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Ukraine liberates Udachne village near Pokrovsk

udanche liberated

Ukrainian forces have successfully cleared Russian troops from the village of Udachne in Donetsk Oblast and raised the Ukrainian flag over the settlement, the General Staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces announced on 2 September.

The village sits approximately 10 kilometers west of Pokrovsk, a strategic town that has emerged as one of the most contested areas along Ukraine’s eastern front line.

“Defense forces ‘cleared’ the village of Udachne on the Pokrovsk direction and installed the Ukrainian flag,” the General Staff reported on Facebook.

Military officials confirmed that all Russian strongpoints in the area were destroyed during the operation.

“Over two weeks, assault groups gradually cleared house by house and raised the Ukrainian flag over the village,” according to a video statement released by the armed forces.

The liberation of Udachne comes amid intense fighting across the Pokrovsk direction, where Ukrainian forces repelled 46 assault attempts near the settlements of Volodymyrivka, Zapovidne, Novoekonomichne, Myrolyubivka, Lysivka, Zvirove, Kotlyne, Udachne, and Dachne, the General Staff reported in its morning briefing on Facebook.

The village belongs to the Udachne territorial community, which has been under severe pressure from Russian forces. As of 11 June 2024, fighting was already underway in Udachne, Novoserhiivka, and Novomykolaivka, according to Valeriy Duhelny, head of the Udachne village military administration, as reported by Suspilne Donbas.

Duhelny had told Suspilne Donbas on 8 June that combat operations and the “gray zone” had reached the borders of Udachne and Novoserhiivka, though none of the seven settlements in the community were officially occupied at that time. He described the eastern part of Udachne as completely destroyed, with no intact buildings remaining after Russian shelling.

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About 2000 North Korean soldiers reportedly killed in war against Ukraine

north korean forces soon fight inside ukraine says seoul troops russia's kursk oblast 2024 telegram/tsaplienko video korea joongang daily kims boys rushka south korea’s intelligence service has revealed preparing send

Around 2,000 North Korean servicemen sent to Russia to participate in combat operations in Ukraine have been killed, South Korean lawmakers said citing intelligence data, Yonhap news agency reported.

South Korea’s National Intelligence Service also indicated that Pyongyang plans to additionally send approximately 6,000 soldiers to Russia as part of a third batch of troops to assist Moscow in its war against Ukraine. The intelligence suggests that about 1,000 combat engineers have already arrived in Russia.

According to intelligence data, existing troops are deployed “in the rear as reserve forces,” Yonhap reported.

Since October last year, North Korea has sent approximately 13,000 military personnel to support Russia’s military operations. North Korea itself reported that during the first and second stages of troop deployment to Russia, it lost about 350 soldiers.

The latest casualty figures represent a significant increase from previous estimates. In late April 2025, a South Korean lawmaker, citing intelligence data, said that around 600 North Koreans had been killed in Russia’s war against Ukraine, particularly while participating in military operations in Russia’s Kursk region.

In June, North Korean state media showed footage of the country’s leader Kim Jong Un mourning his soldiers who reportedly died during Russia’s war against Ukraine. In August, Kim Jong Un awarded soldiers and commanders of his army who participated in battles in the Kursk Oblast on the side of Russian forces and met with families of the deceased.

The intelligence assessment suggests North Korea’s military involvement in the war continues to expand despite mounting casualties among its forces.

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Russian drones kill one in Kyiv Oblast strike as Ukraine shoots down 120 of 150 attack UAVs

Russian forces struck Bila Tserkva in the Kyiv Oblast during the night of 2 September, killing one person and causing significant damage to industrial facilities, according to Kyiv Regional Military Administration head Mykola Kalashnyk and Ukraine’s State Emergency Service.

The attack damaged warehouses and a three-story building at an enterprise, sparking fires at the facility. A garage cooperative also caught fire during the bombardment.

“During the firefighting operation, rescuers discovered the body of a deceased man,” the State Emergency Service reported. At another location, emergency responders extinguished fires in three buildings.

Russian forces also targeted Sumy the same night. Regional military administration head Oleh Hryhorov reported that the attack caused a large-scale fire in the city.

“The Russian forces hit non-residential buildings in the Zarichny district of the city,” Hryhorov said. No casualties were reported from the Sumy attack. Authorities are still determining the full extent of the damage.

The nighttime assault was part of a broader attack involving 150 Shahed-type strike drones and various decoy drones launched against Ukraine, according to the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

Russian forces launched the unmanned aircraft from Kursk, Bryansk, Millerovo, Primorsko-Akhtarsk, and Cape Chauda in temporarily occupied Crimea.

Ukraine’s air defenses neutralized 120 targets during the attack. Aviation, anti-aircraft missile forces, electronic warfare units, unmanned systems, and mobile fire groups participated in repelling the air assault.

Military officials recorded impacts from 30 strike drones at nine locations, with debris from destroyed targets falling at five additional locations across northern, southern, eastern and central regions of the country.

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Ukraine’s builders boom while factories bust in tale of two economies

Underground school protects agains Russian missile strikes

Construction sites multiply across Ukraine while factory floors stay empty. The National Bank’s August business survey reveals an economy moving at fundamentally different speeds—a division that signals resilience and vulnerability for the country’s long-term prospects.

Strategic implications emerge immediately

This sectoral divide marks Ukraine’s transition from an export economy to a reconstruction economy—a fundamental shift that may outlast the war.

The data prove that Western allies’ reconstruction aid works exactly as intended: it stimulates domestic activity and maintains consumer confidence. But it also exposes the limits—private industrial investment won’t return until security dramatically improves.

The split offers a roadmap for global businesses watching Ukraine.

Local-serving sectors like construction, retail, and consumer services can function and grow during wartime. Export-oriented manufacturing and complex services remain too vulnerable to sustained attack.

The winners: builders and traders

Construction companies hit their fourth month of optimism in August, with their business confidence index reaching 54.0—the only major sector firmly in positive territory.

Builders expect more orders, expanded workforces, and steady material supplies as reconstruction accelerates.

The optimism reflects a geographic shift: Western regions like Lviv and Ivano-Frankivsk lead activity as internal migration and safety drive housing demand, while companies struggle with acute labor shortages—over 150,000 missing workers force wage increases of 23%.

The confidence shows up in import data: machinery imports surged 50% in July, feeding construction demand for everything from cranes to concrete mixers.

Trading firms, such as retailers, food distributors, and consumer goods companies, joined the optimism at 51.8, buoyed by consumer spending and fresh harvest supplies.

These companies have stayed positive for six consecutive months, suggesting Ukrainian purchasing power remains intact. At the same time, the National Bank reports that trading companies express concerns about inventory levels, suggesting supply chain pressures beneath the surface optimism.

The strugglers: factories and services

While construction enjoys predictable six-month order backlogs, manufacturers face an entirely different reality. Manufacturing confidence barely moved to 48.7—still below neutral—as companies grapple with destroyed facilities and an export market collapse.

Grain exports plunged 45.4%, while metals exports fell 5.1% as production centers face ongoing Russian attacks.

Services firms scored worst at 47.0, hammered by expensive logistics, electricity price hikes, and chronic staff shortages. Most expect to cut jobs rather than expand.

The economic gamble

Ukraine essentially bets its future on reconstruction while its industrial base hemorrhages capacity. Construction sites signal resilience, but can’t replace the export earnings that once powered the economy.

This strategy also creates a dangerous dependency: Ukraine builds more while producing less for world markets.

Whether this proves sustainable depends on donor fatigue, military progress creating safe export corridors, and whether industrial companies can survive long enough to benefit from eventual peace.

For now, the cranes keep rising while factory chimneys stay cold. Ukraine’s economic survival depends on which trend proves more durable.

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Russo-Ukrainian war, day 1286: Ukraine investigates Russian assassination plot against longtime anti-Kremlin politician

Exclusives

Ukraine investigates Russian link to assassination of politician who opposed Kremlin for 30 years. Ukrainian police detained a 52-year-old man suspected of assassinating the longtime anti-Kremlin politician who was involved in organizing Ukraine’s biggest pro-democracy revolutions and called for Russia’s “complete destruction” during the full-scale invasion.
A Russian drone boat hunted down Ukraine’s lucky intelligence ship. Russia has explosive drone boats, too—now Ukrainian ships and planes are no longer safe from surface attack.

Latest News

Mon Sep 01 2025

HUR: Russia amassed 260 foreign machines for tank production since 2007 war planning. Intelligence documents expose how European CNC technology powers Russian tank production, creating leverage points for coordinated sanctions enforcement.

Ukraine exposes Russian death lists of prominent figures after parliament speaker’s assassination in Lviv. The 52-year-old Euromaidan leader survived grenade attacks and multiple murder attempts since 2014 before the 2025 Russian operation.

Ukraine destroys irreplaceable Soviet radio telescope in Crimea, opening path to more operations. Ukrainian Navy officials revealed the strikes specifically target layered defenses protecting both the strategic bridge and Novorossiysk naval base where Russian missile carriers operate.

US pressures Europe to sanction India while importing Russian uranium and palladium

. he 50% tariff escalation followed India’s rejection of Trump’s request for Nobel Peace Prize nomination, according to sources, pushing New Delhi toward stronger ties with China.

Ukraine blows up another rail substation in southern Russia powering rail traffic to occupied Crimea. Kropotkin’s transformer station was targeted in Kyiv’s latest round of a campaign to disrupt Russian military supply chains.

Ukrainian foreign minister warns West against appeasing Russia as Kyiv marks WWII anniversary. Avoiding difficult decisions and favoring weakness over strength allowed evil to grow stronger in 1939, he said.

Poland’s defense chief warns against “getting used to Russia’s war” at WWII anniversary. He also called Russia an “empire of evil.”

Business mood lifts as $17.8B in aid props up Ukraine’s economy. Ukrainian businesses are less pessimistic about prospects, while the economy survives increasingly on foreign aid.

Ukraine’s Kyivstar lists on NASDAQ, world’s second-largest exchange in New York, during war

. The historic achievement follows government reforms that cut telecom permit times from two years to 25 days, spurring broader international investment.

Russian tanks rolled toward Pokrovsk. Then HIMARS and drones turned the whole convoy into wreckage (video). The 79th Air Assault Brigade exposed and destroyed the rare Russian column movement.

Kremlin deploys nuclear threats and war nostalgia to spook Western capitals into silence. Russian officials evoke Hiroshima and WWII to warn France and Germany against supporting Kyiv.

Ukraine seeks to tame war risk with state-backed insurance scheme. Ukraine is preparing a nationwide war-risk insurance program to finally open the door for private capital.

Man crashes car through Russian consulate gates in Sydney, police officer injured. A 39-year-old man injured a police constable and crashed his SUV through the Russian consulate gates in Sydney the morning of 1 Sept. Australian authorities arrested a man

German parliamentary chiefs arrive to Kyiv for first bipartisan Ukraine mission. Two key figures from Germany’s ruling coalition landed in Kyiv on 1 Sept., marking the first time parliamentary leaders from both the CDU/CSU and SPD have visited Ukraine together since Russia’s invasion began.

Read our previous daily report here.

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HUR: Russia amassed 260 foreign machines for tank production since 2007 war planning

The new Russian porcupine tank.

Russia has been preparing for war with Ukraine since 2007. Since then, Russia’s largest tank manufacturer, Uralvagonzavod, has been accumulating hundreds of units of foreign high-tech machinery to support Moscow’s aggression against Ukraine, Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence or HUR reports. 

Foreign equipment strengthens Russia’s military-industrial complex

HUR has published new data in the “Tools of War” section of the War&Sanctions portal on over 260 machine tools, CNC processing centers, and other foreign-made equipment operating within the Russian military-industrial complex.

This portal documents entities and companies helping Russia wage the war against Ukraine. 

According to Kyrylo Budanov, Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence chief, most of these purchases occurred during the rearmament of Russia’s defense industry ahead of the all-out war.

Sanctions and service restrictions – an effective limiting mechanism

This equipment requires regular maintenance, repairs, and software updates. Manufacturers can restrict the supply of spare parts, technical fluids, and CNC software, directly impacting the operation of Russia’s military machinery.

Production expansion during wartime

In 2024, Uralvagonzavod launched a new tank engine production line equipped with advanced CNC machinery from leading European manufacturers. While deliveries via third countries continue, they have become slower, more complicated, and more expensive due to sanctions.

Effectively limiting Russian aggression requires coordinated diplomatic efforts, investigation of violations, and blocking of circumvention schemes.

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