pressing question: can Ukraine truly afford to abandon Donbas? The stakes go beyond shifting lines on a map—it’s about the survival of Ukraine’s defenses, the fate of its heartland, and what kind of peace, if any, might follow.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyyhas been unequivocal:
“We will not leave Donbas. We cannot do this. Donbas is a springboard for Russia’s future offensive… They want to take about 9,000 square kilometers—around 30% of Donetsk Oblast—and that will be a platform for new aggression.”
The term Donbas refers to two eastern Ukrainian regions: Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts. As of mid-2025, Russia occupies nearly all of Luhansk—about 99%—and roughly 75% of Donetsk, leaving only a narrow stretch under Ukrainian control.
It is within this fractured and embattled landscape that Ukraine’s most critical defensive line—the fortress belt—has held firm.
The fortress belt: Ukraine’s eastern shield
The fortress belt stretches from Sloviansk through Kramatorsk to Druzhkivka and Kostyantynivka, a 50-kilometer chain of fortified towns and cities. It relies as much on geography as on engineering: Karachun Hill towers over the plain, rivers carve natural moats, and slag heaps, quarries, and railway embankments reinforce defensive positions.
Victor Taran, a Ukrainian Armed Forces officer and co-founder of the “KRUK” UAV training center, captures its essence:
“The paths into this agglomeration are mined, re-mined, and controlled with interlocking fire.”
Within these urban zones, streets are blocked by tank traps and trenches; anti-drone nets span chokepoints. Just behind the front line lie the arteries of resistance—supply depots, repair hubs, and medical evacuation routes—all seamlessly integrated into defense.
This fortress belt isn’t static—it’s a dynamic defense network, built over a decade. Recreating it farther west would mean starting from scratch, on flat, exposed steppe.
Why the fortress belt matters
According to the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), Russian forces have repeatedly failed to break through or encircle it. The belt’s cities aren’t mere strongpoints—they are the linchpin holding back the eastern advance. ISW notes that Russia’s demand for its surrender is a telling admission of its inability to take it by force alone.
Russian attempts to seize Ukraine’s fortress belt 1 July 2014. Credit: ISW
If the belt falls: Why geography turns against Ukraine
Abandoning the fortress belt would push Ukraine’s front line 82 km west onto open fields—no hills, few settlements, no river buffers. This flat terrain is made for airpower and drones, not defense.
Again, Taran warns:
“Without the fortress belt, our troops would be in open fields. The Russians would kill them with bombs and missiles like in a shooting range.”
The rebuilding problem
To build a new defensive network farther west—in Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk, or Poltava oblasts—Ukraine would need months of engineering, vast resources, and unwavering Western support. And even then, the terrain offers no natural advantages like rivers, industrial strongpoints, or commanding elevations.
Ruins in Kostyantynivka, Donetsk Oblast in July 2025. Photo: 93rd Brigade via Facebook
A front under intensifying pressure
Even without forced retreat, Ukrainian defenses are under growing strain. The situation in Donetsk Oblast worsens daily. Recently, Russian forces made their deepest breakthrough in more than a year near Pokrovsk, advancing 10–17 km into Ukrainian-held territory.
Though narrow, this salient threatens to sever supply routes feeding the fortress belt. If it widens, Ukrainian positions in Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, and Druzhkivka could face isolation and collapse—a risk that underscores how close the danger already is.
Situation near Pokrovsk and Dobropillia, Donetsk Oblast. Map: ISW.
A launchpad for the next offensive
Without the fortress belt, Russia would gain a direct launchpad to strike deeper into Kharkiv, Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, and Poltava. The terrain offers nothing to slow such an offensive—unless a strong, pre-prepared defense stands in the way.
The historical warning
In 1938, Czechoslovakia ceded its fortified Sudetenland to Nazi Germany, hoping for peace. Six months later, the entire country was occupied. History teaches us: surrendering fortified ground to an expansionist power rarely ends wars—it triggers the next.
Ukrainian soldiers in Donetsk Oblast. Photo: 93rd Brigade via Facebook
What’s really at stake
Donbas is more than scarred land—it is the cradle of Ukraine’s eastern defense. Surrendering it isn’t neutral—it is giving up the very shield that has held since 2014.
The question remains: can Ukraine afford to abandon Donbas? Some may see it as a pathway to peace. But if peace means sacrificing its strongest defenses, it may be a peace paid for with its survival.
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US President Donald Trump told European and Ukrainian leaders that the US is willing to contribute security guarantees for Ukraine — but only if NATO is not involved, according to Politico sources.
This comes as Trump pushes for a Russia-Ukraine peace deal amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war. Despite promises to end the Russo-Ukrainian war in one day, the US President failed to achieve any results since taking office in January as Moscow has only been escalating its attacks instead of negotiati
US President Donald Trump told European and Ukrainian leaders that the US is willing to contribute security guarantees for Ukraine — but only if NATO is not involved, according to Politico sources.
This comes as Trump pushes for a Russia-Ukraine peace deal amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war. Despite promises to end the Russo-Ukrainian war in one day, the US President failed to achieve any results since taking office in January as Moscow has only been escalating its attacks instead of negotiating a ceasefire.
Politico reports that Trump’s comments came during a 13 August German-brokered virtual meeting aimed at aligning American and European positions before Trump’s 15 August summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin. The offer, while sparking cautious optimism, left many questions unanswered about its scope and strength.
Trump’s NATO-free security offer
According to Politico, three people familiar with the call — a European diplomat, a British official, and a person briefed on the conversation — said Trump indicated that Washington could play a role in helping Kyiv deter future Russian aggression if a ceasefire is reached. One person briefed on the call said the president made clear he would only agree to such a guarantee if it was not part of NATO. Trump did not define what the guarantees would entail, speaking only in broad terms.
A British official told Politico that Trump sees a US role in security guarantees as part of a final settlement. European officials, while encouraged that Trump appeared receptive to their calls for a deal, remain wary about the outcome of his talks with Putin.
Explore further
European leaders brace for Alaska Trump-Putin meeting after NBC says US President pledged no territorial carve-up without Kyiv’s consent
Limits on US involvement
Politico notes that Trump has stated any US guarantee will not include the direct provision of weapons or the deployment of American troops to Ukraine. Instead, his administration has allowed Europe to purchase American weapons for delivery to Kyiv. Officials say this policy has added pressure on Moscow and played a role in bringing Putin to the negotiating table. Even so, the scale of the guarantees is expected to fall short of what Kyiv and its backers want.
European governments have been exploring security arrangements without the US, including a coalition of willing ground forces to help uphold a future peace deal. However, they see American backing — even outside NATO — as essential to strengthening deterrence.
Concerns ahead of Putin meeting
Trump has long opposed lethal military assistance for Ukraine during his presidency. While some allies believe he has considered their advice in pursuit of a ceasefire, they fear what might happen once he meets Putin in person. The lack of detail about the guarantees and their enforcement leaves uncertainty over whether such a deal could prevent future Russian aggression.
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Western media buzz with speculation about potential Trump-Putin meetings in Alaska. Moscow sees another bargaining chip. But in Kyiv, military planners work from a different timeline — one measured not in months of negotiations, but years of grinding conflict that Russia still believes it can win through sheer persistence.
Russia doubles down on military solution
On 30 July, as President Trump threatened new tariffs against Moscow, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov delivered a telling res
Western media buzz with speculation about potential Trump-Putin meetings in Alaska. Moscow sees another bargaining chip. But in Kyiv, military planners work from a different timeline — one measured not in months of negotiations, but years of grinding conflict that Russia still believes it can win through sheer persistence.
Russia doubles down on military solution
On 30 July, as President Trump threatened new tariffs against Moscow, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskovdelivered a telling response: Russia has developed “certain immunity” to sanctions and no longer fears additional economic restrictions.
However, the real indicator of Russian intentions sits buried in draft legislation submitted to the State Duma. The proposal would replace traditional spring and autumn conscription cycles with year-round conscription — a move opposition Russian media trace directly to a confidential order from Vladimir Putin. This gives the proposal a strong chance of passing as early as this autumn.
The timing exposes Moscow’s calculation.
With Russian battlefield losses surpassing one million soldiers killed, wounded, and missing, the Kremlin needs constant replenishment without formally declaring mobilization.
The apparent goal of the draft law is to increase pressure on conscription-age citizens and push them toward signing contracts with the Russian Armed Forces. Human rights advocates and activists warn that such year-round conscription would allow the state to keep men under constant mobilization surveillance, enabling rapid replenishment of army ranks without formally declaring mobilization.
The numbers behind Russia’s war machine
Ukraine’s Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyireported that, as of late June, approximately 695,000 Russian troops, including operational reserves, were engaged in the war against Ukraine. Over the past year alone, over 440,000 contract soldiers have joined Russia’s ranks.
At the same time, Russia continues forced conscription in temporarily occupied Ukrainian territories and is actively recruiting foreigners.
Despite recent Ukrainian advances in the Sumy Oblast— where several settlements were successfully liberated from Russians — the situation in Donetsk Oblast remains critical, mainly due to the overwhelming concentration of Russian forces there.
This systematic expansion suggests Moscow views the conflict as a war of attrition that it can win through numerical superiority.
Ukraine’s strategic calculation for long-term conflict
Therefore, people in Ukraine do not believe in the prospects of lasting peace with Russia soon. On the contrary, Ukrainian authorities indicate that Russia’s main goal for 2025 is to fully capture the remaining parts of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, and by 2026, build on the success east of the Dnipro River, including an attempted occupation of Odesa and Mykolaiv, thereby cutting Ukraine off from the sea entirely.
This timeline explains why Kyiv does not believe in a lasting peace with Russia without security guarantees, nor in the effectiveness of any negotiations about Ukraine conducted without Ukraine.
On 9 August, President Volodymyr Zelenskyyemphasized that Ukraine is ready for real steps that could lead to peace, but no agreements “against Ukraine and without Ukraine” can be considered peaceful. At the same time, he stressed that Kyiv, together with international partners, is ready to seek ways to achieve a genuine and lasting peace “that will not collapse due to Moscow’s ambitions.”
Ukraine’s position, particularly regarding the inviolability of international borders, was supported in a joint statement by the leaders of Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia. The leaders of the Baltic and Northern European countries also stated that “negotiations can only take place in the context of a ceasefire.”
Ukraine’s asymmetric response strategy
In response, Ukraine’s military and political leadership is actively seeking ways to strengthen national defense. Given that Ukraine’s mobilization reserve is significantly smaller than Russia’s, Kyiv is focusing on military innovation and asymmetric responses to Russian aggression.
In particular, drones’ success on the battlefield led to the creation of the world’s first Unmanned Systems Forces, which use aerial, naval (both surface and underwater), and ground-based drones in combat operations.
Alongside the general mobilization announced after the full-scale invasion, Ukraine has also introduced a voluntary recruitment pathway.
This allows citizens to apply directly to specific units or branches of service and choose roles based on their skills and interests.
Despite calls from some international partners to lower Ukraine’s mobilization age from 25 to 18 to replenish the ranks with younger personnel, Kyiv has chosen a different approach. Young people aged 18 to 24 can voluntarily join the Defense Forces through a special contract program, gaining financial and social benefits in exchange for one year of military service, which includes mandatory combat deployment. At the same time, enlistment is only possible in specific units and for certain specialties.
As of 30 July, this “18-24” contract program has been expanded to include specialists in unmanned systems — not just aerial drone operators, but also technicians working with ground-based robotic platforms. This version of the contract entails 24 months of service, with at least 12 months of direct combat involvement.
Financial commitment to extended warfare
At the same time, Ukraine continues efforts to improve mobilization efforts and increase voluntary enlistment in the face of Russia’s ongoing summer offensive.
On 31 July, the Ukrainian government announced an additional ₴412.4 billion (about $10 billion USD) in defense and national security funding. Of this, ₴115 billion ($2.7 billion) is earmarked for military personnel salaries, while ₴216 billion ($5.1 billion) will fund the procurement and production of weapons, military equipment, drones, etc.
In fact, Ukraine has been running a program for the decentralized procurement of drones and other important battlefield equipment since last year, and thanks to its implementation, the effectiveness of striking the enemy has increased by 40%. In addition, a decision was made to increase vacation time for service members — an initiative personally proposed by President Zelenskyy, according to Deputy Head of the Presidential Office, Colonel Pavlo Palisa.
Kyiv continues to refine its mobilization strategies and strengthen its army support systems.
What this means for Western policy
The gap between Western diplomatic timelines and Ukrainian military planning creates a fundamental policy challenge. While international partners hope for a negotiated resolution, both Moscow and Kyiv prepare for an extended conflict.
Despite some hopes for diplomatic success, the daily missile and drone attacks on Ukraine, the deaths of civilians, and the situation on the front lines show that Moscow is not interested in peace and is betting on victory by force.
Ukraine firmly maintains its position that it will neither give up its land nor exchange it for temporary agreements.
The only effective response to Russian aggression remains strengthening defense capabilities through enhancing the capacities of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, developing modern technologies, and the determination and unity of the international community, understanding that Russia responds only to the language of force.
Key takeaways for international partners:
Peace talks must be based on respect for international law and Ukraine’s territorial integrity
Russian “immunity” to sanctions requires more creative economic pressure
Ukraine’s long-term defense investment needs sustained Western support
Quick negotiated solutions remain unlikely while Russia believes in military victory
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US President Donald Trump’s Ukraine ceasefire plan was the focus of a call with European leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on 13 August, NBC News reports. European officials briefed on the discussion said the president told participants he will not discuss any division of territory when he meets Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on 15 August, but will push for an end to the fighting first.
This comes amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as Trump pushes for direct Kyiv-Mos
US President Donald Trump’s Ukraine ceasefire plan was the focus of a call with European leaders and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on 13 August, NBC News reports. European officials briefed on the discussion said the president told participants he will not discuss any division of territory when he meets Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska on 15 August, but will push for an end to the fighting first.
This comes amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as Trump pushes for direct Kyiv-Moscow talks, allegedly to end the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war. Since taking office in January, Trump failed to achieve any progress, since Russia isn’t interested in freezing the war.
Leaders stress truce before peace talks
NBC cites two European officials and three other people briefed on the call who said Trump’s stated goal for the Alaska meeting is to secure a ceasefire in Ukraine. The sources told NBC that Trump and the other leaders agreed no peace negotiations should begin until a truce is in place. Zelenskyy warned during the call that “Putin definitely does not want peace.”
Concerns over earlier land swap comments
European and Ukrainian officials had grown uneasy after Trump’s recent public remark suggesting there could “be some land swapping” between Russia and Ukraine. NBC’s sources said those concerns were addressed directly, with Trump assuring allies that Ukraine must decide any territorial concessions and that no such deals would be struck without Kyiv’s consent.
Sanctions threat if truce fails
According to NBC, participants in the call agreed that if Putin refuses a ceasefire, Trump will likely move to impose new sanctions on Russia. Two additional people familiar with the conversation told NBC that some European leaders left feeling more positive about the president’s approach, with one source saying achieving a truce is the top priority for the meeting.
Possible follow-up meeting with Zelenskyy
NBC reports Trump said after the call that there is a “very good chance” of a second meeting involving himself, Putin, and Zelenskyy soon after the Alaska summit. He suggested such talks could happen “almost immediately” if the first meeting clarifies each side’s position.
White House stays quiet on details
White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told NBC the administration would not comment on private diplomatic conversations but reiterated that Trump wants to end the war and stop the killing. Vice President JD Vance, who also joined the Wednesday call, told US troops in the UK that ending the war in Ukraine is one of “our most important shared security goals in Europe.”
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Germany will fund a $500 million package of US-sourced weapons for Ukraine under NATO’s Prioritized Ukraine Requirements List (PURL) initiative. NATO said the shipment will focus on urgent operational needs, such as air defense systems to counter intensified Russian air strikes.
Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Germany is Ukraine’s largest backer in Europe. Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion on 24 February 2022, Germany has provided or allocated around €40 billion in bilateral
Germany will fund a $500 million package of US-sourced weapons for Ukraine under NATO’s Prioritized Ukraine Requirements List (PURL) initiative. NATO said the shipment will focus on urgent operational needs, such as air defense systems to counter intensified Russian air strikes.
Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Germany is Ukraine’s largest backer in Europe. Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion on 24 February 2022, Germany has provided or allocated around €40 billion in bilateral military aid to Ukraine for the coming years.
Germany commits to fast-track weapons delivery
On 13 August, Germany’s Foreign Ministry said the PURL initiative covers military equipment either not produced by European industry or available more quickly from the United States than from European partners or Canada. The list includes critical air defense capabilities needed to counter Russian aerial attacks that are causing growing civilian casualties across Ukraine.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte welcomed Berlin’s decision, calling it proof of Germany’s enduring commitment to Ukraine’s defense. He said the new package will help Kyiv defend itself against Russian aggression and underlined Germany’s role as NATO’s largest European military donor to Ukraine.
Germany’s Defense Ministry confirmed the package will be one of the first major contributions under the NATO mechanism. Officials stressed that the funding is intended to meet Ukraine’s most urgent battlefield requirements.
A multinational NATO effort
Germany’s contribution follows earlier announcements by the Netherlands, as well as a joint pledge from Denmark, Norway, and Sweden. Each package is valued at about $500 million and is sourced from US stockpiles to accelerate delivery.
The German government said the decision underscores its commitment to substantial and reliable support for Ukraine, as well as solidarity within the alliance. Coordination with NATO and allied governments on the details is ongoing.
Previously, US President Donald Trump announced on 14 July that the United States will supply Ukraine with multiple packages of military equipment and munitions, purchased by NATO. He named Patriot air defense systems among the weapons planned for delivery.
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Trump and Putin will likely walk away Friday with aligned foreign policy against Europe—but no path to peace.
Trump has already demonstrated his negotiating skills by offering Russia substantial concessions before talks have even started. He has offered Putin nearly everything he demanded to even start negotiations with Ukraine.
In July 2023, I argued that Trump’s “peace plan” was a blueprint for Russian victory over Ukraine and the West. He has since offered even greater concessions while
Trump and Putin will likely walk away Friday with aligned foreign policy against Europe—but no path to peace.
Trump has already demonstrated his negotiating skills by offering Russia substantial concessions before talks have even started. He has offered Putin nearly everything he demanded to even start negotiations with Ukraine.
That’s not negotiations. It is capitulation at the peril of the rule-based world order, Europe and the transatlantic relationship.
The talks between Trump and Putin in Alaska are unlikely to result in an unjust, temporary peace on Russian conditions. Nor will they produce the just and lasting peace the free world is calling for.
Why? Neither has the cards to change the strategic situation. But they will produce something both leaders want: deeper alignment against European allies.
Neither leader can deliver what they promise
Trump wants more than anything else to achieve a diplomatic victory, resetting relations between Russia and the United States, turning Russia away from China through a “reverse Nixon” strategy, and ensuring increased trade and access to Russian minerals.
These goals are far more important to him than lasting and just peace. They are also far more unrealistic than the latter.
There is a big gap between what Trump wants and what he can achieve.
The United States cannot force Ukraine to withdraw from government-controlled territories, change its constitution, or recognize Russian sovereignty over occupied territories.
It cannot force the Ukrainian population—the source of Ukrainian resolve and resilience—to accept anything contrary to their interests.
Having stepped away from the Budapest Memorandum, any US security guarantee lacks credibility. Trump lost most cards when he stopped aid to Ukraine.
Nor can the US force Europe to return frozen Russian assets, lift sanctions, or recognize Russian territorial conquests that violate international law. It cannot force the free world to stop supporting Ukraine’s fight for existence.
Trump has also forsaken all means necessary to force Russia to seek peace. He has aligned his foreign policy with Putin’s and declared himself unwilling to use US military power to pressure Russia. Threats of secondary sanctions and tariffs are unlikely to sway a country that is not waging war for territory but for great power status, strategic parity with the US, and a sphere of influence over parts of NATO territory.
The Kremlin has “played” all its “cards” short of nuclear weapons.
It is bleeding soldiers and weapons on the battlefield without any prospect of an imminent breakthrough.
It is advancing at a foot pace and will need an additional 3-4 years to occupy the rest of Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson oblasts.
More crucially, at the present speed of advance, Russia will not occupy the rest of Ukraine before 2120.
By the end of this year, it will have lost 1.5 million soldiers on the battlefield.
More importantly, it will have lost most of its main battle tanks, armored personnel carriers, infantry fighting vehicles, and artillery pieces.
It has already lost the ability to conduct mechanized maneuvers, crucial for any hope of decisive battles.
While it refuses to abandon its strategic aims and objectives, its economy is slowly collapsing.
The Kremlin is little by little creating the conditions for a Black Swan event that might one day topple the regime.
Yet Putin believes he is winning. He has repeatedly rejected Trump’s so-called Peace Plan. Kremlin statements continue to demonstrate that Russia remains committed to achieving its original war goals and will not sign up to anything that does not deliver a victory.
Explore further
Putin came for the summit. Trump brought the white flag.
How Russia manipulates America’s diplomatic collapse
Besides the support from China, Iran, and North Korea, President Trump is possibly Russia’s best hope for a victory in Ukraine. He has already demonstrated his willingness to betray allies and partners to secure what he sees as the US national interests (hence his America First policy).
The Trump administration is actively pursuing a reset or normalization of relations with Russia. The administration and Russian officials are discussing economic cooperation and removing barriers to mutual trade, with Trump’s tone increasingly favorable toward potential business ties.
Additionally, the policy shift is naively believed to pull Russia away from China, undermining the strategic alliance between Moscow and Beijing.
The Kremlin is actively entertaining the idea that a reset of relations is both possible and mutually beneficial, offering potentially great economic rewards. It is actively manipulating a US administration that has recently fired over 1,300 career diplomats and civil servants, losing institutional knowledge, diplomatic capacity, language and cultural expertise.
Russia, in contrast, maintains a professional diplomatic corps with deep US expertise.
The talks between the US special envoy, Steven Witkoff—an American lawyer and real estate investor—and highly experienced Russian diplomats like Sergey Lavrov (Foreign Minister), Yuri Ushakov (Presidential Aide), Kirill Dmitriev (Head of the Russian Direct Investment Fund; Special Representative for Foreign Investment), and not least President Putin, demonstrates the extreme imbalance between the two parties.
Combined diplomatic experience? 172 to 0.5 years in favor of the Russian Team.
As Daniel Hannan, former member of the European Parliament, observed: “Whatever his motives, Trump has behaved exactly as a Russian asset would.”
Statements by the Trump administration signal a deepening of the transatlantic chasm beyond different perceptions of Russia to an even deeper societal rupture about values and the nature of democracy. They mark an end to the era of shared US-European values.
President Trump’s repeated concessions to Russia and the absence of European representatives at the negotiations underline the scale and scope of the strategic split.
Given Trump’s all too generous offers, Putin’s persistent refusal to engage in meaningful negotiations, and their common refusal to involve Europe in the talks, the fear of betrayal comes easily.
What Friday’s meeting will actually achieve
The meeting between Trump and Putin will likely have limited impact on the war but significant impact on Western unity.
The meeting will likely be a “feel-out session” sharing perspectives on the war and the way forward. But both presidents will walk away with even more aligned foreign policy, united in ramping up pressure on Europe and Ukraine.
It will provide Trump another excuse to delay meaningful sanctions, tariffs or actions that might pressure the aggressor.
Trump has blinked, shown his cards, and demonstrated weakness and is, consequently, left without leverage. Putin gets an American partner in pressuring European allies while Trump gets to claim he’s pursuing “peace” while avoiding confrontation with Moscow.
Hans Petter Midttun, independent analyst on hybrid warfare, Non-Resident Fellow at the Centre for Defense Strategies, board member of the Ukrainian Institute for Security and Law of the Sea, former Defense Attaché of Norway to Ukraine, and officer (R) of the Norwegian Armed Forces.
Editor’s note. The opinions expressed in our Opinion section belong to their authors. Euromaidan Press’ editorial team may or may not share them.
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A Russian Feniks (“Phoenix”) reconnaissance drone washed ashore in Bulgaria and was destroyed by the Bulgarian Navy. Bulgaria’s Ministry of Defense said the unmanned aircraft was found on a beach in Sozopol on 12 August, after vacationers noticed it in the sand. The drone, similar in design to the Russian Orlan-10 but with distinct features, appeared damaged from long exposure to seawater.
Both Russia and Ukraine have been widely using drones in the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war. The UAV that ende
A Russian Feniks (“Phoenix”) reconnaissance drone washed ashore in Bulgaria and was destroyed by the Bulgarian Navy. Bulgaria’s Ministry of Defense said the unmanned aircraft was found on a beach in Sozopol on 12 August, after vacationers noticed it in the sand. The drone, similar in design to the Russian Orlan-10 but with distinct features, appeared damaged from long exposure to seawater.
Both Russia and Ukraine have been widely using drones in the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war. The UAV that ended up in Bulgaria could be used by the Russian navy trying to locate Ukrainian naval drones in the Black Sea or to spy on Bulgarian ships and shores.
Drone discovered by beachgoers in Sozopol
According to the Bulgarian Ministry of Defense, the fixed-wing drone was spotted in the morning by people relaxing on Harmani Beach in Sozopol — the city on the Black Sea’s southwestern coast about 50 km from Türkiye. The local Burgas Oblast administration contacted the military at 10:00, prompting authorization from Chief of Defense Admiral Emil Eftimov to deploy a navy team.
Navy specialists move in
A specialized unit from the Bulgarian Navy, led by Captain Third Rank Zhivko Karchev under the order of Fleet Admiral Vanio Musinski, arrived to investigate, mark, extract, transport, and dispose of unexploded ordnance. Upon inspection, the team determined the drone was of an unknown model and could not confirm whether it contained any munitions.
Destroyed on site for safety
For security reasons, and on the recommendation of the operation’s lead, the navy received permission to destroy the drone on site. At 11:20 local time, the UAV was eliminated in line with safety regulations. The Ministry of Defense later posted images of the wreck on Facebook, showing broken wings and a damaged fuselage.
Identification as Feniks UAV
Described by the Bulgarian military as an unidentified model, Ukrainian military news portal Militarnyi initially identified the drone as Orlan-10 — a widely-used Russian UAV model, very similar to the rarer Feniks. The Telegram community “Potuzhnyi informator,” however, later correctly identified the photos of the wreck as Feniks.
Russian reconnaissance UAVs: Feniks (left) and Orlan-10 (right). Note the shape of the wings. Photos: Tiktok/trophies.orcs, Defence Blog.
Bulgarian officials said the condition of the wreck suggested it had been in the water for several months before washing ashore.
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Exclusives
Putin came for the summit. Trump brought the white flag. For six months, Trump has found excuses for Putin, punished allies instead of adversaries, and now arrives at the table already conceding the game.
As sanctions bite, Russia’s war chest nears empty by Christmas. The Russian economy is not collapsing, but it is stagnant and suffering high inflation. And this economic decline could be a tipping point, because Russia may run out of liquid reserves, prompting the Kremli
As sanctions bite, Russia’s war chest nears empty by Christmas. The Russian economy is not collapsing, but it is stagnant and suffering high inflation. And this economic decline could be a tipping point, because Russia may run out of liquid reserves, prompting the Kremlin to cut public expenditures.
. Russian oil refineries in two regions came under drone attack overnight, with debris from intercepted aircraft damaging a residential building in Volgograd
Intelligence and technology
FT: European defense plant space tripled since 2021. Three years after Russia invaded Ukraine, Europe has constructed an industrial war machine spanning 7 million square meters of new weapons facilities, marking the continent’s largest defense buildup since World War II.
Ukrainian Intel: North Korean troops remain in Kursk Oblast. 11,000 North Korean soldiers remain stationed across four brigades in Russia’s Kursk and Belgorod oblasts, with an additional 6,000 personnel expected for infrastructure and support operations.
Merz meets Zelenskyy in his office in Berlin. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived by helicopter at the German chancellery for a videoconference with Donald Trump and European leaders, one day before the US president’s planned summit with Vladimir Putin in Alaska
. Belarus will practice planning nuclear weapons deployment alongside Russia during military exercises next month, Defense Minister Viktor Krenin announced
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Ukraine’s long-range drone campaign has struck deep inside Russia again, igniting a massive fire at the Lukoil-Volgogradneftepererabotka refinery in Volgograd overnight on 14 August. The attack set off explosions, triggered a fuel spill, and forced the temporary closure of the city’s airport.
The attack is part of Ukraine’s strategic bombing campaign, targeting Russia’s military, defense-industry, and fuel sites. The Ukrainian long-range drones often target Russian refineries and oil depots, whi
Ukraine’s long-range drone campaign has struck deep inside Russia again, igniting a massive fire at the Lukoil-Volgogradneftepererabotka refinery in Volgograd overnight on 14 August. The attack set off explosions, triggered a fuel spill, and forced the temporary closure of the city’s airport.
The attack is part of Ukraine’s strategic bombing campaign, targeting Russia’s military, defense-industry, and fuel sites. The Ukrainian long-range drones often target Russian refineries and oil depots, which supply Moscow’s army with fuel and lubricants.
The Lukoil-Volgogradneftepererabotka plant is Russia’s largest petroleum producer in the Southern Federal District, with an annual capacity of 14.8 million tons. It is located roughly 500 km from the war zone.
Southern Russia’s largest refinery hit overnight
Russian Telegram channels, including Astra, reported explosions and fires at the Lukoil facility in the early hours. Volgograd Oblast governor Andrei Bocharov claimed the region came under a massive drone attack. He alleged that falling debris from intercepted drones caused petroleum products to spill and ignite at the refinery. Bocharov said firefighting crews were deployed immediately and claimed there were no casualties.
Multiple explosions and fire after the strike
Local accounts described several blasts before the blaze engulfed parts of the facility. Russian sources later confirmed that the refinery was the site of the attack. Authorities shut down Volgograd’s airport during the incident, citing safety concerns.
The Russian Ministry of Defense claimed its air defenses destroyed 44 Ukrainian drones overnight across Russia and Russian-occupied Crimea, including nine over Volgograd Oblast. It alleged that 14 drones were downed over the Black Sea, seven over Russian-occupied Crimea, seven over Rostov Oblast, four over Krasnodar Krai, two over Belgorod Oblast, and one over the Azov Sea.
Previous strikes on the same facility
This was not the first time the Volgograd refinery was targeted. Ukrainian drones reportedly struck the plant on 13 August, hitting the Krasnoarmeysky district where the facility is located. On 15 January, Russian media reported an explosion and subsequent fire at the refinery. In 2024, Ukrainian drones also attacked the plant twice — on 3 February and 11 May.
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Georgia’s ruling party released new campaign material featuring cemetery footage of buried Ukrainian soldiers and bombed residential buildings, escalating its controversial practice of exploiting Russian war crimes for domestic political gain.
Georgian Dream’s central campaign message warns that supporting pro-European opposition would bring Ukrainian-style war to Georgia. The practice demonstrates how Russia’s invasion has become a tool in Georgian domestic politics, as the government exploits
Georgia’s ruling party released new campaign material featuring cemetery footage of buried Ukrainian soldiers and bombed residential buildings, escalating its controversial practice of exploiting Russian war crimes for domestic political gain.
Georgian Dream’s central campaign message warns that supporting pro-European opposition would bring Ukrainian-style war to Georgia. The practice demonstrates how Russia’s invasion has become a tool in Georgian domestic politics, as the government exploits the conflict to shape voter behavior around Western integration versus accommodation with Moscow.
The Facebook video juxtaposes haunting black-and-white footage from Russian-bombed Ukrainian cities with colorful Georgian infrastructure. The campaign includes military cemeteries filled with Ukrainian defenders, destroyed residential towers, and grieving parents standing in rubble where their children died.
Screenshot from video posted to Georgian Dream Facebook page.
The Ukrainian footage (left) is captioned “no to war!”, while the Georgian side (right) reads “choose peace!”
Political campaign exploits Ukrainian suffering
Ukraine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned the materials as “yet another unfriendly act by the ruling party ‘Georgian Dream’ that for its own political PR purposes keeps using videos depicting the horrific consequences of the Russian full-scale aggression against Ukraine.”
“Such cynical actions demonstrate disrespect towards the Ukrainian people and the victims of the Russian aggression,” the statement continued, expressing “just indignation among Ukrainian society.”
This follows the party’s previous use of bombed Ukrainian theaters and churches in October 2024 election banners, which featured destroyed sites like Mariupol’s drama theater where hundreds of civilians died in targeted Russian airstrikes.
“Crawling before Moscow”
The ministry delivered particularly harsh criticism of Georgia’s broader trajectory under billionaire oligarch Bidzina Ivanishvili, who made his fortune in Russia and has steered the country away from Western integration.
“It is regrettable to observe how the Georgian authorities crawl before Moscow and disregard the principles of dignity and independence, which [are] historically inherent to the Georgian nation,” Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry stated.
The statement suggested Georgian Dream’s political technologists should “be honest with their own people and post a more truthful image on their pages: the Russian tricolor on the right and closed doors of the EU and NATO on the left.”
Pattern of Russian influence
Since 2022, Georgian Dream has refused to sanction Russia, passed Moscow-style “foreign agents” legislation, and suspended EU integration talks until 2028 despite winning disputed elections in October 2024.
The party’s “fear of war” strategy exploits trauma from Russia’s 2008 invasion, which left 20% of Georgia under occupation.
International observers called Georgia’s October elections fraudulent, with statistical analysis suggesting the party stole 15% of votes cast. Mass protests have continued for over eight months, while the EU has effectively frozen Georgia’s membership path.
Despite government hostility, Ukraine emphasized its “consistent and unwavering support to the friendly Georgian people in their aspiration to build up an independent, democratic, and European state.”
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What happens if Putin refuses to end the war? Donald Trump isn’t saying. But the consequences will be “very serious.”
The warning came during a White House briefing this week, Sky News reports. When pressed by journalists for specifics, Trump declined to elaborate.
“I don’t need to say. There will be very serious consequences.”
Why the cryptic threat now? Trump and Putin are set to meet 15 August in Anchorage, Alaska. The stakes couldn’t be higher.
Trump expects this to be just the beginning.
What happens if Putin refuses to end the war? Donald Trump isn’t saying. But the consequences will be “very serious.”
The warning came during a White House briefing this week, Sky News reports. When pressed by journalists for specifics, Trump declined to elaborate.
“I don’t need to say. There will be very serious consequences.”
Why the cryptic threat now? Trump and Putin are set to meet 15 August in Anchorage, Alaska. The stakes couldn’t be higher.
Trump expects this to be just the beginning. A second meeting could happen within days, he told reporters, possibly including Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
“There’s a very high probability that we’ll have a second meeting that will be more productive than the first, because in the first one I’m going to find out where we are and what we’re doing.”
The president was blunt about his track record. When asked whether he believes he can persuade Putin to stop shelling Ukrainian civilians, Trump acknowledged failure. He’d raised the issue before “but it didn’t happen.”
Here’s what’s driving the Alaska talks: Washington and Moscow are pursuing an agreement that would let Russia keep occupied territories. The Wall Street Journal says Putin has already presented Trump’s team with a ceasefire proposal.
The price? Ukrainian territorial concessions.
Trump has suggested any peace deal would require “some territorial exchange for the benefit of both sides.” Russia demands: Ukraine withdraws troops from all of Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia oblasts, parts of which are not even occupied.
Ukraine’s response was swift.
Zelenskyy declared Ukraine “will not give away its lands to anyone.” European Union leaders echoed that position, insisting Ukraine must shape any peace framework.
The timing matters. On 13 August, just two days before the Alaska meeting, Zelenskyy and European leaders arranged their own session with Trump. Their goal: coordinate positions before Trump sits down with Putin.
What emerges from Alaska could reshape the war’s trajectory. Putin arrives with territorial demands. Trump brings unspecified threats. Ukraine and Europe are scrambling to ensure their voices aren’t drowned out.
The consequences, as Trump says, could indeed be serious.
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A Ukrainian Orthodox priest was running spies for Moscow. Right from his pulpit in Zaporizhzhia, a city close to the front line in southern Ukraine.
Meanwhile, Russian propaganda has strategically infiltrated segments of the US, particularly influencing some Christian Republicans, telling them that Ukraine “persecutes” Orthodox churches. Moscow knows many Americans don’t understand the difference between Ukrainian churches and Russian-controlled ones, so they exploit that confusion. However,
A Ukrainian Orthodox priest was running spies for Moscow. Right from his pulpit in Zaporizhzhia, a city close to the front line in southern Ukraine.
Meanwhile, Russian propaganda has strategically infiltrated segments of the US, particularly influencing some Christian Republicans, telling them that Ukraine “persecutes” Orthodox churches. Moscow knows many Americans don’t understand the difference between Ukrainian churches and Russian-controlled ones, so they exploit that confusion. However, in reality, Ukraine’s recent laws and actions aim to protect religious freedom by restricting Russian-affiliated religious organizations that are seen as conduits of Russian state influence and espionage amid the ongoing war.
The The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) reported that the network was run by an abbot from a Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) parish who used his religious position to identify and recruit pro-Russian sympathizers. The priest used Sunday sermons to scout for recruits, justifying Russia’s invasion to identify sympathizers in his congregation.
How did Ukrainian counterintelligence find him? They caught a Russian spotter operating in the city first. Under interrogation, he gave up the priest. This led to surveillance of the priest’s activities and the discovery of the broader network.
The cleric had recruited a 41-year-old Ukrainian soldier deployed to a local base. The man was feeding Moscow detailed intelligence about Ukrainian positions, troop numbers, and equipment along the Zaporizhzhia front lines. He photographed classified documents showing new Armed Forces deployments and reported on his own battalion’s activities.
Security Service of Ukraine arrests Ukrainian Orthodox Church priest and mobilized soldier who spied for Russian intelligence in Ukraine. Photo: SBU
But the network went higher. Both the priest and soldier answered to a handler from Russia’s 316th reconnaissance center—part of the GRU military intelligence service. Ukrainian investigators identified this controller as a former Ukrainian police officer who fled to occupied territory and switched sides.
The evidence was everywhere. During raids, the SBU found phones and computers packed with incriminating communications. In the priest’s possession: a Russian passport, Kalashnikov ammunition, and knives.
Why did the priest risk everything? The SBU says he used his religious position systematically, weaving pro-Russian propaganda into sermons before approaching potential recruits privately.
Both men now face five criminal charges, including high treason during martial law. The most serious carry potential life sentences.
Explore further
Yes, Tucker, Christians are really killed in Ukraine — for refusing to spy for Putin
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President Trump hates the moniker TACO (Trump Always Chickens Out). But regarding Vladimir Putin and the war in Ukraine, Trump has repeatedly earned this sobriquet.
Despite repeated warnings that he would impose large secondary sanctions on buyers of Russian energy, Trump has caved to China and instead imposed substantial sanctions on India. This jeopardizes a generation of rapprochement with India and drives it closer to Moscow and Beijing.
In soccer or hockey terms, this amounts to sco
President Trump hates the moniker TACO (Trump Always Chickens Out). But regarding Vladimir Putin and the war in Ukraine, Trump has repeatedly earned this sobriquet.
Despite repeated warnings that he would impose large secondary sanctions on buyers of Russian energy, Trump has caved to China and instead imposed substantial sanctions on India. This jeopardizes a generation of rapprochement with India and drives it closer to Moscow and Beijing.
In soccer or hockey terms, this amounts to scoring an own goal.
When Trump, after six months of finding excuses for Putin and virtually offering him victory, announced his dissatisfaction with Putin’s refusal to commit to peace, many commentators argued he had finally seen the light. Now, they claimed, he would impose crushing sanctions on Russia and its Asian supporters—China and India.
This expression of irritation with Putin’s stalling was allegedly a turning point. Alas, it was not to be.
Trump’s unilateral concessions
On 7 August, Trump and the Russian government announced that instead of draconian sanctions being imposed on Russia, Trump and Vladimir Putin would hold a summit next week. Trump would probably meet with Ukrainian President Zelenskyy afterward.
But Moscow refused to commit to meeting Zelenskyy, although it might meet with other Ukrainians—again implying the illegality of Zelenskyy’s tenure. Trump duly conceded that Putin did not have to meet Zelenskyy, just hours after a White House aide stated that Putin indeed had to meet with Zelenskyy.
Russia rubbed salt in this wound by claiming the idea for a summit was Trump’s, emphasizing that he, not Putin, was the supplicant. Russian media, now exulting that Washington will finally accept Moscow as an equal by meeting with it, suggest this summit will not even discuss Ukraine but other bilateral issues.
Whether such claims have validity cannot be known. But they indicate Putin’s belief, shared by the Russian elite, that even if the West had the fortitude to impose greater sanctions or furnish Ukraine with more assistance, it would not matter—Russia is going to win.
Russian elite confidence
As Mikhail Zygar has written, the Russian elite is not scared and treats Trump’s earlier threats with disdain. This episode reveals that for all his bravado, Trump has imposed no sanctions on China or Russia but rather attacked America’s allies and partners in an act of extreme strategic incompetence.
Trump has already made two unjustified and unreciprocated concessions to Putin: asking to hold a summit with him and agreeing to exclude both Ukraine and Europe. When asked about this summit, a European official stated he was distraught:
“For all the bluster, Trump has not put a single iota of pressure on Putin—yet. Zero, zip.”
Cosmetic Russian concessions expected
Beyond these unilateral gestures to Putin, speculation suggests Russia will present nothing but cosmetic concessions—for example, suspending aerial and missile attacks on civilian targets. This costs Russia very little but impedes Ukraine’s attacks on Russian energy and logistics targets. This approach was reportedly what Belarusian President Lukashenka communicated to Washington.
There is no reason to expect Putin to offer concessions regarding his insistence that Ukraine be kept out of NATO, demilitarized, and made permanently vulnerable to Russian takeover.
Putin will not change his government to suit Russia’s taste, nor will he give ground regarding the five Ukrainian provinces Russia has seized since 2014: Crimea, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson.
Instead, this “agreement” will likely pave the way toward Russia’s annexation of those provinces, as Putin and the Russian government have long embarked upon their Russification. There is little to expect here unless Trump magically departs from his fear of Putin and his steadfast refusal to understand what this war is about and how it connects to both international security in general and European security in particular.
Explore further
Nordic-Baltic nations remind before Trump-Putin meeting: international borders must not be changed by force
Putin’s broken promises
We already know in advance of this summit—even if Trump does not—that any agreement with Putin will not be worth the paper it’s written on. In invading Ukraine in both 2014 and 2022, Putin broke eight international treaties guaranteeing Ukraine’s borders and sovereignty.
He has also broken or walked out of virtually every arms control treaty except the ABM treaty and is obviously not interested in talks on a new one. Even assuming Russia negotiated such a treaty, it is unlikely to adhere to it. Apart from the eight treaties he broke, Putin also refused to abide by the terms of the Minsk agreements following Russia’s 2014 invasion.
It appears that Trump, a self-proclaimed stable genius, and his negotiators have no need of prior or expert knowledge of Russian policy and negotiating tactics.
Echoes of Munich 1938
This summit, taking place over the heads of the most directly interested parties, has already triggered considerable anxiety—like the Munich summit of 1938.
That anxiety, based on the first six months of Trump’s second term and his summits with Putin during his first term, is all too justified.
Dr. Stephen J. Blank, a Senior Fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, is an expert on Russian foreign policy, Eurasian security, and international relations.
Editor’s note. The opinions expressed in our Opinion section belong to their authors. Euromaidan Press’ editorial team may or may not share them.
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A Polish man attempted to join Putin’s army by swimming across an Estonian river on an inflatable mattress. Estonian border guards stopped him. Now he is arrested.
Since 2022, Estonia has taken a very strong and active stance in support of Ukraine amid the Russian war of aggression. Estonia knows what Russian occupation looks like. The Baltic nation endured Soviet rule from 1940 to 1991—a period of repression and forced migrations that many Estonians haven’t forgotten. Estonia provided extensiv
A Polish man attempted to join Putin’s army by swimming across an Estonian river on an inflatable mattress. Estonian border guards stopped him. Now he is arrested.
Since 2022, Estonia has taken a very strong and active stance in support of Ukraine amid the Russian war of aggression. Estonia knows what Russian occupation looks like. The Baltic nation endured Soviet rule from 1940 to 1991—a period of repression and forced migrations that many Estonians haven’t forgotten. Estonia provided extensive military support, training over 1,500 Ukrainian soldiers and supplying hundreds of millions of euros in weapons including Javelin missiles and artillery ammunition. For Estonians, supporting Ukraine isn’t just about international law—it’s about preventing Putin from recreating the Soviet empire that once controlled their own country.
The 49-year-old was caught last week trying to cross the Narva River, which separates Estonia from Russia, according to RMF24. His plan? Float across on a mattress and enlist in Russian forces fighting Ukraine, according to prosecutors.
The Polish citizen had traveled to Estonia from Serbia and was carrying items that demonstrated support for Russian military actions in Ukraine—possibly a St. George ribbon or the letter “Z” that Russian supporters display.
Can foreigners just decide to join Russia’s military? Not through Estonia. The country’s internal security service treats this as a criminal act under national law.
“Joining the army of the Russian Federation indirectly threatens the security of Estonia, as well as all European Union member states,” prosecutor Gardi Anderson told reporters.
The Viru district court ordered two months detention. Why so long? Prosecutors argued the man might flee or try crossing again if released immediately.
Estonian Internal Security Service spokesperson Marta Tuul explained their approach:
“To prevent such actions, we also prosecute citizens of other states who try to support Russia’s military actions through Estonia.”
What happens next? The Polish citizen faces charges under Estonian law that criminalizes participation in foreign acts of aggression. His case could set precedent for how Baltic states handle similar attempts to reach Russian military recruiters.
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Can an airline walk away from a tragedy by invoking international payment caps? Not this time.
Ontario’s Superior Court just delivered a crushing blow to Ukraine International Airlines, upholding a ruling that strips the carrier of its right to limit compensation for the 176 people killed when flight PS752 was shot down over Tehran, Iran, in 2020.
The court’s reasoning? UIA acted negligently because it “failed to assess the risks associated with operating flights from Tehran.” That single findin
Can an airline walk away from a tragedy by invoking international payment caps? Not this time.
Ontario’s Superior Court just delivered a crushing blow to Ukraine International Airlines, upholding a ruling that strips the carrier of its right to limit compensation for the 176 people killed when flight PS752 was shot down over Tehran, Iran, in 2020.
The court’s reasoning? UIA acted negligently because it “failed to assess the risks associated with operating flights from Tehran.” That single finding changes everything for the families seeking justice.
Here’s why this matters. Under international aviation law, airlines typically pay up to $180,000 per passenger when fault is proven. But when negligence enters the picture? Those caps disappear.
This determination allows victims’ families to seek compensation beyond the standard international aviation limits.
The Ontario Court of Appeal wasn’t buying UIA’s challenge either. “I dismiss the appeal, ordering court costs to be paid by the appellant in favor of the defendants,” the court stated.
What actually happened that January morning?
January 8, 2020. Tehran’s airport. A Boeing 737-800 climbs into the dawn sky carrying 176 people on board—11 Ukrainians, plus citizens from Iran, Canada, Britain and Afghanistan, all of them died.
Minutes later, Iranian forces shoot it down.
Why? They mistook the civilian aircraft for a hostile military target. Iran initially denied responsibility, then admitted what officials called a “catastrophic mistake” three days later.
The timing tells the story. Hours earlier, Iran had launched missile strikes on US military bases in Iraq, retaliating for the assassination of Iranian general Qasem Soleimani. Tensions were sky-high.
Could this have been prevented?
That’s the million-dollar question the Canadian court answered with a resounding yes.
French investigators decoded both flight recorders in July 2020. The data confirmed what Ukraine suspected: the aircraft was functioning normally when the missile struck. No mechanical failure. No pilot error.
The plane was fine. The decision to fly wasn’t.
Why is Iran’s investigation controversial?
The Iranian probe has drawn fire from multiple countries. In February 2021, UN special rapporteurs accused Iran of violating international law and conducting a non-transparent investigation riddled with “inaccuracies.”
Ukraine joined that criticism. So did other affected nations.
Iran did sentence 10 military personnel in April, according to reports. But details? Those remain classified.
What happens now?
UIA can no longer hide behind international treaty provisions that would have capped compensation payments. The airline faces potentially massive financial exposure.
For the families, this ruling represents more than money. It’s acknowledgment that their loved ones died because of preventable negligence—not just Iranian missiles, but Ukrainian miscalculation.
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Two people died when a Russian drone hit their car on a highway in Kherson Oblast on 13 August morning. But that wasn’t the end of it.
When police arrived to help, Russian forces struck again. Three officers were wounded in the second attack.
Russian drones hunted civilian cars in broad daylight across southern and eastern Ukraine, killing three people and then striking again when rescuers arrived. The city of Kherson and part of its region was liberated from the Russians in 2022 but anot
Two people died when a Russian drone hit their car on a highway in Kherson Oblast on 13 August morning. But that wasn’t the end of it.
When police arrived to help, Russian forces struck again. Three officers were wounded in the second attack.
Russian drones hunted civilian cars in broad daylight across southern and eastern Ukraine, killing three people and then striking again when rescuers arrived.
The city of Kherson and part of its region was liberated from the Russians in 2022 but another part east of the Dnipro… pic.twitter.com/xBRwZI6uFR
Why target rescue workers? Ukrainians authorities describe this pattern as what appears to be a coordinated campaign to cause terror among the civilian population.
Kherson Oblast sits at a strategic crossroads where the Dnipro River meets the Black Sea, making it a gateway between Russian-occupied Crimea and the Ukrainian mainland. Russian forces captured the region early in their 2022 full-scale invasion but Ukrainian forces liberated the city that November after a successful counteroffensive. Russia still controls territory east of the Dnipro River and illegally claims the entire oblast as Russian territory, despite losing most of it. Now civilians in the liberated areas live under constant terror of Russian drones, artillery shells, and mines.
Three separate attacks, same target – civilians
Russian forces hit civilian vehicles in three locations on 13 August. In another part of Beryslav district, a drone killed one person and wounded a woman in a passenger car. Emergency crews pulled out the dead and got the injured woman to medical care.
Then came the ambulance strike. Russian forces hit the emergency vehicle directly, sparking a fire that local firefighters had to extinguish, the State Emergency Service reported.
Over in Donetsk region? Same story, different location. A Russian drone slammed into a car carrying three people, sending it careening into a roadside ditch. Police pulled two men from the wreckage while rescue teams freed the third passenger and handed him to medics.
Ukraine documents more Russian war crimes
The Beryslav prosecutor’s office isn’t treating this as random violence. They’ve opened a war crimes investigation under Article 438 of Ukraine’s Criminal Code—the section that covers war crimes resulting in death.
What makes this a war crime? Deliberately targeting civilians. And the follow-up strike on police during rescue operations? That crosses another line entirely.
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For months, Russia’s official inflation rate has hovered around 10%. In June, the Central Bank of Russia boasted that the rate had fallen to 9.4%, but it then dampened the celebration by reporting that expectations for inflation one year from now are 13% (which may well be the actual inflation rate today). Yet, on 25 July, the central bank dared to cut its very high interest rate, which has weakened growth and caused a severe credit crunch, from 20% to 18%.
Deceitful appearances
True, Russ
For months, Russia’s official inflation rate has hovered around 10%. In June, the Central Bank of Russia boasted that the rate had fallen to 9.4%, but it then dampened the celebration by reporting that expectations for inflation one year from now are 13% (which may well be the actual inflation rate today). Yet, on 25 July, the central bank dared to cut its very high interest rate, which has weakened growth and caused a severe credit crunch, from 20% to 18%.
Deceitful appearances
True, Russia’s economy appeared surprisingly dynamic in 2023 and 2024, with the official growth rate reaching 4% each year. But this was largely because the Russian government revived dormant Soviet military enterprises beyond the Ural Mountains. Moreover, real growth figures may have been exaggerated because some inflation was hidden by state-owned enterprises selling their goods to the state at administered prices.
In any case, official growth has fallen this year, probably to 1.4% in the first half of 2025. Since October 2024, the Kremlin itself has begun to report that Russia is experiencing stagflation – a message that was reinforced at the annual St. Petersburg International Economic Forum in June.
Improvement is unlikely. The country’s financial reserves are running out, energy revenues are declining, and there are increasingly severe shortages of labor and imported technology. All are linked to the war and Western sanctions.
Since 2022, Russia has had an annual budget deficit of about 2% of GDP, implying that it needs $40 billion each year to close the gap. But owing to Western financial sanctions, Russia has had virtually no access to international financing since 2014.
Not even China dares to finance the Russian state openly, for fear of secondary sanctions.
(Indeed, two small Chinese banks were just sanctioned by the European Union for such sins.) So, Russia must make do with the liquid financial resources held in its National Wealth Fund. Having fallen from $135 billion in January 2022 to $35 billion by May 2025, these are set to run out in the second half of this year.
Dwindling oil revenues
Traditionally, half of Russia’s federal revenues have come from energy exports, which used to account for two-thirds of its total exports. But in the face of Western sanctions, Russia’s total exports have slumped, falling by 27%, from $592 billion to $433 billion, between 2022 and 2024.
The federal budget for 2025 assumed an oil price of $70 per barrel, but oil is now hovering closer to the Western price cap of $60 per barrel, and the EU has just set a ceiling of $47.6 per barrel for the Russian oil that it still purchases. In addition, the West has sanctioned nearly 600 Russian “shadow fleet” tankers, which will reduce Russian federal revenues by at least 1% of GDP.
Against this backdrop, the Kremlin has announced that while it intends to spend 37% of its federal budget – $195 billion (7.2% of GDP) – on national defense and security this year, it must cut federal expenditures from 20% of GDP to about 17%. But since the government has already cut non-military expenditures to a minimum, it claims that it will reduce its military expenditures by some unspecified amount in 2026.
Reducing military expenditures at the height of a war is rarely an auspicious signal. As the commentator Igor Sushkopoints out, “The Confederacy did this in 1863-1865 (American Civil War), Germany in 1917-1918 (WWI), Japan in 1944-1945 (WW2),” and the outcome every time was “total military defeat.”
Of course, actual economic strength is not the issue. Ukraine spends about $100 billion per year on its defense, which amounts to 50% of its GDP, but no one bothers to question this, because for Ukrainians, the war is existential. Ukraine would not survive if the war was lost.
By contrast, Russia spends only 7% of its GDP on the war, but this is a war of Putin’s choice. It is not existential for Russia, only for Putin.
If he had a popular mandate, Russia could spend much more on the war. But he apparently does not think his popularity could withstand devoting much more of the budget to the effort.
Short of everything — except corruption
Meanwhile, it is increasingly clear that something else is rotten in Russia besides the economy. Russia has fallen to 154th place out of 180 countries on Transparency International’s authoritative Corruption Perceptions Index, while Ukraine is in 105th place. Since the start of the war, a dozen or so senior Russian energy managers have fallen out of windows.
And more recently, former Deputy Defense Minister Timur Ivanovwas sentenced to no less than 13 years in prison for corruption; Transportation Minister Roman Starovoit allegedly committed suicide just hours after Putin fired him; and a gold-mining billionaire was arrested, and his company was nationalized to help the treasury.
These were high officials. Ivanov was a top protégé of former Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, and Starovoit was the right-hand man of Putin’s close friend Arkady Rotenberg. Such developments are clear signs of Russia’s economic instability.
Compounding the financial pain is an extreme labor shortage, especially of qualified workers.
Officially, unemployment stands at only 2%, but that is partly because many Russians have left. Since the start of the war, and especially after Putin attempted a minor mobilization in 2022, approximately one million people fled the country, including many young, well-educated men.
He has not dared to pursue another mobilization since.
Now, labor scarcities are holding back production and driving up wages, while Western export controls limit Russia’s supply of high-tech goods (though Chinese supplies have mitigated the impact).
Russia’s economy is fast approaching a fiscal crunch that will encumber its war effort. Though that may not be enough to compel Putin to seek peace, it does suggest that the walls are closing in on him.
Anders Åslund is the author of Russia’s Crony Capitalism: The Path from Market Economy to Kleptocracy (Yale University Press, 2019).
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2025.
www.project-syndicate.org
Editor’s note. The opinions expressed in our Opinion section belong to their authors. Euromaidan Press’ editorial team may or may not share them.
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The head of Norwegian intelligence has identified the Russian Federation as the primary security threat facing Norway, according to VG.
Nils Andreas Stensones made the declaration during an event titled “Hybrid attacks against Norway: are we at war?” While opening his remarks, Stensones clarified that he does not consider the current situation equivalent to wartime conditions.
“However, Russian President Putin believes that Russia is in constant conflict with the West… Russia is currently the b
The head of Norwegian intelligence has identified the Russian Federation as the primary security threat facing Norway, according to VG.
Nils Andreas Stensones made the declaration during an event titled “Hybrid attacks against Norway: are we at war?” While opening his remarks, Stensones clarified that he does not consider the current situation equivalent to wartime conditions.
“However, Russian President Putin believes that Russia is in constant conflict with the West… Russia is currently the biggest threat to Norway,” Stensones said.
The intelligence chief expressed his assessment that Russia does not aim to influence this year’s elections in Norway.
At the same event, the head of Norway’s domestic intelligence service revealed evidence of Russian involvement in a cyber sabotage operation targeting a dam in the western part of the country during spring 2024.
The Norwegian assessment aligns with broader European security concerns. A French top general believes Russia could pose a real threat to Europe by 2030, according to France’s National Strategic Review for 2025, which calls for preparations for high-intensity warfare in Europe.
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Norway’s Police Security Service (PST) believes pro-Russian hackers orchestrated a cyber attack on a Norwegian dam in spring 2025, according to VG.
PST chief Beate Gangas said the service considers the April 2025 cyber sabotage of a dam a work of pro-Russian hackers. The incident occurred at a dam on Lake Risevatnet in southwestern Norway, where cybercriminals seized control of the system. The gates remained open for four consecutive hours and released large volumes of water before staff detecte
Norway’s Police Security Service (PST) believes pro-Russian hackers orchestrated a cyber attack on a Norwegian dam in spring 2025, according to VG.
PST chief Beate Gangas said the service considers the April 2025 cyber sabotage of a dam a work of pro-Russian hackers. The incident occurred at a dam on Lake Risevatnet in southwestern Norway, where cybercriminals seized control of the system. The gates remained open for four consecutive hours and released large volumes of water before staff detected the intrusion and took action.
“Over the past year, we have seen a change in the activities of pro-Russian cyber actors. In April, a dam in western Norway became the target of such an operation,” Gangas said. “Our Russian neighbor has become more dangerous.”
The PST chief explained that Russia employs multiple methods in its activities against Norway and Western countries generally.
“This can be subversive activity, influence, polarization, covert intelligence operations – methods aimed at weakening our security, but which cannot be characterized as acts of war,” Gangas said. “The goal is to influence Norwegian society, create feelings of unrest and instability, and identify our strengths and weaknesses.”
She added that similar activities are expected to continue against various European countries. “They don’t necessarily aim to cause damage, but intend to show what they are capable of,” the intelligence chief said.
The hackers took control of the digital control system managing water flow at the Risevatnet dam in Bremanger in April. For four hours, valves remained open, releasing nearly 500 liters per second before the breach was discovered and stopped. Both Kripos and PST have investigated the incident.
“The purpose of this type of action is to contribute to influence and create fear or unrest among the country’s population,” Gangas said.
The security service reports that Russia uses composite measures against Norway and the West. Gangas described this as state actors’ use of various tools against specific vulnerabilities in an opponent’s society.
“These are tools and methods that Russia uses to influence the security situation in other countries. The goal is to influence Norwegian society, spread unrest and instability, and map our strengths and weaknesses,” the PST chief said.
She said that Russia will likely carry out more actions against various targets in Europe.
“Since the end of 2023, Russian intelligence has been behind several dozen actions in Europe. Last year they targeted an IKEA warehouse in Estonia, a shopping center in Poland, and a warehouse with Ukraine deliveries in Britain. So far this year, a Ukrainian restaurant in Estonia has been hit and there were plans to send incendiary devices by plane from Germany to targets in Ukraine,” she said.
In Poland, six individuals have been charged with subversive activities on behalf of another country. Romania suspects sabotage in a fire at an arms factory producing small arms and ammunition.
Intelligence chief Nils Andreas Stensønes opened by dismissing that Norway is at war, but noted: “Russia’s President Putin considers Russia to be in a permanent conflict with the West.” He called Russia “an unpredictable neighbor” and stated: “It is Russia that is primarily the greatest threat to Norway today.”
Regarding potential election interference, the intelligence chief believes autumn’s parliamentary elections are not a target. “Together with PST, we assess that foreign states do not intend to significantly influence the outcome of this autumn’s parliamentary elections. But Russia has an interest in influencing us from a more long-term perspective,” he said.
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The Ukrainian army and air force teamed up for a precise air strike on a concentration of Russian troops in Bakhmut—with a Sukhoi Su-27 fighter and a mysterious new surveillance drone.
The Aug. 11 raid targeted what the army’s 24th Mechanized Brigade described as “a temporary deployment site of enemy personnel” around 15 km from the front line in Donetsk Oblast.
The personnel were reportedly from Russia’s 98th Airborne Division. The division’s paratroopers have been fighting in Cha
The Ukrainian army and air force teamed up for a precise air strike on a concentration of Russian troops in Bakhmut—with a Sukhoi Su-27 fighter and a mysterious new surveillance drone.
The Aug. 11 raid targeted what the army’s 24th Mechanized Brigade described as “a temporary deployment site of enemy personnel” around 15 km from the front line in Donetsk Oblast.
The personnel were reportedly from Russia’s 98th Airborne Division. The division’s paratroopers have been fighting in Chasiv Yar—and slowly pushing Ukrainian troops out of the ruins of that front-line town.
The twin-engine, supersonic Su-27—one of dozens the Ukrainian air force inherited from the Soviet air force in 1991—probably struck the site with one of its new Western-supplied precision munitions: the French Hammer glide-bomb or American Joint Direct Attack Munition, which can also be fitted with wings for gliding attacks.
A glide bomb can range tens of kilometers when tossed in a fast climb. The combination of satellite guidance, glide kits and the toss-style release method helps Ukrainian pilots attack Russians behind the front line while also staying outside the range of many Russian air-defenses.
But distant strikes require help spotting targets—and then assessing the damage following the strike. For that, the 24th Mechanized Brigade deployed a previously unknown drone type. “You can see the work of the new Ukrainian fixed-wing drone ‘Privet-299,'” the brigade stated.
Aside from the fact it’s got fixed wings—as opposed to rotors—we know almost nothing about the Privet-299. Russian forces operate a “Privet-82” drone that may be broadly similar to the Ukrainian Private-299.
The mostly plywood Privet-82, which costs just a few thousand dollars, ranges 50 km or farther with a 5-kg payload. Russian drone start-up Oko designed the Privet-82 to be inexpensive and easy to produce.
The Russian Privets are cheap enough to be single-use. Some Russian drone teams are even overloading their Privet-82s with 10-kg TM-62 anti-tank mines and flying them into Ukrainian targets. “This is basically Russia’s answer to the Ukrainian heavy bomber drones,” American analyst Andrew Perpetua observed.
It’s unclear whether the Ukrainian Privet-82 is strictly a surveillance drone—or whether it too can be sent on one-way missions with an explosive payload. For now, we know the mysterious Privet-299 as an airborne spotter for manned fighter raids.
The Privet-299 could meet growing demand for medium-range attack drones.
At present, Ukraine’s FPV drones dominate the battlefield as far as 15 km from the line of contact. Efforts are underway to extend the drone kill zone to 40 km. “The goal: deny Russian forces the ability to move undetected across the front,” American-Ukrainian war correspondent David Kirichenko wrote.
The Privet-299 should range 40 km with a meaningful payload, filling a critical gap between the FPVs and Ukraine’s much bigger—and much more expensive—deep-strike drones, which range thousands of kilometers, but at a unit cost of potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Ultimately, the Ukrainians will seek to establish “layers of drone superiority,” Perpetua said. They’ll need slightly heavier, but still affordable, drone models to patrol layers 50 km and 100 km from the front line.
As it happens, the Russian Oko drone firm is developing a bigger Privet drone, the Privet-120, which should range 200 km with a 20-kg payload.
Explore further
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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz received Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at his chancellery, where Zelenskyy arrived by helicopter for a videoconference with US President Donald Trump and other European leaders.
Bild reported on 13 August that Zelenskyy landed directly on the grounds of the German chancellor’s office, where Merz greeted him upon arrival.
The leaders are expected to have lunch together before beginning online negotiations with European partners and US President Donald Tr
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz received Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at his chancellery, where Zelenskyy arrived by helicopter for a videoconference with US President Donald Trump and other European leaders.
Bild reported on 13 August that Zelenskyy landed directly on the grounds of the German chancellor’s office, where Merz greeted him upon arrival.
The leaders are expected to have lunch together before beginning online negotiations with European partners and US President Donald Trump. The virtual meeting precedes Trump’s scheduled summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska.
Zelenskyy’s spokesman Serhiy Nykyforov said the visit includes the videoconference and bilateral meeting with Merz, plus an online session of the “coalition of the resolute.”
“Following the meeting, around 4:00 pm Berlin time, statements by Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Friedrich Merz to the media are possible,” the spokesman added.
Earlier, American media cited local officials reporting that President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance will participate in Wednesday’s virtual meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European allies.
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Belarus will practice “planning the use” of nuclear weapons and Oreshnik missiles during joint military exercises with Russia scheduled for 12-16 September, Defense Minister Viktor Krenin announced, according to Belarusian state news agency BELTA.
“We will, of course, within the framework of the West-2025 exercise, together with our Russian colleagues, work out issues of planning the use of this type of weapons,” Krenin said when asked whether the drills would include planning for nuclear weapo
Belarus will practice “planning the use” of nuclear weapons and Oreshnik missiles during joint military exercises with Russia scheduled for 12-16 September, Defense Minister Viktor Krenin announced, according to Belarusian state news agency BELTA.
“We will, of course, within the framework of the West-2025 exercise, together with our Russian colleagues, work out issues of planning the use of this type of weapons,” Krenin said when asked whether the drills would include planning for nuclear weapons and the Oreshnik missile system.
The Belarusian defense chief emphasized that “nuclear weapons are capable of inflicting unacceptable damage on potential adversaries” while describing them primarily as “an important element of strategic deterrence.”
Krenin repeated Russian narratives about the alleged “militarization” and “military activity” of the West along Belarus’s western and northern borders. He warned that NATO leadership was supposedly using West-2025 as a pretext for conducting their own exercises and threatened a “response.”
“What worries us most is the decision of the Polish military leadership to create a grouping of more than 30-34 thousand servicemen. In our opinion, this is already a serious grouping. We need to monitor this very carefully (and we will do this) and react. If they show any aggression towards the Republic of Belarus, we have something to respond with,” the minister expressed particular concern about Polish military plans.
Historical Context
Russia accumulated military forces in Belarus before its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, officially citing joint exercises as justification. In February 2022, Russian forces attacked Ukraine from Belarusian territory and subsequently launched ballistic missiles at Ukrainian targets from Belarus.
In December 2024, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that Oreshnik systems could be deployed in Belarus in 2025, using the weapon system to pressure the West after Ukraine received permission for long-range strikes against Russia.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy responded that Putin was “waving the Oreshnik” to prevent US President Donald Trump from ending the Russian-Ukrainian war. Ukrainian Armed Forces Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi announced Ukraine was developing its own air defense system and missile system as a deterrent against Oreshnik strikes.
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has made contradictory statements about receiving the Oreshnik system, claiming in January 2025 that Belarus would receive it “any day,” then acknowledging in March that the promised weapons had not arrived. In July, Lukashenko stated the Oreshnik would allegedly be deployed in Belarus by year’s end.
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European weapons manufacturers have expanded their industrial facilities at three times the peacetime rate since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, with building activity covering over 7 million square meters of new development across the continent, according to a Financial Times analysis of radar satellite data.
The analysis, which tracked 150 facilities across 37 companies, found that areas marked by changes jumped from 790,000 square meters in 2020-21 to 2.8 million square meters in 2024-25. About
European weapons manufacturers have expanded their industrial facilities at three times the peacetime rate since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, with building activity covering over 7 million square meters of new development across the continent, according to a Financial Times analysis of radar satellite data.
The analysis, which tracked 150 facilities across 37 companies, found that areas marked by changes jumped from 790,000 square meters in 2020-21 to 2.8 million square meters in 2024-25. About a third of the sites reviewed showed signs of expansion or construction work.
“These are deep and structural changes that will transform the defence industry in the medium to long term,” said William Alberque, a senior adjunct fellow at the Asia Pacific Forum and former director of Nato arms control. “Once you’re mass-producing shells, the metals and explosives start flowing, which drops the cost and complexity of missile production.”
The Financial Times used more than 1,000 radar satellite passes from the European Space Agency’s Sentinel-1 satellites to track changes at sites associated with ammunition and missile production. The satellites fire radar pulses and record their echoes to reveal surface alterations that may be hard to discern on conventional satellite images.
Among the sites with the biggest expansion was a joint project between German defense giant Rheinmetall and Hungarian state defense company N7 Holding, which has built a production site for ammunition and explosives in Várpalota in western Hungary. The first factory at the site was completed in July 2024, producing 30mm ammunition for Rheinmetall’s KF41 Lynx infantry fighting vehicle.
“We cannot comment on the alleged outlines of our production facilities on satellite images for reasons of corporate security,” said Patrick Rohmann, a spokesperson for Rheinmetall.
Construction continues as the site will also produce 155mm artillery shells and 120mm ammunition for the Leopard 2 tank and, potentially, the Panther, according to Rheinmetall. The site will also house an explosives factory.
EU funding drives rapid expansion
The analysis examined 88 sites linked to the EU’s Act in Support of Ammunition Production (ASAP) programme, which has invested €500 million ($586 mn) to tackle bottlenecks in ammunition and missile production. Clear physical expansion was visible at 20 sites with ASAP funding, including the construction of entirely new factories and roads. At 14 sites, small expansions such as new car parks were visible.
Companies receiving ASAP funds expanded more rapidly than those without EU funding, the analysis indicates. The Financial Times also examined 12 sites that were wait-listed for ASAP and 50 other sites in the EU and UK linked to missile production for comparison.
EU defense commissioner Andrius Kubilius told the Financial Times that since Moscow’s invasion, Europe’s annual capacity to produce ammunition had increased from 300,000 to reach about 2 million by the end of this year.
Rheinmetall’s expansion accounts for a significant portion of this growth. The company said its annual production capacity for 155mm rounds was set to rise from 70,000 in 2022 to 1.1 million in 2027.
Major projects across Europe
At the German headquarters of missile-maker MBDA in Schrobenhausen, new roads and building works are clearly visible. The radar identified changes affecting 94,000 square meters of terrain since 2022. The site benefited from €10 million through ASAP to expand production of the portable shoulder-launch Enforcer missile, but also received a $5.6 billion Nato commission to produce up to 1,000 Patriot GEM-T surface-to-air missiles on European soil.
“The order volume will enable MBDA to set up a production facility for Patriot missiles in Germany, as well as major subcomponent production,” said MBDA Germany director Thomas Gottschild.
Norwegian manufacturer Kongsberg opened a missile factory in June 2024, backed with NKr640 million ($62 million) of funding to increase missile production, including €10 million ($12 mn) from ASAP. “The expansion led to an exponential increase in our total missile production capacity,” said company spokesperson Ivar Simensen.
BAE Systems received support from Westminster and increasing orders from the UK Ministry of Defence, investing more than £150 million in its British munitions factories since 2022. At its Glascoed site in south Wales, digging is clearly visible on satellite images. BAE says it will increase the production capacity of 155mm shells sixteen-fold when the new explosive filling facility starts operating later this year.
Nordic expansion and future challenges
Norwegian-Finnish manufacturer Nammo received about €55 million ($65 mn) under ASAP to boost manufacturing of shells, propellant and powder. Significant expansion is clearly visible at Nammo’s Finnish production site in Vihtavuori.
“ASAP has been instrumental in helping Nammo make critically important investments in production,” said Thorstein Korsvold, a spokesperson for the company. Similar programmes in other areas were needed, Korsvold said, pointing out that “air defence missiles as well as high explosives are currently produced only in very small quantities.”
The EU is negotiating a new €1.5 billion ($1.7 bn) defense programme that “replicates the logic of ASAP” through grants, and would also fund joint procurement, according to the European Commission. Kubilius said the commission was looking at whether similar methods could be used “to incentivise industries to expand their production in other areas,” with priority areas including missiles and air defence, artillery and drones.
Production bottlenecks remain
Despite the expansions, officials and industry insiders say actual output in Europe is likely to be significantly below potential capacity. Experts believe that long-range strike capabilities remain a serious issue for Europe and Nato more broadly, as Russia is outpacing its adversaries.
Fabian Hoffmann, a researcher at the University of Oslo, said missiles were critical for a convincing deterrent against Russia’s superior ground forces. “Missiles are the precondition for Nato’s theory of victory. Because we are not going to keep up with Russia’s pace of mobilisation,” said Hoffmann.
“With Russia’s dramatic expansion the best we can do to establish a credible deterrence that if you shoot at us, we are going to shoot right back. But if we are ever going to get there, then we have to drastically expand our production.”
Hoffmann noted that “miniature jet engine production for long-range missiles are a huge bottleneck” for European missile production, suggesting these could be the next target of future EU spending programmes along with explosive filler.
“We cannot comment on the alleged outlines of our production facilities on satellite images for reasons of corporate security,” said Latvian Foreign Minister Baiba Braže, who called the expansion “a very positive and much needed development” but said it was “crucial” the defense industry was ready to deliver on Nato’s growing spending and use taxpayers’ money “effectively.”
Read also:
Drones attack refineries in Sloviansk-on-Kuban and Volgograd, fire reported
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Over 10,000 North Korean soldiers continue their deployment at training grounds in European Russia, according to Ukraine’s military intelligenc, Major General Vadym Skibitskyi, Deputy Chief of the Main Intelligence Directorate of Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense, said in an interview with Suspilne.
“DPRK servicemen continue to remain in Kursk Oblast, in the European part in general, at training grounds where these four brigades were created, they remain there,” Skibitskyi said. He specified that a
Over 10,000 North Korean soldiers continue their deployment at training grounds in European Russia, according to Ukraine’s military intelligenc, Major General Vadym Skibitskyi, Deputy Chief of the Main Intelligence Directorate of Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense, said in an interview with Suspilne.
“DPRK servicemen continue to remain in Kursk Oblast, in the European part in general, at training grounds where these four brigades were created, they remain there,” Skibitskyi said. He specified that approximately 11,000 soldiers are involved in the deployment.
The intelligence official outlined the geographical scope of North Korean operations. “It is clearly defined that their main area of responsibility is Kursk and Belgorod oblasts. And we saw this both in combat application and in their presence specifically in this region,” Skibitskyi said.
Ukrainian intelligence expects the arrival of the first batch of North Korean military personnel – approximately 1,200 people – to Kursk Oblast. The deployment follows a preliminary agreement between Russia and North Korea to send 6,000 fighters for demining operations, engineering work, infrastructure restoration, bridge and road construction, plus medical personnel.
“Those who will perform tasks, again, Kursk and Belgorod oblasts,” the general clarified regarding the new contingent’s operational area.
The arrival of 1,200 North Korean military personnel was scheduled for late July or early August. They will serve and perform tasks, Skibitskyi said.
Ukraine’s Main Intelligence Directorate reported on 1 July 2025, that no direct participation of North Korean soldiers in combat operations alongside Russia against Ukrainian Defense Forces had been recorded. The same intelligence service stated that about 3,500 DPRK soldiers completed training at military training grounds in Russia’s Far East, with potential redeployment to Kursk Oblast.
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Russian sabotage and reconnaissance units have punched through Ukrainian defenses in eastern Ukraine, advancing up to six miles behind front lines within 48 hours, according to The Telegraph’s battlefield reports.
The breakthrough occurred near Dobropillya in Donetsk, targeting strategically vital territory that could threaten Ukraine’s control of Kramatorsk.
The location carries significant strategic weight. If Russian forces establish a foothold, the breach could enable Moscow to cut off Krama
Russian sabotage and reconnaissance units have punched through Ukrainian defenses in eastern Ukraine, advancing up to six miles behind front lines within 48 hours, according to The Telegraph’s battlefield reports.
The breakthrough occurred near Dobropillya in Donetsk, targeting strategically vital territory that could threaten Ukraine’s control of Kramatorsk.
The location carries significant strategic weight. If Russian forces establish a foothold, the breach could enable Moscow to cut off Kramatorsk, one of Ukraine’s most important strongholds in the Donetsk Oblast still under Kyiv’s control.
Ukraine has publicly denied any major breakthrough. “A number of small Russian groups are constantly putting pressure on Ukrainian positions and attempting to bypass the first line of defense,” Victor Tregubov, spokesman for the Dnipro group of forces, said in a statement. “It is important to understand that this does not mean Russian forces have taken control of the territory. It means a small group, five to 10 people, has infiltrated the area.”
Kyiv has diverted special forces units to confront the infiltrators in an attempt to prevent additional territory from falling under Russian control before Friday’s scheduled peace talks between Russia and the United States in Alaska.
The seized territory sits east of Dobropillya, north of Pokrovsk, and within striking distance of Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, Druzhkivka and Kostyantynivka—the “fortress belt” that has anchored Ukraine’s Donetsk defenses since 2014, The Telegraph reported.
DeepState, an open-source mapping group, reports Russian units are pushing toward the Dobropillya-Kramatorsk highway, which carried military convoys and civilian traffic until mid-July. Russian troops are also probing for positions in Petrivka and Novovodiane on the far side of the road.
Ukraine’s military confirmed recently clashes around Kucheriv Yar, acknowledging Russian advances. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Russia was preparing new “offensive operations” without elaborating on locations.
The mining town of Dobropillia faces direct threat from the new corridor. Already hit by repeated drone strikes, civilians are fleeing the area.
“It’s a really difficult situation right now,” an officer from the 68th Brigade, who until recently lived in Dobropillia, told The Telegraph. “FVPs, gliding bombs and many other weapons are being used.”
Recent fighting has occurred along an unfinished defensive line. Where there should have been three anti-tank trenches, dragon’s teeth and concertina wire, the section breached by small assault groups had just one trench—and even that was incomplete, according to The Telegraph.
Sternenko, a military blogger, wrote on Telegram that Russian forces had seized parts of the highway linking Donetsk’s major population centers. “The situation is critical,” he said.
The Dobropillia-Kramatorsk route serves as a key artery connecting the fortress belt to Pokrovsk and other hubs, facilitating supply flows, reinforcements and evacuations. Control or disruption could strangle Ukraine’s logistics, hampering defense of the Kramatorsk-Sloviansk stronghold.
Reports indicate Russian FPV drones are already striking the road. If the highway is severed, Pokrovsk could face isolation, with a potential advance from Dobropillia completing its encirclement. Pokrovsk has endured sustained Russian pressure for nearly a year and is flanked on three sides.
For Moscow, success would boost momentum as Russia makes steady gains across the front line. The advance would secure a key logistics chokepoint and open a direct route into the Donbas heartland.
With Ukraine and Europe set to be excluded from Friday’s talks between Russia and the US, Zelenskyy said Tuesday: “We see that the Russian army is not preparing to end the war. On the contrary, they are making movements that indicate preparations for new offensive operations.”
Criticism of Ukraine’s leadership has intensified. Bohdan Krotevych, a lieutenant colonel in the national guard, accused decision-makers of ignoring warnings and claimed Zelensky was not receiving full briefings.
“The line of combat engagement as a fixed line does not actually exist,” Krotevych said. “Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad are almost surrounded. Kostiantynivka is in a semi-encirclement. The enemy is advancing toward Kramatorsk and Druzhkivka.”
Yuri Podoliak, a pro-Russian military blogger, said Russia had yet to commit substantial forces to secure an operational breakthrough, with the offensive carried out by sabotage groups—small, specialized units trained for covert operations behind enemy lines.
The Institute for the Study of War said the move was not yet a major breakthrough but warned the next few days could prove pivotal as Russian forces look to consolidate gains.
Ukraine has deployed the 33rd Brigade in the area of Russian infiltration. Fresh forces from the newly-established 1st Azov Corps—comprising five brigades—have been sent to stem the advance. Elements of the 92nd Brigade were also dispatched in recent days.
DeepState reported Ukrainian troops were rushing to establish new defensive lines around Zolotyi Kolodiaz, Shakhove and nearby settlements—positions currently bypassed by Russian troops but vulnerable to seizure.
Moscow has previously used peace talk periods for offensive operations. In 2014, Russian forces staged escalations before and during negotiations, creating facts on the ground to lock in gains before ceasefires.
“This is critical. In both 2014 and 2015, Russia launched major offensives ahead of negotiations to gain leverage,” said Tatarigami_UA, a former Ukrainian army officer whose Frontelligence Insight tracks the conflict.
Sergei Markov, a former Kremlin adviser, said the advance may have been designed to increase pressure on Kyiv to cede land to prevent the Russian army from eventually taking the rest of Donetsk by force.
Some analysts have downplayed the immediate severity. “We are still talking about a penetration rather than a breakthrough as the operational implications are still limited,” said John Helin, analyst and founder of the Black Bird Group. “Despite the depth, we’re still mostly moving in the realm of tactics here, for now.”
Officers speaking to The Telegraph fear the ongoing assault could precede a much larger breach. The road reportedly taken by Russian forces runs along high ground, similar to the route near Ocheretyne—a village beyond Avdiivka whose fall in spring 2024 was followed by major territorial losses.
Read also:
50-kilometer fortress: Why Ukraine’s Donetsk defense belt matters more than territory
Zelenskyy: Ukrainian Armed Forces will not leave Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts on their own
FT: European defense plant space tripled since 2021
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The Institute for the Study of War reported 8 August that surrendering remaining territories in Donetsk Oblast as a ceasefire prerequisite without securing a final peace agreement would grant Russian forces tactical advantages for future military operations.
“The surrender of the rest of Donetsk Oblast as the prerequisite of a ceasefire with no commitment to a final peace settlement ending the war would position Russian forces extremely well to renew their attacks on much more favorable term
The Institute for the Study of War reported 8 August that surrendering remaining territories in Donetsk Oblast as a ceasefire prerequisite without securing a final peace agreement would grant Russian forces tactical advantages for future military operations.
“The surrender of the rest of Donetsk Oblast as the prerequisite of a ceasefire with no commitment to a final peace settlement ending the war would position Russian forces extremely well to renew their attacks on much more favorable terms, having avoided a long and bloody struggle for the ground,” the ISW analysed.
Such concessions would compel Ukraine to abandon what the institute terms its “fortress belt” — the primary fortified defensive line established in Donetsk Oblast in 2014. The ISW emphasizes that “conceding such a demand would force Ukraine to abandon its ‘fortress belt,’ the main fortified defensive line in Donetsk Oblast since 2014 — with no guarantee that fighting will not resume.”
The fortress belt consists of four major cities and multiple smaller settlements positioned along the H-20 Kostyantynivka-Sloviansk highway. The defensive line stretches 50 kilometers from north to south — approximately the distance between Washington, D.C. and Baltimore, Maryland — and housed over 380,537 residents before the current war.
Sloviansk and Kramatorsk anchor the northern section of this defensive network, functioning as logistics hubs for Ukrainian military operations throughout Donetsk Oblast. Kramatorsk currently serves as the oblast’s provisional administrative center, replacing Donetsk City, which remains under Russian occupation. The southern portion of the fortress belt includes Druzhkivka, Oleksiyevo-Druzhkivka, and Kostyantynivka.
The defensive infrastructure originated following Ukraine’s 2014 military operations against pro-Russian proxy forces. These forces initially captured Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, Druzhkivka, and Kostyantynivka in April 2014, but Ukrainian troops regained control by July of that year.
The ISW reports that Ukraine has invested 11 years in strengthening these positions, building “significant defense industrial and defensive infrastructure in and around these cities.” This sustained development effort represents substantial financial and strategic commitments that would be lost under any territorial concession scenario.
The analysis suggests that Russian forces would gain considerable operational advantages by securing these positions without conducting costly urban warfare operations. The fortress belt has served as what the ISW describes as “a major obstacle to the Kremlin’s territorial ambitions in Ukraine over the last 11 years.”
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on the evening of 13 August that Ukrainian forces will not voluntarily withdraw from territories in Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts currently under their control, speaking to journalists three days before a scheduled Alaska meeting between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump.
“We will not leave Donbas – we cannot do this. Everyone forgets the first part – our territories are illegally occupied. For the Russians, Donbas is a bridgehead for a future new offens
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on the evening of 13 August that Ukrainian forces will not voluntarily withdraw from territories in Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts currently under their control, speaking to journalists three days before a scheduled Alaska meeting between Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump.
“We will not leave Donbas – we cannot do this. Everyone forgets the first part – our territories are illegally occupied. For the Russians, Donbas is a bridgehead for a future new offensive. If we leave Donbas of our own free will or under pressure – we will open a third war,” Zelenskyy said, according to Radio Liberty.
The Ukrainian leader challenged potential American positioning on territorial concessions. “Of course, I would like to see America’s position given how it all started – our territory was occupied, Ukrainians are being killed, and after that they tell me: ‘Listen, do you want to stop being killed? You need to leave.’ And what security guarantees? Leave Donetsk oblast?” Zelenskyy said.
Zelenskyy said earlier that Kyiv would not recognize any Ukraine-related decisions made at the US-Russia Alaska summit. The Ukrainian president characterized the Trump-Putin meeting as potentially significant only for bilateral US-Russia relations, calling the very fact of the meeting Putin’s “personal victory.”
“It is impossible to talk about Ukraine without Ukraine, and no one will accept this. Therefore, the conversation may be important for their bilateral track, but they cannot decide anything about Ukraine without us. I hope that the US president understands and takes this into account,” Zelenskyy said at the “Youth Here” forum.
In domestic policy developments, Zelenskyy announced he has instructed the government and army to work on lifting travel restrictions for men under 22 years old. “This is a positive, correct story that will help many Ukrainians maintain ties with Ukraine and pursue education in Ukraine,” the president said.
Since Russia’s invasion, Ukraine has maintained martial law and general mobilization. Men aged 18 to 65 cannot leave the country’s territory. Men aged 25 to 60 are subject to mobilization, while men aged 18 to 24 can be called for basic military service, which during martial law lasts three months.
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Unmanned aerial vehicles targeted oil refining facilities in Russia’s Krasnodar Krai and Volgograd Oblast during overnight attacks on 13 August, according to Russian sources.
The Russian Telegram channel Shot reports that drone debris fell on the territory of a refinery in Sloviansk-on-Kuban, Krasnodar Krai.
“Debris from one of the drones fell on the territory of the refinery, as a result of which a car allegedly caught fire,” Shot reported. Russian authorities claim no casualties resulted from
Unmanned aerial vehicles targeted oil refining facilities in Russia’s Krasnodar Krai and Volgograd Oblast during overnight attacks on 13 August, according to Russian sources.
The Russian Telegram channel Shot reports that drone debris fell on the territory of a refinery in Sloviansk-on-Kuban, Krasnodar Krai.
“Debris from one of the drones fell on the territory of the refinery, as a result of which a car allegedly caught fire,” Shot reported. Russian authorities claim no casualties resulted from the attack and that the fire was “promptly extinguished.”
Volgograd also came under drone attack, with the city’s oil refinery identified as the primary target by local Telegram channels. Volgograd Oblast Governor Andrei Bocharov confirmed that “debris from one of the downed drones fell on the roof of a 16-story residential building in the Traktorozavodsky district.”
Residents in southern districts of Volgograd reported air defense systems activation in areas housing industrial zones with the refinery and oil depot, according to Telegram channel Baza.
The overnight strikes follow a pattern of drone attacks on Russian energy infrastructure. On 7 August, Russia faced massive drone attacks that ignited the Afipsky refinery and a military unit in Sloviansk-on-Kuban, Krasnodar Krai. Local emergency services confirmed the fire at military unit No. 61661 in Sloviansk-on-Kuban following the drone strike. Regional authorities also verified the fire at the Afipsky refinery.
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. Russia is preparing for September offensive operations across three Ukrainian front sectors, moving its strongest brigades and 30,000 personnel from the unsuccessful Sumy direction
White House confirms Trump-Putin meeting in Anchorage without Zelenskyy. The largest city in Alaska will host a bilateral summit between Trump and Putin to discuss ending the Ukraine war, while the White House acknowledged that “only one side participating in this war will be present.”
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Estonia invokes “Munich 1938” as Trump prepares Putin talks. Estonia’s foreign minister has invoked one of history’s most ominous diplomatic moments to warn about Friday’s Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska — comparing it to the 1938 Munich Agreement that greenlit Hitler’s expansion.
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Will Ukraine give up land to end the war? According to The Telegraph, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has quietly signaled yes—but only territory Russia already holds.
European diplomats and Western officials told the newspaper that Zelenskyy acknowledged this position in conversations with European leaders. The catch? Ukraine would reject any deal requiring it to surrender additional territory.
Why the shift now? Trump and Putin set to meet in Anchorage, Alaska on 15 August.
The White Ho
Will Ukraine give up land to end the war? According to The Telegraph, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has quietly signaled yes—but only territory Russia already holds.
European diplomats and Western officials told the newspaper that Zelenskyy acknowledged this position in conversations with European leaders. The catch? Ukraine would reject any deal requiring it to surrender additional territory.
Why the shift now? Trump and Putin set to meet in Anchorage, Alaska on 15 August.
The White House described the meeting as a “listening exercise” for Trump to better understand how to potentially bring the war to an end.
The timing matters. European leaders worry Trump might negotiate over Ukraine’s head. “I have many fears and a lot of hope,” Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Monday.
Zelenskyy emphasized that any peace deal must include Ukraine’s involvement and that Ukrainian territorial integrity is non-negotiable. Trump, however, hinted that any agreement might involve territorial concessions, a point strongly opposed by Zelenskyy.
What exactly would Ukraine accept? Freezing current front lines. Russia would keep de facto control of occupied areas in Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, Kherson and Crimea—roughly 20% of Ukraine’s internationally recognized territory.
But there’s a constitutional problem. Ukraine’s constitution requires a nationwide referendum for territorial concessions.
Trump criticized this constraint Monday: “I was a little bothered by the fact that Zelenskyy was saying, ‘Well, I have to get constitutional approval’. I mean, he’s got approval to go into war and kill everybody, but he needs approval to do a land swap?”
Trump to find out if he can make a deal with Putin
Can Trump deliver on his promises? The US president said Monday he would try recovering Ukrainian territory during his Putin meeting. “Russia has occupied a big portion of Ukraine. We’re going to try to get some of that territory back for Ukraine.” There would be “some swapping, some changes to land.”
Trump described Friday as a “feel-out meeting.” His confidence? “Probably in the first two minutes, I’ll know exactly whether or not a deal can be made because that’s what I do. I make deals.”
Europe warns no more Ukrainian concessions
Here’s what Europe thinks. Six major powers—the European Commission, France, Italy, the UK, Poland, and Finland—issued a joint declaration stating “the current line of contact should be the starting point of negotiations.”
Translation: No more Ukrainian concessions.
France’s Emmanuel Macron and Germany’s Friedrich Merz backed this hardline approach over the weekend. Their message to Trump: territorial exchanges are a “red line.”
Russia prepares to launch more offensives, not ready to stop war
Is Russia actually ready for peace? Zelenskyy doesn’t think so. Monday evening he cited intelligence reports showing Russia “moving their troops and forces in such a way as to launch new offensive operations.”
The Institute for the Study of War agrees. Russia still seeks Ukraine’s “full capitulation”—toppling the Western-facing government, blocking NATO membership, and forcing demilitarization.
Why can’t Ukraine afford to lose more territory? Geography. Ceding additional areas in Donetsk would let Russian forces bypass fortifications built since the 2014 Donbas war. Ukraine would lose strategic defensive positions it’s held for years.
What about those Kursk bargaining chips? Gone. Ukraine had controlled parts of Russia’s Kursk region, potentially useful for prisoner swaps or negotiations. But Moscow’s forces broke Ukrainian control of that border area.
Ukraine emphasizes security guarantees in any peace deal
Therefore, Zelenskyy insists on clear and reliable security guarantees from Western countries before agreeing to any peace deal with Russia. He emphasizes Russia’s history of repeatedly violating ceasefires since 2014.
He also highlights the importance of starting peace efforts with confidence-building measures like the release of thousands of Ukrainian prisoners and stresses that Ukraine deserves not only to join the EU but also receive NATO security guarantees.
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte framed the central challenge: “How to deal with the factual situation that the Russians are holding, at this moment, Ukrainian territory.” His distinction? Russia may control land factually, but this can never be accepted legally—”in a de jure sense.”
Will Ukrainian voters accept territorial losses? European officials believe Zelenskyy has room to maneuver. A growing number of Ukrainians might stomach surrendering Russian-held land as the price for ending the war.
Trump plans to call Zelenskyy first “out of respect,” then European leaders after meeting Putin. But the constitutional referendum requirement means any territorial deal would need approval from war-weary Ukrainian voters.
The stakes couldn’t be higher. Friday’s Alaska meeting will test whether Trump’s deal-making confidence can bridge the gap between Russia’s maximalist demands and Ukraine’s red lines.
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You show Russians footage of their soldiers dying in Ukraine. They get angry—and mobilize to avenge them. You appeal to their humanity with pictures of Ukrainian children killed by Russian bombs. They shrug. You try facts about war crimes. Nothing.
Peter Pomerantsev’s latest book, “How to win an information war,” distills lessons of WW2-era British-German propagandist Sefton Delmar for the current Russo-Ukrainian war
But tell them criminals are being released from prison to join the army?
You show Russians footage of their soldiers dying in Ukraine. They get angry—and mobilize to avenge them. You appeal to their humanity with pictures of Ukrainian children killed by Russian bombs. They shrug. You try facts about war crimes. Nothing.
Peter Pomerantsev’s latest book, “How to win an information war,” distills lessons of WW2-era British-German propagandist Sefton Delmar for the current Russo-Ukrainian war
But tell them criminals are being released from prison to join the army? That their sons might get raped by fellow soldiers? That crime is soaring back home while they’re dying in Ukraine?
Now you’ve got their attention.
This counterintuitive discovery comes from Ukrainian psychological operations teams who’ve spent three years learning what British propagandist Sefton Delmer figured out fighting the Nazis: facts don’t defeat propaganda. Self-interest does.
“People see the corpses of dead Russians and they’re like, well, I’m going to go and defend them,” Peter Pomerantsev tells me, describing Ukrainian research into failed propaganda attempts.
The author of “How to Win an Information War” has spent years studying both Soviet disinformation and Western attempts to counter it. His latest book, just translated into Ukrainian, resurrects Sefton Delmer, a forgotten genius who ran Britain’s “black propaganda” operations against Nazi Germany.
What Delmer understood—and what Ukraine is rediscovering—is that authoritarian propaganda doesn’t work through logic. It works through permission.
Watch the full interview with Peter Pomerantsev on our YouTube channel
The inner pig dog strategy
Sefton Delmer. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Delmer called it appealing to the “inner pig dog”—that part of human nature that’s selfish, greedy, and looking for an excuse to save its own skin.
While the BBC broadcast noble appeals to German democracy, Delmer’s radio stations told Germans it was fine to be corrupt because their officers were stealing everything anyway. Why die for these scum?
“He’d never say that, though,” Pomerantsev explains.
Delmer’s programs featured soldiers raging about corruption, giving lurid details about what Nazi officials were eating while troops starved.
The message was indirect but clear: everyone’s looking out for themselves. You should, too.
The Schweinhund, “pig-dog” in German. Photo: krautblog-ulrich.blogspot.com
One of Delmer’s most successful creations was “Der Chef,” a fake German radio station that posed as an underground voice of disgusted German soldiers. Der Chef would rail against SS corruption with stories so scandalous they became irresistible. When the Nazis converted the monastery of Münsterschwarzach into a military hospital, Der Chef spun a lurid fantasy:
“Two hundred SS men marched into the monastery… A bawdy house was made out of the monastery for the SS men and their whores. The holy mass gowns are used as sheets, and the women wear precious lace tunics made out of choir robes with nothing underneath them… Like this, they go into the chapel and drink liquor out of the holy vessels…”
Der Chef was outraged at such blasphemy—but always returned to these topics, the way tabloids show disgust at depravity while giving readers an excuse to enjoy it.
The approach worked perfectly: breaking taboos against insulting the SS while deepening rifts between party and army, party and people.
But Delmer’s genius wasn’t just in the sensational content.
His operations provided genuinely useful information to Germans—warnings about which districts would be bombed, updates on cities that had been struck, so soldiers could take guaranteed leave to help their families.
The stations posed as German broadcasts, so listeners wouldn’t get in trouble if overhead. They treated Germans as human beings, even while subverting them.
Sefton Delmer’s WW2 “black propaganda” radio studio at Milton Bryan near London that ran the Soldatensender Calais, a station posing as a German military radio station. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
“His radio shows were full of pornography, aggression, a lot of color. It was definitely more than the BBC. It was very tabloid and really rather remarkable,” Pomerantsev explains.
But Delmer’s method was always indirect: “He tells stories about people deserting and we’ll always be like, how horrendous, these traitors are deserting, and give details how they desert with the intention of making people want to desert.”
The parallels to Russia today are striking. Ukrainian research has found similar patterns:
“Several research groups have found the same thing—that the most effective messaging is around the rise of crime rates in Russia to undermine the desire of people to send their families to the war,” Pomerantsev notes.
The crime messaging works because it targets what Putin supporters actually value:
Order and stability – Rising crime rates suggest Putin’s “strong hand” is failing
Personal safety – Stories about criminals in the army threaten families directly
Elite competence – Military chaos reflects broader governmental failure
“People who support the war the most are very authoritarian. They want Putin’s strong hand. They want order,” Pomerantsev explains. “The idea that chaos is growing because of the war undermines their entire worldview.”
Why facts bounce off
Delmer worked with Cambridge’s first professor of psychoanalysis to understand Nazi psychology. They identified three elements that make authoritarian propaganda work:
Identification with the leader – Leaders who normalize aggression, sadism, and narcissism, creating what Pomerantsev calls “a carnival of evil feelings”
Toxic collective identity – A sense of superiority over others based on supremacism
Ersatz agency – The illusion of control when people actually have none
“The less control we have over our lives, the more propaganda we need,” Pomerantsev quotes Delmer as observing.
This explains why showing Russians their casualties backfires. In an authoritarian mindset, those deaths demand vengeance, not reflection. Appeals to humanity assume a moral framework that propaganda has already dismantled.
“It’s not that he didn’t believe in facts. He just wanted to find the facts that worked for his aims,” Pomerantsev notes about Delmer’s approach.
The same principle applies today: effective counter-propaganda uses real information, but selects facts that serve strategic goals rather than moral ones.
“I don’t think there’s an important democratic movement in Germany to support,” Delmer concluded about Nazi Germany.
The same pragmatism should guide effective operations against Russia today. As opposed to the current Western strategy of supporting Russian opposition media, which can influence only 11% of critically-minded Russians, disruptive propaganda operations should focus on themes that resonate with authoritarian mindsets rather than moral appeals.
Pomerantsev’s research reveals the psychological mechanism behind this.
Working with teams in Russia, he found “the largest correlation between being ready to send your kids to die in the war is to do with belief in Russian supremacism”—the conviction that Russia is superior to others while simultaneously being victimized by them.
When Russians are primed with messages reinforcing this supremacist-victim narrative, their support for war actually increases. However, other messages do work: those hinting at rising crime inside the army and China humiliating Russia.
For Russians who actively support Putin (55% of the population), messaging about personal safety could undermine war support
For Russians who are passive loyalists, (34 % of the population), messages suggesting China’s advantage over Russia decrease war support
It is precisely these kind of messages that Ukraine is using in successful offensive propaganda operations against Russia, Pomerantsev suggests, hinting at the presentation of his book in Kyiv that the Delmers of today are sitting in the room, incognito.
The resource problem
The tragedy is that Ukraine knows what works but lacks the resources to scale it.
“Delmer had the backing of a state which allowed him to experiment,” Pomerantsev points out. “He had a team of hundreds of people working in this beautiful vast country estate outside of London. He managed to persuade the government to give him the most powerful radio transmitter in the world.”
1940s UK government broadcast transmitter at King’s Standing, near Crowborough, Sussex, codenamed Aspidistra, the most powerful broadcast transmitter in the world at the time. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Ukraine has no such luxury. While fighting for survival, it can barely manage domestic information space, let alone mount the massive multimedia campaign needed to truly destabilize Russian mobilization.
“If we were fighting this war as we did the war on terror, we would have set up dozens of radio stations like in Afghanistan,” Pomerantsev notes.
“We had huge information operations during our intervention in Iraq. If we were doing this, it would be such a key element of what we were doing. But we want to undermine mobilization, we say we want to slow down Russia’s war machine, and we haven’t done the ABCs of undermining mobilization and military morale. It just shows you how fundamentally pathetic Ukraine’s partners are.”
We say we want to slow down Russia’s war machine, and we haven’t done the ABCs of undermining mobilization and military morale.
The Kremlin’s real fear
What would work if resources were available? Pomerantsev outlines the pressure points that actually worry the Kremlin:
Putin’s approval rating – Which collapsed to under 60% during Ukraine’s Kursk operation
Economic stability – The ruble’s weakness, rising short-term loan defaults, a growing credit crisis
Military compensation – Soldiers’ families not getting paid, creating resentment
Elite loyalty – Growing mistrust between different power centers
China’s reliability – Deep anxiety about Beijing potentially abandoning Moscow
“Any attempt to deter Russia has to be linked into their sense of control,” he argues.
The Kremlin’s leadership remains traumatized by how quickly the Soviet system collapsed. When they sense loss of control, they retreat.
The Kursk incursion proved this. Putin’s rating plummeted. The government panicked, posting and deleting contradictory messages. That was the moment to pile on pressure—NATO exercises, shadow fleet blockades, secondary sanctions. Add coordinated information operations targeting those specific vulnerabilities.
Instead, nothing.
Beyond good and evil
Delmer’s approach offends our democratic sensibilities. He promoted desertion, normalized corruption, used pornography to grab attention.
His radio shows were, by his own admission, an exercise in encouraging Germans to be “bad.”
Nazis told Germans they would be good by doing very bad things, while Delmer told Germans to be bad, achieving a very good thing.
“I think we have to think very carefully when we think about good and bad in politics,” Pomerantsev reflects. “If you’re stimulating someone to think for themselves, if you’re provoking them to act for themselves, if you’re provoking them to break through a kind of passivity which has been fed to them by authoritarian propaganda—I think that’s good.”
He sees Delmer’s work as fundamentally liberating:
“I think at the core of it was a deeply anti-authoritarian project because in stimulating people to think and act for themselves, he was giving them a way to break through authoritarian psychology.”
The Nazis used the language of nobility and sacrifice to enable genocide. Delmer used the language of greed and self-interest to stimulate individual thinking. When you’re deserting or stealing from your factory, you’re reclaiming agency from an authoritarian system.
As Pomerantsev puts it:
“The Nazis used the language of noble and the nation and sacrifice in order to enable genocide and rape, while Delmer was using the language of naughtiness, greed, corruption, sexual hanky-panky in order to stimulate good.”
The inversion is profound: Nazis told Germans they would be good by doing very bad things, while Delmer told Germans to be bad, achieving a very good thing.
This isn’t about making Russians good people. It’s about making them bad soldiers.
You might also like our video series “A guide to Russian propaganda”
Radio then, full-spectrum now
If Delmer were alive today, he wouldn’t pick just one channel.
“We live in a multimedia age, so you need everything and you need scale,” Pomerantsev explains. “You’d be using radio, you’d be using satellite TV where it’s relevant, some of the great things the Ukrainians do—hacking into Russian local TV and playing content. You want all of those. You want to have a sense that you’re everywhere. Robo calls, SMSs, everything. You’re using everything and you’re thinking how they work together to create a full spectrum movement.”
The aim is the same as in the 1940s: make the people who keep the war going feel it’s no longer in their interest. Delmer did it by embracing the “baddie baddie” role. Pomerantsev is asking if Ukraine’s partners are ready to do the same.
As Pomerantsev puts it: “The Ukrainians are doing a lot, and I think, like with Delmer, we’ll find out after the war.”
The question is whether Ukraine’s partners will provide the resources for a real information offensive before it’s too late. Because knowing what works means nothing if you can’t execute it at scale.
Facts don’t defeat propaganda. But appealing to fear, greed, and self-preservation might. Delmer knew it. Ukraine has proven it.
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White House spokesperson Caroline Levitt announced that US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin will meet in Anchorage, Alaska’s largest city. The meeting is scheduled for 15 August to discuss ending Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Levitt confirmed that details and the meeting schedule are currently being coordinated. When asked why Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was not invited to the negotiations, the White House spokesperson said the meeting was happening at Puti
White House spokesperson Caroline Levitt announced that US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin will meet in Anchorage, Alaska’s largest city. The meeting is scheduled for 15 August to discuss ending Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Levitt confirmed that details and the meeting schedule are currently being coordinated. When asked why Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was not invited to the negotiations, the White House spokesperson said the meeting was happening at Putin’s request.
She confirmed that Trump plans to visit Russia in the future. The purpose of the Alaska negotiations, Levitt explained, is for Trump and Putin to “better understand how to end this war.”
When asked what Trump would do if Putin was not serious about negotiations, Levitt said she would not “put forward any hypothetical assumptions.” However, she said she was “very confident” that Trump would remain satisfied with the meeting.
The White House spokesperson said the US president was “determined to stop the killings” and “deeply respects all sides of the conflict and everyone trying to end it.”
“This administration has truly used all levers of influence, taken all measures to achieve peace through diplomatic resolution,” the White House spokesperson said.
Trump previewed terms of a potential peace deal that could include “some swapping of territories.” Bloomberg previously reported that Washington and Moscow were seeking to reach an agreement to end the war in Ukraine that would secure occupied territories for Russia.
The Wall Street Journal wrote that Putin presented the Trump administration with a ceasefire plan in exchange for territorial concessions from Kyiv. Trump suggested that a peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine would likely require “certain territorial exchanges for the benefit of both sides.” Specifically, Ukraine would need to withdraw troops from all of Donetsk Oblast, and Crimea would be recognized as sovereign Russian territory.
Against the backdrop of these reports, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that Ukraine would not give up its lands to anyone. Zelenskyy and European leaders plan to meet with Trump on 13 August to discuss the course of action.
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy disclosed that Ukraine sustained 340 casualties on 11 August, with 18 military personnel killed, 243 injured, and 79 missing in action, according to Ukrinform.
Speaking to journalists, Zelenskyy said that Russian losses were three times higher. “Russians lost 968 soldiers in one day: 531 killed, 428 injured, and 9 captured,” the president said.
President revealed the overall personnel ratio between Ukraine and Russia stands at 1 to 3 in favor of the occupy
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy disclosed that Ukraine sustained 340 casualties on 11 August, with 18 military personnel killed, 243 injured, and 79 missing in action, according to Ukrinform.
Speaking to journalists, Zelenskyy said that Russian losses were three times higher. “Russians lost 968 soldiers in one day: 531 killed, 428 injured, and 9 captured,” the president said.
President revealed the overall personnel ratio between Ukraine and Russia stands at 1 to 3 in favor of the occupying forces. In artillery, the ratio is 1 to 2.4 in Russia’s favor, Zelenskyy said. However, Ukraine maintains a 1.4-fold advantage in FPV drones.
On the morning of 12 August, Ukraine’s General Staff reported that Russia has lost 1,065,220 personnel since the war began. Ukrainian forces have also destroyed 11,098 Russian tanks, 31,406 artillery systems, 421 aircraft, and 340 helicopters, according to the General Staff.
The General Staff does not release current data on Ukrainian losses.
In February 2025, Zelenskyy said that 45,000 Ukrainian servicemen had died in the war against Russia. Previously, in December 2024, the president said Ukraine’s losses had reached 43,000 military personnel.
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Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced that Russia is transferring approximately 30,000 troops from the Sumy direction to three other front sectors after failing to achieve success in the northern region.
Accorrding to Zelenskyy, Russia began moving troops to the Zaporizhzhia and Pokrovsk directions.
The president outlined Russia’s preparations for offensive operations across three main directions: Zaporizhzhia, Pokrovsk, and Novopavlivka. According to Zelenskyy’s assessment, Russia p
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced that Russia is transferring approximately 30,000 troops from the Sumy direction to three other front sectors after failing to achieve success in the northern region.
Accorrding to Zelenskyy, Russia began moving troops to the Zaporizhzhia and Pokrovsk directions.
The president outlined Russia’s preparations for offensive operations across three main directions: Zaporizhzhia, Pokrovsk, and Novopavlivka. According to Zelenskyy’s assessment, Russia plans to deploy approximately 15,000 additional troops to the Zaporizhzhia direction, around 7,000 to Pokrovsk, and about 5,000 to Novopavlivka.
Of the 53,000 Russian forces concentrated on the Sumy direction, approximately 30,000 will be redirected to these three sectors, according to the president’s assessment.
Zelenskyy emphasized that Russia’s strongest brigades currently positioned on the Kursk direction will be among those redeploying. “We believe this is the main source of troops, these are their strongest brigades that are standing on the Kursk direction, they will be moving,” he added.
The president provided a timeline for expected Russian preparations, saying they will prepare for offensive actions after the 15th and will be ready with these brigades by September. “We believe they will be ready by September with these brigades. We believe that with additional [forces] they may be ready in November,” Zelenskyy said.
According to the president, these three directions were targeted by Russia a year ago, and Russian forces are operating according to the same plans and maps. Zelenskyy said that the offensive mission on Zaporizhzhia and Pokrovsk was delayed by a year due to the Kursk operation.
The president suggested that throughout this month, Russian forces will attempt to demonstrate progress on all directions to exert political pressure on Ukraine, seeking various concessions.
The announcement comes as Ukrainian forces have achieved several tactical successes in Sumy Oblast. On 12 June, the president reported that Ukrainian defenders were “gradually pushing back” Russian forces in the region. Two days later, on 14 June, Zelenskyy announced the liberation of Andriivka in Sumy Oblast. Most recently, on 27 July, the Armed Forces of Ukraine reported the liberation of Kindrativka in the Khotyn community.
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Latvia will join NATO’s Priority Ukraine Requirements List (PURL) initiative and contribute at least 2 million euros ($2.3 million) to supply Ukraine with American weapons, Prime Minister Evika Silina announced on 12 August, following a government meeting.
The Latvian government discussed participation in the NATO initiative during its August 12 session. “The scope of Latvia’s financial contribution to this initiative will be clarified, but it will be no less than 2 million euros,” Silina said
Latvia will join NATO’s Priority Ukraine Requirements List (PURL) initiative and contribute at least 2 million euros ($2.3 million) to supply Ukraine with American weapons, Prime Minister Evika Silina announced on 12 August, following a government meeting.
The Latvian government discussed participation in the NATO initiative during its August 12 session. “The scope of Latvia’s financial contribution to this initiative will be clarified, but it will be no less than 2 million euros,” Silina said after the meeting, according to Delfi.
Latvia’s readiness to participate had been indicated the previous week during a conversation between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and Latvian President Edgars Rinkevics, though without specific details at the time.
The PURL mechanism represents a new approach for delivering American weapons to Ukraine through financial contributions from other NATO member states. The United States and NATO launched this initiative to streamline weapons procurement and delivery processes.
Several NATO allies have already committed substantial funding to the program. The Netherlands prepared a $500 million aid package under PURL, which includes components and missiles for Patriot air defense systems, according to Delfi reporting. Sweden, Norway, and Denmark will jointly allocate approximately $500 million to the initiative.
Sources indicate that the first weapons and ammunition deliveries under the PURL initiative will begin within the coming weeks, though official confirmation remains pending.
The Priority Ukraine Requirements List allows NATO members to pool resources for purchasing American military equipment specifically identified as priorities for Ukraine’s defense needs. This mechanism aims to coordinate international military assistance more efficiently than previous ad-hoc arrangements.
Latvia’s contribution adds to the growing international commitment to the PURL framework, which has attracted over $1 billion in pledged funding from various NATO member states since its launch.
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The Kremlin is considering two scenarios for the upcoming Alaska summit: an agreement without Ukraine or pressure through cutting aid. According to Corriere della Sera, Russian President Vladimir Putin is offering US President Donald Trump a “convenient way out of the situation,” Kremlin foreign policy adviser Dmitry Suslov says.
According to him, at the 15 August Alaska summit, where the main topic will be ending Russia’s war against Ukraine, the Kremlin expects one of two possible scena
The Kremlin is considering two scenarios for the upcoming Alaska summit: an agreement without Ukraine or pressure through cutting aid. According to Corriere della Sera, Russian President Vladimir Putin is offering US President Donald Trump a “convenient way out of the situation,” Kremlin foreign policy adviser Dmitry Suslov says.
According to him, at the 15 August Alaska summit, where the main topic will be ending Russia’s war against Ukraine, the Kremlin expects one of two possible scenarios.
Scenario 1: Bilateral deal without Ukraine and Europe
The first option envisions adopting a Russia–US ceasefire plan for Ukraine, negotiated exclusively between Moscow and Washington.
The agreement could include:
Withdrawal of Ukrainian forces from the parts of Donbas they still control,
Withdrawal of Russian forces from Sumy, Dnipropetrovsk, and Kharkiv oblasts, but keeping the current front line in other areas,
Ukraine is committed not to join NATO.
This would mean continued fighting in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia oblasts.
Suslov stressed that renouncing NATO membership is a “mandatory and inevitable condition,”and the final arrangements must include “Ukraine’s demilitarization and constitutional reform toward federalization.”
Scenario 2: Pressure through cutting assistance
Suslov said the second option is that Ukraine and its European partners reject the Kremlin’s proposals. In this case, he suggests Trump could completely end military aid to Kyiv and even halt weapons sales to European countries so they cannot transfer arms to Ukraine.
“This will speed up Ukraine’s defeat and its complete collapse,” he stated.
Suslov believes Trump might take such a step to avoid appearing weak after pressuring Brazil, India, and China to stop importing Russian oil under threat of secondary sanctions.
At the same time, according to the Kremlin adviser, successfully reaching a bilateral deal in Alaska would help ease tensions with China, India, and Brazil and give the US president the chance to claim a “historic achievement.”
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has emphasized that no country, except European states, provides Kyiv with real security guarantees, including financial support for the army, the foundation of the country’s defense. Therefore, European leaders must be present at key international meetings, UkrInform reports.
His statement came ahead of the meeting between US President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin, scheduled for 15 August in Alaska. The meeting will focus on the
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has emphasized that no country, except European states, provides Kyiv with real security guarantees, including financial support for the army, the foundation of the country’s defense. Therefore, European leaders must be present at key international meetings, UkrInform reports.
His statement came ahead of the meeting between US President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin, scheduled for 15 August in Alaska. The meeting will focus on the end of Russia’s war against Ukraine. One possible subject of discussion is the ceding of part of Ukrainian territory to Russia. At the same time, there is no hint of any security guarantees that the West might offer to prevent another Russian invasion.
Zelenskyy’s plan: ceasefire, negotiations, and security guarantees
The Ukrainian president has presented his simple and clear plan to end the war: first, a ceasefire, followed by negotiations mediated by the US with clear security guarantees from all parties.
“My plan is not that complicated. It is very simple: a ceasefire, and during the ceasefire we must discuss and resolve the issues… with clear security guarantees,” Zelenskyy stresses.
The importance of Ukraine’s participation in the upcoming negotiations
The president announced that on 13 August, there will be a series of online negotiations with European leaders, US and NATO representatives, ahead of the Trump-Putin meeting in Alaska.
“Such sensitive issues concerning Ukraine must be discussed in Ukraine’s presence,” Zelenskyy emphasizes.
These negotiations aim to coordinate a common position regarding peace, security guarantees, and support for Ukraine in the ongoing diplomatic process.
Earlier, the study showed that Europe leads in military aid for Ukraine, surpassing the US. According to research by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy’s Ukraine Support Tracker, European countries have become the main donors of support to Ukraine, allocating over 35 billion euros for weapons procurement.
This sum is 4.4 billion euros more than the US has spent on the defense of Ukraine over more than three years of Russia’s aggression.
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The Belarus Defense Ministry has announced that Russia and Belarus will conduct Zapad-2025 joint strategic military exercises from 12 to 16 September.
These maneuvers raise concerns due to the possible use of Belarus as a staging ground for aggression against Ukraine and the Baltic countries.
Repeating the 2022 invasion preparation scenario
According to Valery Revenko, Head of the Department of International Military Cooperation at the Belarusian Ministry of Defense, the theme of t
The Belarus Defense Ministry has announced that Russia and Belarus will conduct Zapad-2025 joint strategic military exercises from 12 to 16 September.
These maneuvers raise concerns due to the possible use of Belarus as a staging ground for aggression against Ukraine and the Baltic countries.
Repeating the 2022 invasion preparation scenario
According to Valery Revenko, Head of the Department of International Military Cooperation at the Belarusian Ministry of Defense, the theme of the exercises is“the deployment of troop groups to ensure the security of the Union State.”
“The overall goal is to test the capabilities of the Republic of Belarus and the Russian Federation in ensuring the military security of the Union State and readiness to repel possible aggression,” Revenko emphasizes.
Experts have previously noted that the Zapad-2025 scenario essentially repeats the preparatory measures under the cover of which Russia amassed troops near Ukraine’s borders in late 2021 – early 2022, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reports.
Russia is already deploying troops and equipment to Belarus
According to the Armed Forces of Ukraine, Russia has begun transferring the first units to Belarus — several hundred soldiers and dozens of pieces of equipment, as per Facty.
Minsk assures that the exercises pose no threat to neighbors and will be conducted openly. Observers from nine NATO countries are involved.
NATO will respond harshly to possible aggression
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte stressed that a new military conflict in Europe is currently unlikely but cannot be ruled out.
If anyone decides that an attack on Poland or any of our allies will go unpunished, they will face the full force of the alliance, Rutte warned.
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Slipping past empty Ukrainian trenches northeast of the fortress city of Pokrovsk in recent weeks, Russian infantry quickly marched 15 km to the north. Now the Russians are threatening the village of Dobropillya, which sits astride one of two main supply lines into Pokrovsk.
“The development of the operational situation in the Dobropillya direction causes particular concern,” the Ukrainian Center for Defense Strategies warned. But you might know it reading the latest public social media post
Slipping past empty Ukrainian trenches northeast of the fortress city of Pokrovsk in recent weeks, Russian infantry quickly marched 15 km to the north. Now the Russians are threatening the village of Dobropillya, which sits astride one of two main supply lines into Pokrovsk.
“The development of the operational situation in the Dobropillya direction causes particular concern,” the Ukrainian Center for Defense Strategies warned. But you might know it reading the latest public social media post by Gen. Oleksandr Syrsky, the Ukrainian commander-in-chief.
Russia’s narrow breakthrough near Pokrovsk. Map: Deep State
“Reported on the details of the operational situation at the front,” Syrsky wrote as the first reports of Russian troops in Dobropillya appeared online.
“It’s a tough one,” Syrsky wrote. “But the opponent is held back.”
The opponent is not held back. The Russian 51st Combined Arms Army’s foot- and motorcycle-borne breach of the Ukrainian line northeast of Pokrovsk has deepened fast. And for good reason: Ukraine is desperately short of trained infantry, largely owing to an inefficient and sometimes corrupt mobilization system.
In many sectors of the 1,000-km front line, as few as eight Ukrainian soldiers defend a 900-m length of trenches, according to the pro-Ukraine Conflict Intelligence Team. Normally, at least 200 troops would defend that much of the front. It’s no wonder the Russians were able to simply walk past empty trenches in Donetsk Oblast.
At least one former officer is worried Ukrainian Pres. Volodymyr Zelensky doesn’t appreciate the scale of the problem—perhaps because he’s getting bad information. “I sincerely don’t know what exactly is being reported to you,” Bohdan Krotevych, who recently quit as the chief of staff of the Azov Brigade, wrote on social media, “but I’m informing you: on the Pokrovsk-Kostiantynivka line, without exaggeration, it’s complete chaos.”
Пане Президенте, Я щиро не знаю, що саме Вам доповідають, але інформую: на лінії Покровськ – Костянтинівка без перебільшення повна пізда. І ця пізда наростає вже давно, погіршуючись з кожним днем.
“And this chaos has been growing for a long time, worsening with each passing day,” Krotevych added. “The command structures currently being appointed (or already appointed) to ‘fix the unfixable’ will most likely be blamed for the chaos that’s already unfolding.”
“The systemic problem began with the depletion of reserves,” Krotevych claimed. Ukrainian brigades may have suffered thousands of casualties capturing a small swathe of Russia’s Kursk Oblast starting a year ago—and may have suffered hundred more while retreating form Kursk after their supply lines were severed by Russian drones seven months later in February.
A soldier from the Ukrainian army’s 4th Heavy Mechanized Brigade. 4th Heavy Mechanized Brigade photo.
Meanwhile, Ukraine’s antiquated mobilization system has consistently failed to generate enough new troops. Today, the Ukrainian military’s roughly 130 combat brigades may be short around 100,000 infantry, according to analyst Andrew Perpetua.
Brigades that should have thousands of troops instead have hundreds. “The widespread fragmentation of units across the entire front line, reports of ‘captured villages’ being touted as victories amidst failures of entire sectors, the allocation of mobilization resources to ‘cronies’ and the complete lack of strategic or even operational vision” have combined to undermine Ukraine’s defenses, Krotevych wrote.
But not according to Syrsky. “Our combat units will become stronger by receiving additional funding from the state budget,” the commander-in-chief wrote.
Explore further
Ukraine’s Leopard tanks rush to Pokrovsk—100,000 Russians wait to spring the trap
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Europe leads military aid for Ukraine, surpassing the US. According to research by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy’s Ukraine Support Tracker, European countries have become the main donors of support to Ukraine, allocating over 35 billion euros for weapons procurement.
However, despite this, European leaders will not attend the summit between US President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Alaska on 15 August, where discussions about conditions for a ceasefire in Ukraine
Europe leads military aid for Ukraine, surpassing the US. According to research by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy’s Ukraine Support Tracker, European countries have become the main donors of support to Ukraine, allocating over 35 billion euros for weapons procurement.
However, despite this, European leaders will not attend the summit between US President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Alaska on 15 August, where discussions about conditions for a ceasefire in Ukraine may take place. Meanwhile, Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna drew parallels between potential Ukraine concessions and Neville Chamberlain’s1938 appeasement of Nazi Germany, which led to World War II.
The Ukraine Support Tracker project monitors military, financial, and humanitarian aid to Ukraine based on open data. It covers 40 countries, including the G7 members, as well as Australia, South Korea, Türkiye, Norway, New Zealand, Switzerland, China, Taiwan, and India.
Europe spent more on military aid than the US
From the start of the full-scale war until June 2025, Europe allocated at least 35.1 billion euros for Ukraine’s armaments — 4.4 billion euros more than the US. Importantly, a significant portion of weapons are purchased directly through the defense industry rather than taken from existing stockpiles.
The study highlights that Germany provided the largest bilateral aid package of five billion euros. Norway, Belgium, the Netherlands, the UK, and Denmark also provided significant aid packages.
The US supports, but Kyiv must finance purchases Itself
In May 2025, Trump’s administration approved large arms exports to Ukraine, but the country must finance these purchases independently.
Ukraine’s financing through international mechanisms
A significant part of Ukraine’s financial support is currently provided through the ERA loan mechanism, created by the G7 and the European Commission. A total of 45 billion euros is planned to be provided, partly financed by frozen Russian assets.
Experts warn that whether donors can maintain this level of assistance in the long term remains uncertain.
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Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) has targeted another Shahed drone storage facility in Russia’s Tatarstan, 1,300 km from Ukraine. The SBU announced the destruction of ready-to-use attack drones and foreign components in the latest strike.
Ukraine’s systematic targeting of Russia’s drone infrastructure aims to disrupt Moscow’s ability to launch nightly swarms of 100+ Shaheds that build reserves before unleashing massive coordinated attacks of 500+ drones against Ukrainian cities.
Russia’s expand
Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) has targeted another Shahed drone storage facility in Russia’s Tatarstan, 1,300 km from Ukraine. The SBU announced the destruction of ready-to-use attack drones and foreign components in the latest strike.
Ukraine’s systematic targeting of Russia’s drone infrastructure aims to disrupt Moscow’s ability to launch nightly swarms of 100+ Shaheds that build reserves before unleashing massive coordinated attacks of 500+ drones against Ukrainian cities.
Russia’s expanding drone production network now manufactures over 5,000 Shaheds monthly, transforming Iranian designs into a cornerstone of its terror campaign against Ukrainian civilians far from the front lines.
This is the second such strike within a week, as Ukraine continues to target Russia’s weapons supplies deep within the country. The most recent strike on 9 August destroyed attack drones and foreign components using a domestically-produced Liutyi drone with 75-kg warheads to hit a logistics hub in the region.
Russia’s Republic of Tatarstan is home to the main production facilities for Shahed drones used by Russia, particularly the Yelabuga facility located within the Alabuga Special Economic Zone.
Latest strike targets Shahed logistics
The SBU Special Operations Center “A” announced that their long-range drones struck a logistics hub in Kzyl-Yul, Republic of Tatarstan.
Videos taken by local residents confirm the strike on the warehouse.
The series of strikes is “aimed at reducing the enemy’s capabilities for ‘Shahed’ terror in Ukraine,” the SBU reports. They add that “operations at enterprises that provide weapons to the Russian military machine will continue.”
Strikes expand to defense plants
The Tatarstan operations also follow drone strikes on two defense plants in Orenburg and Stavropol regions within 24 hours.
On 11 August, Ukrainian military intelligence (HUR) drones struck the Orenburg Helium Plant, Russia’s only helium production facility located 1,200 kilometers from the front line. In the early hours of 12 August, HUR drones also targeted the Monocrystal JSC plant in Stavropol, sparking a fire approximately 480 km from the frontline.
Ukraine’s expanding deep-strike campaign
These strikes continue Ukraine’s systematic targeting of Russia’s drone production network throughout 2025, striking warhead labs, antenna plants, and control system factories deep inside the country.
This week’s operations follow previous Ukrainian strikes on Shahed infrastructure, including January strikes that destroyed over 200 Shahed drones in storage facilities in Russia’s Oryol Oblast and attacks on the Yelabuga industrial zone, which houses Russia’s largest known Shahed production facility.
Russia has launched thousands of Iranian-designed Shahed drones against Ukraine since fall 2022. Western media reports that each Shahed-136 drone costs as low as $20,000, making them cost-effective weapons for mass attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure and cities.
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Ukrainian special forces reported the destruction of radar in Abrykosivka, a fixed TRLK-10 Skala-M complex in Russian-occupied Crimea. The overnight strike on 9–10 August 2025 was carried out by resistance units of Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces, according to an official statement on the command’s Facebook page.
The radar’s elimination follows a series of precision attacks on Russian military infrastructure in Crimea, including air defense and surveillance systems. Earlier in August, Ukrain
Ukrainian special forces reported the destruction of radar in Abrykosivka, a fixed TRLK-10 Skala-M complex in Russian-occupied Crimea. The overnight strike on 9–10 August 2025 was carried out by resistance units of Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces, according to an official statement on the command’s Facebook page.
The radar’s elimination follows a series of precision attacks on Russian military infrastructure in Crimea, including air defense and surveillance systems. Earlier in August, Ukrainian strike drones hit a radar complex near Feodosiia used for tracking space objects. Taken together, these operations show a pattern of systematically dismantling the enemy’s layered air defense and detection systems across the peninsula.
Officials said the loss of this installation will significantly limit the Russianability to use aviation against Ukrainian civilians and infrastructure. Crimea has two Abrykosivkas, one in Yevpatoriia district closer to the western coast, another in Feodosiia’s in the east. The report does not specify which of the two had the radar site.
Euromaidan Press could not independently verify the operation or its outcome.
Special operations take out Soviet-era radar in occupied Crimea
Militarnyi reports that the TRLK-10 Skala-M was a Soviet-Russian stationary route radar complex with both primary and secondary air target detection capabilities. It was designed for controlling air traffic, including on routes and in approach zones, and served as a crucial element in the occupied peninsula’s airspace management system. With a range of up to 350 km, the radar could track aircraft over vast stretches of the Black Sea and southern Ukraine.
The Special Operations Forces command reported the strike but did not disclose which weapons or systems were used to destroy the radar. The mission was executed in the settlement of Abrykosivka, deep inside Russian-occupied territory. The destruction of this installation, according to the command’s statement, will weaken the adversary’s ability to coordinate and execute air missions that have repeatedly been used to strike civilian targets.
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The 1st Corps of the National Guard Azov has taken defensive positions on the Pokrovsk front, moving to block Russian forces advancing in Donetsk Oblast, according to the corps’ official statement.
The recent Russian breakthrough towards Dobropillia threatens the defense of Pokrovsk. Russian forces have been trying to take the city and surrounding areas since early 2024.
The deployment of one of Ukraine’s most disciplined and combat-experienced brigades comes as Russian forces have advanced mor
The 1st Corps of the National Guard Azov has taken defensive positions on the Pokrovsk front, moving to block Russian forces advancing in Donetsk Oblast, according to the corps’ official statement.
The recent Russian breakthrough towards Dobropillia threatens the defense of Pokrovsk. Russian forces have been trying to take the city and surrounding areas since early 2024.
The deployment of one of Ukraine’s most disciplined and combat-experienced brigades comes as Russian forces have advanced more than 23 kilometers deep into Ukrainian positions toward the Dobropillia-Kramatorsk road.
Regular Ukrainian defensive units have proven unable to halt the advance in this critical sector, according to Ukrainska Pravda. The 23-kilometer Russian salient now sits equidistant between Pokrovsk and Kostiantynivka.
Elite units replace faltering defenses
The corps moved into what has been described as “one of the most difficult sections of the front.” The area was previously defended by Tactical Group “Pokrovsk,” which “absolutely could not cope with defense on this section,” according to military sources.
“The situation remains complex and dynamic,” Azov stated. “The enemy, trying to advance in that direction, suffers significant losses in personnel and equipment.”
Corps units have “planned and implemented measures to block [Russian] forces in the designated area,” though results will be announced later.
Recent weeks saw intensified pressure, with three sabotage groups of 50 personnel each infiltrating Pokrovsk itself. Ukrainian forces eliminated approximately 120 attackers while capturing others. 100,000 Russian troops are currently stationed in the area.
Russia’s 10-km breakthrough north of Pokrovsk, Donetsk Oblast. Photo: Deep State
Russian forces have dramatically expanded their breakthrough along the Pokrovsk-Kostiantynivka road. What began as a 10-kilometer salient in May 2025 near Malynivka, Nova Poltavka, and Novoolenivka has now extended to 23 kilometers.
On 11 August, DeepState analysts reported a Russian advance northeast of nearby Dobropillia, warning that “after final consolidation and accumulation, there will be mandatory attempts to move deeper into the territory.”
Ukraine’s Dnipro command disputed the implications of these advances, stating that Russian infiltration attempts “never lead to territorial capture” and that Ukrainian troops have eliminated infiltrators “in the shortest possible time.”
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Russian propaganda threatens Azerbaijan with war over support for Ukraine. Pro-Kremlin media have intensified anti-Baku rhetoric, escalating accusations against the country of being “Western sellouts.”
Ukrainian-Azerbaijani relations significantly improved in 2024–2025 following a series of aggressive actions from Russia. In December 2024, Russian forces shot down an Azerbaijani aircraft near Grozny, killing 38 passengers. Shortly afterward, Russia launched raids on its territory, resulting in
Russian propaganda threatens Azerbaijan with war over support for Ukraine. Pro-Kremlin media have intensified anti-Baku rhetoric, escalating accusations against the country of being “Western sellouts.”
Ukrainian-Azerbaijani relations significantly improved in 2024–2025 following a series of aggressive actions from Russia. In December 2024, Russian forces shot down an Azerbaijani aircraft near Grozny, killing 38 passengers. Shortly afterward, Russia launched raids on its territory, resulting in the deaths of two Azerbaijani citizens. In response, Baku began openly strengthening ties with Kyiv. During the Soviet era,Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia were under Moscow’s control and subjected to centralized governance.
On 11 August, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev signed a decree allocating $2 million in humanitarian aid to Ukraine following Russian strikes on the state-owned SOCAR’s oil depot in Odesa Oblast and a gas compressor station that transports Azerbaijani gas to Ukraine.
The funds will be used to purchase electrical equipment for Ukraine.
“The Russian propaganda has launched a new wave of harsh anti-Azerbaijani rhetoric, ranging from accusations of being ‘Western sellouts’ to direct threats of war,” says the Center for Countering Disinformation under Ukraine’s National Security and Defense Council.
Moscow is losing control over the South Caucasus
As explained by the Center, the Kremlin is increasingly losing influence over Azerbaijan and can no longer impose its political or economic will. Therefore, Kremlin propaganda intensifies pressure through threats and war rhetoric to rally its domestic audience.
“Moscow can no longer dictate its political or economic will to Azerbaijan. Thus, propaganda tries to compensate for the loss of real leverage with threats,” the Center notes.
Azerbaijan strengthens its fight against Russian propaganda
Baku is actively freeing itself from Russian dominance: recently, the “Russkiy Dom” was closed, and the activities of Russian propaganda media have been restricted in the country.
The “Russkiy Dom” in Baku was a Russian information and cultural center functioning as a representative office of the agency engaged in strengthening Russia’s humanitarian influence abroad, in Azerbaijan. The center faced accusations of espionage activities disguised as cultural work.
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Overnight drone strikes have reportedly hit two major Russian industrial sites linked to the defense sector — Ukraine’s intelligence drones targeted Russia’s only helium plant in Orenburg, and a separate attack struck the Monocrystal synthetic sapphire factory in Stavropol, causing a fire. The results of both attacks are so far not known.
Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Kyiv has been targeting military, defense-industry, logistics, and fuel sites deep inside Russia with long-range d
Overnight drone strikes have reportedly hit two major Russian industrial sites linked to the defense sector — Ukraine’s intelligence drones targeted Russia’s only helium plant in Orenburg, and a separate attack struck the Monocrystal synthetic sapphire factory in Stavropol, causing a fire. The results of both attacks are so far not known.
Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Kyiv has been targeting military, defense-industry, logistics, and fuel sites deep inside Russia with long-range drones to cripple Moscow’s war machine.
Ukrainian drones target rare helium facility in Orenburg
Militarnyi, citing a source in Ukrainian military intelligence, reported that drones from the Main Intelligence Directorate (HUR) of Ukraine’s Defense Ministry attacked the Orenburg Helium Plant on 11 August. The facility is the only producer of helium in Russia and one of the largest in Europe, with an annual capacity to process about 15 billion cubic meters of natural gas. It belongs to Gazprom Pererabotka, a subsidiary of Gazprom. Orenburg is about 1,250 km from the warzone.
Helium from the plant is reportedly used in missile production, the space industry, and aviation. Militarnyi noted that the site is directly involved in Russia’s war against Ukraine and is a key part of the country’s military-industrial complex. Local residents reported explosions near the facility, and authorities temporarily closed a section of the M-5 “Ural” federal highway near the villages of Perevolotskoye and Kholodnye Klyuchi, the latter being the plant’s location.
That evening, Orenburg Oblast authorities claimed that two drones had been shot down after a UAV danger regime was declared in the region. Officials did not confirm any direct hits or falling debris.
Stavropol sapphire producer hit hours later
In the early hours of 12 August, Russian Telegram channel Astra and Ukrainian Supernova+ reported that drones attacked the Monocrystal JSC plant in Stavropol, sparking a fire. The facility is located about 480 km from the frontline.
The facility is one of the world’s leading producers of synthetic corundum (sapphire), a material used in optoelectronics, aerospace, instrumentation, and military applications. According to the company, it is a subsidiary of the Energomera industrial conglomerate.
Synthetic sapphire from Monocrystal is used in optical systems, protective sensor elements, and laser components, including those in military devices. It is also applied in missile guidance systems, UAV camera housings, and aircraft and spacecraft instrumentation.
Local residents reported hearing at least five explosions and seeing flashes in the night sky before smoke appeared over the site. The city’s mayor, Ivan Ulyanchenko, claimed the UAVs were “suppressed by our electronic warfare systems” and that no one was injured, although windows in one community facility were shattered. He added that emergency services were working at the scene and that a UAV danger regime remained in effect across the region.
Russian ministry claims interceptions
Later on 12 August, the Russian Defense Ministry claimed that overnight its forces had shot down 22 Ukrainian drones over Rostov Oblast and three over Stavropol Krai. The statement did not address the reported damage at either site.
Recent strikes
The attacks follow a series of recent Ukrainian drone operations against industrial and energy facilities deep inside Russia. Bloomberg has reported that Rosneft’s Saratov oil refinery, struck on 10 August, halted crude intake after a drone strike.
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Starting college can feel like stepping into a whirlwind. There are new schedules, new places, and way too many things to remember. Between rushing to class, managing assignments, keeping up with your social life, and figuring out meals, it’s easy to feel like there aren’t enough hours in the day. The right gadgets won’t solve everything, but they can make a big difference.
You’re probably already carrying your phone, laptop, and headphones—but what about the tools that help you stay focused,
Starting college can feel like stepping into a whirlwind. There are new schedules, new places, and way too many things to remember. Between rushing to class, managing assignments, keeping up with your social life, and figuring out meals, it’s easy to feel like there aren’t enough hours in the day. The right gadgets won’t solve everything, but they can make a big difference.
You’re probably already carrying your phone, laptop, and headphones—but what about the tools that help you stay focused, save time, or just make life easier? Tech has come a long way, and there are now smart, compact, and student-friendly devices designed to fit your routine and budget.
We’ve rounded up seven practical, everyday gadgets that help students stay on track, get around, and make the most of campus life.
1. Smart transportation: Getting around campus made easier
Some campuses stretch across miles. Even if you live close, getting from one end of campus to another between classes can be a hassle. Public transport isn’t always reliable, and walking everywhere takes time and energy—especially when you’re running late.
That’s why many students are turning to high powered electric bikes. Electric bikes help students save time, skip the traffic, and get to class without showing up sweaty. They’re perfect for commuting between classes, dorms, and off-campus hangouts. Most fold down easily, so you can store them in small dorm rooms or shared apartments. They also come with features like app connectivity, built-in lights, and hydraulic brakes.
You don’t need a special license to ride one, and charging is simple. If you’re tired of wasting time walking across campus, this might be the most helpful gadget you invest in all year.
2. Noise-Canceling headphones for study and downtime
Let’s face it—college isn’t always quiet. Whether you’re in a noisy dorm, crowded library, or buzzing coffee shop, distractions are everywhere. A good pair of noise-canceling headphones helps block out the noise so you can focus when it matters.
Over-ear models usually offer better sound and more comfort for long study sessions. If you’re always on the go, in-ear buds with active noise cancellation might be more your style. Either way, you’ll thank yourself during finals week.
Plus, they’re great for more than studying. Use them to unwind with a podcast, listen to music, or enjoy a movie without annoying your roommate.
3. Smartwatch that does more than tell time
Smartwatches aren’t just for fitness buffs. For students, they offer a simple way to stay organized without constantly pulling out their phone. Most models let you check your calendar, set class reminders, reply to texts, and even track your sleep and heart rate.
Some connect directly to your phone while others work with Wi-Fi or Bluetooth. You can use them to control music during workouts, track steps on busy days, and get alerts for upcoming deadlines.
They help you stay focused, too. Instead of getting distracted by social media when checking your phone, a quick glance at your wrist gives you just the info you need.
4. Portable power banks to stay charged on the go
College students rely on their phones and laptops for everything—class schedules, group chats, emails, and more. But what happens when your battery dies between classes?
That’s where a portable power bank comes in. It’s one of those items you don’t realize you need until it saves you. Look for one with fast charging, multiple ports, and enough capacity to recharge your devices more than once. Slim, lightweight designs are easy to carry in your backpack or even your pocket.
If you’re out all day, having backup power means you won’t miss a call, a class notification, or a deadline.
5. Compact printer for last-minute assignments
Yes, many assignments are digital now, but not all of them. Some professors still require physical copies. And campus printers? They’re often broken, crowded, or out of ink at the worst possible time.
A compact printer in your dorm room solves that. Modern printers don’t take up much space. Many are wireless and work with phones, tablets, and laptops. Some even print directly from cloud services.
You won’t need it every day, but during midterms or finals, you’ll be glad you have it.
6. Digital note-taking tools that beat pen and paper
Typing notes isn’t for everyone. If you like writing things out by hand but hate carrying notebooks or losing pages, digital tools are the way to go.
Tablets with stylus support are perfect for this. Apps let you highlight, organize, and sync notes automatically to the cloud. You can also draw diagrams or mark up readings directly on screen. Another great option is smart notebooks. These let you write with real ink, then scan your pages into a digital format you can save and search later.
These tools help you stay organized and save space. You won’t have to carry piles of paper or worry about losing your notes.
7. Bluetooth tracker tags to keep track of essentials
Losing your keys when you’re late for class is the worst. And it happens more often than you think when you’re juggling books, coffee, and bags. Bluetooth tracker tags are a smart fix.
These little gadgets attach to your keys, wallet, or backpack. If you lose something, use your phone to make it ring or find its last known location. Some even have reverse features—tap the tag to find your phone.
They’re inexpensive and easy to use. If you’ve ever been late because you were digging through your room for something important, you’ll appreciate having one.
Tech doesn’t have to be flashy to be useful. The best gadgets are the ones that quietly help you manage your day, save time, or reduce stress. Each item on this list solves a real problem college students face—whether it’s getting to class faster, staying focused while studying, or keeping track of your stuff.
You don’t need to buy everything at once. Start with what makes the most sense for your daily routine. If you’re always running late, consider an electric bike. If your study space is loud, start with headphones. The goal isn’t to own every new device—it’s to pick the ones that actually make your life easier.
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Switzerland adopted the European Union’s 18th sanctions package against Russia, implementing new restrictions that came into effect on 12 August, according to the country’s government press service.
The Federal Department of Economic Affairs, Education and Research announced that the measures respond to Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine, originally approved by the EU on 18 July.
Under the new sanctions, Switzerland added 14 individuals and 41 companies to its blacklists. The targeted entit
Switzerland adopted the European Union’s 18th sanctions package against Russia, implementing new restrictions that came into effect on 12 August, according to the country’s government press service.
The Federal Department of Economic Affairs, Education and Research announced that the measures respond to Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine, originally approved by the EU on 18 July.
Under the new sanctions, Switzerland added 14 individuals and 41 companies to its blacklists. The targeted entities include “Russian and international firms that manage the ‘shadow fleet’ to circumvent price restrictions on Russian oil, trade it, or supply equipment for the Russian military-industrial complex, including companies from third countries,” the department reported.
The sanctions extend beyond Russian territory, affecting 105 vessels from third countries that are now prohibited from purchase, sale, and servicing. These are “mainly tankers transporting Russian oil or military goods,” according to the announcement.
In a significant economic measure, Switzerland lowered the price ceiling on Russian oil to $47.6 per barrel, with the new limit taking effect from 3 September.
The country also imposed stricter export controls on 26 companies, including those outside Russia, “due to attempts to circumvent the ban on drone supplies,” the government reported.
Beyond Russia-focused measures, Switzerland implemented additional EU sanctions against Moldova and Belarus. Regarding Moldova, “seven individuals and three companies involved in Russia’s attempts to influence the EU membership referendum and the 2024 presidential elections” faced restrictions. For Belarus, limitations were imposed on “eight defense industry companies.”
The sanctions package reflects Switzerland’s continued alignment with EU policy despite its traditional neutrality, as the country maintains its response to what it characterizes as Russia’s aggressive actions in Ukraine.
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Ukraine has tested the revolutionary Starlink Direct to Cell technology for the first time. It allows smartphones to connect directly to satellites without special antennas or equipment. The technology could keep communications running even during massive attacks and blackouts, says Ukrainian Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko.
How Starlink Direct to Cell works?
Unlike traditional Starlink, smartphones connect to satellites like they would to a mobile tower, using standard LTE or 5G.
“Ukraine ha
Ukraine has tested the revolutionary Starlink Direct to Cell technology for the first time. It allows smartphones to connect directly to satellites without special antennas or equipment. The technology could keep communications running even during massive attacks and blackouts, says Ukrainian Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko.
How Starlink Direct to Cell works?
Unlike traditional Starlink, smartphones connect to satellites like they would to a mobile tower, using standard LTE or 5G.
“Ukraine has become one of the first countries in the world where Starlink Direct to Cell works — direct satellite connection without antennas or additional hardware, requiring only 4G and a SIM card,”explains Svyrydenko.
The technology offers global coverage, from mountains and steppes to remote villages and even the ocean. As early as autumn 2025, Kyivstar plans to launch the first stage, enabling SMS messaging from anywhere in Ukraine-controlled territory.
Why is it critical during wartime?
From 2022 to 2025, Russia destroyed around 73% of Ukraine’s thermal power plants. Continuous strikes on energy and communications infrastructure have caused long rolling blackouts.
“In wartime, when the Russians deliberately target energy and communications, this technology is a matter of security. Ukrainians will be able to stay connected even in the most remote locations,” Svyrydenko stresses.
Minister of Digital Transformation Mykhailo Fedorov has confirmed, “We successfully exchanged our first text messages via satellite directly from smartphones.”
When Starlink Direct to Cell will launch?
The technology is being rolled out in partnership with the US, Australia, Japan, Canada, and New Zealand. Beta testing is underway, and an official launch in Ukraine is planned for the fall of 2025.
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Davyd Chychkan, a Ukrainian artist known for his anarchist political views and socially engaged artwork, died 9 August from wounds sustained while repelling a Russian infantry assault in southern Zaporizhzhia Oblast. He was 39 years old.
Russian aggression continues to take lives of Ukrainian artists, journalists, writers, musicians and many others in a creative field. Ukraine’s Ministry of Culture and Strategic Communications reported that Russian aggression has killed 219 artists and 108 me
Davyd Chychkan, a Ukrainian artist known for his anarchist political views and socially engaged artwork, died 9 August from wounds sustained while repelling a Russian infantry assault in southern Zaporizhzhia Oblast. He was 39 years old.
Russian aggression continues to take lives of Ukrainian artists, journalists, writers, musicians and many others in a creative field. Ukraine’s Ministry of Culture and Strategic Communications reported that Russian aggression has killed 219 artists and 108 media workers since the February 2022 full-scale invasion, drawing parallels to Stalin’s systematic destruction of Ukrainian cultural figures in the 1920s and early 1930s. The ministry described this as a deliberate continuation of historical patterns where occupying powers target Ukraine’s cultural elite, emphasizing that each artist represents not just individual talent but an irreplaceable part of Ukrainian identity and cultural heritage.
Why was an anarchist artist on the front lines? Chychkan had his reasons.
When Russia launched its full-scale invasion, European cultural institutions offered him thousands of euros monthly to relocate and continue his work abroad. He refused. Making money off Ukraine’s war while safely abroad struck him as morally bankrupt, according to military colleague Mykyta Kozachynskyy.
Instead, Chychkan volunteered for a mortar crew.
The decision fit his philosophy.
“True anarchists must share the most difficult hardships that their people experience,” the Resistance Committee—an organization of anarchist fighters—quoted him saying.
The group confirmed his death after he suffered severe injuries during combat on 8 August. His death was also confirmed by his wife Anna Wtikenwneider.
Ukrainian artist Davyd Chychkan in the process of creating one of his artworks. Photo: Anya Wtikenwneider/Facebook
Artist’s exhibitions were attacked or canceled
Chychkan’s political views had been causing trouble for years.
His exhibitions faced repeated attacks. In 2017, more than a dozen people broke into a venue showing his work, assaulted a security guard, destroyed the exhibition, and stole four paintings.
This January, Odesa National Art Museum canceled his planned exhibition “With Ribbons and Flags” after critics claimed he equated Ukrainian and Russian soldiers.
Why the hostility? Chychkan was an anarcho-syndicalist who saw art as a tool for working-class liberation.
One of the paintings by a Ukrainian artist-anarchist Davyd Chychkan which he posted on his Instagram. Photo: @davidchichkan/Instagram
Born into an artistic family in 1986, he was largely self-taught and worked across graphics, posters, painting, street art, and performance. His pieces often featured political messaging that challenged conventional patriotic narratives.
“Anarchist convictions are my escapism, a wonderful world and a pillow into the existential pit, to fall more softly,” he once explained his political philosophy that advocated for decentralization and solidarity.
One of the paintings by a Ukrainian artist-anarchist Davyd Chychkan called ”In quarantine” or ”Threat and isolation,” which he posted on his Instagram. Photo: @davidchichkan/Instagram
BBC defense correspondent Jonathan Beale met Chychkan last December near Kupiansk in eastern Kharkiv Oblast. The encounter stuck with him.
“In many ways, he didn’t seem like an archetypal soldier,” Beale recalled. Chychkan’s unit was an eclectic mix—the artist fought alongside a vegan chef, software developer, and engineer.
But Chychkan’s commitment was clear. He shared his artwork with fellow soldiers and spoke passionately about politics and social justice.
“I didn’t know David very well, but he seemed sensitive and thoughtful to me. In many ways, he didn’t seem like an archetypal soldier, if such a thing exists. But he was clearly devoted to his comrades and his country,” Beale noted.
During their meeting, Chychkan was eagerly awaiting his son’s birth. “It pains me greatly that he won’t be with Anna to watch him grow up,” Beale said.
Ukrainian artist Davyd Chychkan, who died in combat defending Ukraine, leaves widow and infant son. Photo: Anya Wtikenwneider/Facebook
What he left behind
Chychkan’s wife Anna described him as someone who “loved life very much, but gave it for Ukraine, for the democratic, truly social country he dreamed of.”
Her Facebook post revealed both grief and anger—grief for the husband and father who won’t see his son grow up, anger at those who “persecuted him, insulted him, disrupted exhibitions and threatened him.”
Paintings by a Ukrainian artist-anarchist Davyd Chychkan, which he posted on his Instagram. Photos: @davidchichkan/Instagram
The Resistance Committee remembered him differently than his critics did. They described someone who “always approached any work conscientiously, never hid behind others’ backs or behind his own social capital” and shared “deep thoughts about politics, ethics, and social justice” with fellow soldiers.
At the Odesa Museum of Modern Art, staff noted that visitors consistently lingered at Chychkan’s exhibits during the city’s Biennale. His art, they said, was dedicated to “the fight for freedom”—a fight he ultimately joined with more than brushes and paint.
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A Russian military court sentenced 54-year-old Ukrainian citizen Olena Ipatova to five years and two months in prison for serving as a medic in a Ukrainian Armed Forces battalion six years before Russia’s full-scale invasion.
The Southern District Military Court in Rostov-on-Don found Ipatova guilty under Article 205.4 Part 2 of the Russian Criminal Code for “participation in a terrorist organization,” according to Russian media Mediazona, which cited the court’s press service.
Russian authoriti
A Russian military court sentenced 54-year-old Ukrainian citizen Olena Ipatova to five years and two months in prison for serving as a medic in a Ukrainian Armed Forces battalion six years before Russia’s full-scale invasion.
The Southern District Military Court in Rostov-on-Don found Ipatova guilty under Article 205.4 Part 2 of the Russian Criminal Code for “participation in a terrorist organization,” according to Russian media Mediazona, which cited the court’s press service.
Russian authorities detained Ipatova on 14 March 2025. She was initially held in custody until 2 April, then released on a travel restriction order before being arrested again in the courtroom following her sentencing.
The prosecutor’s office of the Russian-annexed Donetsk People’s Republic alleged that Ipatova served as a “combat medic” in the Ukrainian Armed Forces’ Aidar assault battalion from January 2018 through spring of the same year. Prosecutors did not claim she participated in battalion activities after Russia began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
Ukraine’s Ministry of Internal Affairs has been searching for Ipatova since 20 February 2025. Her wanted notice lists Sievierodonetsk in Luhansk Oblast as her place of birth.
The case reflects a pattern of Russian courts imposing lengthy sentences on Ukrainian citizens from occupied territories who resisted Russian forces. The courts typically prosecute such cases under terrorism and “state treason” charges.
In August, the same Southern District Military Court sentenced 20-year-old Daria Kulik from Russian-occupied Melitopol in Zaporizhzhia Oblast to 18 years in prison plus a 600,000-ruble fine. The court found Kulik guilty of “state treason,” attempted terrorism, participation in a terrorist organization, and illegal storage of explosives.
In June, the court handed down sentences to a Melitopol family: 29-year-old Artem Murdid received life imprisonment, his partner Hanna Voshkoder was sentenced to 20 years, and his mother Hanna Murdid received 22 years.
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Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavsky arrived in Kyiv for meetings with his Ukrainian counterpart Andriy Sybiha and Deputy Prime Minister Taras Kachka, according to the Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs press service.
The ministers visited the memorial on Independence Square, where Sybiha presented Lipavsky with a medal for supporting Ukrainian diplomacy. “For me it is an honor to receive a medal for supporting Ukrainian diplomacy,” the Czech minister said.
During their press conference in Kyiv, b
Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavsky arrived in Kyiv for meetings with his Ukrainian counterpart Andriy Sybiha and Deputy Prime Minister Taras Kachka, according to the Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs press service.
The ministers visited the memorial on Independence Square, where Sybiha presented Lipavsky with a medal for supporting Ukrainian diplomacy. “For me it is an honor to receive a medal for supporting Ukrainian diplomacy,” the Czech minister said.
During their press conference in Kyiv, both foreign ministers outlined concrete military and political support measures. Lipavsky said that Czech Republic delivered 1.5 million large-caliber ammunition rounds last year through the Czech ammunition initiative.
The Czech ammunition initiative reportedly helped change the Russian advantage from 10 to 1 to 2 to 1. This is a five-fold increase in real potential.
Ukraine expects to receive approximately 1.8 million artillery shells by year’s end through this Czech initiative, Sybiha said.
During Lipavsky’s meeting with Deputy Prime Minister Kachka, they discussed Ukraine’s EU membership prospects.
“Our position is clear — Ukraine should be in Europe, and Czech Republic supports its membership as it meets standard conditions,” Lipavsky wrote on X.
Economic cooperation between the two countries continues expanding despite the war, Lipavsky said. Trade growth increased 21.4% last year, and “I think this trend is growing more and more,” he added.
The ministers also signed a contract for the “School of Superheroes” project initiated by Prague. “This money will help children with severe forms of disabilities and diseases by expanding school opportunities in the region. We also plan to work more in eastern Ukraine and in the most dangerous regions, because we should not be afraid of Putin, and these regions also need our presence,” Lipavsky explained.
The Czech Ministry of Foreign Affairs said the symbolic significance of the memorial visit: “The bloody events on the Maidan in 2013 and 2014 took more than a hundred lives. We must remember their fate, as Ukrainians are again dying for their freedom. The foreign ministers of Czech Republic and Ukraine honored their memory on Independence Square — a historical memory.”
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The head of Ukraine’s Main Intelligence Directorate Kyrylo Budanov has conducted an inspection visit to Zmiinyi Island and Black Sea gas production platforms, the Defence Intelligence Directorate reported on 12 August.
During the visit, Budanov inspected positions held by fighters from the special unit Timur on Zmiinyi Island and examined the forces and equipment involved in defending the maritime area. The inspection included the Boiko drilling platform, which Ukraine regained control of in 202
The head of Ukraine’s Main Intelligence Directorate Kyrylo Budanov has conducted an inspection visit to Zmiinyi Island and Black Sea gas production platforms, the Defence Intelligence Directorate reported on 12 August.
During the visit, Budanov inspected positions held by fighters from the special unit Timur on Zmiinyi Island and examined the forces and equipment involved in defending the maritime area. The inspection included the Boiko drilling platform, which Ukraine regained control of in 2023.
As part of his trip, Budanov held a meeting with officers regarding further actions within the overall strategy and awarded fighters from the Timur special unit. The visit also included commemorating fallen soldiers who died during the liberation of Zmiinyi Island and Ukrainian territorial waters in the Black Sea from Russian occupiers.
“Our effective struggle against the aggressor at sea, on land and in the sky has proven to the whole world – a united Ukrainian nation is capable of defeating even the strongest enemy. Whatever anyone says – only we ourselves determine Ukraine’s future. The struggle continues,” Budanov said.
Liberation of Zmiinyi Island
Russian forces captured Zmiinyi Island on the first day of their full-scale invasion on 24 February 2022, leading to active combat operations around the strategic location.
On 30 June 2022, Ukraine’s Southern Operational Command reported that after strikes by Ukrainian Armed Forces, Russian occupying forces hastily evacuated the remaining garrison using two high-speed boats and abandoned Zmiinyi Island in the western Black Sea.
Russia’s defense ministry confirmed the withdrawal of their forces from Zmiinyi Island, calling it a “gesture of goodwill.” The Pentagon disputed the Kremlin’s version, saying that Ukrainians had successfully applied significant pressure on the Russians occupying the island.
According to Forbes calculations, Russians lost equipment worth nearly one billion dollars during the strikes on Zmiinyi Island. On 7 July 2022, the Ukrainian flag was raised over the island again.
On 20 September 2024, the State Border Guard Service published footage from Zmiinyi Island, emphasizing that Defense Forces prevent enemy aviation and military vessels from approaching the Ukrainian coast. The published footage showed the island littered with burned occupier equipment and shell fragments.
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US President Donald Trump confused Alaska with Russia, falsely claimed Ukraine started Russia’s invasion, and pushed for Ukrainian territorial concessions during an 11 August press conference. The President announced he was “going to Russia” for his 15 August Putin summit, apparently forgetting the meeting is in Alaska, while declaring Ukraine must accept “land swapping.”
This comes as Russia continues its ongoing invasion of Ukraine.
President mistakes US state for aggressor nation
The Independ
US President Donald Trump confused Alaska with Russia, falsely claimed Ukraine started Russia’s invasion, and pushed for Ukrainian territorial concessions during an 11 August press conference. The President announced he was “going to Russia” for his 15 August Putin summit, apparently forgetting the meeting is in Alaska, while declaring Ukraine must accept “land swapping.”
This comes as Russia continues its ongoing invasion of Ukraine.
President mistakes US state for aggressor nation
The Independent says that Trump told reporters from the White House briefing room:
“I’m going to see Putin. I’m going to Russia on Friday.”
Trump’s geographical confusion sparked immediate social media reaction, WION notes. Users asked whether the US plans to give Alaska to Russia as part of Ukraine negotiations.
USA Today reports the president confirmed the meeting location on Truth Social last week, writing:
“The highly anticipated meeting between myself, as President of the United States of America, and President Vladimir Putin, of Russia, will take place next Friday, August 15, 2025, in the Great State of Alaska.”
Trump falsely claims Ukraine started Russia’s invasion
Trump also returned to Russian narratives by suggesting Ukraine somehow started Russia’s invasion of itself. Axios reports that Trump falsely suggested Zelenskyy chose to start the war. The President said he was “a little bothered” by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s weekend assertion that ceding territory would violate Ukraine’s Constitution.
Reuters says Trump told the press conference:
“He’s got approval to go into a war and kill everybody, but he needs approval to do a land swap?”
Axios notes this represents a return to hostile treatment of the Ukrainian president after months of apparent warming between them.
“There’ll be some land swapping going on,” Trump declared, claiming to know this “through Russia and through conversations with everybody, to the good of Ukraine.“
USA Today says Trump claimed some moves would allegedly benefit Ukraine, while others would not.
“It’s very complex, because you have lines that are very uneven,” Trump stated per the outlet.
European leaders reject concessions before ceasefire
“Russia has not agreed to full and unconditional ceasefire, we should not even discuss any concessions.”
Kallas emphasized that “transatlantic unity, support to Ukraine and pressure on Russia” were needed to end the war. The outlet notes she warned concessions would not prevent “future Russian aggression in Europe.”
Trump reveals negotiation strategy without Ukraine
According to Axios, Trump said he would call Zelenskyy after meeting Putin. The US President stated per the outlet:
“I may say, ‘lots of luck, keep fighting.’ Or I may say, ‘we can make a deal.'”
Trump also claimed he would know “probably in the first two minutes” whether progress with Putin was possible, according to Reuters. Trump plans to “feel out” Putin’s willingness to reach an agreement.
President cites misleading Ukrainian opinion data
Axios reports that Trump falsely cited a poll claiming 88% of Ukrainians want immediate peace. The outlet clarifies the true Gallup figure is 69%, though this still represents a dramatic increase. Nevertheless, the desire for peace does not imply the support for ceding territories.
According to Reuters, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer spoke with Canadian counterpart Mark Carney on 11 August. According to a Downing Street readout cited by Reuters, they agreed peace “must be built with Ukraine – not imposed upon it.“
Russian demands
Kremlin officials reportedly demand Ukraine cede strategically vital unoccupied territory in Donetsk Oblast and freeze frontlines elsewhere as ceasefire conditions. Putin appears to offer deliberately unacceptable proposals to delay sanctions and meaningful negotiations while blaming Ukraine.
Surrendering remaining Donetsk Oblast would force Ukraine to abandon its “fortress belt” defensive line maintained since 2014. This would position Russian forces to renew attacks on more favorable terms without guarantees fighting won’t resume.
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Exclusives
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Russia punches narrow hole in Ukraine’s Pokrovsk front — can Kyiv close it before it widens?. A 10-kilometre Russian advance has left Ukrainian commanders racing to prevent a deeper breach in Donetsk.
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Ukraine’s draft evasion problem is a symptom of a deeper crisis. Why do Ukrainian men refuse mobilization, hide in their homes, and let their wives, sisters, and mothers do the everyday heavy lifting? Why does Ukraine’s mobilization system no longer work?
. Europe’s top diplomat insists on proper sequencing as Putin tries to flip script with territorial demands.
Zelenskyy: diplomatic push creates real chance to achieve peace. President Zelenskyy declared “now is the moment when there is a real chance to achieve peace” during a phone call with Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince, while rejecting any territorial concessions days before a planned Trump-Putin meeting.
. The meeting on 15 August excludes Ukraine initially, but Rutte insisted that any substantive negotiations on territory and security guarantees “will have to be—and will be—involved” Ukrainian participation.
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We keep our reporting open and accessible to everyone because we believe in the power of free information. This is why our small, cost-effective team depends on the support of readers like you to bring deliver timely news, quality analysis, and on-the-ground reports about Russia's war against Ukraine and Ukraine's struggle to build a democratic society.
Ukraine reportedly cleared villages in Sumy Oblast possibly after discovering untracked Russian infiltration attempts. The Ukrainian military says 225th Assault Regiment expelled enemy forces from Stepne and Novokostiantynivka on 11 August.
Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Russian forces have repeatedly attempted border breaches in Sumy Oblast throughout 2025. Russia established a bridgehead from Kostiantynivka to Yunakivka. Other infiltration efforts faced similar defeats by Ukrainian def
Ukraine reportedly cleared villages in Sumy Oblast possibly after discovering untracked Russian infiltration attempts. The Ukrainian military says 225th Assault Regiment expelled enemy forces from Stepne and Novokostiantynivka on 11 August.
Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Russian forces have repeatedly attempted border breaches in Sumy Oblast throughout 2025. Russia established a bridgehead from Kostiantynivka to Yunakivka. Other infiltration efforts faced similar defeats by Ukrainian defenders. Stepne and Novokostiantynivka are located west of the Russian bridgehead.
Some maps still label Novokostiantynivka as Pershe Travnia, its former name before decommunization.
Mystery liberation raises questions about Russian tactics
The General Staff announced the clearing operation in its 11 August night report. Militarnyi reports that monitoring resources never showed these villages as occupied. Neither DeepState maps nor the General Staff’s daily battlefield updates marked Russian presence there.
The 225th Assault Regiment reportedly pushed enemy units back across Ukraine’s state border. Militarnyi suggests Russia attempted a stealth breakthrough on this border section. The operation may have involved assault groups or reconnaissance-sabotage units.
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Today, there are a lot of updates regarding the Russian Navy.
Recently, it’s been a bad few days for the Russian Navy, as the Ukrainian campaign has been reinforced by nature and even the Russians’ own incompetence.
Spanning from the Black Sea and St. Petersburg to the Far East, Russian naval power and projection is falling apart at the seams.
Russia officially scraps Admiral Kuznetsov after years of failed repairs
Screenshot from RFU News YouTube video, 11 August, 2025.
The biggest ne
Today, there are a lot of updates regarding the Russian Navy.
Recently, it’s been a bad few days for the Russian Navy, as the Ukrainian campaign has been reinforced by nature and even the Russians’ own incompetence.
Spanning from the Black Sea and St. Petersburg to the Far East, Russian naval power and projection is falling apart at the seams.
Russia officially scraps Admiral Kuznetsov after years of failed repairs
Screenshot from RFU News YouTube video, 11 August, 2025.
The biggest news is that after years of repairs and accidents, Russians officially lost their last aircraft carrier, Admiral Kuznetsov. The massive ship has now been decommissioned and is to be scrapped for parts.
The main reason for this is that the ship spent most of its service life in port and under repairs, and the ability of the Russian military to maintain an expensive and very vulnerable aircraft carrier has disappeared. Western naval analysts joke that when the boat was not on fire, the massive smoke plume from its diesel exhaust made it seem like it was.
Most notably, the aircraft that make up its air wings are no longer in production, and due to the ramp on the flight deck putting too high a strain on the front gears, if the weight was too high, their fuel load and therefore operational range were already largely limited.
The list of incidents during its service is also long, with a few notable examples being the approximately 300,000 ton oil spill onto the Irish coast, five of its jets crashing into the ocean during operations as the arresting wires kept snapping, or they simply ran out of fuel, and several crew members dying because of the water filtration system’s failure during its maiden voyage.
Screenshot from RFU News YouTube video, 11 August, 2025.
The bad days continue, as one of the largest earthquakes in recent history caused a tsunami to sweep along Russia’s far eastern shores.
Recently released satellite footage shows extensive damage to Russia’s two main naval bases here, one of which houses a large part of Russia’s nuclear submarine fleet, with the submarines visibly missing from the photos and possibly under repair.
Additionally, the Russian Academy of Sciences reports that the southern part of Kamchatka shifted two whole meters to the southeast as a result of the earthquake, causing speculations of much larger damage to Russian naval facilities not visible from satellite footage.
Ukraine obtains classified plans for Russia’s newest nuclear submarine
Screenshot from RFU News YouTube video, 11 August, 2025.
Russia’s nuclear submarine fleet then took another hit, as Ukrainian military intelligence revealed it had obtained a full set of classified documents and schematics on Russia’s newest strategic nuclear submarine, the Project 955 Aborey class.
They released some of them online and stated that the classified documents include information about the submarine’s survivability systems, which entered service just over three weeks ago.
Ukrainian military intelligence also made a statement, saying they had already identified several weak points in the Russian sub right before Zelenskyy authorized a new series of covert operations. The details of which remain unknown.
Single Ukrainian drone forces Russia to cancel Navy Day celebrations
Screenshot from RFU News YouTube video, 11 August, 2025.
Lastly, during Navy Day, celebrating the temporary existence and history of Russia’s fleets,
as well as its specialized naval infantry units currently fighting in Ukraine. Russian warships from all four Russian fleets were scheduled to hold a parade and gun salutes through the harbor of St. Petersburg, as well as air shows and ground troops conducting displays on land.
However, the parade and all its surrounding events were canceled due to safety concerns, as a single Ukrainian Liutyi drone was spotted flying over Leningrad Oblast.
As there were no reports of any confirmed hits, Ukrainians likely simply decided to fly a drone in the general vicinity and let Russia cancel the parade themselves, unable to intercept a possible threat from the skies.
Russian naval decline accelerates across Pacific and Baltic theaters
Screenshot from RFU News YouTube video, 11 August, 2025.
Overall, the loss of their only carrier is significant, as these types of ships allow a navy to exert strong military influence and capabilities on a global scale.
Extensive damage to its military bases and possibly also vessels on the Pacific coast results in a serious deterioration of both its regional influence and strategic deterrence capabilities.
Ukraine having found weaknesses in the new Russian submarine’s defenses through classified documents and the news of additional covert operations being in the works only exacerbates this effect.
With Russia’s global dominance already increasingly deteriorating, and parades meant to counteract this trend are being called off, this is another strong hit to Russian military geopolitical relevance, as more pressure is shifted onto the already strained Russian ground-based assets.
In our regularfrontline report, we pair up with the military blogger Reporting from Ukraine to keep you informed about what is happening on the battlefield in the Russo-Ukrainian war.
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At least a dozen foreign volunteers serving in Ukraine’s military were killed when a Russian missile struck a training camp’s mess hall near Kropyvnytskyi on 21 July, according to The New York Times report citing soldiers with knowledge of the incident.
The attack targeted recruits from the United States, Colombia, Taiwan, Denmark and other countries during lunchtime, when soldiers had gathered at picnic tables for their meal. The Ukrainian Army confirmed the strike killed and injured soldiers b
At least a dozen foreign volunteers serving in Ukraine’s military were killed when a Russian missile struck a training camp’s mess hall near Kropyvnytskyi on 21 July, according to The New York Times report citing soldiers with knowledge of the incident.
The attack targeted recruits from the United States, Colombia, Taiwan, Denmark and other countries during lunchtime, when soldiers had gathered at picnic tables for their meal. The Ukrainian Army confirmed the strike killed and injured soldiers but declined to provide specific casualty figures.
An American recruit from Florida, who witnessed the attack, described the explosion as “the loudest he had ever heard” in a telephone interview with the publication. The soldier, who requested anonymity as he was not authorized to speak publicly, said he observed “at least 15 dead soldiers and more than 100 others who were injured” following the blast.
The missile strike also ignited an ammunition depot at the base, triggering secondary explosions that sent “debris and shrapnel whistling through the air” as survivors attempted to assist the injured, according to the American soldier’s account. He reported applying tourniquets to gravely injured personnel and helping transport them to ambulances, trucks and private vehicles for evacuation to hospitals.
The base’s air raid alarm failed to sound before the strike, the witness noted. He expressed dismay at discovering that “first aid kits were nowhere to be found around the mess hall” in the aftermath.
Volodymyr Kaminskyi, spokesman for the international legion under Ukraine’s military intelligence agency HUR, confirmed an investigation into the strike was underway but said casualty figures could not be released during the ongoing probe.
Two foreign soldiers who had trained at the facility, known as Camp Krop, told The New York Times that lax security had been a source of complaints before the attack. They identified the practice of gathering soldiers for communal meals as a particular vulnerability.
The strike represents one of the deadliest attacks on foreign fighters during the war. Since 2022, hundreds of international volunteers have passed through the HUR training site, with recent recruits predominantly from South America. Colombian fighters have been drawn to Ukraine by salaries ranging from $1,000 to $1,750 in base pay monthly, plus combat bonuses exceeding $3,000 per month.
Ukraine’s commanding general Oleksandr Syrskyi said that soldiers at training sites “must respond to air raid alerts and Russian drones immediately.” He announced plans to relocate training operations to “sheltered underground sites as much as possible.”
The Kropyvnytskyi attack follows previous deadly strikes on training facilities. Russian missiles hit a base in Yavoriv near the Polish border during the war’s first month in 2022, killing or injuring dozens. Last year, more than 50 soldiers died in a missile attack in Poltava, while three recruits were killed and 18 injured in a 29 July strike on a training academy.
The American recruit, who had been at the base for less than a week and had not yet received his rifle, said he had “accepted risks in joining the Ukrainian Army” due to his desire to “assist a struggling democracy” but “had never thought people would be killed in training.”
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“We can not let history repeat itself,” Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna warned on Monday, speaking to Estonian Public Broadcaster’s main radio station Vikerraadio, drawing parallels between Neville Chamberlain’s appeasement and potential Ukraine concessions.
“If we agree to aggression today, we will only encourage similar steps in the future.”
The warning comes as Trump sends mixed signals about Friday’s summit, promising to “try to get some territory back for Ukraine” while simultaneo
“We can not let history repeat itself,” Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna warned on Monday, speaking to Estonian Public Broadcaster’s main radio station Vikerraadio, drawing parallels between Neville Chamberlain’s appeasement and potential Ukraine concessions.
“If we agree to aggression today, we will only encourage similar steps in the future.”
The warning comes as Trump sends mixed signals about Friday’s summit, promising to “try to get some territory back for Ukraine” while simultaneously warning there will be “some swapping, changes in land” — precisely the diplomatic ambiguity preceding 1938’s catastrophe.
Why Alaska echoes Munich’s warnings
Tsahkna’s historical parallel gains urgency from Trump’s contradictory signals about the summit. The president promised Monday to “try to get some territory back for Ukraine” while simultaneously warning there will be “some swapping, changes in land between Russia and Ukraine.”
The Alaska meeting comes after Trump’s self-imposed deadline for Russia to agree to a ceasefire, which expired Friday, without the additional sanctions he had threatened. Instead of punishment, Putin gets a summit — exactly the pattern that encouraged Hitler’s appetite in the 1930s.
“When an aggressor gets what he wants, it increases his appetite,” Tsahkna said. “We must not reward aggression — not in Ukraine or anywhere else. Estonia will never accept state borders changed by force.”
Nordic-Baltic nations draw red lines
The warning escalated into collective action Sunday when eight Nordic and Baltic nations — Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, and Sweden — released a joint statement with a clear message: “international borders must not be changed by force.”
Their statement declares: “No decisions on Ukraine without Ukraine, and no decisions on Europe without Europe.”
Latvia’s Foreign Minister Baiba Braže warned, “Russian aggression must neither be rewarded nor justified. To this day, there has not been a single indicator on the part of Russia that would signal its genuine desire for peace and an end to aggression.”
The unified front reflects more profound European anxieties. As Tsahkna noted after Monday’s EU foreign ministers’ meeting, “26 member states expressed very unified positions” while warning that “the Munich Agreement that took place in 1938 cannot be allowed to happen again in Europe.”
Putin’s strategic gambit
Putin sees the meeting as a chance to cement Russia’s territorial gains and keep Ukraine out of NATO. Moscow’s conditions reveal the scope of its ambitions: Putin demands Kyiv cede the annexed regions and Crimea, renounce NATO membership, and limit its armed forces.
The meeting is a diplomatic coup for Putin, who has been isolated since the invasion. The Kremlin sought to portray renewed US contacts as two superpowers resolving global problems, with Ukraine being just one issue.
Europe mobilizes ahead of Alaska
Estonia’s warnings are spurring rapid diplomatic action. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is expected to join a virtual meeting on Wednesday with Trump, Vice President JD Vance, and EU leaders — coordinated by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz to “discuss how to pressure Moscow ahead of Trump’s meeting with Putin.”
European Commission Vice-President Kaja Kallas warned that Putin wants to “go for the old-fashioned way of… let’s divide the territories and spheres of influence.” The frantic diplomacy reflects Estonia’s core fear: that Alaska could become 2025’s Munich moment without unified Western resolve.
Europe’s “without Ukraine” nightmare
The Baltic states’ urgency stems from fears that Ukraine might be excluded from its fate.
“Nothing can be agreed about Ukraine without Ukraine, and the same applies to Europe more broadly,” Tsahkna insisted. “The meeting between Trump and Putin in Alaska on Friday will be one of the most important meetings in recent decades, and we will work very actively to ensure that our views are represented there.”
As Zelenskyy put it: “Any decisions that are without Ukraine are at the same time decisions against peace. They will not bring anything. These are dead decisions. They will never work.”
Stakes beyond Ukraine
For Estonia and its neighbors, Friday’s meeting tests whether the West learned 1938’s lessons. “Ukraine’s security is Europe’s security,” Tsahkna stressed, which is why Estonia has joined the UK-France coalition, which provides security guarantees to Ukraine.
In Minister Tsahkna’s words, the Alaska meeting will show whether it will be a “Churchill meeting” or a “Chamberlain meeting,” meaning whether Trump chooses Churchill’s resolve or Chamberlain’s appeasement.
The Trump-Putin summit is scheduled for 15 August in Alaska. It follows Trump’s expired deadline for Russia to halt attacks on Ukraine and comes amid reports that Putin has presented territorial concession proposals to the Trump administration.
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On 12 August, 26 European leaders have reaffirmed Ukraine’s right to self-determination, with Moscow’s ally Hungary standing alone in its dissent. This collective stance comes as US President Trump prepares to meet Russian leader Putin in Alaska later this week, raising concerns over potential pressures on Ukraine to make territorial concessions to Russia, the aggressor state.
Before the upcoming Trump-Putin meeting, the European leaders’ statement emphasized that “the path to peace in Ukraine c
On 12 August, 26 European leaders have reaffirmed Ukraine’s right to self-determination, with Moscow’s ally Hungary standing alone in its dissent. This collective stance comes as US President Trump prepares to meet Russian leader Putin in Alaska later this week, raising concerns over potential pressures on Ukraine to make territorial concessions to Russia, the aggressor state.
Before the upcoming Trump-Putin meeting, the European leaders’ statement emphasized that “the path to peace in Ukraine cannot be decided without Ukraine.“
European Union’s statement on Ukraine’s sovereignty
The European Union leaders issued the statement emphasizing Ukraine’s independence and territorial integrity amidst the ongoing Russian invasion.
“We, the leaders of the European Union, welcome the efforts of President Trump towards ending Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine and achieving a just and lasting peace and security for Ukraine,” the statement reads.
It underscored the importance of Ukraine’s freedom to decide its future, a principle that has garnered overwhelming support among EU nations.
The declaration from the European Council highlighted that “a just and lasting peace that brings stability and security must respect international law, including the principles of independence, sovereignty, territorial integrity, and that international borders must not be changed by force.”
This sentiment was echoed throughout the statement, emphasizing that “the people of Ukraine must have the freedom to decide their future.”
“Hungary does not associate itself with this Statement,” a final note in the statement reads.
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A grassroots organisation in Alaska has called for a protest against the planned meeting between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, scheduled for 15 August in the state.
Stand Up Alaska announced the demonstration will take place on 14 August in downtown Anchorage, one day before the high-stakes summit.
“Stand with us in Anchorage, Alaska, as we rally against the presence of an international war criminal in our great state. With the governor’s approval, the presiden
A grassroots organisation in Alaska has called for a protest against the planned meeting between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, scheduled for 15 August in the state.
Stand Up Alaska announced the demonstration will take place on 14 August in downtown Anchorage, one day before the high-stakes summit.
“Stand with us in Anchorage, Alaska, as we rally against the presence of an international war criminal in our great state. With the governor’s approval, the president has extended an invitation to Vladimir Putin, and we’re here to send a clear message to both Donald Trump and Putin: Alaska stands firmly against authoritarianism,” the organisation reported on its mobilisation platform.
The statement comes after the US President Donald Trump invited Russian President Vladimir Putinfor a peace talks which will take place on 15 August 2025 in the Great State of Alaska.
The summit comes amid ongoing diplomatic efforts to address the war in Ukraine. Trump has said any peace deal would involve “some swapping” of territory, a controversial prospect. European leaders rushed to understand the terms of the meeting and ensure Ukraine was not being left out of discussions about its future.
The White House is considering inviting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to Alaska, according to NBC News. Online negotiations involving European leaders, the US, and Ukraine are planned for 13 August, one day before the scheduled protest and two days before the Trump-Putin meeting.
The demonstration in Alaska represents local opposition to what organisers characterise as accommodating an international pariah. Within an hour of Trump’s announcement, a protest was declared for 2 pm on that date in downtown Anchorage.
The protest organisers positioned their demonstration as a pro-Ukrainian initiative, using the hashtag #AlaskaStandsWithUkraine. “Join us in Anchorage, Alaska, to protest an international war criminal’s presence. Despite the governor’s support, the president invited Vladimir Putin. We’re here to tell Trump and Putin: Alaska opposes tyranny. #AlaskaStandsWithUkraine,” the group posted on Facebook.
Gov. Mike Dunleavy called Alaska “the most strategic location in the world.” The governor expressed support for hosting the summit in his state.
Social media users have suggested various forms of protest participation. Comments on Stand Up Alaska’s Facebook page included proposals for residents to display Ukrainian flag colours on rooftops and in yards, while others suggested welcoming signs reading “Welcome to Kyiv.”
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Russian forces are pushing near Dobropillia, Donetsk Oblast, but it is premature to call these gains an operational-level breakthrough, according to the Institute for the Study of War (ISW). The think tank assesses that Moscow’s troops are likely seeking to turn current tactical advances into a broader push in the coming days.
Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Russia’s main goal for years has been capturing the entire Donetsk Oblast in eastern Ukraine.
Russian advances southeast of Dobropill
Russian forces are pushing near Dobropillia, Donetsk Oblast, but it is premature to call these gains an operational-level breakthrough, according to the Institute for the Study of War (ISW). The think tank assesses that Moscow’s troops are likely seeking to turn current tactical advances into a broader push in the coming days.
Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Russia’s main goal for years has been capturing the entire Donetsk Oblast in eastern Ukraine.
Russian advances southeast of Dobropillia
ISW reported on 11 August that Russian sabotage and reconnaissance groups are operating near Dobropillia, northwest of Pokrovsk. A Ukrainian source said such groups are active in the area. NASA FIRMS satellite data indicated heat anomalies west of Nove Shakhove, in Novyi Donbas, Bilytske, and Rodynske — suggesting artillery fire in these areas.
The think tank assessed that Russian forces likely seized several settlements southeast of Dobropillya, including Razine, Sukhetske, Fedorivka, Zatyshok, Boikivka, Novotoretske, and Zapovidne, as well as Mayak and Pankivka east of Dobropillia. Russia’s Ministry of Defense claimed its troops took Fedorivka, northeast of Pokrovsk. Ukrainian military observer Kostyantyn Mashovets reported forward Russian assault units and infiltration groups operating near Kucheriv Yar, Nove Shakhove, and Bilytske.
Contested zones and advancing lines
Russian military bloggers claimed Moscow’s forces seized Dorozhnie, advanced north of Zapovidne, south of Bilytske, south of Dorozhnie, west of Shakhove, and southeast of Vilne toward Nove Shakhove. Other claimed gains included areas south of Kucheriv Yar and on the outskirts of Zolotyi Kolodyaz.
One milblogger said Russian forces control about half of Volodymyrivka, south of Shakhove, while Ukrainian troops hold northern Pankivka. The same source claimed Russian troops have interdicted a 2.5-kilometer section of the T-0515 Pokrovsk–Dobropillya highway. Another milblogger described Kucheriv Yar and Zolotyi Kolodyaz as contested “gray zones,” with Russian reconnaissance-in-force missions underway.
ISW sees potential for bigger gains
ISW stressed it is too early to declare these moves an operational-level breakthrough. However, the think tank noted Russian forces may attempt to mature these tactical penetrations into a larger offensive in the coming days, similar to the approach used in mid-April 2024 that led to the seizure of operationally significant territory northwest of Avdiivka.
The institute said the next several days will be critical for Ukraine’s ability to prevent accelerated Russian gains north and northwest of Pokrovsk.
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On 11 August, EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas announced plans for new EU sanctions against Russia. France 24 reports that Kallas warned against making any concessions to Moscow without an unconditional ceasefire as US President Trump prepares to meet Vladimir Putin on 15 August.
ISW warned earlier that ceding Ukrainian-held parts of Donetsk Oblast serves Russian military objectives. The think tank assesses that Russian forces will almost certainly violate any future ceasefire. Putin’s report
On 11 August, EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas announced plans for new EU sanctions against Russia. France 24 reports that Kallas warned against making any concessions to Moscow without an unconditional ceasefire as US President Trump prepares to meet Vladimir Putin on 15 August.
ISW warned earlier that ceding Ukrainian-held parts of Donetsk Oblast serves Russian military objectives. The think tank assesses that Russian forces will almost certainly violate any future ceasefire. Putin’s reported proposal demands Ukraine concede critical defensive positions for nothing in return.
EU ministers unite on new sanctions package
Following a meeting of EU foreign ministers, Kallas said the bloc will develop a 19th package of economic measures. She emphasized that Russia has not agreed to any ceasefire conditions.
“As far as Russia has not agreed to full and unconditional ceasefire, we should not even discuss any concessions,” Kallas said, according to France24.
The announcement comes as European leaders coordinate their response to potential peace negotiations. Kallas said the ministers jointly expressed support for any US steps allegedly leading to just peace. However, she stressed that the process and sequencing remain crucial.
No concessions without proper guarantees
“The sequencing of the steps is important. First an unconditional ceasefire with a strong monitoring system and ironclad security guarantees,” Kallas explained.
She confirmed that the EU will work on both military and budgetary support for Ukraine.
The foreign policy chief also mentioned supporting Ukraine’s accession process to join the EU.
Ukraine said it would never recognize Russian control over its sovereign territory. Kyiv acknowledged that getting captured land back would require diplomacy rather than battlefield victories. Kallas backed Ukraine’s position on 10 August, stating that international law is clear.
European coordination ahead of Trump-Putin meeting
French President Emmanuel Macron will hold a virtual meeting with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Wednesday. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz will also participate in the discussions about Ukraine. The meeting aims to coordinate positions before Trump’s upcoming summit with Putin in Alaska.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy held calls with 13 counterparts over three days. France 24 reports he spoke with leaders from Germany, Britain, and France. Zelenskyy thanked countries backing Ukraine’s position in his Sunday evening address.
“The war must be ended as soon as possible with a fair peace,” Zelenskyy said. He emphasized that everything concerning Ukraine must be decided with Ukraine’s participation.
NATO and EU insist on Ukrainian involvement
Speaking to ABC, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte claimed that Trump is “putting pressure on Putin.” Rutte saidthe Trump-Putin meeting will test how serious Putin is about ending the war. He acknowledged Russia controls some Ukrainian territory and suggested future deals might acknowledge this factually.
“When it comes to acknowledging, for example – maybe in a future deal – that Russia is controlling, de facto, factually, some of the territory of Ukraine, it has to be effectual recognition and not a political de jure recognition,” Rutte told ABC.
Kallas insisted on 10 August that any US-Russia deal must include Ukraine and the EU.
“The US has the power to force Russia to negotiate seriously,” she stated. She added that any deal between the US and Russia must include Ukraine and the EU for Europe’s security.
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Ukraine’s Dnipro command denies Russian control near Donetsk Oblast’s Dobropillia, saying troops eliminate every enemy infiltrator “in the shortest possible time.” The statement followed OSINT frontline-monitoring project DeepState’s map reporting Russian forces advanced into several settlements in the Pokrovsk sector, threatening key cities.
This comes as US President Donald Trump prepares for a meeting with Russia’s leader Vladimir Putin later this week. Russia, meanwhile, continues its war in
Ukraine’s Dnipro command denies Russian control near Donetsk Oblast’s Dobropillia, saying troops eliminate every enemy infiltrator “in the shortest possible time.” The statement followed OSINT frontline-monitoring project DeepState’s map reporting Russian forces advanced into several settlements in the Pokrovsk sector, threatening key cities.
This comes as US President Donald Trump prepares for a meeting with Russia’s leader Vladimir Putin later this week. Russia, meanwhile, continues its war in Ukraine, focusing on capturing the rest of eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast.
Dnipro command disputes reported Russian gains
The Operational-Strategic Grouping of Forces Dnipro, formerly Khortytsia, claims Russian forces attempt to infiltrate Ukrainian positions in the Dobropillia and Pokrovsk directions, but such actions never lead to territorial capture. The command explains that Russian troops, using their numerical advantage and suffering heavy losses, push small groups past the first defensive line.
Officials state that infiltration incidents force Ukraine to deploy reserves to destroy the enemy, but this never equals taking control of the area. They warn that misunderstanding this distinction repeatedly leads to flawed analysis and public debate, particularly in the Pokrovsk–Myrnohrad urban area.
Fierce battles but allegedly no lasting occupation
The Dnipro Grouping acknowledges the situation remains difficult and that fighting in the Pokrovsk sector is among the most intense on the entire front line. However, it claims that all infiltrating Russian groups face destruction in the shortest possible time. The command urges the public not to spread information from unverified or poorly informed sources.
DeepState earlier reported that Russian forces, through sustained pressure and larger infantry numbers, advanced into Kucheriv Yar and Zolotyi Kolodiaz, and also moved into Veselye, reportedly covering 9 to 15 km, according to DeepState’s interactive map. The OSINT project says Russian units try to entrench and build up forces in these settlements.
The Dnipro command directly challenges this account, insisting the frontline near Dobropillia and Pokrovsk remains intact despite constant Russian attempts to break through.
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Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine has produced many surprises, least of which is the defiant resistance Kyiv has mounted for years now. But the war has also sparked a wave of technological innovation, one of the most important being the mass adoption of cheap drones.
While artificial intelligence has played a growing role on the battlefield, over the past year, fiber-optic drones have taken on a more central role.
“This isn’t a traditional war. It’s a war of drones,” said Vladyslav, a
Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine has produced many surprises, least of which is the defiant resistance Kyiv has mounted for years now. But the war has also sparked a wave of technological innovation, one of the most important being the mass adoption of cheap drones.
While artificial intelligence has played a growing role on the battlefield, over the past year, fiber-optic drones have taken on a more central role.
“This isn’t a traditional war. It’s a war of drones,” said Vladyslav, an electronic warfare specialist serving in the 141st Separate Mechanized Brigade. He added that it’s “a war of technology.”
Ukraine has leveraged this technological edge masterfully, holding Russia at bay for several years. It has built a “drone wall” – a defensive network of drones that Russia continues to hurl wave after wave of soldiers into, suffering heavy losses in relentless meatgrinder assaults.
By mid-2024, Russia began deploying fiber-optic drones on the battlefield, beginning the process of eroding Kyiv’s technological edge. These drones are connected to operators by fiber-optic cables, making them both unjammable and undetectable to conventional electronic warfare systems.
Explore further
Ukraine’s secret weapon against Russia’s drone swarms: a wall of static
Russia weaponizes the unjammable advantage
Fiber-optic drones played a key role in Russia’s successes in the Kursk offensive. The same tactics are now being replicated across the front:
and using fiber-optic drones to strike at Ukrainian logistics and vehicles.
Ukraine’s Commander-in-Chief, Oleksandr Syrskyi, acknowledged that Russia currently holds the advantage in the fiber-optic drone race “in terms of both quantity and range of application.” It certainly helps Russia from the close relationship they share with China, the world’s leader in fiber optics.
As a result, Kyiv is now scrambling to catch up to Russia’s fiber-optic advantage.
The elite Russian drone unit Rubicon has made very effective use of this technology. Specializing in long-range fiber-optic FPVs, Rubicon has launched deep strikes into Ukrainian rear positions, crippling logistics and command nodes.
Their presence on the Kostiantynivka front has forced Ukrainian brigades to rethink supply routes and drone deployment tactics.
Davyd from the 419th Battalion of Unmanned Systems with an anti-drone gun. Photo: Ryan Van Ert
Davyd, callsign “Poliak,” a drone pilot from the 419th Battalion of Unmanned Systems, has witnessed firsthand how Russian forces combine fiber-optic drones with high-speed motorcycle assaults on their positions.
“Out of ten motorcycles, five usually make it through,” he said, describing how standard FPVs first clear entry points before a fiber-optic drone flies directly into dugouts, forcing immediate evacuation.
In one instance, a fiber-optic drone destroyed their shelter after threading its way inside. “Luckily, everyone survived, but once they find you, you have to flee fast,” he said.
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Ukraine found a way to beat Russia’s unjammable drones. It doesn’t work anymore.
Ukraine adapts under pressure
So far, there are no scalable countermeasures against these fiber-optics.
“Shotguns are fairly effective. Scissors or a knife work great if one flies by and you can spot the fiber cable,” said Heiner Philipp, an engineer with Technology United for Ukraine.
“Higher-tech solutions like AI-powered automated turrets equipped with radar and camera sensors can shoot them down without human intervention, but they’re expensive and they still require people to supply ammo, fuel, and maintenance.”
However, it poses a strategic risk for Kyiv that much of its drone material is sourced from China – the same suppliers often provide components to both Ukraine and Russia.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has warned that China has begun restricting the export of Mavic drones to the West.
“India and other low-cost jurisdictions are already producing fiber, and we’ve begun buying from them to establish relationships,” Philipp added.
Still, Ukrainian drone pilots are adapting quickly. More and more of Ukraine’s reconnaissance is done via First-Person View (FPVs) now because of fiber-optics and “It’ll be cheaper than making fixed-wing drones,” said Bohdan, a drone operator in the Unmanned Systems Battalion of Ukraine’s 110th Separate Mechanized Brigade.
Fixed-wing systems, he explained, “only see from 300 meters up, at best. More like 500–600 meters usually. It’s hard to detect anything from that high. A fiber-optic drone can film from half a meter above the ground – or 3, or 10, or 100. It’s much easier to find something that way.”
A Ukrainian soldier from the Unmanned Systems Battalion of Ukraine’s 110th Separate Mechanized Brigade. Photo: Ryan Van Ert
He noted the drones typically have a range of 10 to 20 kilometers, though some other units have reached up to 32 kilometers. “But to do that, you need to fly low and in a straight line to prevent the cable from sagging or snagging on obstacles,” Bohdan explained.
“Fiber-optic drones can’t be jammed or tracked, which gives them a big edge,” he added. “But in winter, the cables can glint with frost, making them more visible. Still, if enough of them are in use, it becomes nearly impossible to trace them back to the operator.”
In response to these battlefield demands, Ukrainian companies like 3DTech have begun producing next-generation fiber drones with ranges up to 30 kilometers, optimized for low-altitude ambush strikes.
Explore further
Surprisingly, Russian soldiers used scissors to down a Ukrainian fiber-optic drone — but Kyiv also knows a trick or two
Global logistics impact
Andrii, known as Murphy, from the 419th Battalion of Unmanned Systems, said they survived a close call recently. His team narrowly escaped when an FPV drone targeted their vehicle, managing to abandon it just before impact.
The strike destroyed the car and all their equipment, and afterward, they discovered enemy fiber-optic lines in the area.
Andrii, a drone pilot from the 419th Battalion of Unmanned Systems working on the frontline in Donetsk Oblast. Photo: David Kirichenko
As a result of these drone attacks, Ukraine is facing an acute shortage of trucks, pickups, and armored transport vehicles, which are increasingly being destroyed.
Across the front, it’s now common to see Mad Max–style vehicles – improvised trucks reinforced with metal cages to protect against drones.
Volunteer groups and charities have stepped in to supply thousands of replacements, but demand continues to far outpace supply. As a result, Kyiv is becoming more reliant on unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs) to carry out frontline logistics and resupply missions.
Yevhen, a UGV company commander in the 92nd Assault Brigade, said his team is developing a mobile platform to launch kamikaze drones using fiber-optic links. These links are immune to jamming but vulnerable to being severed by other drones crossing their path.
To reduce that risk, most systems now combine fiber with a radio backup to ensure reliability.
Technology spreads beyond Ukraine
The reach of fiber-optic drone warfare is also expanding beyond Ukraine. Reportedly for the first time in Mali, the use of fiber-optic FPV drones was observed by the Azawad Liberation Front (FLA), which is fighting against both the Malian government and the Russian African Corps. In Myanmar, rebels from the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) reportedly used a fiber-optic FPV drone to down a Mi-17 helicopter.
Sometimes, the most practical solutions such as the use of fiber-optics prove to be the most effective. The technological race on Ukraine’s battlefields is advancing rapidly, and militaries around the world are paying close attention.
David Kirichenko is a freelance journalist covering Ukraine and Eastern Europe. He can be found on the social media platform X @DVKirichenko.
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Russian troops have advanced roughly 10 kilometers north of Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast, seizing key villages and cutting the Dobropillia–Kramatorsk highway near Novovodiane, according to the Ukrainian monitoring project DeepState. The breakthrough threatens a major supply artery and risks a deeper advance that could split Ukraine’s defensive front in Donetsk.
DeepState reports the attack relied on sustained infantry pressure with superior numbers, allowing Russian units to capture Kucheriiv Y
Russian troops have advanced roughly 10 kilometers north of Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast, seizing key villages and cutting the Dobropillia–Kramatorsk highway near Novovodiane, according to the Ukrainian monitoring project DeepState. The breakthrough threatens a major supply artery and risks a deeper advance that could split Ukraine’s defensive front in Donetsk.
DeepState reports the attack relied on sustained infantry pressure with superior numbers, allowing Russian units to capture Kucheriiv Yar and Zolotyi Kolodiaz. Both are now being used as staging grounds for further operations. From Kucheriiv Yar, Russian forces also infiltrated Vesele via treelines, with Ukrainian observers counting around two dozen enemy soldiers there in the past 24 hours.
One frontline defender, quoted by DeepState, summed up the risk bluntly:
“The worst part is that if they take these positions, we’ll never get them out.”
Moscow’s demands before peace talks
The advance comes just days before a planned Trump–Putin summit in Alaska on 15 August, where, according to Ukrainian and Western sources, Russia is expected to demand full control of Donetsk Oblast, including areas still under Ukrainian control.
Pokrovsk, the southernmost city in Ukraine’s heavily fortified “fortress belt”—which also includes Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, Druzhkivka, and Kostiantynivka—has been under relentless Russian pressure for over a year. Its fall would threaten to unhinge the entire defensive line from the south.
While military analysts note that taking Sloviansk or Kramatorsk could require years of sustained fighting, bypassing or capturing Pokrovsk could allow Russia to envelop the belt from the west and render its strongest fortifications less relevant.
Assesed control of terrainin Donetsk Oblast, 10 August 2025. Photo: ISW map
“This has been building for a long time”
Defense analyst Bohdan Myroshnykov rejects the notion that the offensive is merely timed for political leverage before the summit.
“I don’t believe the enemy threw everything into battle ahead of the Trump talks. This has been building for a long time,” he says.
He points out that Russian forces are approaching their peak operational capacity and have redeployed units from Sumy Oblast to reinforce the Pokrovsk–Dobropillia axis. This groundwork was laid months ago with the capture of Koptyeve and advances near Novoeconomichne—small settlements that drew little public attention but were crucial staging points for today’s breakthrough.
On Ukraine’s side, Myroshnykov cites disruption during the transfer of operational control from an operational-tactical group to corps-level command, creating “chaos in management.” Reinforcements have arrived, he says, but their full effect is still pending.
Matveev: A push to cut the front
Defense analyst Yan Matveev says the Russian advance began from Novotoretske, covering up to 10 kilometers in a single day to reach Kucheriiv Yar and Zolotyi Kolodiaz.
“The goal is to seize Dobropillia and possibly Bilozerske, cut Pokrovsk’s supply routes, and split the Donetsk front in its center,” he warns.
Matveev stresses that the situation in the center of the Donetsk front is becoming increasingly tense and difficult for the Ukrainian Armed Forces.
“They still have a chance for counterattacks — the breakthrough is too narrow. But do they have the forces?”
Such a move could force Ukrainian forces in Pokrovsk to retreat to avoid encirclement, destabilizing defensive lines further north.
A 155th Mechanized Brigade Leopard 2A4 in Pokrovsk. 155th Mechanized Brigade photo.
Mashovets: The 51st army at the fore
Military analyst Kostiantyn Mashovets identifies the 51st Combined Arms Army of Russia’s Central Grouping of Forces as the main strike formation here. It has been reinforced by the 39th Motor Rifle Brigade from the 68th Army Corps and elements of the 2nd and 8th Combined Arms Armies.
While the main push is toward Rodynske and Krasnyi Lyman, Russian commanders are also using small infiltration groups along the Novotoretske–Kucheriiv Yar line—a tactic they have refined through months of urban fighting.
Rodynske and Krasnyi Lyman remain in Ukrainian hands, but Russian forward units have already reached Novoe Shakhove and Biletske east of Dobropillia.
“If they continue north, they could undermine the defense not only of Dobropillia and Pokrovsk, but Druzhkivka and Kostiantynivka as well,” Mashovets warns. “The corridor they’re using is still thin, but cutting it now would be ideal—if we have the forces.”
Multiple threat axes on Pokrovsk
Even as Russia drives toward Dobropillia, it is tightening pressure directly on Pokrovsk from several directions. From the northeast, Russian forces have taken Suvorove and are assaulting Rodynske. From the southwest, small assault teams are fixing Ukrainian defenders in place and probing city outskirts.
DeepState describes one infiltration attempt in detail: three Russian groups, each 50 soldiers strong, advanced over 10 days from Pishchane toward Zakhysnykiv Ukrainy Street in Pokrovsk. Supplied by drones with food, water, and communications equipment, they moved along pre-planned routes. Ukrainian drone strikes killed 120 of the 150 attackers before they reached their objectives. The survivors briefly occupied several buildings before being eliminated; a few remain unaccounted for.
Fortifications bypassed
Around Zolotyi Kolodiaz and Shakhove, Ukrainian engineers have built heavy fortifications—anti-tank ditches, earthworks, and reinforced positions (VOPs, ROPs). Instead of attacking them head-on, Russian forces have bypassed these defenses, leaving them intact and potentially usable if captured.
This is why the soldier quoted by DeepState warned that retaking such positions would be nearly impossible once occupied.
Drones in command of the battlefield
The opening phase of the offensive relied heavily on drones to establish fire control over Ukrainian supply lines. Now, with the Dobropillia–Kramatorsk highway under Russian control, drones are expected to play an even bigger role in disrupting resupply efforts and troop movements into the threatened area.
Ukrainian drone. Photo: General Staff
Strategic implications
The breach north of Pokrovsk is more than a local setback. Dobropillia’s fall would give Russia a platform to envelop Pokrovsk from the west or north, undermining Ukraine’s fortress belt from its southernmost point.
While Sloviansk and Kramatorsk are formidable objectives that could take years to capture, bypassing them through Pokrovsk and Dobropillia would neutralize much of their strategic value.
DeepState warns that without a timely counterattack, Dobropillia could fall before Pokrovsk, potentially forcing Ukraine into difficult decisions about holding ground versus preserving manpower.
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy declared that a real opportunity for peace in Russia’s war against Ukraine has emerged, according to his office’s statement following a phone conversation with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud.
During the call, Zelenskyy briefed the Crown Prince on ongoing partner contacts and diplomatic efforts to end the war.
“Communication with leaders continues practically around the clock, we are in constant contact. Now is the moment when there is a re
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy declared that a real opportunity for peace in Russia’s war against Ukraine has emerged, according to his office’s statement following a phone conversation with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud.
During the call, Zelenskyy briefed the Crown Prince on ongoing partner contacts and diplomatic efforts to end the war.
“Communication with leaders continues practically around the clock, we are in constant contact. Now is the moment when there is a real chance to achieve peace. But peace must be honest and sustainable, and security must be guaranteed. This is important not only for Ukraine – for every European country,” the president said.
The Ukrainian leader said that he and Mohammed bin Salman Al Saud share the same view regarding the dangers of any decisions made without Ukraine and Europe. Zelenskyy thanked the Crown Prince for his clear support of this position and readiness to make efforts for peace.
Both sides agreed that their countries’ teams would coordinate all necessary efforts. The leaders also discussed joint projects that would strengthen both nations, the president added.
The diplomatic outreach comes amid significant developments in peace negotiations. On 9 August, Donald Trump announced he had arranged a meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska for 15 August, confirming that the United States is considering “territorial exchanges” between Ukraine and Russia as part of this process “for the benefit of both sides.”
Zelenskyy responded that Ukraine would not gift its land to the Russian forces, saying that the answer to Ukraine’s territorial question already exists in Ukraine’s Constitution. He did not comment on his possible participation in the Trump-Putin meeting.
On 10 August, European leaders published a joint statement noting that the current line of contact should become the starting point for peace negotiations.
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Ukrainian intelligence operatives conducted a cyberattack on the IT infrastructure of one of Russia’s largest private internet service providers serving security agencies, according to a source in Ukrainian intelligence speaking to Hromadske.
The operation targeted the Filanko group of companies, which provides internet and hosting services to over 20,000 clients including Beeline, MGTS, 24tv, and Russian security structures, the source reported.
Cyber specialists successfully disabled 600 virtu
Ukrainian intelligence operatives conducted a cyberattack on the IT infrastructure of one of Russia’s largest private internet service providers serving security agencies, according to a source in Ukrainian intelligence speaking to Hromadske.
The operation targeted the Filanko group of companies, which provides internet and hosting services to over 20,000 clients including Beeline, MGTS, 24tv, and Russian security structures, the source reported.
Cyber specialists successfully disabled 600 virtual machines and 24 hypervisors, the intelligence source detailed. The attack destroyed 800 terabytes of data and eliminated 11 physical servers from the data center operations.
The scope of the infrastructure damage extended to monitoring systems. “74 Raspberry Pi devices for remote data monitoring from the data center and 12 terabytes of sensor data” were destroyed, according to the source. Office operations suffered additional losses with 5 physical servers and 5 terabytes of data eliminated.
Network infrastructure bore significant damage as operatives disabled 3,100 switching equipment devices. Among these were “37 service routers, core routers, and network edge routers,” the source specified.
Financial systems also came under attack. Intelligence operatives “emptied wallets in the company’s personal account totaling $1.3 million,” the source reported.
The operation included a symbolic element on a related website. On the main page of a site selling “emergency briefcases” for Russian security structures, operatives published a photograph of eliminated Russian occupiers in Ukraine, according to the intelligence source.
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The European Union has secured €1.6 billion ($1.9 billlion) from profits generated by frozen Russian assets, marking the third transfer under the program, the European Commission announced.
The allocation strategy has shifted with this latest tranche. While 90% of funds from the first two transfers supported Ukraine through the European Peace Facility (EPF) and 10% through the Ukraine Facility, the third transfer will see 95% directed to Ukraine through the Ukraine Loan Cooperation Mechanism (UL
The European Union has secured €1.6 billion ($1.9 billlion) from profits generated by frozen Russian assets, marking the third transfer under the program, the European Commission announced.
The allocation strategy has shifted with this latest tranche. While 90% of funds from the first two transfers supported Ukraine through the European Peace Facility (EPF) and 10% through the Ukraine Facility, the third transfer will see 95% directed to Ukraine through the Ukraine Loan Cooperation Mechanism (ULCM) and 5% through the EPF.
The ULCM provides non-repayable support to Ukraine for repaying macrofinancial assistance loans from the EU and bilateral creditor loans within the mechanism framework. The total credit support amounts to €45 billion ($52 bn).
The EPF assists Ukraine in addressing urgent military and defense needs, according to the Commission’s statement.
The frozen assets program emerged as a response to Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. The EU froze Russian assets in Europe, with G7 jurisdictions holding approximately $280 billion in frozen Russian sovereign assets, according to Ukraine’s Ministry of Finance.
G7 countries committed to keeping these assets immobilized until Russia pays for crimes committed against Ukraine. Leaders agreed to provide Ukraine with a $50 billion loan, to be repaid using proceeds from these assets.
The United States already delivered $1 billion to Ukraine from frozen Russian assets at the end of 2024, demonstrating the mechanism’s implementation across multiple jurisdictions.
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders will hold an online conversation with US President Donald Trump ahead of his scheduled meeting with Russian leader Vladimir Putin, according to the European Commission.
Deputy Chief Spokesperson of the European Commission Arianna Podesta confirmed the call to Suspilne, saying it will take place on 13 August. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is organizing the conversation, which will include European Commission President Ursula von der
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders will hold an online conversation with US President Donald Trump ahead of his scheduled meeting with Russian leader Vladimir Putin, according to the European Commission.
Deputy Chief Spokesperson of the European Commission Arianna Podesta confirmed the call to Suspilne, saying it will take place on 13 August. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz is organizing the conversation, which will include European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
The diplomatic outreach follows Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s disclosure that Washington promised to consult with European partners regarding negotiations with Russia.
Multiple European nations have expressed support for Trump’s efforts to end the Russian-Ukrainian wars. France, Italy, Germany, Poland, Great Britain, Finland and the European Commission backed Trump’s peace initiative but stressed that “the path to peace in Ukraine cannot be determined without it.”
Eight Nordic and Baltic countries issued a separate statement underlining that diplomatic settlement of the Russian-Ukrainian war must defend “vital security interests” of both Ukraine and Europe.
EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy Kaja Kallas has convened a meeting of European foreign ministers to discuss the situation.
This comes as Trump and Putin agreed to meet on 15 August in Alaska. Bloomberg reported that Washington and Moscow seek to reach an agreement to end the war in Ukraine that would secure occupied territories for Russia.
The Wall Street Journal wrote that Putin presented the Trump administration with a ceasefire plan in exchange for territorial concessions from Kyiv.
Trump suggested that a peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine would likely require “a certain exchange of territories for the benefit of both sides.” Specifically, Ukraine should withdraw troops from all of Donetsk Oblast, while Crimea should be recognized as sovereign Russian territory.
Following these reports, Zelenskyy said that “Ukraine will not give away its lands to anyone.”
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Russian forces have made a limited breakthrough north of Pokrovsk, advancing about 15 kilometers and driving toward Dobropillia, according to the OSINT project DeepStateMap. The advance threatens a key logistics corridor and could deepen Russian penetration of Ukrainian defensive lines in Donetsk Oblast.
This comes as US President Donald Trump’s deadline for Russia to agree to a ceasefire passed without result. Trump announced plans to meet Russian leader Vladimir Putin instead of imposing new s
Russian forces have made a limited breakthrough north of Pokrovsk, advancing about 15 kilometers and driving toward Dobropillia, according to the OSINT project DeepStateMap. The advance threatens a key logistics corridor and could deepen Russian penetration of Ukrainian defensive lines in Donetsk Oblast.
This comes as US President Donald Trump’s deadline for Russia to agree to a ceasefire passed without result. Trump announced plans to meet Russian leader Vladimir Putin instead of imposing new sanctions or tariffs on Russia. Moscow demands that Ukraine cede the remainder of Donetsk Oblast for a ceasefire, offering no guarantees in return.
Russians advance 15 kilometers in five days
DeepState reports that Russian troops broke through a narrow front section. The enemy advanced approximately 15 kilometers into Ukrainian defensive positions over five days starting 7 August.
Militarnyi notes that DeepState analysts confirmed Russian penetration into Kucheriv Yar and Zolotyi Kolodiaz settlements. The General Staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces map confirms the breakthrough as of 8:00 AM on 11 August 2025.
Russian infantry units infiltrated Vesele village from Kucheriv Yar through tree lines. DeepState observed about twenty enemy soldiers accumulating in this village over the past day.
Russians target critical infrastructure
Russia continues developing success toward the Dobropillia-Kramatorsk highway. Russian infantry appeared near Novovodiane and Petrivka as they push forward.
DeepState notes the situation remains chaotic. The enemy exploits defense gaps to penetrate deep behind Ukrainian positions. Russian forces quickly establish positions and accumulate troops for further advances.
The Zolotyi Kolodiaz and Shakhove area contains new heavy engineering fortifications under construction. Enemy forces bypass these structures and may later occupy them for defensive purposes.
Strategic implications threaten multiple cities
The narrow breakthrough spans approximately 15 kilometers deep and 5-6 kilometers wide according to DeepState’s evening map on 11 August. This wedge formation creates operational risks for Ukrainian forces.
DeepState warns that without rapid stabilization, Dobropillia faces immediate danger. The entire Pokrovsk-Myrnohrad agglomeration defense group risks encirclement. The breakthrough also threatens Kostiantynivka from another flank.
The advance potentially endangers the Sloviansk-Kramatorsk agglomeration in the future. Russian forces could use Donetsk-Kharkiv and Donetsk-Dnipropetrovsk oblast border positions for launching future offensives.
Ukrainian forces hold key positions
Ukrainian serviceman “Bakhmut Demon” reports on Telegram that the situation remains difficult near Kostiantynivka-Dobropillia. He confirms Ukrainian forces still hold Pokrovsk despite heavy fighting.
“We cannot be terminators while others live life,” the serviceman wrote. He attributes Russian breakthroughs to personnel shortages in Ukrainian ranks.
The serviceman notes positive developments in Sumy Oblast where Ukrainian forces advance. He emphasizes that Ukrainian troops maintain positions in both Kostiantynivka and Pokrovsk.
Russian tactics exploit Ukrainian weaknesses
DeepState explains that Russian infantry group assault tactics cause extremely high losses among attackers. However, critical Ukrainian infantry shortages allow this costly strategy to succeed.
Russian command shows no concern for casualties among “volunteers.” The constant influx of replacements enables continued human wave attacks despite massive losses.
After consolidating positions, Russians will attempt deeper territorial penetration and breakthrough expansion. Enemy drone teams will deploy to complicate Ukrainian logistics and position retention.
The narrow salient offers opportunities if Ukrainian reserves act quickly. While surrounding enemy forces may prove difficult, controlling their logistics could trap Russian units operationally.
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy held a phone conversation with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to discuss Ukraine’s peace efforts and sanctions policy against Russia, Zelenskyy said on 11 August.
During the call, Zelenskyy briefed Modi on recent Russian attacks on Ukrainian cities and villages, including yesterday’s strike on a bus station in Zaporizhzhia that left dozens injured.
“A deliberate strike with Russian bombs on ordinary city buildings. And this at a time when a diplomati
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy held a phone conversation with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi to discuss Ukraine’s peace efforts and sanctions policy against Russia, Zelenskyy said on 11 August.
During the call, Zelenskyy briefed Modi on recent Russian attacks on Ukrainian cities and villages, including yesterday’s strike on a bus station in Zaporizhzhia that left dozens injured.
“A deliberate strike with Russian bombs on ordinary city buildings. And this at a time when a diplomatic opportunity to end the war has finally appeared,” Zelenskyy said.
Zelenskyy highlighted India’s support for Ukraine’s peace initiatives. New Delhi shared the position that “everything concerning Ukraine must be decided with Ukraine’s participation. Other formats will not produce results,” according to Zelenskyy.
The leaders discussed sanctions against Russia in detail, according to Zelenskyy’s statement. The conversation focused on “the need to limit exports of Russian energy carriers, particularly oil, to reduce its potential and ability to finance the continuation of this war.”
Zelenskyy and Modi agreed to schedule a personal meeting in September during the UN General Assembly and to work out an exchange of visits.
The conversation comes as US President Donald Trump signed an executive order imposing additional 25% tariffs on imports from India.
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Germany’s largest defense contractor Rheinmetall will double its planned ammunition production capacity at its new Ukrainian facility to 300,000 artillery shells annually, CEO Armin Papperger announced during the company’s Q2 2025 conference call on 7 August.
The expanded capacity represents a significant increase from the original target of 150,000 shells per year. “Ukrainian officials want to double the planned production capacities,” Papperger said in response to questions during the conferen
Germany’s largest defense contractor Rheinmetall will double its planned ammunition production capacity at its new Ukrainian facility to 300,000 artillery shells annually, CEO Armin Papperger announced during the company’s Q2 2025 conference call on 7 August.
The expanded capacity represents a significant increase from the original target of 150,000 shells per year. “Ukrainian officials want to double the planned production capacities,” Papperger said in response to questions during the conference call, according to German Aid to Ukraine.
Production at the Ukrainian plant is scheduled to begin in 2026, following what Papperger described as a typical one to two-year ramp-up period to reach full capacity. The facility will manufacture 155mm artillery ammunition, addressing Ukraine’s heavy reliance on shell deliveries from partner nations.
However, further expansion beyond 300,000 shells appears unlikely in the near term due to financial constraints. Papperger indicated that the Ukrainian government “simply doesn’t have the money” for higher production figures.
The project has faced delays attributed to bureaucratic hurdles. Papperger expressed frustration with the pace of progress, saying that “bureaucracy in Ukraine is unfortunately very, very high.” He compared the Ukrainian project to a similar facility in Unterlüß, Germany, noting that construction began almost simultaneously at both locations, but the German plant is now completed while the Ukrainian facility remains unfinished.
This marks the second time Papperger has publicly criticized Ukrainian administrative processes. He previously raised similar concerns in a February 2025 interview with Deutsche Welle on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference.
A representative from another German defense company, speaking anonymously to German Aid to Ukraine, confirmed experiencing bureaucratic challenges in Ukraine but could not verify whether establishing operations would be easier in Germany, as Papperger has suggested.
Despite these administrative challenges, there are no indications that the factory completion will be significantly delayed. The facility is expected to begin operations as originally announced, with production starting next year.
The expansion will enhance Ukraine’s domestic ammunition production capabilities, reducing dependence on international deliveries for its military operations. Currently, Ukraine relies almost exclusively on shell supplies from allied nations to meet its artillery needs.
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A Ukrainian drone strike has forced the Saratov Oil Refinery—a major facility in southwestern Saratov Oblast owned by state-run Rosneft—to halt crude oil intake, Bloomberg reports, citing people familiar with the matter.
The 10 August attack triggered explosions and a fire on-site, abruptly halting operations at a plant capable of processing around 140,000 barrels of crude per day. Analysts warn that if the shutdown persists, Russia’s domestic gasoline supplies could face pressure just as sea
A Ukrainian drone strike has forced the Saratov Oil Refinery—a major facility in southwestern Saratov Oblast owned by state-run Rosneft—to halt crude oil intake, Bloombergreports, citing people familiar with the matter.
The 10 August attack triggered explosions and a fire on-site, abruptly halting operations at a plant capable of processing around 140,000 barrels of crude per day. Analysts warn that if the shutdown persists, Russia’s domestic gasoline supplies could face pressure just as seasonal demand climbs.
Escalation before high-stakes Alaska talks
The strike comes just five days before a planned 15 August summit in Alaska between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. The White House has said the meeting could expand into a trilateral peace negotiation if Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy attends, though Kyiv’s participation remains uncertain.
Despite the diplomatic push, fighting has intensified. Both sides are exchanging waves of drones and missiles, with Ukraine stepping up strikes deep inside Russian territory while Russia continues to bombard Ukrainian cities.
Part of a wider campaign against Russian energy infrastructure
The Saratov facility is the latest in a string of Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian refineries this month. On 2 August, strikes disabled the Ryazan and Novokuybyshevsk refineries. Five days later, Ukraine targeted the Afipsky refinery in the Krasnodar Krai, followed by a reported strike on a plant in Russia’s Komi Republic, some 2,000 kilometers from Ukraine.
The Saratov plant’s position along the Volga River makes it a strategic hub for both regional fuel distribution and exports—raising the stakes of its prolonged closure.
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In the shadow of Europe’s largest war since World War II, few expected a small Western European nation to become one of Ukraine’s steady military partners. Yet Belgium has stepped up—pledging fighter jets, advanced air defense systems, ammunition, naval support, and a decade-long security pact.
Its influence is amplified by a unique role in Europe’s financial battlefield. Brussels-based Euroclear holds over €180 billion in frozen Russian assets—the largest cache in Europe. Taxes on the intere
In the shadow of Europe’s largest war since World War II, few expected a small Western European nation to become one of Ukraine’s steady military partners. Yet Belgium has stepped up—pledging fighter jets, advanced air defense systems, ammunition, naval support, and a decade-long security pact.
Its influence is amplified by a unique role in Europe’s financial battlefield. Brussels-based Euroclear holds over €180 billion in frozen Russian assets—the largest cache in Europe. Taxes on the interest from these holdings fund much of the EU’s military aid to Ukraine, giving Belgium outsized leverage in sustaining Kyiv’s war effort.
The record, however, has gaps. As of mid-2025, Belgium’s pledge of 30 F-16s—the largest from any single country—remains undelivered. And while Brussels is central to the frozen-assets plan, it opposes full confiscation, limiting Ukraine’s access to the principal sum.
When President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visited Brussels in May 2024, he signed a landmark 10-year bilateral security agreement—the 11th such pact that year, launched after the G7’s 2023 Joint Declaration of Support. For Belgium, it was a promise that its backing would go beyond immediate aid, locking in a decade of military cooperation.
In collaboration with the Dnistrianskyi Center, Euromaidan Press presents this English-language adaptation of Dariia Cherniavska’s analysis on Belgium’s role in Ukraine’s defense, recovery, and pursuit of justice.
In Brussels, Zelenskyy and De Croo signed a bilateral security and support deal in May 2024. Photo: president.gov.ua
A quiet but strong hand
From the beginning of Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, Belgium’s contributions weren’t always front-page news. Unlike some larger NATO allies, its aid wasn’t accompanied by high-profile announcements or flashy military convoys. But behind the scenes, Belgium was delivering—and planning for the long haul.
That planning came into focus in May 2024, when Belgium and Ukraine formalized their cooperation under a 10-year security deal. The agreement wasn’t symbolic. It came with a promise: €977 million in military aid for 2024 alone, and a further €1 billion annually starting in 2025.
F-16 coalition: Record pledge, slow reality
One of Belgium’s most high-profile commitments is its role in the F-16 fighter jet coalition. Belgium has pledged 30 F-16s by 2028—more than any other single donor. These American-made aircraft symbolize Ukraine’s modernization and its fight to reclaim the skies.
Yet as of mid-2025, none have been delivered. Officially, the delay is due to Belgium’s own transition from F-16s to newer F-35s, creating bottlenecks in the transfer process.
To bridge the gap, Belgium has invested heavily in training. Since 2022, over 3,000 Ukrainian troops have been trained. In spring 2024, 50 flight instructors and two F-16B aircraft were sent to Denmark to prepare Ukrainian pilots, engineers, and mission planners. Meanwhile, Melsbroek airbase hosted intensive aircrew training—ensuring Ukraine’s defenders are ready the moment those jets arrive.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy visits Belgian airbase with F-16s bound for Ukraine on May 2024. Photo: armyinform.com.ua
Air defense: Guarding the skies above Ukraine
Protecting Ukraine’s airspace is a matter of survival. Belgium has made air defense a cornerstone of its aid:
€200 million in 2024 for Germany’s air defense initiative
€150 million in 2025 via the German-led Integrated Air and Missile Defense (IAAD) coalition
Deliveries supported by Belgium’s A400M transport aircraft
20 modernized Cerberus systems announced in May 2025 to defend against drones and missiles
These systems are critical—but the scale of Russian missile and drone attacks means Ukraine’s needs outpace even the largest contributions. Every air defense battery or missile delivery helps, but the demand is unrelenting.
Belgian Air Force A400M Atlas taxiing at Melsbroek Air Base during the 15th Wing open day, 27 May 2023. Photo: Alain Henry de Frahan
Naval support: Minehunter and maritime drones
Belgium’s support extends to the seas. In June 2025, it transferred the decommissioned minehunter Narcis—renamedMariupol in honor of the city destroyed by Russian forces in 2022. Equipped with advanced unmanned underwater drones, the ship will help clear mines from the Black Sea and reopen vital trade routes.
Training has been central to this maritime support. In 2023, Belgium trained Ukrainian operators on 10 R7 underwater drones from ECA Robotics Belgium—later delivered for underwater inspection and maintenance. Training expanded in 2024 to various strike drones, and in 2025 to the Mariupol’s crew and air defense technicians.
A Belgian minehunter. Photo: Belga / Dirk Waem
Ammunition, armor, and battlefield logistics
When Ukraine’s frontlines started running dangerously low on ammunition, Belgium was one of the nations to step up. In 2024, it joined the Czech-led ammunition coalition, committing €200 million toward purchasing 50,000 artillery shells—each one a lifeline on the battlefield.
That same year, Belgium pledged three Caesar self-propelled howitzers, valued at €12 million, under the artillery coalition. Though delivery delays have been reported, the promise remains.
Belgium has also provided:
Mistral air defense launchers
AIM-120 AMRAAM missiles for NASAMS
Hundreds of Volvo military trucks
M113 armored personnel carriers
Lynx tactical armored vehicles
These contributions may lack the headline appeal of fighter jets, but they keep Ukraine’s forces operational under intense pressure.
The 155th Mechanized brigade, trained abroad, was instructed in using French Caesar howitzers. Photo from the 155th brigade’s FB
Building Ukraine’s defense industry
Belgium’s assistance goes beyond delivering equipment to the front. In early 2024, the Ukrainian and Belgian defense ministries signed a Memorandum of Understanding, launching a collaborative effort to co-develop new defense technologies.
One of the first tangible results came from Belgian defense firm John Cockerill, which undertook the modernization of dozens of Bandvagn 206 all-terrain vehicles destined for Ukraine—building on its earlier work upgrading M113 armored personnel carriers before their transfer to the Ukrainian Army.
Belgium is also helping Ukraine expand its own defense manufacturing capacity. In partnership with Thales Belgium, work is underway to co-produce 70mm FZ275 LGR rockets, with a range of up to 3,000 meters. Designed for precision and rapid deployment, these rockets will strengthen Ukraine’s ability to intercept Russian drones and enhance short-range air defense.
Bandvagn 206S armored tracked all-terrain vehicle. Photo: Ministry of Defense of Germany
Frozen Russian assets: Central role, clear limits
Belgium’s Euroclear holds the largest frozen Russian asset stockpile in Europe—over €180 billion. Since spring 2024, the EU has been transferring interest from these holdings to Ukraine, with the first €1.5 billion going toward air defense, ammunition, and defense industry projects.
By May 2025, Ukraine had received €6 billion via the G7’s Extraordinary Revenue Acceleration (ERA) program, with €35 billion planned for the year.
Belgium, however, opposes full confiscation of the assets, citing legal risks. Instead, it supports keeping them frozen indefinitely—even if some EU states refuse to renew sanctions—so that interest income continues to flow.
Reconstruction and recovery
Belgium’s role in Ukraine’s recovery goes hand in hand with its financial contributions from frozen Russian assets. Through the Belgian development agency Enabel, Ukraine will receive €150 million by 2028 for the comprehensive reconstruction of Chernihiv and KyivOblasts. Funded from the profits of frozen Russian assets held in Belgian jurisdiction, this aid will rebuild schools, healthcare facilities, and energy infrastructure.
Separately, under the Chernobyl International Cooperation Account managed by the EBRR, Belgium contributed over €200,000 at the end of 2024 to restore equipment at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant damaged during Russia’s occupation.
A billion-euro blueprint for stability
In April 2025, the Belgian government unveiled a €1 billion military aid plan for Ukraine, to be renewed every year through 2029. It was one of the most ambitious announcements yet from a European country—and about two-thirds of that funding is being funneled through Belgian companies.
This dual-purpose strategy doesn’t just support Ukraine—it strengthens Belgium’s own defense industrial base, ensuring production remains efficient, scalable, and strategically aligned with EU and NATO goals.
Training, technology, and trust
Belgium’s training efforts go far beyond pilots. In 2023, it trained Ukrainian drone operators, including how to use 10 R7 underwater drones from ECA Robotics Belgium—systems later delivered as part of its military aid and used for inspection, surveillance, and maintenance of underwater infrastructure.
In 2025, that training expanded to include the minehunter crew, drone pilots, and technicians managing air defense systems.
Through the IT Coalition, Belgium has also invested heavily in Ukraine’s cyber and communications infrastructure, contributing to a €1.1 billion effort to modernize command centers, secure communications, and data infrastructure.
R7 Remotely Operated Vehicles by ECA Robotics Belgium. Photo: militarnyi.com
Why Belgium’s role matters
Belgium may not have the military scale of the US or economic might of Germany, but it offers something just as vital: reliability and long-term commitment. It is a partner that pairs battlefield support with industrial cooperation, reconstruction aid, and steady financial backing.
With 30 F-16s pledged, €1 billion per year committed, and a unique position at the heart of Europe’s frozen asset system, Belgium’s influence will remain significant as Ukraine’s fight continues.
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These questions — painful and inherently political — are crucial to understanding Ukraine’s situation in the third year of war.The answer lies in broken expectations, a faltering strategy, dysfunctional command structures, and a society unprepared for a long war.
Euphoria
I remember September 2022. Ukrainian forces were tearing through Kharkiv Oblast. Every day brought news of liberated settlements: Izium, Kupiansk, Balakliia. Russian troops weren’t fighting — they were running. I thought:
These questions — painful and inherently political — are crucial to understanding Ukraine’s situation in the third year of war.
The answer lies in broken expectations, a faltering strategy, dysfunctional command structures, and a society unprepared for a long war.
Euphoria
I remember September 2022. Ukrainian forces were tearing through Kharkiv Oblast. Every day brought news of liberated settlements: Izium, Kupiansk, Balakliia. Russian troops weren’t fighting — they were running. I thought: keep them running. Push them until victory — so graspingly near — is achieved.
Many around the world thought the same. I remember talking with friends in different European countries — some political analysts, one a veteran of several wars — and the consensus was clear: if Ukraine could keep up the pressure, it would be over quickly.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy with Ukrainian defenders in Kherson, November 14, 2022. Photo: Ministry of Defense of Ukraine
Then came November. Kherson was liberated. Everyone remembers the cheerful photos of people greeting Ukrainian troops with flags, flowers, and tears.
Victory was near. Or so it seemed.
That moment — that brief illusion of victory just around the corner — explains more than any think tank report could. It explains why, now in the third year of war, so many Ukrainian men do not want to fight.
Because no one ever prepared them to.
Shattered expectations
Wars don’t care what one expects. What followed Kherson were long, brutal, morale-draining defensive battles, turning into slow retreats — first at Bakhmut, then Avdiivka, then Robotyne. These names are synonymous not with victory, but with attrition. Trench warfare. Exhaustion. Withdrawal.
While all this unfolded, the country was never told: This will be long and hard, and it will demand everything of you. Instead, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy quietly shifted blame for the failed counterattack onto General Valerii Zaluzhnyi by sending him to London as ambassador, letting speeches about liberating Crimea fade away.
There was no clarification about what would come next. For the public, it became increasingly clear that nothing was clear — that the government had no plan B. This was at a time when Ukrainians were ready to hear hard truths and make sacrifices.
Instead of a clear-headed mobilization strategy, the government offered half-promises and tried to carry on with roughly the same army that had gathered in 2022.
Within Ukraine’s leadership, there seems to be widespread belief that they can somehow win with negotiations, drones, unmanned ground vehicles, or other high-tech solutions.
In other words: Ukraine cannot smart its way out of needing soldiers. A simple truth remains — any land Ukrainian soldiers do not set foot on is no longer part of Ukraine.
The Kremlin understands this very well.
Ukraine is a democracy — and that’s a problem
Cracks in Ukraine’s ad-hoc mobilization began showing as Russians tidied up their ranks, built a functioning recruitment system, and applied pressure on a Ukrainian frontline now stretched thin and underequipped.
By late summer 2023, when the promised counterattack failed and the public realized this war could last for years, the government should have rolled out a feasible mobilization plan.
But that didn’t happen.
Not just because of disorganization, but because the political cost was deemed too high. Unlike Russia, which sustains its war effort with voluntary contracts and where even the word “mobilization” sparks Kremlin panic, Ukraine was forced into the deeply unpopular route of compulsory service.
The leadership knew the risks: forced mobilization in a democracy is always precarious. But with no money and no surplus of volunteers, there were no other options.
What followed was a creeping mobilization without any openly stated clear goal and structure.
The mobilization system, which isn’t
The mobilization system, relying heavily on the old Soviet model with all its rigidity and ineffectiveness, wasn’t overhauled — it was merely patched.
Territorial recruitment centers continued operating within outdated frameworks, simply under increased pressure. Reform attempts were unfinished and half-hearted, addressing only isolated issues.
As a result, mobilization officers handing out enlistment papers on streets or carrying out forced conscription came to be seen by the public — especially potential recruits and their families — as increasingly arbitrary and unjust.
Credit is also due to Russian propaganda, which turned people’s ire against mobilization officers.
The improvisations of 2022 — driven by volunteerism, national unity, and the belief that the war would be short — masked underlying flaws only temporarily. In the long run, a patched-up, paper-heavy post-Soviet system proved unfit for managing a prolonged democratic war effort demanding fairness, transparency, and shared sacrifice.
Especially as the societal cohesion and patriotic fervor of 2022 faded. Cracks in the system became chasms — broken features incompatible with reality.
Queues at the recruitment center in Ternopil on 25 February 2022, one day after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Photo: 0352.ua
A deepening divide
There is still no clear rotation system, keeping men in units and trenches far too long. The “Reserve+” phone app, heavily promoted by the Ministry of Defense, delivered far less than hoped. While intended to streamline mobilization, it was hampered by poor design, technical bugs, a lack of user trust, and weak integration with existing military records.
To many, draft rules feel arbitrary and unjust. Some men are snatched off the streets — a practice Russian propaganda grandly amplifies. Others remain untouched because they know the system, know someone in it, or can afford to bribe their way out.
Meanwhile, Ukraine’s command structure shows deep dysfunction. Higher-ups deny junior commanders’ initiative, senior officers cling to power, and promotions are often blocked. This demotivates not only active soldiers but also discourages recruits from joining what looks like a rigid, unrewarding system.
Yet changes for the better do occur.
Parallel to this dysfunctional structure are units like the 3rd Assault Brigade, 12th Special Forces Brigade “Azov”, and 13th Khartiia Brigade, which promote meritocratic initiative and professionalism. They project a vision of military service that isn’t just about obligation — but also pride, skill, and purpose. They actively recruit, seeking talent. For them, the message is clear: this war is not someone else’s job. Everyone will serve. Find your place. Prepare.
A still from an Azov Brigade ad — part of a series showing everyday chats where someone mentions a husband, son, or boyfriend hiding from recruitment, and another delivers the proud punch line: “Mine’s in Azov,” met with silent approval. Photo: YouTube/АЗОВ
And then there are those who serve not because of fancy campaigns or competent leadership but despite the system. These men and women endure impossible conditions, hold the line under fire, and continue their job, often without recognition. Their loyalty to Ukraine and their comrades is the force keeping the country alive.
Their silent example clashes directly with denial still prevalent in civilian society — where some cling to magical thinking that diplomacy will solve everything, or that the war will end if Ukraine hangs on long enough.
This reveals the growing societal divide — between those who have embraced the reality that doing their part is inevitable if they want to continue living in a free country, and those who haven’t.
Ukraine’s 81st Air Mobile Brigade during training. Many serve not for glory, but despite the system — while others choose not to serve at all. Photo: 81st Air Mobile Brigade
Russia knows it all
This domestic mismanagement is being exploited by the enemy. Russia has spent years targeting Ukraine’s morale, deliberately amplifying every failure, mistake, and injustice. Regarding mobilization, Russian propaganda doesn’t need to invent much. It simply shows what’s real and nudges it toward despair.
For many Ukrainians, the mobilization officer has become more feared than the Russian invader. That’s not merely tragic — it’s a psychological victory for the Kremlin. All wars are fought first in the mind: war, at its essence, is psychology and logistics.
So why don’t they fight?
Because no one ever told them they’d have to.
The Revolution of Dignity in 2013–2014 brought Ukrainian society into ongoing flux, transforming from the post-Soviet patrimonial social contract into something where citizens take responsibility. Where the state is not “them” but “us.”
But this isn’t happening simultaneously throughout Ukraine.
The volunteer army of 2022 — spurred by revolutionary fervor and made up of a professional core, existing conscripts, and volunteers — looked, for a moment, like it might be enough. That illusion lingered far too long.
When it became clear the war would be long, brutal, and unwinnable without mass mobilization, many men felt caught off guard. The system demanding everything was the same one that had failed to prepare them for years. It offered neither clarity, fairness, nor a plan but seemed to want everything in return.
Those who served felt abandoned. Others with better connections, deeper pockets, or better luck stayed home.
Some were “reserved” by employers — a state-allowed exemption meant to keep strategic branches of the economy running. This arrangement is often viewed with suspicion by everyone not part of it — another example of lost fairness. Some had left the country before borders closed. Some bribed their way out.
Ukrainian border guards detain draft evaders attempting to cross the Tysa River into Hungary. Photo: Border Service, 9 November 2024
The result rewarded evasion and punished commitment.
The real challenge is not how to punish evasion but understanding it. For many, draft avoidance isn’t only fear or selfishness but a symptom of alienation. These people don’t believe in the state enough to risk their lives for it.
Understanding what fuels that disconnect — and how to fix it — is one of the most critical strategic riddles Ukraine faces.
By the end of last year, over 100,000 Ukrainian soldiers had deserted — most for shorter or longer periods, many switching units without permission, but some forever, according to Euromaidan Press reporting from 16 January 2025. The number now, in August? Higher.
The women left behind
In this broken system, the burden has fallen heavily on women. Wives, mothers, sisters, and daughters support men hiding from mobilization. They shop, cook, take out trash, and carry the emotional and domestic load. Often, they’re not merely passive enablers but active decision-makers — asking other women, “Why did you let yours go?” They help normalize avoidance, turning personal reluctance into a social stance.
At the same time, other women protest for fairer rules and better treatment of those who serve. Some demand transparent mobilization criteria. Others call for proper rotation and relief for men at the front since 2022.
elatives of Ukrainian servicemen at a rally in Kyiv on 27 April 2024, demanding fixed terms for service. Photo: Suspilne
These women are voices of a society under enormous strain. But they’re divided: between those who fight to bring their men home and those who protect men who refuse to go.
Still others wear the uniform themselves. Over 60,000 Ukrainian women currently serve in the Armed Forces, with around 5,000 in combat roles. Their service — often overlooked in this debate — is a daily reminder that gender doesn’t limit duty.
Becoming Israel?
If this war is here to stay — and it may be — Ukraine faces a challenge: how to distribute defense burden fairly and sustainably while the rest of the country leads more or less ordinary lives.
Some say Ukraine must become like Israel — a country where repelling external enemies is part of national identity and everyday routine, with no exceptions.
If so, there will be no alternative to conscription. The reality on the front shows that forcibly mobilized soldiers often become competent and committed — not because they were ready, but because they rose to the challenge. Avoiding this truth only delays the reckoning.
Including Israel in the discussion automatically includes men and women. Several initiatives and pilot programs have been launched to train and involve more women in defense roles, from combat training to logistics to cybersecurity.
Ukrainian servicewomen in uniform. Over 60,000 women serve in Ukraine’s Armed Forces, including about 5,000 in combat roles. Photo: The Ukrainian Defense Ministry
More Ukrainians are asking: why is one-half of the population trapped inside the country while the other half is free to travel at will?
But becoming like Israel would require more than slogans. It would demand an end to illusions, a reshaping of the social contract, and a reckoning with what the war truly demands — and from whom. Because someone always pays. In Ukraine, it’s the same exhausted battalions who have held the line since Bucha, since Bakhmut, since Berdiansk.
And they are running out — of men, of time. And if this continues — eventually, of ground.
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Europe is “years away” from having the kit, personnel and supply chains to defend Ukraine, The Times warns, despite “bold talk” of protecting it. The paper says the continent “wholly lack[s] the means” to protect Kyiv’s territory, leaving it unable to credibly demand a role in the upcoming Trump–Putin summit in Alaska, which will take place with little or no European participation.
“Had Europe better invested in defense, it might be able to argue for some role in Alaska,” the editorial says.
Europe is “years away” from having the kit, personnel and supply chains to defend Ukraine, The Times warns, despite “bold talk” of protecting it. The paper says the continent “wholly lack[s] the means” to protect Kyiv’s territory, leaving it unable to credibly demand a role in the upcoming Trump–Putin summit in Alaska, which will take place with little or no European participation.
“Had Europe better invested in defense, it might be able to argue for some role in Alaska,” the editorial says. “The bald fact is that Europe is not credible.”
Europe lacks strength to shape or enforce peace
Even if Europe remains diplomatically united, The Times argues it “lacks the strength to back Kyiv in negotiating favourable terms… or enforcing a ceasefire.” Without sustained US backing, “its war effort will buckle.”
Reliance on US support
Instead of leading, Europe depends on American weapons, intelligence, and political will. US Vice-President JD Vance told Fox News that Americans are “sick” of paying for foreign wars and Washington is “done funding” Kyiv.
“If you care so much about this conflict,” he said, “you should be willing to play a more direct… substantial way in funding this war yourself”.
Coalition plan stalls
British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer’s aim for a 64,000-strong “coalition of the willing” has faltered. The Times says “gathering a coalition of even 10,000 soldiers would be difficult… reaching 25,000 might be possible at a stretch.”
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has argued that 200,000 troops are needed to counter Russia’s 800,000-strong army. Lithuania’s defence minister Dovile Sakaliene warned: “If we can’t even raise 64,000 that doesn’t look weak — it is weak.”
“It is notable,” the paper writes, “that Poland… has declined to participate in any coalition.”
Spain and Italy have also refused; Finland fears deployments would “dilute” its own border defences; Estonia may send only a company-sized unit. The Kremlin has warned that any Western troops could “trigger a new world war.”
EU military. Photo: the European Defence Agency
Aid totals mask dependence
In June, The Times reports, Europe overtook the US as Ukraine’s biggest donor of military aid — about €72 billion (roughly $78 billion) compared with the US’s $65 billion (around €60 billion). But “much of Europe’s aid finances the purchase of US-made weapons,” underscoring its dependence.
Zelenskyy has said “less than 30%” of Ukraine’s arms come from Europe, with “about 40%” from the US and a third produced domestically.
The EU’s €800 billion Readiness 2030 plan to modernise forces is, according to The Times, “too late for playing a credible role in the future of Ukraine.”
Urgent editorial warning
In its editorial, The Times accuses Starmer of focusing “too much on words instead of investment plans” and calls for urgent increases in defence spending. Quoting Stalin’s remark about the Vatican’s lack of “divisions,” it warns that Putin may look towards Europe and “raise the same smug question”:
“The best day to invest in defense was yesterday, the second best is today.”
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Today, there are interesting updates from the Russian federation.
Here, Ukraine continued its own version of sanctions by successfully hitting Russia’s main Central Asian gas pipeline. This puts not only Russia’s influence in Asia under threat but also stops the work of some of its most important military factories due to the lack of resources.
In a bold escalation of its long-range strike campaign, Ukraine has struck one of the most critical arteries of Russia’s gas infrastructure, the C
Today, there are interesting updates from the Russian federation.
Here, Ukraine continued its own version of sanctions by successfully hitting Russia’s main Central Asian gas pipeline. This puts not only Russia’s influence in Asia under threat but also stops the work of some of its most important military factories due to the lack of resources.
In a bold escalation of its long-range strike campaign, Ukraine has struck one of the most critical arteries of Russia’s gas infrastructure, the Central Asia Center pipeline. Explosions rocked the Volgograd region, knocking the pipeline out of service and forcing an indefinite shutdown.
This strategic attack, confirmed by Ukraine’s Main Intelligence Directorate, not only disrupted the gas transit but also directly affected energy supplies to multiple key military-industrial facilities across Russia, dependent on energy plants that fully receive their gas from this pipeline.
A screenshot from the Reporting from Ukraine – RFU News YouTube video, 11 August.
Among those impacted are the Demikhovsky Machine-Building Plant, MiG Aircraft Corporation, and the Magnum-K ammunition factory, central players in Russia’s war machine. Local emergency crews rushed to the site as Gazprom, the pipeline operator, initiated damage assessments and repairs, halting gas flow across the region.
The Central Asia Center pipeline is a 4,000 kilometer-long linchpin in Russia’s gas export network, designed to transport gas from Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan to Russia and vice versa. This pipeline is a geopolitical leverage as it enables Russia to exert influence over Central Asian energy while simultaneously channeling gas toward its own industrial needs.
A screenshot from the Reporting from Ukraine – RFU News YouTube video, 11 August.
It is an important tool to keep the energy networks of Russia and the Central Asian countries interlinked and interdependent. With the Nord Stream pipelines now crippled by sabotage and geopolitical isolation, and the Power of Siberia pipeline to China bearing the full hope of Russia’s Asian gas strategy, the Central Asia Center pipeline became an even more vital fallback.
Striking it isn’t just symbolic but strategic, as Ukraine has targeted a highly vulnerable and deeply exposed piece of infrastructure. All Russian pipelines span vast, often remote terrain with limited protection, making them soft but critical targets. If Ukraine decides to repeat such attacks or target the Power of Siberia pipeline as well, the ramifications for Russia could be immense.
A screenshot from the Reporting from Ukraine – RFU News YouTube video, 11 August.
Constant disruption of the lines due to the easy repetition of the strikes would undermine Russia’s ability to pivot away from lost European markets, weaken its hold on Central Asian energy dependencies, and slash billions from its energy revenue. Repeated strikes could also create logistical nightmares, reduce supply reliability, and destroy investor confidence, key levers in Russia’s geopolitical influence. As a result, Moscow would be hard-pressed to maintain energy flows even for domestic needs, let alone sustain the illusion of dominance in the global energy market.
The pressure is already prompting signs of panic in the Russian government. Reports suggest Russia may be considering a limited air ceasefire by halting drone and missile strikes in hopes of reducing the tempo of Ukrainian retaliation.
The last month alone has seen several dozen successful Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian oil refineries and depots, air defense systems, railway logistics, and factories deep in Russian territory.
With drones hitting Sochi, Ryazan, Samara, and now a strategic gas pipeline, Russia’s rear is on fire, both literally and figuratively. A temporary air truce would give Moscow the breathing room it desperately needs to regroup and reinforce, but few in Ukraine are ready to fall for this trap.
Ukrainian officials and analysts understand such a ceasefire would only pause Russia’s terror campaign, giving it time to replenish stockpiles and come back later to strike even harder. It’s a tactical ploy, and Ukraine has no reason to trust it.
A screenshot from the Reporting from Ukraine – RFU News YouTube video, 11 August.
Overall, the attack on the Central Asia Center pipeline marks a turning point in Ukraine’s long-range strategy. With one strike, Kyiv has exposed a critical vulnerability in Russia’s energy empire and opened the door for further precision sabotage.
As Western sanctions grind on slowly and often without immediate impact, Ukraine is delivering its own version – swift, targeted, and devastatingly effective. Each drone strike against energy and military infrastructure does more than destroy machinery, it shatters the myth of Russian invulnerability. If Ukraine continues on this path, it may not only cripple Russia’s battlefield logistics but also bring its broader war economy to a breaking point.
In our regular frontline report, we pair up with the military blogger Reporting from Ukraine to keep you informed about what is happening on the battlefield in the Russo-Ukrainian war.
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The key to success in the CS2 skin market is turning expertise into tangible returns. With thousands of weapon skins, hidden rarity tiers, fluctuating prices and subtle Float Values that can dramatically swing value, even a casual trade can become a strategic decision. For serious traders, every detail counts.
That’s where the cs2 wiki quietly becomes one of the most important tools on the scene. It’s not just a collection of skin images or weapon names—it’s a data-rich resource that helps yo
The key to success in the CS2 skin market is turning expertise into tangible returns. With thousands of weapon skins, hidden rarity tiers, fluctuating prices and subtle Float Values that can dramatically swing value, even a casual trade can become a strategic decision. For serious traders, every detail counts.
That’s where the cs2 wiki quietly becomes one of the most important tools on the scene. It’s not just a collection of skin images or weapon names—it’s a data-rich resource that helps you understand why an item costs what it does, how rare it truly is, and when it’s the right moment to make your move. In a trading environment where milliseconds and margins matter, the wiki can mean the difference between scoring a deal and getting left behind.
5 core features that make the CS2 Wiki essential
A well-designed wiki is a multi-functional resource packed with detailed data, visuals and helpful tools. It provides everything a trader needs to fully understand a skin’s profile and value.
1. Skin database
As the foundation of the CS2 wiki, this database lists every skin available in the game, neatly organised by weapon, collection and rarity. Each entry includes high-resolution images so that users can compare finishes and patterns. It’s ideal for identifying which skins are gaining popularity and which have potential for future growth.
2. Float values
The wiki explains the Float Value range—from 0.00 (Factory New) to 1.00 (Battle-Scarred)—and shows how individual skins fall on that spectrum. This helps traders understand why two identical items can have vastly different price tags.
3. Collection info
Skins don’t exist in isolation. Each belongs to a specific case or collection, often tied to game events or operation drops. The CS2 wiki outlines where each item originates, which makes it easier to understand the rarity and how often a particular skin might still drop. Traders seeking limited-release or discontinued items use this feature to track legacy value.
4. Wear grades
Beyond just Float Value, skins are categorised by defined wear grades: Factory New, Minimal Wear, Field-Tested, Well-Worn and Battle-Scarred. These grades heavily influence how an item looks and what collectors will pay for it. The wiki breaks down the visual differences, so you can anticipate buyer expectations and price accordingly.
5. Rarity tiers
From Consumer Grade to Covert and beyond, each skin belongs to a rarity tier that impacts how often it drops and how the market perceives it. The CS2 wiki presents the tier system in a clear, accessible format. This helps traders understand what makes an item “rare” in statistical terms, not just by appeal.
How smart traders use the CS2 Wiki
The CS2 wiki gives experienced traders the edge they need to move with precision in a fast-changing market. Here’s how they put it to work:
Price tracking: By reviewing Float Values, rarity and demand data, traders can follow how a skin’s price has shifted over time. This helps them decide if they’re buying at a peak or catching a bargain.
Sniping opportunities: Cross-referencing Float Values, wear grades and collection info allows traders to spot listings priced lower than their real value, especially when sellers miss rare traits.
Market trend analysis: Staying on top of database updates and collection stats helps traders recognise patterns, from rising knife styles to skins making a comeback, before prices surge.
Used strategically, this resource becomes less of a reference and more of a market compass for every serious trader.
Integration with marketplaces
Some marketplaces now integrate live data directly into their wikis—and DMarket is a leading example. Instead of offering static descriptions, DMarket’s CS2 wiki pulls real-time marketplace information such as active listings, Float Values, current prices and item availability. This creates a seamless bridge between research and trading.
When browsing a skin on the wiki, users can instantly see whether it’s on sale, compare its Float Value to others and check how its price has changed recently. With this integration, there is no need to leave the page or search elsewhere. Traders can verify an item’s exterior and make a purchase, all within the same interface.
More than a reference—a trading power tool
The CS2 wiki functions as a strategic assistant, a marketplace companion and an educational resource, all rolled into one. In 2025’s competitive skin economy, the difference between a blind trade and a smart trade is often just one click—and that click leads to the wiki. Whether you are new to trading or already deep in the game, it is the tool that will give your next move an edge.
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We keep our reporting open and accessible to everyone because we believe in the power of free information. This is why our small, cost-effective team depends on the support of readers like you to bring deliver timely news, quality analysis, and on-the-ground reports about Russia's war against Ukraine and Ukraine's struggle to build a democratic society.
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Eight Nordic and Baltic nations just told Donald Trump exactly what they won’t accept in any Ukraine peace deal.
Their message, released four days before Trump meets Vladimir Putin in Alaska on 15 August, clearly states — don’t trade Ukrainian territory for a ceasefire.
These diplomatic developments occur against reports indicating that Putin has presented the Trump administration with a ceasefire proposal involving territorial concessions from Ukraine.
According to Leaders of the Nordic-Baltic
Eight Nordic and Baltic nations just told Donald Trump exactly what they won’t accept in any Ukraine peace deal.
Their message, released four days before Trump meets Vladimir Putin in Alaska on 15 August, clearly states — don’t trade Ukrainian territory for a ceasefire.
These diplomatic developments occur against reports indicating that Putin has presented the Trump administration with a ceasefire proposal involving territorial concessions from Ukraine.
According to Leaders of the Nordic-Baltic Eight, any diplomatic solution must protect the security interests of both Ukraine and Europe. The statement, published on the Swedish government website on 10 August, includes Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, and Sweden.
The statement emphasizes that “peace will only come through a combination of determined diplomacy, unwavering support for Ukraine, and consistent pressure on the Russian Federation to halt its unlawful war.”
The countries assert that talks can only occur within the context of a ceasefire and that Ukraine must receive “robust and credible security guarantees” to defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity. The statement reaffirms that “international borders must not be changed by force.”
“No decisions on Ukraine without Ukraine, and no decisions on Europe without Europe,” their joint statement declares.
This position aligns with President Zelenskyy’s stated readiness for peace talks conducted with full respect for Ukrainian sovereignty and right to determine its own future.
Earlier, other EU leaders, including France, Germany, Italy, Poland, and Britain also warned Trump against pressuring Ukraine into making territorial concessions and emphasized their commitment to maintaining military support for Ukraine regardless of any such pressure.
But why do these countries even care?
The Nordic-Baltic countries have provided billions in military aid to Ukraine and maintain some of Europe’s most advanced defense industries.
Their assistance includes financial aid, training and equipment for Ukrainian brigades. They also uphold sanctions against Russia and work closely with the US and other partners to maintain strong diplomatic pressure on Russia to end the conflict.
Moreover, Finland shares an 830-mile border with Russia and the Baltic states lived under Soviet occupation for five decades so they are threatened by a potential future Russian attack.
Can Trump ignore these appeals?
Technically, yes. Practically, much harder. Any sustainable peace deal needs European buy-in for reconstruction funding, security guarantees, and long-term deterrence.
The Nordic-Baltic countries are betting Trump understands this. Their statement commits to continued military aid and sanctions against Russia while offering to help diplomatically—if their conditions are met.
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Azerbaijan condemned Russian attacks on Azerbaijan’s energy infrastructure in Ukraine and ordered $2 million in humanitarian assistance to Kyiv.
Since 2022, Azerbaijan has backed Ukraine’s territorial integrity, refusing any peace deals that would force Ukraine to give up land. Baku has sent over $40 million in humanitarian aid to Ukraine, including transformers and generators to repair Russian-damaged power grids, while gradually distancing itself from Moscow. The relationship with Russia has s
Azerbaijan condemned Russian attacks on Azerbaijan’s energy infrastructure in Ukraine and ordered $2 million in humanitarian assistance to Kyiv.
Since 2022, Azerbaijan has backed Ukraine’s territorial integrity, refusing any peace deals that would force Ukraine to give up land. Baku has sent over $40 million in humanitarian aid to Ukraine, including transformers and generators to repair Russian-damaged power grids, while gradually distancing itself from Moscow. The relationship with Russia has soured further after incidents like Russian air defense downing an Azerbaijani passenger plane near Aktau, Kazakhstan in December 2025. Russia denies responsibility for this incident that resulted in 38 deaths.
The announcement follows a phone conversation on 10 August between Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, during which the Ukrainian president reported on Russian strikes against energy facilities.
The next day, Aliyev signed a decree directing Azerbaijan’s Energy Ministry to spend $2 million from the presidential reserve fund on electrical equipment manufactured in Azerbaijan. The decree cited “principles of humanism” but the timing sent a different message.
According to the presidential administration, Ukraine considers these attacks “a deliberate attempt by Russia to block pathways that guarantee energy independence for Ukraine and other European countries.”
Aliyev’s office stated that he specifically condemned Russian airstrikes on an oil depot belonging to Azerbaijani state company SOCAR and a gas compressor station that transports Azerbaijani gas to Ukraine. Russian forces struck the compressor station on the night of 6 August and the SOCAR oil depot on the night of 8 August.
The timing of these attacks is significant as Ukraine had recently begun receiving gas from Azerbaijan via the Trans-Balkan corridor for the first time. Despite the strikes, Aliyev emphasized that the attacks “will in no way lead to a suspension of energy cooperation between Azerbaijan and Ukraine.”
Why does this matter to Azerbaijan? The country spent years building energy partnerships with Europe to reduce dependence on Russian transit routes. Russia’s missiles effectively targeted Azerbaijan’s strategic pivot away from Moscow.
The condemnation may signal a broader shift in Azerbaijan’s support for Ukraine. Azerbaijani Telegram channels close to President Aliyev’s circle report that authorities may lift restrictions on transferring weapons from Azerbaijani stockpiles to Kyiv if Russian strikes on Azerbaijan-related energy facilities continue.
Russian military bloggers are already reporting that Baku has started producing 122mm and 155mm artillery shells for Ukraine.
The energy infrastructure attacks occur against a backdrop of deteriorating relations between Moscow and Baku.
On 27 June, representatives of the Azerbaijani diaspora were detained in Russia’s Yekaterinburg, with two people dying. In response, Baku detained and arrested approximately two dozen Russian citizens, including journalists from the pro-Kremlin agency “Sputnik Azerbaijan,” whose license was revoked in February. Some detainees face charges of drug smuggling and cyber fraud.
Aliyev also previously advised Ukraine to “not accept” Russian occupation of its territories. Now he’s putting resources behind those words.
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Will NATO abandon Ukraine if Trump and Putin shake hands in Alaska on 15 August?
Not happening, says NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte.
“NATO has not abandoned its commitment to provide Ukraine with everything necessary so that it remains in the fight,” Rutte told CBS News.
The weapons deliveries continue regardless of whatever emerges from the Trump-Putin summit, Rutte claims.
But why meet Putin at all? Trump’s calculation is simple: test whether the Russian leader actually wants
Will NATO abandon Ukraine if Trump and Putin shake hands in Alaska on 15 August?
Not happening, says NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte.
“NATO has not abandoned its commitment to provide Ukraine with everything necessary so that it remains in the fight,” Rutte told CBS News.
The weapons deliveries continue regardless of whatever emerges from the Trump-Putin summit, Rutte claims.
But why meet Putin at all? Trump’s calculation is simple: test whether the Russian leader actually wants peace talks or just more stalling time.
“It’s really crucial that a meeting takes place,” Rutte explained. “President Trump is making sure that Putin is serious.”
The stakes couldn’t be clearer. If Putin proves he’s genuinely interested in negotiations, talks expand to include Ukraine and European allies. If not? “Then it will stop there,” Rutte said.
Ukraine gets left out—for now
Here’s the immediate controversy: Ukraine won’t have a seat at Friday’s table. Putin specifically requested the bilateral format, and Trump agreed to “start off with Russia” before potentially bringing in Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy later.
Does this worry NATO? Rutte brushes off the concern. Ukraine “will have to be—and will be—involved” when discussions turn to territory, security guarantees, and actual peace frameworks. The Friday meeting isn’t meant to decide Ukraine’s fate. It’s meant to figure out if serious negotiations are even possible.
Europe pays, America arms Ukraine
Meanwhile, the military support machine keeps churning. Trump’s Priority Ukraine Requirements List system—where European allies buy American weapons for Ukraine—has unlocked hundreds of millions in new commitments. The Netherlands ponied up 500 million euros. Denmark, Norway, and Sweden jointly matched that figure.
Why this matters: European allies are essentially funding American defense contractors to arm Ukraine. It’s politically genius for Trump—he can claim Europeans are paying while keeping American weapons factories humming.
Rutte credits Trump with “opening the floodgates” on weapons deliveries and breaking diplomatic deadlock through direct Putin engagement. Not exactly the criticism many expected from NATO leadership.
The territorial deadlock persists
Can any deal actually work? Here’s where things get complicated fast.
Trump has floated a controversial territorial swap proposal—Ukraine gives up some occupied land to Russia while potentially regaining other territory. The idea aims to break the current stalemate through mutual concessions.
Zelenskyy’s response? Absolutely not. The Ukrainian president firmly rejected any land concessions, stating that Ukrainians will not cede territory to occupiers. Ukraine’s constitution declares its territory “indivisible and inviolable”—making any swap legally problematic even if Zelenskyy wanted to consider it.
The proposal sparked outrage across Ukraine, with many viewing territorial concessions as outright betrayal. Yet polling reveals growing war fatigue: some Ukrainians show slight increased tolerance for territorial compromises following military setbacks in 2023.
Rutte threads this needle carefully. Russian occupation can never be legally recognized, he insists. But negotiations might address “how to deal with the factual situation that the Russians are holding, at this moment, Ukrainian territory.”
European allies echo this tension—supporting Ukraine’s sovereignty while recognizing that frozen conflicts might be the only path to stopping active warfare.
What Trump-Putin meeting actually tests
The 15 August Alaska meeting won’t solve anything definitively. Zelenskyy hasn’t confirmed whether he’ll attend any subsequent talks, adding another layer of uncertainty.
Instead, Friday probes a fundamental question: Does Putin want to end this war or just reset it on better terms?
If Putin arrives ready for genuine concessions, talks could expand quickly. If he’s fishing for sanctions relief while planning more offensives, Trump will likely walk away and let the weapons deliveries speak for themselves.
Either way, NATO’s position is locked: Ukraine gets armed until this ends, regardless of what happens between the world’s two most unpredictable leaders in an Alaskan conference room.
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On the night of 11 August, drones reportedly struck the Arzamas Instrument-Making Plant in Russia’s Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, over 1000 km away from Ukraine’s border.
The targeted plant manufactures equipment for aviation and aerospace industries, producing gyroscopic instruments, control systems, onboard computers, steering mechanisms, and testing equipment. The facility also produces flow measurement devices and medical equipment.
Ukraine conducts drone attacks against Russia to systematic
On the night of 11 August, drones reportedly struck the Arzamas Instrument-Making Plant in Russia’s Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, over 1000 km away from Ukraine’s border.
The targeted plant manufactures equipment for aviation and aerospace industries, producing gyroscopic instruments, control systems, onboard computers, steering mechanisms, and testing equipment. The facility also produces flow measurement devices and medical equipment.
Ukraine conducts drone attacks against Russia to systematically degrade Russian military capabilities and disrupt the war effort through targeted strikes on strategic infrastructure. The primary targets include military airbases, military-industrial facilities producing weapons and components, oil refineries and energy infrastructure that fuel Russian operations, and radar stations critical to air defense systems.
The regional governor Gleb Nikitin described the strike as aimed at “industrial facilities” and said the casualties occurred among plant workers. He reported that the attack killed one worker and injured two others.
Drones attacked Russia overnight, striking a sanctioned defense plant in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast, over 1000 km away from Ukraine's border.
The attack targeted the Arzamas Instrument-Making Plant that produces critical military equipment for Russia's war machine.
According to Russian news Telegram channels Astra and Mash, local residents reported hearing explosions throughout the city, with social media posts including video footage of the moments during the attack on the facility.
Ukrainian Telegram channels claimed responsibility for the strike on the Arzamas plant.
[UPDATE] Ukraine’s Security Service confirmed responsibility for the drone strike, with an informed SBU source telling Ukrainian news agency Hromadske that the attack specifically targeted the plant’s production of components for X-32 and X-101 cruise missiles.
“Russian defense industry enterprises that work for the war against Ukraine are absolutely legitimate military targets,” the SBU source stated, adding that the service continues efforts to demilitarize facilities that produce weapons used to attack Ukrainian cities.
Astra also established that the targeted facility positions itself as “one of the leading enterprises of the country’s defense-industrial complex.” Astra’s investigation revealed that 20% of the plant is owned by the Almaz-Antey Air Defense Concern and that the facility operates under US and European Union sanctions. The channel also noted that the plant received the national “Golden Idea” award in 2020 for military-technical cooperation, and that as recently as Sunday, the facility had acquired new equipment.
Meanwhile, the Russian Ministry of Defense reported that air defense systems intercepted 32 Ukrainiandrones overnight, according to their official statement, though this figure could not be independently verified.
Just a day before, Ukrainian military intelligence (HUR) conducted a historic drone strike on the Lukoil-Ukhta oil refinery in Russia’s Komi Republic, approximately 2,000 km from the Ukrainian border.
The attack targeted and damaged a petroleum tank causing a spill, as well as a gas and gas condensate processing plant producing propane, butane, and gasoline. This refinery supplies fuel and lubricants to Russian forces, making it a strategic target in Ukraine’s efforts to degrade Russia’s war capabilities.
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Today, there are interesting updates from the Russian alliance. Here, India, a key member of the Russian BRICS alliance, surrendered to the threat of devastating US sanctions and is about to cut economic ties with Russia. The danger of a heavy economic hit had an immediate effect, putting another nail in the coffin of what was advertised by the Russians to be an alliance that would dominate world politics and economics.
Trump slaps 25% tariff, warns of 100% hike
India has dramatically
Today, there are interesting updates from the Russian alliance. Here, India, a key member of the Russian BRICS alliance, surrendered to the threat of devastating US sanctions and is about to cut economic ties with Russia. The danger of a heavy economic hit had an immediate effect, putting another nail in the coffin of what was advertised by the Russians to be an alliance that would dominate world politics and economics.
Trump slaps 25% tariff, warns of 100% hike
India has dramatically folded under US economic pressure, triggered by the US imposing a 25% tariff on Indian goods over New Delhi’s continued purchase of Russian oil and military equipment. US President Donald Trump also threatened with additional penalties over this continued practice by India and mentioned that the tariffs could rise to 100% if necessary.
India, a key BRICS member, bowed to US sanctions and will cut economic ties with Russia. Photo: Screenshot from the video
US trade leverage hits India’s strategic plans
The US’s announcement severely impacted India’s strategic planning, given that the United States remains India’s largest trade partner, accounting for roughly 18% of its exports, with bilateral trade totaling $186 billion in 2024 and 2025. With a $41 billion trade surplus and significant service-sector revenues at stake, India’s margins risked severe erosion if the proposed tariffs materialized.
Become one of our 700+ patrons!The US is India’s top trade partner, buying 18% of exports worth $186B in 2024–25. Photo: Screenshot from the video
Indian refineries stop buying Russian oil overnight
Facing the clear and immediate danger of substantial economic harm, Indian state refineries swiftly ceased all purchases of Russian crude oil. Prior to Trump’s ultimatum, India imported roughly 87.4 million tons of Russian oil annually, forming about 35% of its total crude imports, worth approximately $50.2 billion. This sudden reversal is a strategic blow to Russia, as Indian refiners—especially state-run enterprises controlling more than 60% of India’s 5.2 million barrels-per-day refining capacity—were major buyers of Russian oil.
India switches to Middle East and West African oil
Indian companies like Indian Oil and Bharat Petroleum have shifted to immediate delivery markets, rapidly replacing Russian crude primarily with Middle Eastern varieties from Abu Dhabi and West Africa at an impressively quick rate. India’s abrupt reversal significantly undermines Russia’s economic position; following Europe’s embargo on Russian energy, India emerged as Russia’s single largest oil importer, acquiring around 1.8 million barrels per day at its peak. Bilateral trade between India and Russia had surged to over $65 billion in 2024, mostly fueled by oil and fertilizer sales.
Indian Oil and Bharat Petroleum quickly replaced Russian crude with shipments from Abu Dhabi and West Africa. Photo: Screenshot from the video
BRICS vision falters as US economic power prevails
Now, with India withdrawing from major Russian oil deals, Moscow faces an imminent crisis as they must rapidly seek alternative markets. Otherwise, Russia would have to deal with selling now large unsold stockpiles through steep discounts, creating an even more severe budget deficit, already expected to reach over $100 billion by the end of the year, and further undermine its already strained wartime economy.
India’s move came hours after Medvedev mocked Trump’s tariff threats. Photo: Screenshot from the video
Ironically, India’s announcement arrived just hours after a bold statement by former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, who publicly mocked Trump’s threats, confidently dismissing concerns over US tariffs. Trump had earlier mocked Russia and India as “dead economies”, declaring indifference toward their economic fates and directly warning Medvedev against further provocations. The swift Indian capitulation underlines a broader geopolitical implication: despite Moscow’s ambitious claims about the rise of a BRICS-led order, the reality remains starkly different.
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