Russo-Ukrainian war, day 1293: Ukraine’s Bayraktars return to Crimean skies
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Ukraine could get a lot more French Mirage 2000 fighters. More ex-French Mirage 2000s means more critical aerial jamming capability for the outnumbered Ukrainian air force. |
Military
. With S-400 surface-to-air missile systems blinded and boats exposed, drone strikes have returned to the skies over Crimea.
Intelligence and technology
Moscow boasts of domestic drone production—but without China’s parts, Shaheds would never fly. Russia’s long-range drone program is propped up by Beijing, which provides critical components for assembly plants in Tatarstan and beyond.
This sleepy British town will soon make and test Ukrainian military drones built for war with Russia. Ukrspecsystems is moving in with plans to manufacture its unmanned aerial vehicles in the UK and train drone pilots.
International
Even as West tries to choke Russian oil exports with sanctions, new ships are quietly ensuring steady sales. With disguised routes, offshore registrations, and lax insurance, Moscow dodges global restrictions to maintain military spending.
. Viktor Orbán said that future security negotiations will formally divide Ukrainian territory between Russian control, a demilitarized buffer zone, and Western influence.
Latvia forces 841 Russians to leave by October—language test was their pass to stay. Thousands of Russian speakers now must prove residency or depart, with authorities already reporting voluntary and forced exits.
Slovak deputy compares Ukraine to Hamas, justifying Russian aggression as “provoked”. His debate opponent immediately questioned whether the deputy believed “Ukrainians broke [first] into Russia and killed a thousand civilians” as happened on 7 October.
Kremlin says it will continue killing Ukrainians despite sanctions, while Kyiv calls for real security. From Crimea to Kyiv, sanctions pile up, yet Russia’s military potential remains intact, keeping the conflict grinding forward in attrition.
Russia-China trade crashes as Moscow’s frustration with Beijing grows. August decline crowns nine months of deteriorating partnership that once sustained Putin’s war economy.
Trump plans to speak with Putin within days amid escalating attacks on Ukraine. The latest strike killed 2-month-old baby. The US president stated he is “not thrilled” with Russia’s massive attacks on Ukraine but maintains confidence in settling the conflict.
Humanitarian and social impact
Russia plans to tap Europe’s largest nuclear plant to power its secret military object. Documents show step-by-step reconstruction of power lines connecting the plant to a military facility hidden beneath Mariupol’s ruined metallurgical complex.
Rescuers recover third body from Kyiv apartment rubble as Russian strike killed mom and her infant son. Meanwhile, the 24-year-old woman underwent emergency surgery to save her infant following severe burns from debris that destroyed her apartment building.
Energy, not harvest: why Ukraine’s bread may soon cost a quarter more. Bakeries struggle with soaring electricity costs as Russia targets the power grid.
Russian drones target Ukraine’s energy sites to leave civilians without heat and light. The strike on 8 September also resulted in fires at industrial facilities and residential buildings in Kyiv and Dnipropetrovsk oblasts.
Read our earlier daily review here.