Ukrainian drone manufacturer Ukrspecsystems is expanding operations into the United Kingdom, launching a new military drone production factory and training site. The company, which produces eight types of drones for military and civilian use, said production at the UK site will start in 2026.
The company’s expansion into the UK marks a rare instance of a Ukrainian defense firm investing abroad, as Russia’s full-scale invasion continues to drive innovation in drone warfare. Both Ukraine and Russia have deployed drones on a massive scale since 2022, using them for surveillance, targeting, and combat missions.
Norwich Evening News reports that the company will build an 11,000 m² factory in Mildenhall, a small town in eastern England, part of the Suffolk county, along with a testing and training center in Elmsett about 70 km away, creating hundreds of jobs and apprenticeships. The total investment will reach £200 million (approximately $250 million) over the next three years.
According to Ukrspecsystems, the drones will not only be built and tested in Britain, but operators will also be trained in tactics rooted in Ukraine’s battlefield experience.
“Ukrspecsystems is proud to be the first Ukrainian company to commit to a funded plan to invest in infrastructure, jobs and skills in the UK,” said Rory Chamberlain, the UK managing director for Ukrspecsystems. “Our factory at Mildenhall and flight test and training facility at Elmsett are testament to this commitment.”
Targeting laid-off workers from the UK’s collapsing auto industry
The plant’s opening comes as 550 workers at the Lotus sports car plant in Hethel, also in eastern England, face redundancy. Ukrspecsystems has expressed interest in hiring from this experienced engineering pool, and local authorities have welcomed the opportunity to redirect skilled workers into defense technology roles.
The support package includes help with job placement, financial and mental health support, and small business assistance. Job seekers will be connected with engineering vacancies, including those at the new drone plant, and offered free retraining courses. Pop-up outreach vehicles will be deployed to the Lotus site and a space reserved at the Hethel Engineering Centre.
Ukrspecsystems drones are not only of interest to the UK. In April 2025, a Shark reconnaissance drone produced by the company was spotted during testing in the Czech Republic, suggesting broader European cooperation and growing demand for Ukrainian-developed battlefield technologies.
Managing personal and business finances can be a daunting task for many small business owners. It’s easy to become overwhelmed by the different systems in place, and often, cash flow becomes a major concern. However, adopting smart payment solutions can ease this burden. In today’s fast-paced world, banking systems have evolved to offer more efficient methods for managing finances. With these solutions, entrepreneurs can simplify their financial processes, reduce stress, and focus more on growing their ventures.
Here’s how you can streamline your finances:
The importance of streamlining your financial operations
For small business owners, streamlining financial operations is not just a luxury but a necessity. From managing client payments to handling employee wages, keeping track of everything can quickly become overwhelming. When financial processes are disorganized, delays and mistakes become inevitable. The right payment solutions can help alleviate this by automating many aspects of the process. This automation reduces human error, saves valuable time, and ensures that both personal and business finances stay on track. By simplifying accounting, reconciling accounts, and managing payments, owners can shift their focus to other critical areas of business growth.
How early paycheck solutions can benefit small business owners
Accessing funds quickly is a major factor in maintaining smooth operations. With certain banking solutions, small business owners and employees can receive their pay earlier than the traditional payday cycle. This flexibility can be particularly useful during times of fluctuating income. Some banks and online platforms offer services that allow employees to access a portion of their paycheck ahead of the official payday, helping them meet urgent personal or business-related expenses without delay.
is an important consideration for business owners and employees looking to take advantage of this service. Some banks allow for early access to wages, creating a more predictable schedule for both employees and employers. By streamlining payment cycles in this way, businesses can enhance their overall cash management, alleviate financial stress, and operate more efficiently.
For example, services that offer earlier paycheck options can benefit businesses when managing salaries and ensuring timely payment. These solutions give employees access to their wages before the official payday, helping reduce financial pressure and improve satisfaction. More information on how early paycheck systems work can be found through modern banking services, providing clarity on their impact on personal and business financial organization.
Choosing the right payment processing system for your business
Selecting the right payment processing system is crucial for smooth business operations. Depending on the nature of your business, you may need different types of payment solutions. Some systems are designed for in-store purchases, while others are tailored for online transactions. The key is to pick a solution that aligns with your business needs and growth potential. When choosing, small business owners should evaluate transaction fees, ease of use, and integration with existing accounting software. Also, the system should offer scalability as the business expands.
An effective payment processor should be easy for both you and your customers to use, with clear reports and support for different payment methods, such as credit cards, debit cards, and mobile payments. A system that allows for seamless payments will improve both customer experience and your internal efficiency.
Integrating your personal and business finances
Many business owners struggle with keeping personal and business finances separate, but the right payment tools can make this easier. By using separate accounts and streamlining payments through dedicated business services, it becomes easier to track both aspects of your finances without confusion. There are apps and tools available that allow business owners to easily monitor both their business and personal expenses on one platform.
When personal and business finances are properly integrated, it reduces the chance of costly errors and makes tax season simpler. For example, using an accounting app that syncs with your business’s payment processor can automatically categorize and track transactions, making it easier to separate personal spending from business-related expenses.
Streamlining payroll and employee payments
Payroll is often one of the most time-consuming tasks for small business owners. However, there are now smarter solutions that allow owners to pay their employees quickly and accurately, without having to manually process checks each time. Payroll services that integrate with other financial systems make it easier to calculate wages, taxes, and benefits. These systems reduce administrative errors, improve accuracy, and ensure timely payments.
Some services even allow for direct deposit, so employees are paid faster, reducing the delay between paycheck cycles. This can help improve employee satisfaction and retention. Moreover, it simplifies the entire payroll process, giving you more time to focus on other important aspects of running a business.
How payment solutions can improve cash flow management
Efficient payment solutions play a vital role in managing cash flow for small businesses. By using modern tools to automate invoicing, payments, and reminders, business owners can ensure that their income is consistent and timely. Automated payment systems help businesses track invoices, set up recurring payments, and even send automated reminders to customers about upcoming payments, reducing the risk of missed payments.
This streamlined approach to managing payments means you can better predict when money will come in, allowing you to allocate funds for business needs more efficiently. With improved cash flow management, small business owners can reinvest in the business, plan for growth, and reduce the stress that comes with financial uncertainty.
Integrating smart payment solutions into your business operations is more than just a convenience. It’s a strategy that can streamline financial processes, reduce stress, and promote growth. By adopting early paycheck systems, offering diverse payment options, and embracing mobile and secure payment solutions, small business owners can take control of their finances, enhance customer satisfaction, and improve cash flow management.
The world of payment technology continues to evolve, offering new opportunities for businesses to innovate and stay ahead of the competition. By staying informed about trends and leveraging the best tools available, you can ensure that your business remains financially agile, efficient, and prepared for the future. Take action now to simplify your payment processes and watch your business thrive.
Russia continues to amass large numbers of strike drones for coordinated attacks on Ukraine, with recent assaults involving hundreds of unmanned aerial vehicles at once, Ukrainian defense news portal Defense Express reports.
Such large-scale attacks strain Ukraine’s air defenses. Even though many drones are intercepted, those that get through still inflict damage and cause civilian casualties.
Over the night of 6-7 September, Ukraine faced the largest drone attack of the full-scale war. Russian forces launched 810 Shahed attack drones, alongside multiple decoy and imitation UAVs. The assault also included nine Iskander-K cruise missiles and four Iskander-M/KN-23 ballistic missiles.
Ukraine’s defenses intercepted 747 drones and four cruise missiles. Despite this, nine missiles and 54 strike drones hit 33 locations across the country, with debris recorded at eight additional sites.
This strike follows a string of large-scale attacks. On 2-3 September, Russian forces launched 502 drones; on 29-30 August, 537; and on 27-28 August, 598.
In July and August, raids consistently involved over 500 drones, a sharp increase from previous periods when Russia typically deployed a few hundred.
Earlier in August and July, the aerial assaults consistently involved over 500 drones, a significant increase from prior periods when Russia typically launched no more than a few hundred.
Defense Express notes it is unclear whether these waves reflect higher production or a deliberate tactic to overwhelm Ukraine’s air defenses with concentrated “salvo” attacks. The mix of Shaheds versus decoy and imitation drones also remains unknown.
According to Ukrainian military intelligence, Russia’s defense industry currently produces roughly 2,700 Shahed drones per month, allowing Moscow to sustain repeated large-scale strikes.
Russia has brought in nearly 280,000 contract servicemen since the start of 2025, with around 35,000 new recruits joining each month, Ukraine’s military intelligence (HUR) said in an interview published 7 August.
Russia’s ability to steadily recruit tens of thousands of soldiers each month is central to its war effort. Ukraine’s military intelligence says this manpower allows Moscow to offset heavy battlefield losses and sustain operations.
With a far larger population, Russia relies heavily on sheer numbers to pressure and wear down Ukraine’s much smaller armed forces.
Vadym Skibitskyi, deputy head of HUR, told Ukrinform that the Kremlin continues to meet its targets through financial incentives and propaganda.
“Unfortunately, they have the resources, backed by money and propaganda,” he said. New recruits are offered payments of up to 2 million rubles ($21,000) when signing their first contract.
“There are clear signs they will fully meet their recruitment plan by the end of the year,” Skibitskyi added.
Ukrainian military news site Militarnyi reports that during the night of Russia’s largest drone attack on Ukraine, a Russian drone crossed into Poland and vanished. Polish forces tracked the incursion, but again failed to stop it.
Russian drones and missiles target Ukrainian civilians and infrastructure every day. Last night’s assault was the largest so far, with Russia launching 605 Shahed-type explosive drones and decoy UAVs, along with 13 missiles. The strikes killed at least six people, including a baby, and wounded more than 70 civilians.
During such attacks, Russian explosive drones occasionally leave Ukrainian airspace and cross into neighboring countries. So far, only Belarus—Moscow’s ally—has made any attempt to shoot them down. In every other documented case, including incidents in Moldova, Romania, Poland, and Lithuania, none have been intercepted.
Drone flew into Poland during massive Russian strike on Ukraine
Militarnyi says that overnight on 6–7 September, Russia launched its most extensive combined drone and missile attack on Ukrainian territory. During that assault, at around 01:13, one of the Russian drones crossed into Polish airspace from northwestern Ukraine’s Volyn Oblast. The drone continued flying on a course toward the city of Zamość in Poland’s Lublin Voivodeship.
According to Militarnyi, which cited analysis from Ukrainian monitoring groups and official statements from Poland’s Operational Command of the Armed Forces, the drone was detected inside Polish territory. It remained there for at least thirty minutes before disappearing from tracking channels. There was no confirmation about where it crashed or whether it continued flying.
Polish aircraft scrambled, radar systems on alert
At around 01:41, several monitoring channels reported activity from Polish fighter jets in the same area where the drone had been observed.
By 02:06, the Operational Command of the Polish Armed Forces posted a statement on X confirming that Polish and allied aircraft were operating in national airspace.
The statement added that air defense and radar reconnaissance systems were at “the highest level of readiness.” It stressed the “preventive” nature of the actions and claimed the goal was to secure Polish airspace and protect citizens, especially near the border.
Later that night, the Polish military reiterated that it was “monitoring the current situation” and that its forces remained ready to respond immediately.
Despite this, no reports followed about any interception attempt or neutralization of the drone.
Drone vanishes after extended flight inside NATO airspace
By around 05:00, Polish and allied aircraft completed their operations over Poland. The military said the actions ended due to the cessation of Russian airstrikes on Ukraine. No additional updates about the drone’s location or status were released. The last known reports placed it several dozen kilometers inside Polish airspace, where it had remained for over half an hour.
Polish authorities did not report any recovery of debris. There were no indications that the drone was shot down or forced to land. The incident ended without confirmation of what happened to the drone after it disappeared from radars.
Not the first time a Russian drone entered Poland
This is not the first time a Russian drone violated Polish airspace and continued flying for an extended time. In late August, a Russian Shahed drone flewover Poland for approximately two and a half hours before crashing. Militarnyi reported that the straight-line distance from the entry point to the crash site in the village of Osiny was around 200 km.
At the beginning of September, another drone incident occurred. A Gerbera decoy drone fell in a field near the village of Majdan Sielce in Lublin Voivodeship, about 50 km from the Ukrainian border. Polish officials denied that it had “any military characteristics,” whatever it means.
Repeated incidents show that Russian drones continue to penetrate into Polish territory without being stopped.
Ukraine’s government headquarters in central Kyiv was struck overnight by Russian missiles and drones, Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said Thursday. The building, used daily by government staff, sustained structural damage, but no one inside was harmed.
Svyrydenko called the attack an example of “Russian barbarism” and urged the international community to turn outrage into concrete support for Ukraine.
“The walls will be repaired, they are only bricks, but the lives of our people can’t be restored,” Svyrydenko said on X.
As of 5:00 p.m. on 7 August, four people have been reported killed in Kyiv following the strikes.
For the first time since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022, the roof and upper floors of the government building were damaged. Firefighters worked through the night to put out the flames.
Svyrydenko emphasized that only a united international response, including increased air defense systems and sanctions pressure on Moscow, can protect Ukrainian communities and help bring an end to Russian aggression.
Overnight on 6-7 August, Russia carried out one of the largest aerial assaults on Ukraine since the full-scale invasion, deploying over 800 drones – a record number – alongside cruise missiles.
The attacks struck multiple cities, including Kyiv, Kryvyi Rih, Dnipro, Kremenchuk, and Odesa.
French endurance cyclist Sofiane Sehili made it 17,600 kilometers (10,936 miles) across Eurasia on his bicycle. Then Russian border guards stopped him 400 kilometers (248 miles) short of his destination.
Sehili sits in detention in Vladivostok, Russia, after attempting to break the world record for cycling from Lisbon to the Russian Far East city. Russian authorities arrested the 44-year-old on charges of illegal border crossing, according to Le Monde and L’Equipe.
Sehili departed Lisbon on 1 July and cycled through Tajikistan, Mongolia, and China before reaching the border crossing that ended his attempt.
The problems began at the Chinese-Russian frontier on 2 September. Sehili posted on Instagram that customs officials had blocked his entry. He tried twice at border crossings 200 kilometers (124 miles) apart.
“I am the main attraction, the only foreigner,” Sehili described in an Instagram video while waiting at the border. “The police inspect my bike, look at me and say nothing to me. I don’t know if I’ll be able to cross the border.”
French endurance cyclist Sofiane Sehili. Photo: @sofianeshl/Instagram
Border authorities ultimately denied him entry to Russia. After traveling nearly 200 kilometers between crossing attempts, Sehili received final confirmation he could not continue.
“Failing so close to the goal is heartbreaking,” he wrote on Instagram. The cyclist now faces a decision about whether to attempt the record again, giving himself ten months to decide if the route “will remain a failure forever.”
Sehili left his documentarian career in 2012 to pursue endurance cycling. He has since won 11 major competitions from approximately 20 attempts, including the 4500-kilometer (2800 miles) Tour Divide from Canada to Mexico in 2022.
The French consulate is working to assist the detained cyclist, according to Le Monde. Officials have not disclosed the status of diplomatic efforts to secure his release.
The Ukrainian air force lost important aerial jamming capacity when one of its precious few ex-French Dassault Mirage 2000 fighters crashed on 22 July. Fortunately for the air force, France is likely to at least double the number of supersonic, delta-wing Mirage 2000s it’s giving to Ukraine.
“France will announce that it is giving 20 Mirages instead of 10,” former Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba toldLe Monde recently. At least one observer believes France will eventually give Ukraine more than two dozen of the 1980s-vintage, but heavily upgraded, jets.
The first of the single-seat Mirage 2000s arrived in Ukraine in February.
The French air force still flies two squadrons worth of Mirage 2000s—around 26 airframes. But newer Dassault Rafales are gradually replacing the Mirage 2000s, freeing up surplus jets for onward transfer to Ukraine.
The extra planes Kuleba mentioned would soften the blow from the July crash. “An aircraft equipment failure occurred” during an evening training flight, the air force reported at the time. The pilot ejected—and a search team quickly fetched him. “There were no casualties on the ground,” according to the air force.
It was yet another in a series of incidents that have depleted Ukraine’s inventory of newer Western-made warplanes. The service has also lost four of its ex-European Lockheed Martin F-16s since the fighters began flying combat sorties back in August. Three pilots have died.
More Mirage 2000s and F-16s are coming, but we don’t yet know exactly how many—or how fast. France may donate a couple of dozen Mirage 2000s. Meanwhile, Belgium, Denmark, the Netherlands, and Norway have pledged at least 87 flyable F-16s. It’s possible that around 50 of the F-16s are already in Ukraine or in Romania, where NATO instructors train Ukrainian pilots.
Ukrainian F-16s. Ukrainian air force photo.
Jets without jammers
Between its surviving ex-Soviet Sukhoi Su-24s, Su-25s and Su-27s, Mikoyan MiG-29s and the Mirage 2000s and F-16s, the Ukrainian air force probably still operates 125 or so fighters—roughly as many as it had before Russia widened its war on Ukraine in February 2022.
In all, the Ukrainians have written off nearly 100 jets. To sustain its Soviet-era fleet, the Ukrainian air force has taken delivery of surplus MiG-29s from Slovakia, Poland, and Azerbaijan and excess Su-25s from Croatia. Ukrainian technicians have also restored many grounded airframes and returned them to front-line service.
With the help of their allies, the Ukrainians have upgraded the ex-Soviet jets to carry new precision munitions, including cruise missiles and glide bombs. But the Western jets are even better equipped, especially when it comes to defensive systems.
The Americans have equipped the Ukrainian F-16s with underbelly AN/ALQ-131 electronic countermeasures pods. The AN/ALQ-131 is a new and critical capability for the Ukrainian air force, which entered the wider war in 2022 without an aerial jamming capability. That exposed Ukrainian jets to Russian missile fire—and resulted in heavy losses in the early months of the wider war.
In addition to the AN/ALQ-131s, the F-16s have the option of carrying the Pylon Integrated Dispensing System and the Electronic Combat Integrated Pylon Systems: PIDS and ECIPS.
PIDS ejects metal chaff and hot-burning flares to spoof incoming radar and infrared-guided anti-aircraft missiles. ECIPS houses passive defenses to complement the active chaff and flares, including the AN/ALQ-162 jammer for defeating radars on the ground and an AN/AAR-60 missile warning system for triggering the defenses.
The AN/ALQ-131 in particular can “give you a pocket of air superiority for a moment’s time to achieve an objective that has strategic importance and impact,” a US official explained.
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The Mirage 2000s are similarly equipped with a combination of Serval radar warning receivers, Sabre jammers, and Eclair chaff and flare dispensers. This electronic countermeasures suite was on the cutting edge of aerial warfare in the 1980s, but began to fall behind a generation later.
Recognizing this and appreciating the gravity of the Russian missile threat over Ukraine, the French defense ministry promised to install new electronic countermeasures in the Mirage 2000s before transferring them to Ukraine. It’s likely the ministry was referring to the mostly analogue Integrated Countermeasures Suite Mark 2 or the fully digital Integrated Countermeasures Suite Mark 3.
The Ukrainian air force has been taking full advantage of the F-16s and Mirage 2000s’ ability to fill Russian radar screens with electronic noise. The F-16s “act as ‘flying air defense’ with advanced missile warning tech,” the pro-Ukraine Conflict Intelligence Team analysis group noted.
The arrival of the first F-16s back in August, and the first Mirage 2000s six months later, allowed the air force to organize complex strike packages mixing ex-Soviet and ex-European jets combining different offensive and defensive capabilities.
“Sometimes when we arrive, there are already F-16s waiting there, or sometimes Mirages,” a Ukrainian fighter pilot said in an official video from March. The F-16s and Mirage 2000s “either cover the whole package that is sent there to [strike] our enemies, or also strike [themselves],” the pilot said.
All that is to say, every F-16 or Mirage 2000 Ukraine loses costs it more than a single airframe. Without the critical jamming capability the ex-Western jets provide, Ukraine’s complex strike packages could unravel.
It’s fortunate, then, that France is poised to hand over more Mirage 2000s.
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Russia is shifting elite forces and equipment to multiple sectors of Donetsk Oblast, with Ukrainian military sources warning of a likely new offensive. The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) reported that Russian activity is intensifying near Pokrovsk, Dobropillia, Kramatorsk, and Siversk.
This comes as Russia continues its all-out war against Ukraine, focusing on capturing the rest of eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast.
Russian troops mass near Pokrovsk amid infiltration tactics
ISW reported that Lieutenant Colonel Oleksiy Belskyi of Ukraine’s Dnipro Group of Forces saidRussian troops are concentrating in Donetsk Oblast, with the heaviest fighting in the Pokrovsk direction. He said Russia is now bringing in drones and heavy armored vehicles after failing to seize Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad this summer.
The Ukrainian 7th Army Corps reported that Russian naval infantry units were redeployed to Pokrovsk. The Corps reported Russian use of small infiltration teams aiming to get close to Ukrainian drone and artillery positions, overextend defenses, and expand into contested “gray” zones. It also said Russian forces stepped up attacks on Pokrovsk’s flanks using armored and motorized vehicles to disrupt supply lines and attempt encirclement.
The 7th Army Corps said Russia remains focused on taking the fortress belt of Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, Druzhkivka, and Kostyantynivka.
Ukraine expects escalation across Donetsk front
A senior Ukrainian NCO near Siversk noted that Moscow is rotating troops and that Ukraine expects new Russian offensives soon. A deputy battalion commander in the Kramatorsk area said Russia is increasing its force concentration there and has brought in naval infantry.
On 5 September, a Ukrainian servicemember said that five to six unspecified naval infantry brigades, a tank regiment, an infantry regiment, and two motorized rifle brigades were sent to the Dobropillia direction. The same source reported that elements of the 70th Motorized Rifle Division of the 18th Combined Arms Army, Southern Military District, were moved to Chasiv Yar.
Russia redeploys elite units from multiple regions
ISW cited a Russian milblogger reportedly tied to the Northern Grouping of Forces who claimed on 6 September that elements of Russia’s 76th VDV Division, including the 237th Regiment, were redeployed from Sumy Oblast to an unspecified location.
ISW observed that units from Kursk Oblast — including the 155th Naval Infantry Brigade (Pacific Fleet) — were sent to Dobropillya. It also reported that elements of the 40th Naval Infantry Brigade (Pacific Fleet), 177th Naval Infantry Regiment (Caspian Flotilla), and 11th Separate VDV Brigade were redeployed to unspecified areas in Donetsk Oblast.
Elements of the 70th Motorized Rifle Division were also reported transferred from Kherson Oblast to Donetsk’s Bakhmut, possibly to reinforce Russian efforts near Kostiantynivka or Siversk.
ISW assessed that the increased Russian presence near Dobropillya suggests continued focus on offensive operations northeast of Pokrovsk.
In the early hours of 7 September 2025, Ukrainian forces launched a coordinated series of deep strikes on Russian territory, targeting two of the most strategically important fuel infrastructure sites — the Ilsky oil refinery in Krasnodar Krai and the 8-N pipeline pumping station near the village of Naitopovichi in Bryansk Oblast.
The attacks are part of a sustained effort to degrade Russia’s ability to supply its frontline forces and profit from oil exports. The Russian oil refineries have been among the priority targets through August.
Strategic Druzhba pipeline hub hit for second time
According to the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, a precision drone strike targeted the 8-N linear production dispatching station (LPDS) near Naitopovichi village located in Unecha District, Bryansk Oblast. The site is linked to Russia’s Druzhba — a pipeline network used to export oil.
The Naitopovichi-based station is part of the “Steel Horse” mainline pipeline complex, with a pumping capacity of 10.5 million tons per year.
The Ukrainian military described the facility as having “strategic importance for the transportation of oil products for the Russian occupation army.” They reported multiple direct hits, followed by fires in the area of the pumping station and tank park.
Commander of the Armed Forces’ Drone Systems, Robert Brovdi (“Madyar”), also confirmed the strike, noting that the 8-N facility plays a key role in transferring petroleum products from Belarus’s Mozyr and Novopolotsk refineries into Russia.
Brovdi shared aerial footage showing a fire at the facility, and emphasized that the strike was part of a broader campaign against Russian oil infrastructure and hinted at more operations to come: “To be continued…”
This marks the second confirmed Ukrainian strike on the 8-N station. On 29 August, Ukrainian forces had already attacked the same facility. As Russian news Telegram channel Astra reported at the time, the previous strike had resulted in the total destruction of the station’s pump house — a critical component without which oil cannot be transported.
Previous strikes on Russian oil pumping stations temporarily disrupted Russian pipeline oil exports, but the damaged facilities later resumed operations.
Ilsky oil refinery set ablaze — again
On the same night, Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces struck the Ilsky oil refinery in Seversky District, Krasnodar Krai, the General Staff confirmed. Ilsky is located around 30 kilometers from Krasnodar.
The refinery is one of the largest private oil-processing enterprises in southern Russia, processing 6.42 million tons of oil annually. It supplies not only the domestic Russian market but also exports fuel — including to the Russian armed forces.
Astra cited the Krasnodar regional operational headquarters, reporting that “drone debris fell on the territory of the Ilsky refinery” — the standard Russian official wording for all successful Ukrainian attacks. The strike caused one of the refinery’s technological installations to catch fire, according to the report. Officials claimed that the fire, which allegedly covered only several square meters, was quickly extinguished and that there were no casualties. Emergency response and special services were deployed, and refinery personnel were evacuated to shelters.
Footage of the fire at the refinerygrounds, published online by Ukrainian Telegram channel Exilenova+, showed visible flames in the industrial area definitely more than “several square meters” in size.
This was not the first time Ukrainian drones targeted the Ilsky refinery. Earlier strikes took place in February and July this year, as well as in 2023 and 2024. Previous operations have triggered significant fires, including a major one in February. According to Militarnyi and Suspilne, the July attack was reportedly conducted by Ukraine’s military intelligence (HUR).
Ukrainian forces also strike Russian troop sites in Kursk Oblast
In addition to the fuel infrastructure strikes, Ukrainian forces confirmed hits on Russian military personnel sites and logistics warehouses in Kursk Oblast. The General Staff reported “successful hits” on locations housing Russian troops and storing matériel.
The Ukrainian military said these attacks are part of a larger strategy “to reduce the offensive potential of the Russian occupiers and complicate the delivery of fuel and ammunition to the enemy’s military units.”
Russia claims 69 drones shot down
In response to the overnight strikes, the Russian Ministry of Defense claimed that its air defenses had intercepted and destroyed 69 Ukrainian drones over various regions, including 21 over Krasnodar Krai, 13 over Voronezh Oblast, and others in Astrakhan, Belgorod, Volgograd, and Kursk oblasts, as well as Crimea.
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In the early hours of 7 September, Russia launched one of its largest aerial assaults on Ukraine, using over 800 drones and several missiles to strike more than a dozen locations. Despite a major interception effort by Ukrainian air defense, dozens of Russia’s explosive drones and missiles reached their targets, killing civilians, injuring scores, and damaging infrastructure across multiple oblasts.
Amid the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine, Moscow conducts daily drone and missile strikes targeting Ukrainian civilians. These attacks have been escalating since January, when US President Donald Trump took office and began pressuring Kyiv to enter direct negotiations with Moscow — a move fundamentally detached from the reality of Russia’s ongoing military aggression.
Kyiv: fires and civilian deaths
Kyiv was among the hardest-hit cities last night and this morning. Two people were confirmed killed, including an infant whose body was pulled from rubble, and more than 20 others were injured.
One woman died while sheltering in a basement in Darnytskyi District. The Kyiv Military Administration reported significant fire damage in the Pecherskyi District after a government building was hit by drone debris. The Cabinet of Ministers building caught fire after a strike.
In Sviatoshynskyi District, two nine-story apartment buildings ignited, and the top floor of a sixteen-story residential building was also engulfed in flames.
Kyiv Mayor Vitalii Klitschko said that in Sviatoshynskyi District, a fire broke out in a nine-story residential building as a result of the Russian attack, causing partial destruction between the fourth and eighth floors.
“Unfortunately, two people were killed at this location — a woman and her two-month-old child. It is likely that more people remain trapped under the rubble. Over 20 others were injured,” Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko added.
Later that morning, Klitschko saidauthorities were still searching for the body of a third suspected victim under the ruins.
The city recorded more than 10 damaged sites. Over 400 emergency workers and nearly 100 vehicles, including helicopters, were deployed to respond, according to Klymenko.
Odesa: residential and civil infrastructure hit
In Odesa and the Odesa district, drone strikes caused multiple fires in residential buildings and critical infrastructure.
According to the Odesa Oblast Military Administration, three people were injured: a 73-year-old woman and a 27-year-old woman were hospitalized, and a 36-year-old man received treatment on site.
Top of residential high-rise in Odesa visibly damaged following Russian drone strike on 7 September 2025. Image: Suspilne Odesa
The Russian attack damaged a nine-story building, with fires on the upper floors. Firefighters also responded to blazes in warehouse facilities and vehicles. The local Palace of Sports sustained damage.
The air raid alert began at 22:34 on 6 September, with explosions reported starting at 04:08. The all-clear was given at 05:33.
On 6 September, Russian drones struck Zaporizhzhia, heavily damaging a kindergarten, where 80% of the building was destroyed. The Russian attack injured a total of 17 civilians,according to local authorities. Sixteen apartment buildings and twelve one-family houses suffered damage.
Fires erupted in residential areas, a critical infrastructure site was reportedly struck, and explosions damaged roofs, balconies, and windows.
One person was rescued from under debris. The regional prosecutor reported Russia’s use of Shahed-type drones, and a criminal investigation was launched.
Severely damaged building in Zaporizhzhia after Russian strike on 6 September 2025. Image: Zaporizhzhia State Emergency Service
By today, emergency operations had shifted from rescue to recovery.
Zaporizhzhia’s Novopavlivka: Russian air strike killed married couple
On 7 September, a Russian airstrike targeted Novopavlivka in Zaporizhzhia Oblast. Two people — a married couple — were killed. The woman died immediately; her husband’s body was later pulled from the rubble by rescue workers. Several homes were destroyed, according to local authorities.
Kryvyi Rih: missiles hit homes and infrastructure
At least two waves of Russian missiles targeted Kryvyi Rih in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast during the Russian attack overnight on 7 September. The strikes injured three men, one of whom is in serious condition.
The city’s defense council head, Oleksandr Vilkul, said missiles struck transportation infrastructure, industrial sites, private homes, and high-rise buildings. Fires were reported at multiple sites. Public transit was partially disrupted.
A second missile strike later in the morning caused further damage and triggered a fire. Emergency response teams and civil infrastructure repair crews were deployed.
In Poltava Oblast, Russia strikes hit infrastructure in Kremenchuk and Poltava districts. A detached home, a business, and the Dnipro bridge in Kremenchuk were damaged. Though the authorities reported no casualties, the bridge was closed to traffic. Poltava district authorities confirmed a municipal building was also hit.
Mayor Vitalii Maletskyi said the bridge is managed by Ukrzaliznytsia railway company, and structural assessments are underway. Due to damage, Ukrzaliznytsia altered a few train routes, and passengers are transported to Kremenchuk by bus. Two local electric trains were canceled for 7 September.
Sumy Oblast: woman killed in tent camp, child among injured
In the evening of 6 September, a Russian drone struck a tent camp near the town of Putyvl in Sumy Oblast. The attack killed a 51-year-old woman by shrapnel before medical help arrived. Eight others were injured, including an 8-year-old boy and both his parents. According to Putyvl mayor Kostiantyn Havrylchuk, most of the injuries were minor. The Sumy Oblast Prosecutor’s Office reported the attack occurred around 21:40.
In a separate incident in the Krasnopilska community, a 57-year-old man was hospitalized after a Russian drone struck his vehicle.
Kharkiv, Donetsk, and Kherson oblasts: ongoing civilian toll
Russian shelling and air attacks continued across Kharkiv Oblast, where one civilian was killed and six were injured in 14 separate locations over the past 24 hours, according to oblast head Oleh Syniehubov.
In Donetsk Oblast, Russian forces killed two people — in Drobysheve and Hryshyne — and injured nine more, as reported by oblast head Vadym Filashkin.
In Kherson Oblast, two civilians were reported injured over the previous 24 hours, according to local authorities. Later in the morning of 7 September, Russian artillery struck Kherson’s Central District, injuring a 73-year-old woman with shrapnel wounds and a blast injury, the oblast administration added.
Nationwide defense and aftermath
According to the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, Russia launched 805 Shahed drones, nine Iskander-K cruise missiles, and four ballistic missiles overnight. Ukraine’s air defense downed or suppressed 751 aerial targets, including 747 drones and four cruise missiles. Nevertheless, 56 drones and nine missiles struck 37 locations. Debris from downed drones caused secondary fires and destruction in at least eight other locations.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy condemned the Russian attack, calling it a “conscious crime” and urging the international community to implement previously promised sanctions and accelerate the delivery of air defense systems.
“These killings, at a time when real diplomacy could already be underway, are deliberate,” he said.
He confirmed that in Kyiv alone, two people had been killed and dozens injured, including a child, and emphasized that political will was all that was needed to stop further bloodshed.
“We also expect full implementation of all agreements aimed at strengthening our air defense. Every additional system saves civilians from these vile attacks,” Zelenskyy added.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced that 26 countries have agreed to participate in security guarantees for Ukraine, providing protection across land, air, sea, and cyberspace, along with military funding. He did not specify the countries involved.
The security guarantees stem from the Coalition of the Willing, a multinational alliance led primarily by the United Kingdom and France. French President Emmanuel Macron announced following a recent summit that 26 countries have formally committed to deploy troops as a “reassurance force” in Ukraine or maintain presence on ground, sea, or air in case of ceasefire.
Speaking in his evening address, Zelenskyy outlined what the guarantees actually mean: “substantive things on land, in the sky, at sea, also in cyberspace, also this is funding for our army.”
The Ukrainian president emphasized that the foundation remains “a sufficiently strong Ukrainian army to guarantee our independence and Ukraine’s sovereignty.” He emphasized that this includes weapons for the army and long-term financing, noting that many components have been agreed upon with partners as a foundation.
Zelenskyy highlighted ongoing work to expand the PURL program, through which Ukraine purchases American weapons. More than $2 billion has already flowed through this channel, with plans to increase funding further. The priority list includes greater sky protection against Russian drones and missiles—reflecting Ukraine’s daily reality of aerial bombardment.
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Civilian woman thrown from her house by blast wave in Russian attack on southern Ukraine
US won’t send troops to Ukraine
Regarding US participation, Trump has ruled out American ground troops but offered alternative support. “We’re willing to help them with things, especially — probably you could talk about by air, because there’s nobody that has the kind of stuff we have,” Trump told Fox News.
The US role would focus on logistics, air support, intelligence sharing, border surveillance, and weapons provision through European partners.
Peacekeepers won’t be in combat zones
The European plan involves a two-stage approach. Initially, European troops would be stationed away from combat zones, focusing on training Ukrainian forces and providing reinforcements. The second stage would incorporate American intelligence sharing, border surveillance, weapons, and potentially air defense systems.
Russia considers peacekeepers legitimate targets
Russian President Vladimir Putin has responded with direct threats to the peacekeeping proposals. Putin declared that if any troops appear in Ukraine, “we proceed from the assumption that they will be legitimate targets for strikes.” This statement indicates that any potential mission would require significant protection from Russian attacks.
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Russia warns peacekeepers in Ukraine would trigger direct confrontation with Moscow
According to Zelenskyy, the Coalition shares the assessment that Russia is “doing everything possible to drag out the negotiation process and continue the war.”
European officials privately express skepticism about whether security guarantees will deter Putin or produce lasting peace. Many expect the peace talks to fail—exposing whether Russia genuinely wants to end the war or simply buy time to regroup.
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Vance says Russia must have a voice in security guarantees talks for Ukraine
Seven Iranian-designed Russian Shahed drones struck the Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia on 6 September evening, leaving fifteen people wounded and reducing a kindergarten to rubble.
Russian forces have maintained near-daily bombardments of Ukraine throughout August 2025, launching thousands of drones and missiles with particular intensity against frontline regions like Zaporizhzhia. The attacks routinely hit residential neighborhoods, schools, hospitals, and workplaces where ordinary Ukrainians live and work. The systematic targeting of non-military sites has led many analysts and Ukrainian officials to characterize these campaigns as deliberate terror tactics designed to break civilian morale rather than achieve military objectives.
The attack unfolded around 9 p.m. as residents heard the familiar buzz of approaching drones. Viktor watched from his second-floor window as one headed straight for his neighborhood.
“I saw the drone flying, I thought it would fly straight into the roof,” he told Suspilne Zaporizhzhia.
Resident of Zaporizhzhia, Viktor, and his damaged home. Photos: Suspilne
The blast wave threw his wife from their home. Viktor found her unconscious under the door and dragged her to safety before their children rushed her to the hospital. Windows and doors throughout his house were blown out, his barn burned down, and a massive crater now marks his garden.
“The blast wave threw her out of the house. I found her under the door and dragged her to the garage, and the children took her to the hospital,” he shared.
Ivan Fedorov, head of the Zaporizhzhia Regional Military Administration, reported that four people required hospitalization: three women and one man injured, all in moderate condition. But the kindergarten bore the worst damage—80% of the building destroyed.
The remains of a kindergarten in Zaporizhzhia after Russian drone strikes on 6 September destroyed approximately 80% of the building. Photo: SuspilneThe remains of a kindergarten in Zaporizhzhia after Russian drone strikes on 6 September destroyed approximately 80% of the building. Photo: State emergency service
Ukrainian air defenses managed to intercept some drones before they reached their targets. The ones that got through also damaged six apartment buildings, four private houses, and critical infrastructure.
The Zaporizhzhia Regional Prosecutor’s Office opened a criminal investigation, confirming the weapons as Shahed-type strike drones—the same Iranian-designed aircraft Russia has used in hundreds of attacks across Ukraine.
Earlier on 5 September, Russian forces killed a 56-year-old woman with an FPV drone in the same region. Over the past 24 hours, Russian forces launched 476 strikes across 15 settlements in Zaporizhzhia Oblast, damaging homes and farm buildings.
Emergency services are preparing repair work including window boarding and roof restoration once the air raid alert is lifted.
Aftermath of the Russian drone attack on Zaporizhzhia on 6 September that injured 15 people and damaged civilian infrastructure. Photos: Zaporizhzhia Oblast military administration
Four Ukrainian soldiers walked free this week after hiding in a hospital on Russian-controlled territory for over three years.
The rescue by naval special forces unit “Angels” marks one of the longest documented cases of military personnel surviving in enemy territory.
The operation began when Presidential Commissioner for Military Personnel Rights Olha Reshetylova learned about a Marine Corps serviceman’s twin brother. The marine had been severely wounded during 2022 fighting in eastern Ukraine and ended up in a hospital, where doctors concealed him from Russian security forces.
But he wasn’t alone. Three National Guard soldiers had also been sheltering in the same facility since 2022, according to Naval Forces Commander Oleksiy Neizhpapa.
Four Ukrainian soldiers hold National Guard and naval flags following their evacuation by special forces from a hospital on Russian-occupied territory where they had been hiding since 2022. Their faces are blurred for security reasons. Photo: screenshot from the video published by Oleksiy Neizhpapa
The multi-phase operation required careful planning due to several complicating factors.
All personnel were in illegal status on occupied territory (didn’t accept Russian documents)
active combat operations continued in the area
Russian special services had intensified filtration procedures (systematic identity checks, interrogations, and searches used to identify people with pro-Ukrainian loyalties).
Neizhpapa said the primary goal was eliminating immediate threats to the servicemen’s lives. The hospital had provided cover for three years, but the situation couldn’t continue indefinitely.
The successful mission extracted the marine, three National Guard fighters, and one hospital medical worker who had assisted in concealing the military personnel.
Neizhpapa did not provide any other specifics of how the operation was conducted to return these fighters home.
A former member of parliament from a party banned for Russian ties has been arrested and remanded in custody on charges of high treason, according to the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) and the Prosecutor General’s Office.
While the agencies did not identify the suspect by name, Hromadske news agency confirmed through law enforcement sources that the individual is Fedor Khrystenko.
According to ZN.UA, Khrystenko was not extradited but was handed over to the SBU from the United Arab Emirates through what the outlet describes as a rare occurrence made possible by intervention at the highest political level.
ZN.UA reports that Defense Minister Rustem Umerov worked on Khrystenko’s return on orders from President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, with SBU Deputy Chief and Counterintelligence Department Head Oleksandr Poklad traveling to retrieve him, after which Khrystenko “voluntarily” decided to return to Ukraine.
The Prosecutor General’s Office released this image with the face blurred, as they did not officially identify the individual charged with high treason. Multiple Ukrainian media outlets, citing law enforcement sources, have identified the suspect as former Ukrainian politician Fedor Khrystenko. Photo: Prosecutor General’s Office of Ukraine
Suspect began working for Russian before full-scale invasion
Khrystenko was a member of the “Opposition Platform — For Life” party, which Ukraine banned in 2022 for its pro-Russian stance and alleged ties to Moscow.
The party was formed by politicians associated with Yanukovych, who fled to Russia after the 2014 Euromaidan protests that toppled his government following his decision to abandon European integration in favor of closer ties with Moscow.
According to the investigation, Russian intelligence service FSB recruited Khrystenko well before Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The SBU alleges he “actively carried out tasks for the Russian intelligence service” during this period.
The charges stem from what investigators describe as an extensive network of connections to Russian operatives and Ukrainian collaborators. The SBU previously linked Khrystenko to Yuriy Ivanushchenko, known as Yura Yenakievsky, whom they identify as an FSB resident and overseer for the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic.
Investigators also describe Khrystenko as a liaison for Armen Sarkisyan, known as Armen Horlivsky, a collaborator who was assassinated in an explosion at a Moscow residential complex in early 2025.
According to the SBU, Sarkisyan was part of fugitive ex-president Viktor Yanukovych’s inner circle and founded the Russian military battalion “Arbat” after the full-scale invasion began that fought against Ukrainian troops in Donetsk Oblast and later in Russia’s Kursk.
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Russian battalion chief wanted for Euromaidan killings since 2014 assassinated in Moscow
Russian spy had ties in Ukraine’s anti-corruption agency
The case materials reveal what prosecutors call “an effective mechanism for influencing the leadership” of Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau (NABU).
Established in 2014, NABU is empowered to investigate corruption cases involving Ukraine’s highest government officials, including the president, prime minister, and cabinet ministers, making Russian influence over the agency strategically significant for Moscow’s intelligence operations.
The SBU alleges Khrystenko maintained close relationships with several NABU officials, including previously detained Ruslan Magamedrasulov and detective unit head Oleksandr Skomarov.
As evidence of Khrystenko’s NABU connections, the SBU cites a 2022 incident when Skomarov’s wife allegedly traveled abroad using a vehicle belonging to Khrystenko’s wife.
Magamedrasulov was among the NABU investigators targeted during a controversial July 2025 security operation that led to dramatic claims of Russian infiltration within Ukraine’s anti-corruption agencies. The operation resulted in parliament temporarily placing NABU under prosecutorial control before mass protests forced a reversal.
In July 2025, prosecutors filed charges against Khrystenko under two sections of Ukraine’s Criminal Code: high treason committed by a group under martial law, and abuse of influence. Following his detention, a court ordered Khrystenko held in custody until 21 October.
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“Russian spies” who justified Ukraine’s anti-corruption crackdown nowhere to be found
A ceremony to re-bury the remains of 42 people discovered during exhumation work in the former village of Puzhnyky has commenced in Ternopil Oblast, with Ukrainian and Polish officials and approximately 40 descendants of former village residents participating, reports Ukrinform correspondent from the scene.
The Ukrainian delegation includes acting Minister of Culture and Strategic Communications Tetyana Berezhna, Deputy Speaker of the Verkhovna Rada Olena Kondratiuk, Deputy Foreign Minister Oleksandr Mishchenko, and Ukrainian Institute of National Memory head Oleksandr Alfyorov.
Poland’s delegation is led by Senate Marshal Malgorzata Kidawa-Blonska and includes Culture and National Heritage Minister Marta Cenkowska, Acting Charge d’Affaires Piotr Lukasevich, and Consul General in Lutsk Anna Nowakowska.
“Today we are not talking about history, not about politics – today we are talking about humanity and that we are taking a step towards each other in an extremely complex historical topic. Ukraine ensures dignified commemoration of all war victims – regardless of nationality or the antiquity of the tragedy,” UINM head Oleksandr Alfyorov said.
The ceremony included a Roman Catholic holy mass. Memorial markers will remain unnamed for now as DNA research continues, according to Professor Andrzej Ossowski, a geneticist from the Pomeranian Medical University in Szczecin who leads the Polish scientific team.
“We should receive the first identification results by the end of this year. We have DNA profiles of all remains, we are still examining individual ones, and we also have DNA from their family members living in Poland. Given that there are close relatives among the victims, personal identification of remains requires very complex mathematical calculations,” Ossowski explained.
The geneticist noted that while they know they have remains from specific families, personal identification requires time.
“Further identification results will depend on whether we find their relatives (meaning living ones), because without them there will be no way to identify everyone. We don’t have relatives of all victims and are currently searching for their families,” he added.
The discovered remains will be re-buried at the original burial site where exhumation work was conducted – at the old cemetery in the former village of Puzhnyky.
Exhumation operations in the territory of former Puzhnyky village lasted from 23 April to 5 May 2025. The joint Ukrainian-Polish expedition worked under professional and security supervision of the Ukrainian side. DNA research on the remains was conducted in Poland.
Negotiations between Ukraine and Poland regarding the exhumation work continued from the previous year. In late November 2024, during a joint press conference by Polish and Ukrainian Foreign Ministers Radoslaw Sikorski and Andrii Sybiha, the lifting of the moratorium on searching for and exhuming remains of Polish citizens buried on Ukrainian territory was announced. The moratorium had been in effect since 2017.
In January 2025, Ukraine’s Ministry of Culture and Strategic Communications granted permission for the Puzhnyky exhumation.
Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto has once again declared that Budapest will not support Ukraine’s EU membership, emphasizing that the state is not interested in Moscow’s opinion on this matter. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiha called for dialogue.
Szijjarto outlined Hungary’s position following a meeting between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European Council President António Costa on 5 September.
The politicians’ meeting included discussions about EU accession. During a briefing, Zelenskyy said: “If even Putin does not object [to Ukraine’s EU membership], then the positions of some countries, especially Hungary, really look strange.”
According to the Hungarian diplomat, the Ukrainian president was presenting his own reasoning. “Unlike him, our position is not determined from abroad. We are not interested in what they think in Moscow about Ukraine’s EU membership,” he declared.
The minister added that Budapest is interested in what Hungarians think. Szijjarto referenced a referendum by the Hungarian government, in which the country’s citizens allegedly opposed Ukraine’s membership in the bloc due to supposed threats to farmers, the labor market, and security.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiha responded to this statement. He emphasized that Ukraine’s EU accession poses no threat to Hungary.
According to him, the Hungarian farmers mentioned by Szijjarto have never blocked the Ukrainian-Hungarian border, and this year they are actively purchasing Ukrainian corn.
EU accession also does not threaten the Hungarian labor market, since before the full-scale invasion by Russia, Hungary’s government actively invited Ukrainians to work to compensate for the shortage of skilled labor.
Furthermore, the Hungarian community of Zakarpattia also supports joining the bloc.
“Instead of quarrels on Twitter, let’s meet and have a meaningful discussion. I am confident that we can reach pragmatic solutions in good faith — for the sake of our peoples’ common interests of peace and security in a united Europe,” Sybiha emphasized.
Ukraine’s EU accession
All 27 EU member states have already given the “green light” to begin negotiations with Ukraine on joining the bloc, however, Hungary is blocking them.
Last year, Budapest presented Ukraine with a list of 11 demands to unblock the path to the European Union. All of them are aimed at strengthening protection of national minority rights in Ukraine.
The Ukrainian side traveled to Budapest with additional proposals for resolving the entire complex of issues. Ukraine and Hungary then agreed from 12 May to organize regular consultations to work on the stated demands. However, Budapest postponed such consultations due to the detention of Hungarian spies by Ukraine’s Security Service in early May.
Hungarian authorities conducted a so-called consultative referendum in their country regarding Ukraine’s EU membership, following which they announced that 95% of votes were against. Orbán himself claimed that Ukraine’s EU membership would cause “the destruction of the European Union” and war with Russia on EU territory.
Lithuania proposed starting negotiations with Ukraine and Moldova on the first chapter of EU membership without Hungary’s consent. It is proposed that after approval by 26 member states, negotiations would take place at a technical level, de facto, and later an official agreement would be reached legally when all 27 EU states approve it, if Viktor Orbán’s position or that of the entire Hungarian government changes.
Polish protesters have ended their blockade of truck traffic at the Medyka-Shehyni border crossing, according to State Border Guard Service spokesman Colonel Andriy Demchenko.
“The Polish side reported the cessation of truck traffic blockade by protesters and the resumption of truck processing at their checkpoint at 15:30,” Demchenko told Ukrainska Pravda.
The blockade began Saturday at 12:50 Kyiv time when Polish demonstrators launched an action blocking traffic before the Medyka checkpoint, opposite Ukraine’s Shehyni crossing point.
Restrictions will reportedly last at least 6 hours with possible extension.
The protest site was located approximately one kilometer from the Polish Medyka checkpoint. Movement restrictions applied only to freight vehicles – passenger cars and buses continued crossing in normal mode.
At the time of the blockade, 681 freight vehicles were registered in the electronic queue for departure from Ukraine. Around 100 trucks waiting to enter Ukraine were already stationed at a specially equipped parking area, with their processing unaffected by the protest.
Border guards promised to provide additional updates on any changes or complications to traffic flow. The blockade lasted approximately 2.5 hours before Polish authorities announced its termination.
British intelligence has analyzed Russia’s systematic propaganda campaign targeting Ukrainian youth in temporarily occupied territories, according to a September 6 analysis reported by European Truth.
“The forcible political education of Ukrainian youth by the Russian authorities in the illegally occupied territories of Ukraine continues,” the intelligence assessment states. “The Russian Ministry of Defence youth organisation Yunarmiya and the Kremlin youth organisation Movement of the Firsts are amongst those organisations teaching Ukrainian children military skills, and indoctrinating them with pro-Russian and anti-Ukrainian propaganda.”
The British intelligence noted that Russian education authorities aim at countering purported extremism, a term defined broadly by Russian authorities. “A 2022 Russian Ministry of Education manual titled ‘Preventing conflicts, manifestations of extremism and terrorism in a poly-cultural educational environment’ claimed the expression ‘Slava Ukraine’ (Glory to Ukraine) to be an indicator of extremism,” according to the analysis.
Since 2022, Russian authorities have implemented what they call “University Sessions” programme, transporting children from occupied Ukrainian regions to Russian universities for so-called patriotic education. “This aims to inculcate the children with an anti-Ukrainian outlook, as well as glorifying Russian military exploits. Since 2022, around 50,000 Ukrainian children have attended these sessions at 116 Russian universities,” the intelligence report reveals.
British intelligence recently reported that Russia conscripts young Ukrainians into the Russian army upon reaching age 18, with many having been abducted from occupied Ukrainian territories during childhood.
In related developments, the British government imposed sanctions on September 3 against individuals involved in the abduction of Ukrainian children by Russia.
Russia has reached monthly production capacity of 2,700 Shahed-type drones, according to Andriy Yusov, representative of Ukraine’s Main Intelligence Directorate, in an interview with Novyny.LIVE.
The intelligence official specified that Russia manufactures “Geran-2” drones, which are modified versions of standard Shaheds equipped with warheads. Most production takes place at the Alabuga Special Economic Zone in Yelabuga, Republic of Tatarstan, Yusov reported.
Despite this production volume, Russia cannot deploy thousands of drones daily. “They cannot physically launch such quantities toward the country every day. But we see these hundreds of Shaheds and combined missile-drone strikes they carry out – these are truly massive attacks. This is a serious challenge for our air defense and anti-missile defense forces,” Yusov said.
The intelligence representative addressed claims by military radio technology specialist Serhiy Flesh that Russian forces launch Shaheds equipped with cameras and radio control systems. According to Yusov, such modifications remain experimental.
“They can modify something, but going from such limited quantities to mass production is also a certain path. Therefore, they try different means. How much they will be able to put them into full mass production depends, among other things, on access to foreign components and many other factors,” he explained.
Previous intelligence reports indicate Russia’s broader drone ambitions. In September, Ukrainian intelligence disclosed Russia’s current stockpile of “Grom-1” hybrid missiles and annual production plans. On 21 August, LIGA.net reported that Russia plans to manufacture 4,000 turbojet drones by the end of 2025, according to intelligence sources.
Russian forces scattered leaflets disguised as 100-hryvnia banknotes ($2.42) across a Chernihiv district on the morning of 6 September, urging residents to share coordinates and assist in directing artillery fire at Ukrainian Armed Forces positions in exchange for money, according to Chernihiv region police.
“These leaflets were dropped by Russians using a drone,” police reported. The fake currency contained calls for locals to collaborate with Russian forces by providing intelligence on Ukrainian military movements and positions.
Law enforcement dispatched an investigative team to the scene immediately after discovering the propaganda materials. Police have registered the incident and are determining appropriate legal charges for the case.
The Chernihiv police issued warnings about criminal liability for collaborating with Russian forces, specifically highlighting penalties for “spreading information about the location and movement of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.” Authorities instructed residents to destroy any Russian leaflets they encounter.
The incident represents another attempt by Russian forces to recruit local informants through monetary incentives, using deceptive materials designed to resemble legitimate Ukrainian currency. Police emphasized that cooperation with occupying forces carries severe legal consequences under Ukrainian law.
US President Donald Trump clashed with Polish journalist Marek Wałkuski during a press conference, suggesting he “find a new job” after the reporter questioned why no concrete actions had been taken to end the war in Ukraine despite repeated promises, reports Polsat News.
Wałkuski asked why Trump had repeatedly said he would quickly end the war in Ukraine but had not taken measures to do so. Trump responded by citing sanctions against India, “the largest buyer [of Russian products] after China,” which he said cost Moscow “hundreds of billions of dollars.”
“Is this a lack of action? We have not yet moved to the second and third phases, but if you say there are no actions, then you should probably find a new job,” Trump said.
The journalist told The Hill he appreciated the president’s advice, but Trump’s reaction justified his career choice. “I got an answer from the US president to my question that is worthy of media attention, and that’s my job as a journalist. But I’m grateful for his advice,” Wałkuski said.
Polish Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Radosław Sikorski defended the journalist, saying his question to Trump was one “that we all ask ourselves.”
“I would not fire you from your job,” Sikorski added during a press conference in Washington.
Wałkuski is the author of four books about the White House and the United States. He previously served as president of the White House Foreign Press Group from 2024 to 2025 and has been a member of the White House press corps since 2018.
In February, Wałkuski asked a question that provoked a dispute between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, Trump, and US Vice President JD Vance. The journalist asked Trump to comment on being “too closely associated with Putin.” Trump replied that he was not associating with anyone and wanted to bring Russia and Ukraine to the negotiating table.
Vance then intervened, praising Trump’s diplomatic efforts. When the Ukrainian leader said that diplomacy with Putin was pointless, the situation escalated into an argument.
Sikorski commented on Karol Nawrocki’s visit to the White House, saying he would have an argument the next day at the Pentagon. “I will tell [Under Secretary of Defense] Colby: Listen, your president has already decided,” the foreign minister said, referring to Trump’s assurance that US troops would remain in Poland.
During Wednesday’s meeting between Nawrocki and Trump, the American leader assured that the United States would not withdraw troops from Poland and was ready to increase its presence if Poland expressed such a desire.
On 30 August, a Ukrainian politician Andriy Parubiy was shot eight times in the back while walking in Lviv in broad daylight. He died from his injuries.
The detained suspect claims he acted out of “revenge against Ukrainian authorities” after his son went missing in action near Bakhmut. But investigators haven’t ruled out Russian involvement.
Parubiy was hardly welcome in Moscow. The 52-year-old former parliament speaker had spent decades promoting Ukraine’s break from Russian dominance and participating in the key democratic revolutions that threatened Kremlin’s influence.
The scene of Andriy Parubiy’s assassination on Frankivsk district in Lviv on 30 August 2024. The former parliament speaker was shot eight times by a gunman disguised as a delivery courier in broad daylight. Photo: Ukraine’s Prosecutor’s Office
Ukraine’s parliament responded swiftly to his death. On 4 September, 296 lawmakers voted to appeal to European parliaments, condemning Parubiy’s murder as “an act of political terror by Russia.” They demanded international investigations and stronger sanctions.
Parubiy’s assassination was not the only one since Ukraine began its course on self-determination, further away from Russian control. Pro-Ukrainian activists, politicians, and officials face particular risks, especially from networks connected to Russian intelligence services that have operated in Ukraine for decades.
Six cases below reveal this deadly pattern: each victim worked toward Ukraine’s democratic future in the EU instead of accepting life as a Russian puppet state.
Reshat Ametov: First victim of Crimean occupation
Crimean Tatar activist
Reshat Ametov, a 39-year-old Crimean Tatar and father of three, became a symbol of resistance to Russian occupation back in 2014.
He worked as a welder in Simferopol and maintained active political views. On social media, he frequently criticized Russian policies in Chechnya, Tatarstan, and Bashkortostan, and strongly supported the pro-democracy Euromaidan protests in Kyiv.
Crimean Tatar activist Reshat Ametov with his children shortly before the occupation of Crimea in 2014. Photo: ua.krymr.com
The year 2014 marked a turning point in Ukraine’s modern history. Following months of the Euromaidan protests that demanded closer ties with the EU and democratic reforms, pro-Russian president Viktor Yanukovych ordered security forces to open fire on demonstrators in February, killing over 100 protesters. Faced with massive public outrage as even more people flooded the streets demanding changes, Yanukovych fled the country.
Russia exploited this chaotic political situation in Ukraine and sent troops to Crimea, while simultaneously supporting separatist movements in eastern Ukraine. This Russian intervention would eventually escalate into the full-scale war that began in 2022.
One man against the Russian oppressive machine
On 28 February 2014, Ametov announced his intention to protest Russia’s seizure of Crimean government buildings.
“Approximately on Monday I’ll go to the Council of Ministers. Standing protest. Do you also dare?” he wrote on Facebook.
Three days later, Ametov stood alone outside the seized building holding a Ukrainian flag. Surveillance cameras captured what happened next: three men in camouflage uniforms from the illegal “Crimean Self-Defense” formation forced him into a car at gunpoint. That was the last time he was seen alive.
This occurred in broad daylight as Russian forces consolidated control over the peninsula.
Ametov’s last words he wrote on Facebook “Do you dare?” were left by an unknown person on his grave. Photo: Photo: ua.krymr.com
Tortured and killed for resisting Russian occupation in Ukraine
March 16, 2014 was supposed to be Russia’s moment of triumph—the day Crimeans would vote in a sham referendum to “legitimize” the peninsula’s annexation. The official results showed overwhelming support for joining Russia, but the referendum was conducted under military presence and is regarded illegal by the majority of international community.
However, the day before the staged vote, farmers made a horrific discovery in Zemlyanichnoye village, 60 kilometers from Simferopol.
A body lay partially buried in the earth, bearing signs of torture. The victim’s head was wrapped in tape, stab wounds marked the left eye socket, and hands remained cuffed. When authorities identified the corpse, the timing became clear: this was Reshat Ametov, the lone protester who had disappeared twelve days earlier.
The message was clear: this is what happens to resisters.
Russian occupation authorities opened a criminal case in April 2014 but closed it after one year, claiming they could not identify the perpetrators. Ukrainian investigators later identified two “Crimean Self-Defense” members and a former Russian Armed Forces serviceman as suspects in 2019, while the case went to court in November 2023.
In May 2017, President Petro Poroshenko posthumously awarded Ametov the title Hero of Ukraine.
Ametov became Crimea’s first occupation victim, but not the last, according to Yevhenyi Yaroshenko of the KrimSOS organization. Human rights groups documented 59 enforced disappearances during the first decade of Russian rule. Seventeen people remain missing.
Crimean Tatar activist Reshat Ametov with his son. Photo: Crimean Tatar Resource Center
Amina Okuyeva: The Ukrainian-Chechen with two homelands, but one enemy
Studying medicine in Ukraine
Three years later and hundreds of kilometers away, another story of resistance was taking shape. Amina Okuyeva would become the woman who carried two nations’ struggles against the same Russian enemy, fighting with both medical skills and military weapons until assassins silenced her forever.
Born in Odesa, Okuyeva carried both Ukrainian and Chechen heritage. She lived in Moscow and Grozny before returning to Ukraine in 2003 due to the Chechen war.
During the Second Chechen War (started in 1999), she actively supported the resistance, but Chechen fighters convinced her to return to Ukraine and study medicine—they desperately needed trained medics as too many fighters were dying from treatable wounds.
Amina Okuyeva was a Ukrainian-Chechen doctor-turned-fighter who served as a combat medic and sniper in Ukraine’s war against Russian forces since 2014, becoming a symbol of resistance until her assassination in 2017.
After completing medical education in Odesa, she worked as a surgeon while maintaining connections to Chechen resistance movements.
In 2009, she met Adam Osmayev, a Chechen exile accused by Russia of plotting to kill Ramzan Kadyrov, Putin’s puppet in Chechnya, and Vladimir Putin himself. Though they never legally married, they became life partners united by their shared opposition to Russian oppression.
Medic-turned-sniper in fighting Russia since 2014
When Russia launched its aggression in eastern Ukraine in 2014, just months after seizing Crimea, Okuyeva saw her chance to fight the same enemy that had devastated Chechnya.
She joined the Kyiv-2 volunteer battalion as a paramedic. Despite her official medical role, she participated in combat operations in Debaltsevo and Chornukhivo and served as a sniper in her final months of military service.
Okuyeva later became spokesperson for the Chechen Dzhokhar Dudayev Battalion, comprised mainly of Chechens opposing Kadyrov’s regime.
In 2015, Ukraine awarded her the “People’s Hero of Ukraine” order for defending the country.
Amina Okuyeva at the Euromaidan protests in 2014. Photo from her social media
Okuyeva frequently criticized Kadyrov as a “national traitor” and Russian collaborator. His family had switched from fighting Russia in the First Chechen War to serving as Moscow’s puppet rulers after 1999.
Chechen exiles widely despise him for his brutal suppression of independence movements and human rights abuses.
“Kadyrovites are national traitors. There is no worse form of betrayal than national betrayal and collaboration with occupiers,” Okuyeva stated.
For Moscow, Chechens fighting alongside Ukrainian forces represented a double threat: not only were they effective fighters, but their presence contradicted Russian propaganda about protecting ethnic minorities from Ukrainian “fascists.”
Okuyeva’s vocal criticism of Kadyrov while serving in Ukrainian ranks made her elimination a priority for both Russian intelligence and Chechen loyalists.
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Honouring and remembering the fallen female Heroes of Ukraine
Previous assassination attempts
Russian bloggers called her a “Chechen terrorist.” Kadyrov supporters sent death messages through social media. On 1 June 2017, a fake French journalist shot her husband Adam Osmayev during a staged interview. The assassin, Arthur Denisultanov-Kurmakaev, was captured, but the couple knew more attempts would follow.
Amina Okuyeva and Adam Osmayev, the Chechen couple who fought together against Russian forces in Ukraine until assassins killed Okuyeva in a 2017 ambush near Kyiv.
Okuyeva killed in car near Kyiv
Four months later, driving near Kyiv on 30 October, automatic gunfire erupted from roadside bushes. Her partner Osmayev hit the accelerator.
“The shooting came from the right side,” he recalled. “It lasted literally a few seconds until I got out of the shooting zone. But in those few seconds, unfortunately, she was hit.”
Okuyeva died instantly from head wounds. She was 34. Osmayev survived with a leg injury.
Amina Okuyeva was a Ukrainian-Chechen doctor-turned-fighter who served as a combat medic and sniper in Ukraine’s war against Russian forces since 2014, becoming a symbol of resistance until her assassination in 2017.
In January 2020, authorities arrested Igor Redkin, a 56-year-old from Dagestan, after his DNA was found on an abandoned Czech automatic rifle near the crime scene. Investigators identified seven members of the criminal group responsible for Okuyeva’s murder and connected them to other contract killings.
The prosecution alleged the assassination was ordered from Chechnya as revenge against Osmayev’s anti-Kadyrov activities.
Mamikhan Umarov, a Chechen political emigrant who had warned Ukrainian intelligence about the assassination contract, was himself killed near Vienna in July 2020, eliminating a key witness in the case.
Iryna Farion: Fighter for Ukrainian language
Academic and political career
As Ukraine’s resistance proved stronger than Moscow expected and Western support solidified after the full-scale invasion in 2022, assassinations on Ukrainian soil became more frequent and brazen as the next cases will demonstrate.
Iryna Farion built her career defending Ukrainian language and identity. After working as a librarian, she obtained philological education and became a professor at Lviv Polytechnic National University. In 2005, she joined the Svoboda party and was elected to parliament in 2012, where she headed a higher education subcommittee.
Iryna Farion was a Ukrainian linguistics professor and former politician who became a polarizing figure for her fierce defense of the Ukrainian language against Russian influence, ultimately assassinated in Lviv in 2024. Source: Ukrainska Pravda
Following Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea and launch of war in eastern Ukraine, questions of language and identity became increasingly urgent for many Ukrainians, especially as Moscow consistently used “protection of Russian speakers” as justification for military intervention.
Farion turned language defense into political warfare, targeting anyone who dared speak Russian in official settings.
Controversial statements about soldiers
Farion’s advocacy for Ukrainian language often generated controversy due to her uncompromising positions.
She publicly challenged officials who spoke Russian, including then-Prime Minister Mykola Azarov, asking whether his poor Ukrainian reflected political bias or mental limitations.
In 2018, she described Russian-speaking citizens as “mentally backward traitors and Ukraine’s biggest problem.”
The rhetoric intensified after Russia’s full-scale invasion began in 2022. Farion criticized Russian-speaking Ukrainian soldiers, arguing they should call themselves “Russians” rather than Ukrainians.
“Russian-speaking warriors disgrace Ukraine’s Armed Forces,” she stated, adding that fighting internal “Moscow-speaking savages” was more important than battles on the frontline.
Her November 2023 comments triggered a firestorm. She described Russian-speaking “Azov” fighters as “crazed” and suggested Ukrainian soldiers speaking Russian had no right to be considered Ukrainian.
Security services (SBU) opened criminal investigations against her. Students demanded her dismissal from Lviv Polytechnic. Death threats flooded her social media.
At the moment of her assassination, the SBU investigation into her inflammatory statements about Russian-speaking soldiers remained active, with prosecutors considering charges for insulting military honor and dignity.
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Ukraine remembers linguist Iryna Farion, target of Kremlin’s propaganda, assassinated in Lviv in apparent campaign against Ukrainian voices
Assassin allegedly killed her due to personal hatred
On 19 July 2024, an unknown gunman approached Farion near her Lviv apartment building and shot her in the head. She died in the hospital that evening.
For weeks, surveillance cameras had captured the same figure watching her building, studying her routines, learning her patterns.
Six days later, police tracked down her killer 300 kilometers away in Dnipro. Vyacheslav Zinchenko was just 19 years old when they arrested him. Investigators later discovered his digital footprint told a story of radicalization: he had joined neo-Nazi Telegram groups in 2022, that promoted violence and national intolerance.
The prosecution alleged that Zinchenko developed strong personal hatred for Farion due to her Ukrainian language activism.
19-year-old Vyacheslav Zinchenko, a suspect in the murder of Iryna Farion. Credit: Ukrinform
In August 2024, Zinchenko reportedly confessed to a cellmate that he killed Farion out of personal animosity, though he later claimed this confession was made under pressure. He faces life imprisonment on charges of premeditated murder motivated by national intolerance.
Some hated her, some were inspired
Despite the controversy surrounding her radical positions, Farion retained support among some Ukrainians who viewed her uncompromising stance as necessary resistance to Russian cultural influence.
Critics argued she promoted “ethnonarcissism” that prevented coexistence with different identities. But supporters countered that her provocative language was strategically necessary—dry academic discourse would never have reached millions or conveyed the urgency of her message.
The polarization became evident after her death.
Social media filled with tributes declaring “A shot at the language” and “The Ukrainian language was killed.”
Thousands came to the funeral of assassinated renown linguist Iryna Farion in Lviv. Photo: Anastasiya Smolienko/Ukrinform
After Russia’s full-scale invasion made the Russian imperial threat undeniable, many who had previously criticized her positions began seeing her as prophetic rather than extreme.
Social media tributes after her death wrote that “no one defended the Ukrainian language as selflessly and passionately as she did.”
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Son-in-law of slain Ukrainian language advocate and Russian critic Iryna Farion killed in combat
Demian Hanul: Ukrainian activist declared terrorist in Russia
Ukrainian activism in a city with large pro-Russian sentiment
Demian Hanul was a Ukrainian patriot in a city where such views made him a target. Odesa, with its historically large Russian-speaking population and pro-Russian sentiment, was hardly friendly territory for activists pushing Ukrainian identity. But Hanul didn’t back down.
Both he and his father Vadym participated in the 2013-2014 Revolution of Dignity that ousted Yanukovych, continuing a family tradition of resistance.
When Russia responded by seizing Crimea and backing separatists in eastern Ukraine, Hanul took part in the traumatic confrontations at Odesa’s Trade Unions House on 2 May 2014, where 48 people died in fires during clashes between pro-Ukrainian and pro-Russian forces. Russian media branded him a co-organizer of the tragedy and declared him a terrorist.
Demian Hanul was an anti-Russian Ukrainian activist from Odesa who campaigned to remove Soviet monuments and resist Russian influence, ultimately shot dead in 2025. Photo from his social media
His activism also focused on removing Soviet monuments in Odesa, viewing each Lenin statue and Chekist memorial as a Russian imperial foothold in Ukrainian territory.
Moscow frequently invoked protection of these Soviet monuments to justify intervention since 2014, treating shared historical experiences as evidence that Ukraine belonged within Russia’s control rather than as an independent state free to determine its own commemorative landscape.
Hanul’s consistent opposition to Russian influence and imperialism made him a marked man. His activities challenging Moscow’s historical narrative and symbols led Russia to issue an arrest warrant against him in April 2024, accusing him of damaging military memorials.
Despite having a disability (he was wearing a prosthetic eye) Hanul repeatedly tried to enlist for military service but was refused. Instead, he channeled his patriotism into volunteer work, traveling to deoccupied territories in southern Kherson and Mykolaiv oblasts to provide aid and support reconstruction efforts.
Demian Hanul next to the monument of the Russian empress Catherine II, which was dismantled in Odesa on 18 June 2024. Photo from his social media
Escalating attacks and Russian bounties for his death
Hanul faced multiple attacks before his eventual killing. In 2020, unknown persons set fire to his BMW X5 and later shot at his vehicle near Vizyrka village. His car was also damaged with bats. In May 2023, a group in military uniforms physically attacked him in Odesa, leading to criminal proceedings.
In July 2024, Hanul reported threats on his Telegram channel:
“A whole psychological attack on my family has begun. Various Russian information resources announced a reward for attacking me of $5,000-$10,000.”
He requested protection from the SBU and police, who opened a criminal case for death threats. However, they did not manage to protect him.
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Odesa activist shot dead in city center
Activist killed in broad daylight in Odesa
On 14 March 2025, a gunman shot Hanul at 10:30 a.m. in central Odesa and fled. Police detained the suspect within hours—46-year-old Serhiy Shalaev, a military serviceman and former mechanized platoon commander who had deserted from the army.
In court, Shalaev confessed to the killing. Investigators charged him with premeditated contract murder and illegal weapons possession.
Police are examining several motives: a contract killing related to Hanul’s pro-Ukrainian activism, personal animosity, or Russian involvement due to his public positions.
Ivan Voronych: Spymaster who hunted Russian commanders
His unit played key role in Kursk operation
Ivan Voronych spent decades in the shadows, building Ukraine’s most lethal capabilities against Russian targets. He worked for Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) and served in the elite Alpha Special Operations Center, running what the New York Times described as “a unit that received technical support from the CIA.”
His operations included high-profile assassinations that shattered Russian proxy morale in occupied territories.
Ivan Voronych was Ukrainian security service colonel who spent 27 years building Ukraine’s covert operations against Russian targets, including the assassinations of high-level separatist commanders, before being killed by Russia-recruited assassins in Kyiv in 2025.
In 2016, his teams eliminated Arsen Pavlov (“Motorola”), a beloved Russian commander in occupied Donetsk, and Mikhaylo Tolstikh (“Givi”), another famous separatist leader. These targeted killings demonstrated Ukraine’s ability to reach enemy commanders deep in occupied areas, earning Voronych respected status within Ukrainian intelligence.
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The brain behind Ukraine’s shadow war successes—Motorola and Kursk—gunned down in Kyiv parking lot
The colonel’s final mission involved Ukraine’s August 2024 offensive into Russia’s Kursk Oblast. His unit played a key role in the cross-border operation that seized Russian territory and held it for eight months, exposing Putin’s vulnerabilities and destroying a myth of Russian border’s inviolability.
Voronych’s high-profile successes made him a prime target for retaliation by Russian security services (FSB).
Russia wanted him dead as revenge
On 10 July 2025, Voronych left his apartment in Kyiv’s Holosiivskyi district around 8 a.m. A gunman approached in the parking lot and fired five shots from a silenced pistol. Voronych died instantly from multiple wounds. The killer fled in an SUV.
The targeting appeared to involve significant intelligence penetration, as the assassins knew Voronych’s exact address and daily routine. Former SBU officer Ivan Stupak assessed the killing as 99% likely to be a Russian special services operation, citing the professional nature of the attack.
Russian military bloggers acknowledged his elimination as a significant blow, suggesting Moscow had long wanted revenge.
Russians foreign recruits come to Ukraine to kill
Three days later, SBU chief Vasyl Malyuk announced the elimination of the Russia’s security service (FSB) hit team responsible for Voronych’s murder.
According to the investigation, the FSB had sent two foreign nationals – identified as Azerbaijani passport holders Gulalizade Khagani and Narmin Guliyeva – to Ukraine specifically to kill Voronych.
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The handlers instructed the duo to surveil Voronych’s movements and provided coordinates for a weapons cache containing a pistol with suppressor.
When law enforcement attempted to arrest them in Kyiv Oblast, the suspects resisted and were killed in the firefight. The FSB had used them as disposable assets, with no intention of extraction or exchange.
Ukrainian officials revealed that the vulnerability was that Voronych had been living at his registered address, which was listed in publicly accessible databases, allowing the assassins to establish surveillance and plan the killing.
Andriy Parubiy: Lawmaker who called for destruction of “Russian empire”
Now back to the assassination of Andriy Parubiy, whose suspected killer was detained and the investigation continues currently. Why was he targeted? What did the suspect mean by “revenge on Ukrainian authorities”? What kind of politician was Parubiy?
Andriy Parubiy was the former Ukrainian parliament speaker who was shot dead in Lviv in 2025 by a suspect claiming “revenge on Ukrainian authorities.”
Parubiy’s party declared Russia “the cause of all troubles in Ukraine”
In 1991, the 25-year-old co-founded the Social-National Party, declaring Russia “the cause of all troubles in Ukraine”—a statement so radical that Ukraine’s Justice Ministry delayed registration for four years. However, history proved him right.
He played central roles in both the 2004 Orange Revolution and the 2013-2014 Revolution of Dignity, serving as commandant of key protest sites.
“From that megaphone I started the rally,” he recalled of Euromaidan’s first hours. “In the first minutes there were 70-80 of us, there were more police around us than us.”
Over three months, he transformed those initial 80 protesters into a sustained movement. He organized tent cities, built barricades, and created “Maidan Self-Defense”—a structured civilian militia that grew to 12,000 trained members by February 2014 and eventually toppled Viktor Yanukovych’s pro-Russian government.
Andriy Parubiy during the Euromaidan protests in Ukraine in 2013-14.
Government service
After the Revolution of Dignity, Parubiy served as Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council, helping establish Ukraine’s National Guard by incorporating Maidan self-defense forces.
As Russia’s hybrid war intensified through 2014-2016 with cyber attacks, disinformation campaigns, and continued fighting in the east, Parubiy’s anti-Russian stance proved increasingly justified.
He served as Ukraine’s Parliament Speaker from 2016 to 2019, working to counter what he described as Russian attacks on Ukrainian language and culture.
Parubiy joined territorial defense in 2022
When Russia launched its full-scale invasion in 2022, the 58-year-old Parubiy joined territorial defense forces and served at checkpoints around Kyiv. He consistently advocated for complete destruction of what he termed the “Russian empire,” arguing that Russia would remain a perpetual threat if not decisively defeated.
“This is today a chance for the Ukrainian army and people to destroy this empire. If it doesn’t die today, it will continue to remain a threat to us, to our children,” he declared.
Former parliament speaker Andriy Parubiy served at a territorial defense checkpoint in Kyiv after joining Ukraine’s armed resistance following Russia’s February 2022 full-scale invasion. Photo: European Solidarity party
Personal grief or Russian manipulation?
The suspect Mikhaylo Stselnnikov, a 52-year-old from Lviv, had lost his son Mikhaylo-Viktor “Lemberg” during fighting in Bakhmut in May 2023. The young soldier, fighting with the elite 93rd Mechanized Brigade, went missing and was never recovered.
Stselnnikov’s former wife revealed they hadn’t spoken in 27 years. Neither she nor their deceased son maintained contact with the accused. Yet somehow grief transformed into political violence.
The suspect disguised himself as a delivery courier and approached Parubiy from behind on 30 August 2025. He fired at least eight shots to the Parubiy’s back and fled.
In court, Stselnnikov called his actions “revenge on Ukrainian authorities” and rejected suggestions of Russian manipulation. He claimed he wanted quick sentencing so he can be exchanged for prisoners of war to get to Russia and recover his son’s body as the Russians had promised him.
The 52-year-old suspect in Andriy Parubiy’s murder appears in a Lviv courtroom on 2 September 2025, where he confessed to the killing and claimed it was “revenge on Ukrainian authorities.” Photo: Olha Denysiaka/Hromadske
However, investigative sources suggest the killing followed a pattern of Russian intelligence exploiting personal tragedies to recruit assassins. This method allows Russia to eliminate targets while maintaining plausible deniability—the perpetrator genuinely believes they’re acting from personal grief rather than foreign manipulation.
Whether Stselnnikov was directly recruited or simply influenced by Russian information campaigns promising body recovery remains under investigation.
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“Revenge on Ukrainian authorities”: Suspect says he killed to find son’s body, while officials investigate Russian link to lawmaker assassination
The price of fighting for Ukrainian identity and independence
Across eleven years, six figures who exposed Russian lies, defended Ukrainian identity, and resisted Kremlin control were murdered in Ukraine. This pattern reveals a systematic campaign to eliminate the voices that challenge Russian narratives.
While fierce battles continue on the front line, Russia also targets the voices that expose imperial lies and strengthen national sovereignty. The aim is to create fear, silence opposition, and fracture the national unity that sustains resistance.
Direct FSB involvement appears evident in cases like SBU colonel’s assassination, but other killings show how Russian intelligence can exploit personal tragedies and ideological divisions to achieve similar results.
The continued targeting of pro-Ukrainian figures in Ukraine indicates that the struggle for independence encompasses not only territorial liberation of occupied territories but also protection of those who defend Ukraine’s sovereignty against Russian attempts at control in Ukraine that have persisted for centuries.
Ukraine’s Air Force reported a massive drone assault involving 91 Russian unmanned aerial vehicles during the night of 6 September, with 68 intercepted or suppressed and 18 striking their intended targets.
“We recorded hits by 18 strike UAVs at 8 locations, with debris from downed drones falling at 4 locations,” the Air Force reported.
Several Russian drones remained airborne as of the morning of 6 September.
The overnight barrage follows deadly strikes on 5 September that killed six civilians across Donetsk and Kherson oblasts, according to regional military administrations.
In Donetsk Oblast, Russian forces killed three people in Siversk and one in Bilytskoye, the Donetsk Regional Military Administration reports. One additional person was wounded in Oleksievo-Druzhkivka during the 24-hour period.
Meanwhile, Kherson Oblast saw two fatalities and two injuries from Russian aggression, including one child among the wounded, according to the Kherson Regional Military Administration.
Regional authorities report that Russian military forces targeted “critical and social infrastructure” as well as residential areas throughout settlements in the region. The attacks damaged one apartment building and eight private houses.
Ukraine’s new Flamingo cruise missile appears to include older, cheaper and easy-to-acquire components. Leftover Soviet-made free-fall bombs as warheads. And, for propulsion, a simple jet engine borrowed from a military training plane.
The inclusion of off-the-shelf components that are readily available from manufacturers in Ukraine or allied countries is good news as the Flamingo’s builder, Fire Point, aims to ramp up production to as many as seven missiles a day by next month.
There’s still a lot we don’t know about the Flamingo, including its cost. Fire Point is under official investigation in Kyiv for possibly inflating the missile’s capability and price.
Regardless of the outcome of that probe, photos and videos of the massive, seven-ton missile hint at a reliable and affordable design. A close look at the fiberglass missile’s nose seems to indicate the warhead is actually two warheads: a pair of repurposed gravity bombs packed end to end.
The Flamingo seems to be based on the FP-5 missile design from U.K. firm Milanion. The firm claims the FP-5 ranges 3,000 km with a 1,000-kg payload. There isn’t a 1,000-kg Soviet-style gravity bomb in widespread use, according to missile expert Fabian Hoffmann. So “the payload could consist of two stacked FAB-500 unguided bombs,” each weighing 500 kg, Hoffmann wrote.
The evidence points to the FAB-500 M62, one of the most ubiquitous Soviet-era unguided dumb bombs. The Soviet air force left behind potentially thousands of the bombs when it left Ukraine in 1991. Many munitions companies continue to build new FAB-500s, including Bulcomers KS in Bulgaria.
Seems Flamingo's warhead is a modified FAB-1000 general purpose bomb. Ukraine likely has 10,000s leftover from Soviet aviation depots
It’s not for no reason that, when the Ukrainian air force recently developed a simple precision glide-bomb similar to the Russian UMPK, it used old FAB-500 M62s as the basis—and added pop-out wings and satellite guidance.
With end-to-end FAB-500s, a Flamingo should be able to strike with the equivalent of 550 kg of TNT, Hoffmann estimated. That “is substantially more than the long-range drones and mini-cruise missiles Ukraine currently employs.”
Satellite imagery from the aftermath of the first confirmed Flamingo raid, targeting a Russian intelligence and hovercraft base in occupied Crimea on Aug. 30, depicts a large crater and other damage that may confirm Hoffmann’s assessment.
The ramp-launched Flamingo depends on a simple rocket booster to get it off the ground—and, it seems, an Ivchenko AI-25TL turbofan engine to propel the giant missile as fast as 950 km/hr. The AI-25TL, which powers Aero L-39 jet trainers and other aircraft, produces 1,850 kg of thrust.
An L-39 weighs five tons, which is two tons less than a Flamingo weighs. But the L-39 must be maneuverable, where the Flamingo is expected to fly a simple course at steady speed under inertial and satellite guidance. The AI-25TL is more than adequate—and, more importantly, it’s in production in Ukraine with firm Motor Sich. It’s priced to move at around $40,000 per engine.
With a low-cost warhead and equally affordable engine, a Flamingo might cost less than $1 million. That’s quite low for a long-range heavy cruise missile. A Russian Kh-101 or American Tomahawk both cost several times as much.
The Flamingo could change the deep-strike math for Ukraine. The new missile “has so much range and such a big warhead that that’s one of the important ones that could really make a difference,” Finnish analyst Joni Askola said.
And if the missile really is as cheap as it appears to be, Fire Point may actually be able to ramp up production to seven missiles a day.
President Donald Trump stated that European countries should take the lead in providing security guarantees for Ukraine while confirming Washington’s willingness to assist, according to his remarks to journalists at the White House.
The US president emphasized that America will not abandon Ukraine but stressed the primary role of European partners in the process. “We’ll help them. But we want to save a lot of lives, so we’ll do something with that. I think people expect that. We’ll help them,” Trump said.
However, he underscored that Europe should be first in providing guarantees. “Europe will be first in, by far. And they want to be first in. They want to see it end. Europe wants to see it end,” the American president declared.
Trump’s comments follow recent developments in European security discussions. On 4 September, French President Emmanuel Macron announced after a meeting of the “coalition of the willing” that 35 leaders were ready to provide Ukraine with security guarantees, with 26 countries expressing willingness to either send troops or provide certain means to support guarantee forces.
Macron indicated that the US contribution would be finalized in the coming weeks. The following day, NBC News reported, citing several sources, that the United States might take a leading role in controlling a large buffer zone created to protect Ukraine from Russian aggression in case of a peace agreement between Ukraine and Russia.
Meanwhile, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz believes that Russian President Vladimir Putin currently has no grounds for ending the war or concluding a peace agreement with Ukraine.
The statements come as international discussions intensify around potential frameworks for Ukrainian security arrangements and the respective roles of transatlantic partners in any future peace process.
. Ukrainian forces confirmed striking one of Russia’s four largest oil refineries and a fuel depot supplying Russian troops, marking the latest in a systematic campaign against energy infrastructure that has intensified throughout 2024
Lithuania introduces drone alert system with sirens and phone warnings. A two-color alert system featuring sirens and mobile notifications will warn Lithuanians when Russian drones cross into their territory, with red alerts for explosive-carrying aircraft and yellow for non-threatening UAVs
. Students recruited from technical schools now live in guarded dormitories at the Alabuga complex, working under surveillance with punishments for errors and reports of forced overtime.
. Parliament’s failure puts billions in European support at risk while Ukraine battles on multiple fronts.
Fico and Zelenskyy to discuss energy infrastructure in Uzhhorod. Ukraine’s recent attacks on the Druzhba pipeline have prompted Slovak PM to arrange an urgent meeting with Ukrainian President in Uzhhorod on 5 Sept., marking their first face-to-face talks since Fico’s return to power.
In 2024 alone, the LNG tanker fleet of the Glasgow-registered Seapeak Maritime lifted 7.56 million tonnes of liquefied natural gas from Russia’s Yamal Peninsula—more than a third of all cargoes the giant Arctic plant exported last year.
At prevailing gas market prices, those shipments were worth roughly £2.9 billion ($3.7 billion), generating an estimated £127 million ($163 million) in corporate income tax for the Russian state.
This isenough to buy 2,700 Shahed drones or 45 Iskander missiles for use against Ukrainian cities.
A closer look at Seapeak shows a multinational war profiteering scheme with the involvement of seemingly incompatible partners: Canada, the UK, the US, and China. The governments of the first two constituencies have the killswitch in their hands, and they can close down the scheme if they want to walk the talks on supporting Ukraine and confront the Russo-Chinese dirty energy sprawl in the Arctic.
A loophole big enough for an icebreaker
Seapeak’s seven Arc-7 ice-class carriers, managed from an ordinary office block in Glasgow, Scotland, shuttle Russian LNG from the port of Sabetta through the Barents and Norwegian Seas to EU terminals such as Zeebrugge, Bilbao, and Montoir. Their cargoes are then off-sold under long-term contracts to buyers including France’s Total Energies, Germany’s SEFE, and Spain’s Naturgy, quietly feeding European gas grids even as Brussels vows to wean itself off Kremlin energy and London claims to be “clean on gas”.
The Russian LNG trade lays bare a giant blind spot in Western sanctions.
The UK banned direct imports of Russian LNG from 1 January 2023, yet it still allows British-managed or British-insured vessels to haul Putin’s gas for third parties and continues to buy gas from TotalEnergies, Novatek’s key partner in the LNG export business. Worse, Seapeak’s ships have been linked to the presence of Russian FSB special service operatives on board—an obvious counter-intelligence threat for NATO states whose ports they frequent.
The six Arc-7 icebreaking LNG carriers managed by Seapeak Maritime – Eduard Toll, Rudolf Samoylovich, Vladimir Voronin, Nikolay Urvantsev, Georgiy Ushakov, and Yakov Gakkel – operate year-round and export millions of tons of Russian gas from the Sabbeta port at the Yamal peninsula.
Based on average prices for Russian LNG during 2024, the estimated value of the LNG deliveries carried by these vessels in 2024 was around £2.9bn (€3.44bn / $3.72bn), which represents a significant portion of the Yamal LNG total revenue. The LNG volumes carried by the Seapeak fleet directly generated revenue for the Yamal LNG plant, which is located in and operates in Russia, and is subject to taxation under the Russian tax code.
What is Seapeak — and who owns it?
Until early 2022, the company traded LNG at global markets as Teekay LNG Partners, part of the Canadian-founded Teekay Group headquartered in Vancouver. That January, New York private-equity house Stonepeak Infrastructure Partners bought it for US $6.2 billion and re-branded it Seapeak LLC. The Glasgow subsidiary, Seapeak Maritime Ltd, manages the Yamal LNG fleet and books revenue in Britain’s financial system.
When we look into the ownership of the Arc7 tanker fleet, the vessels themselves, things get even more complicated. Seapeak LLC co‑owns the six Arc‑7 LNG carriers in a joint venture with China LNG Shipping Holdings Limited – TC LNG Shipping LLC, which is a Marshall Islands entity established in April 2014. China LNG Shipping Holdings Limited is a major Chinese LNG shipping company incorporated by a consortium of COSCO Shipping Energy Transportation Co., Ltd. and China Merchants Energy Shipping Co. Ltd., which collectively belong to China’s State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council.
In other words, Canadian investors and China’s communist party teamed up to build the LNG fleet driving Russia’s global gas expansion.
Then, in early 2022, US-based investment firm Stonepeak took over the business.
Stonepeak’s investors include North American pension funds and Canadian public-sector institutions; the parent company itself remains registered in Bermuda offshore. This opaque structure means profits extracted from Yamal transit flow through a thicket of tax havens before re-emerging as dividends for western investors, all while Ukraine picks through the increasingly dense, deadly showers of missile and drone attacksmade possible by Russian tax receipts.
National security, not business as usual
If the United Kingdom is serious about enforcing its sanctions regime, leaving Seapeak to continue uninterrupted business with Russians and Chinese is no longer tenable. Westminster already has precedent: it has sanctioned entire fleets of Russian-controlled oil tankers and pledged to lead the fight to dismantle Moscow’s “shadow fleet”. Extending that approach to vessels that facilitate Russian LNG exports is a logical next step — yet action against the management entity itself would be swifter and more comprehensive.
Nationalising Seapeak’s tankers under UK emergency powers would freeze Kremlin revenues and let authorities redeploy, idle, or sell the Arc-7 LNG fleet in line with allied priorities.
Canada, too, has skin in the game. Teekay’s historical ties to Vancouver mean Ottawa retains leverage via the Special Economic Measures Act. By taking control of Seapeak’s Canadian holdings, Canada can ensure its pension funds are not, however indirectly, bankrolling Russian aggression. A joint UK-Canadian move would also close the insurance loophole: once the ships are state-controlled, renewals with London P&I clubs could be halted overnight.
The Kremlin’s Trojan horse
Corporate ownership is only part of the story. Glasgow is today home to a vibrant Ukrainian diasporic community; yet the city’s largest shipping firm remains an unwitting enabler of the Kremlin’s Arctic ambitions. The profits Seapeak generates upstream help Russia’s gas giant Novatek—half-owned by Putin loyalist Leonid Mikhelson—expand LNG mega-projects whose carbon footprint outstrips several EU member states combined. Downstream, those same profits support Russia’s vast propaganda ecosystem and its espionage networks inside Europe’s ports.
Journalist investigations showed that Novatek has been directly implicated in supporting Russia’s military actions in Ukraine by recruiting mercenaries through its private security company, Saturn-1.
Staff from Novatek’s security divisions, including Bastion, were sent to the front lines and paid via the Muzhestvo Foundation—a fund largely financed by Novatek.
Therefore, Russia’s leading LNG exporter’s role in the war of aggression extends beyond finance to direct participation on the battlefield.
A call to act—now
Pulling the killswitch—nationalizing Seapeak’s Arc7 vessels (which has precedent with Germany’s action in 2022 against Gazprom Germany)—would not be a hostile act against free enterprise; it would be a wartime necessity on a par with the seizure of oligarch superyachts and cutting schemes that fund war crimes. It would deprive Russia of hundreds of millions in tax revenue, shut down a strategic export route through the Arctic’s melting ice, prevent further Russo-Chinese expansion in the Arctic, and send an unmistakable signal that allied democracies will choke off every last revenue vein feeding Putin’s war machine.
The alternative—allowing a Canadian-heritage company owned by Wall Street financiers to keep moving Arctic gas for the benefit of Russian warmongers and Chinese crooks, while Ukrainian civilians count the cost—should shame every lawmaker in Westminster and Ottawa.
Britain and Canada helped design today’s sanctions architecture; they must now wield it without fear or favour.
Each cargo Seapeak lifts from Sabetta is another cheque signed over to the Kremlin. The governments of the UK and Canada must investigate Stonepeak’s entanglements with Russia and China. While the EU is taking the course to wean itself from dependency on Russian LNG, it’s about time to nationalise the fleet that is carrying it. This could prove that when Ukraine asks its friends and allies to close a loophole measured in megatonnes of Russian gas and billions of dollars, they will answer with deeds, not declarations.
Oleh Savitskyi is a world-class climate and energy policy expert. Oleh has ten years of experience in the field – from youth climate activism to consulting the Ministry of Environment of Ukraine to managing international advocacy campaigns at Razom We Stand. Oleh is a fellow of the Michael Succow Nature Conservation Fund and an alumnus of the Agora Energiewende EnerTracks training program for energy transition professionals.
Editor’s note. The opinions expressed in our Opinion section belong to their authors. Euromaidan Press’ editorial team may or may not share them.
Russia and Belarus are training for an attack on Poland, and this is more than just military exercises — it’s drills for striking a neighboring country. Prime Minister Donald Tusk warns that Polish forces are ready to respond to any provocations. Diplomacy will continue, but in the event of a threat, serious measures will be taken.
This fall, the Ministries of Defense of Russia and Belarus will conduct not just one “Zapad-2025” military exercise, but six in total. During these maneuvers, nuclear weapon launches against a hypothetical enemy will also be practiced, the Belarus Defense Ministry reports.
According to Defence24, part of the exercises will also take place near Ukraine’s border, similar to what happened shortly before the 2022 invasion.
Unconventional tactics in focus
This year, exercises will include:
simulated counter-air operations,
advances supported by mechanized forces,
active use of electronic warfare, with emphasis on communications and transport,
mass involvement of reservists, and mobilization of local authorities.
Russia and Belarus could stage provocations along Ukraine’s border, aiming to “force Kyiv to disperse its forces.”
Poland prepares to deter aggression
Tusk stressed that preparations are underway to counter any aggression.
“We are preparing appropriate responses together with our allies to the aggressive maneuvers that Russia and Belarus are conducting near our borders. They are already aggressive; they simulate an attack, not defense. Let’s not deceive ourselves,” Tusk says.
Poland keeps a close watch
Tusk emphasizes that Poland is working with European partners to convince the US of the real threat. Recently, Polish President Karol Nawrocki has reached an agreement with US President Donald Trump: US support is available, but “nothing comes for free.”
Provocations will not go unanswered
Polish authorities are monitoring airspace violations and other provocations by Belarus and Russia.
“For Poland, there are dangers, as we border Belarus. We will consult and respond to provocations. Those who carry them out will face serious consequences, both diplomatic and kinetic,” Tusk adds.
While the “kinetic consequences” remain undisclosed, the Polish prime minister assures that Poland has “special measures” in place to protect the country.
Ukraine’s Foreign Intelligence Service has reported that Russia has about 13.2 billion tons of economically viable, proven oil reserves,enough for roughly 25 years of production.
Russian oil remains a key source of revenue that funds its military aggression against Ukraine. In 2025, profits from the oil and gas sector account for about 77.7% of Russia’s federal budget.
According to the International Liberty Institute, the main buyers of Russian oil remainAsian countries, as European markets are largely restricted by sanctions.
At the same time, 96% of the subsoil fundhas already been allocated, indicating near-full utilization of available fields.
Investors losing interest
According to the results of 2024 auctions, one-time payments for hydrocarbon extraction rights amounted to only $50 million, with half the revenue from placer gold mining, a sector less significant for the budget.
This signals a sharp decline in investor interest in Russia’s oil and gas industry.
Ukraine’s intelligence notes that over the next 10–15 years, the potential for further exploration of existing fields in Russia will be exhausted. Limited funding and a lack of technology to develop hard-to-reach, geologically complex, and remote regions undermine Russia’s energy and economic security, casting doubt on the long-term stability of its oil and gas sector.
Earlier, Euromaidan Press reported that Ukraine disabled 17% of Russia’s oil refining capacity through a wave of recent drone strikes targeting key infrastructure.
The attacks, carried out over the past month, have disrupted fuel processing, sparked gasoline shortages, and hit the core of Moscow’s war economy as Washington seeks to broker a peace deal.
New Delhi is taking a step in defiance of American demands. Bloomberg reports that India has officially confirmed that it will continue buying Russian oil despite the 50% US tariffs on Indian goods.
In August 2025, the US raised tariffs on goods from India up to 50%, criticizing New Delhi for supporting Russia’s war machine that has killed over 13,800 civilians. At the same time, Washington has not imposed sanctions on China, the main sponsor of the war and Moscow’s key economic partner.
India has condemned the US decision, pointing out double standards: Europe itself continues to purchase oil from Russia. EU–Russia trade in 2024 reached €67.5 billion in goods and €17.2 billion in services. Europe also imported a record 16.5 million tons of Russian LNG, the highest number since 2022.
“Where we buy our oil from, especially a big-ticket foreign exchange item where we pay so much, the highest in terms of import, we will have to take a call on what suits us best. We will undoubtedly be buying,”stated India’s Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman.
In doing so, New Delhi ignored US President Donald Trump’s demand to stop importing Russian oil, prompting renewed public criticism from him.
“Looks like we’ve lost India and Russia to deepest, darkest, China. May they have a long and prosperous future together!” Trump wrote in a social media post, adding a photo of the three leaders together at Xi Jinping’s summit in China.
Volumes of Russian oil declining
Meanwhile, Andrii Kovalenko, head of Ukraine’s Center for Countering Disinformation, has reported that Russian oil shipments to India fell from 1.8 million barrels per day in 2024 to 1.1 million in September 2025.
“Delhi is demanding additional discounts and payments in non-convertible rupees. US tariffs on Indian goods for Russian oil have already reached 50%,” he says.
He adds that the US and EU sanctions have limited Moscow’s oil trade, and now India and China are dictating the terms.
China increases purchases on its terms
At the same time, Kovalenko reveals that China has increased its purchases of Russian oil, from 50,000barrels in August to 420,000 barrels in September, but also only under conditions of significant discounts, which are $5–6 below Brent.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has called Ukraine’s goal of joining the European Union its “legitimate choice” and commented on the events of 2013–2014 in this context, UNIAN reports.
His words contradict his earlier rhetoric and actions tied to criticizing the events of those years, specifically the Euromaidan revolution. The protests arose from public discontent with then-president Viktor Yanukovych’s decision to postpone signing the Association Agreement with the European Union and instead move closer to Russia. Shortly after, Russia annexed Crimea and unleashed the war in Donbas.
Putin admits: Ukraine’s accession to the EU is a “legitimate choice”
Putin said it is Ukraine’s lawful right to decide how to build its international relations, how to safeguard its economic interests, and with whom to form alliances.
“The problem for us at that time, when Yanukovych was president, was that Ukraine’s integration into the European system of economic relations created certain economic difficulties for us.
Ukraine was part of a free trade zone, our customs borders were open, and for us, this had certain consequences,” said Putin.
The consent of all current EU members is required for Ukraine to join the European Union. However, Hungary and Slovakia, Russia’s allies in Europe, oppose Ukraine’s accession.Moreover, it remains unclear how realistic Ukraine’s EU entry is during wartime.
Hungary remains the main obstacle
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has already responded to Putin’s remarks. He stated that in a situation where even the Russian leader does not oppose Ukraine’s EU membership, the position of “Russia’s friends,” particularly Hungary, on this issue looks strange, according to UkrInform.
“Finally, we hear a signal from Russia that they already accept Ukraine’s membership in the European Union. It’s a pity that they recognize reality with such a delay.
Since 2013, Russia has been moving toward this simple idea, but now some of Russia’s other great friends in Europe also need to hear it,” Zelenskyy said.
He added that if even Putin does not object, the positions of some countries, especially Hungary, regarding negotiation clusters look really strange.
Ukraine has done its homework for EU accession
Zelenskyy also said he is ready to meet with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán on this matter.
Hungary remains the only EU member state blocking the opening of the first cluster in negotiations on Ukraine’s accession to the European Union, while the other 26 leaders at the 26 June summit supported the move. Opening these clusters is intended to align Ukraine with European standards.
Ukraine and Moldova have already fulfilled all the requirements to start accession negotiations under the clusters “Fundamentals,” “Internal Market,” and “External Relations.”
This is the first block, “Basics of EU Membership,” the most important cluster concerning Ukraine’s participation in the EU internal market, and the block dealing with foreign and security policy.
Earlier, Putin said that if Western forces appeared on Ukrainian territory, they would have become legitimate targets for Russia. His statement came the day after a Russian ballistic missile deliberately struck an unarmed Danish demining mission, killing two people and wounding eight in Chernihiv Oblast.
Meanwhile, the “Coalition of the Willing” countries have reportedly agreed that ten of the 21 states, which are ready to work on security guarantees for Ukraine, are willing to send their soldiers to Ukrainian territory after the fighting ends.
The US is ready to create a buffer zone in Ukraine to contain Russia, but it is unclear whether Putin will stop the war. If a peace agreement is reached, the US plans to take a leading role in monitoring a large demilitarized buffer zone on Ukrainian territory, NBC News reports.
However, it is unclear what could compel Russia to stop its military actions and attacks on Ukraine. US President Donald Trump has reportedly called Putin at least six times, urging him to end the aggression and inviting him to Alaska, offering a potential easing of sanctions. The only change since the start of these American peace efforts has been an increase in both the intensity of attacks on civilians and the number of casualties.
It would separate the Russian and Ukrainian areas after the fighting ends. The US drones, satellites, and other intelligence tools would help ensure security compliance, while American troops would not be deployed within the zone.
International oversight and security
Troops from one or more non-NATO countries, such as Saudi Arabia or Bangladesh, could secure the buffer zone.
Meanwhile, Turkiye would be responsible for the safe movement of goods and services in the Black Sea, controlling the Bosporus and Dardanelles straits. Previously, Turkiye attempted to ensure the safety of the maritime corridor for exporting Ukrainian grain. However, Russia continued its strikes on Ukraine’s Odesa port anyway.
Security guarantees and economic protection
Some security guarantees from allies are planned to be based on the plan, which avoids the use of NATO forces and Article V to avoid crossing Russia’s “red line.”
Additionally, bilateral agreements between Ukraine and its allies would provide security and economic support. The US is discussing with Ukraine a deal worth around $100 billion, which would include weapons supplies and the exchange of intellectual property rights for Ukrainian developments as part of security guarantees.
Still, it is not clear how Kyiv will get back Ukrainian children stolen by Russia and how the issue of war reparations will be solved.
If Western forces appear on Ukrainian territory, they would become legitimate targets for Russia, declared Russian dictator Vladimir Putin, according to UNIAN.
His statement came the day after a Russian ballistic missile deliberately struck an unarmed Danish demining mission, killing two people and wounding eight.
Putin threatens the West
“If any troops appear in Ukraine, especially now during ongoing hostilities, we proceed from the assumption that they will be legitimate targets for strikes,”said the Russian president.
This means the potential mission should be significantly protected from Russian strikes.
Coalition of the willing and European guarantees
On 4 September, a meeting of the “coalition of the willing” took place in Paris. It was agreed that out of 21 countries willing to work on security guarantees for Ukraine, ten would agree to send their soldiers to Ukrainian territory after the fighting ends.
Countries prepared to take this step include the United Kingdom, France, the Nordic countries, the Baltic states, the Netherlands, and Australia. Preliminary estimates suggest that the European mission in Ukraine could number 25–30 thousand troops. These security guarantees are meant to take effect once peace is established in Ukraine, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reports.
However, there is no clear evidence that Russia is ready to end the war. On the contrary, the escalation of attacks on civilians, preparations for new offensives in the Kharkiv region, and deepening ties with China indicate that Russia intends to continue its aggression.
Meanwhile, Donald Trump, the leader of the US, traditionally considered the major protector of the Western world, has stated that he does not plan to send troops to Ukraine, has not imposed the promised sanctions on Moscow, and is not providing Ukraine with new aid packages. As a result, the situation in Ukraine is at a deadlock.
A deadlock for Ukraine
According to Putin, security guarantees should apply not only to Ukraine but also to Russia.
At the same time, the dictator claimed that Russia “will fully comply with peace agreements regarding Ukraine once they are reached.”
As is known, Russia has repeatedly violated agreements with Ukraine, from the Budapest Memorandum to the Minsk agreements, which were intended to stop the war in Donetsk and Luhansk. Instead, these agreements paved the way for a full-scale war, resulting in hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths.
According to Putin, no one has yet discussed such agreements with Russia “at a serious level.”
Putin also stated that he is allegedly willing to engage with Ukraine, but sees “little point” in such talks, claiming it is impossible to reach an agreement.
Earlier, he suggested meeting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Moscow, despite seven countries offering their cities for such a meeting and the risks it would pose for Zelenskyy.
Zelensky urges the West to implement guarantees without waiting for peace
Amid discussions over security guarantees, the question arises: What is preventing the West from implementing security guarantees now?
According to Rai, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy stated that security guarantees for Ukraine must take effect immediately without waiting for a cessation of hostilities.
“It is important that the security guarantees promised by the countries forming the ‘coalition of the determined’ begin to operate immediately, without waiting for the end of the fighting,” the Ukrainian president said.
Zelenskyy added that this refers not only to military support for Ukraine but also to economic guarantees. According to him, 26 countries have expressed readiness to support Ukraine’s security, and this is “an important step forward.”
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said during a September 5 briefing that US President Donald Trump expressed dissatisfaction with European countries continuing to purchase Russian gas and oil, thereby supporting Russia’s military machine. Hungary and Slovakia are among such countries, according to Zelensky.
European Council President António Costa emphasized that the EU has already reduced purchases of Russian energy resources by 80%. A significant portion of the remaining 20% falls on Hungary, which is currently blocking Ukraine’s EU accession.
Hungary explains this position by stating it disagrees with accepting Ukraine into the EU during wartime. But in that case, peace must be accelerated and the war stopped, Costa stressed.
“And for this it is necessary to continue supporting the Armed Forces of Ukraine, not to block the use of the Ukraine Facility fund. On the other hand, as President [of the US Donald] Trump said — it is very important to stop allowing the Russian Federation to continue waging this war by buying oil and gas,” Costa said.
Costa reported he will visit Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban in the near future. President Zelensky also assured that contacts exist between Kyiv and Budapest.
Zelensky stated he sees no foundation for Hungary’s accusations but emphasized that Ukraine is ready for dialogue.
“We are ready to meet with Orban. To discuss what else they are dissatisfied with. And how else we can help so that they are finally satisfied. President Trump heard a signal from our side regarding the blockade. America and President Trump said they would work to unblock this process, to help Ukraine with this,” Zelenskyy said.
Costa emphasized that Ukraine must meanwhile continue working on EU accession.
“The negotiation process continues. Ukrainian authorities continue working with the European Commission. We cannot lose this path. We must continue working on reforms, because in any case this must be done. We don’t need to wait for Hungary, or anyone, to continue our work. Because Ukraine’s future is in the EU,” he said.
Costa believes the Russian-Ukrainian war will end before Ukraine’s EU accession negotiations conclude, so “there are no reasons to waste time in this process.”
“If even Putin does not object [to Ukraine’s EU membership], then the positions of some countries, especially Hungary, really look strange,” Zelenskyy said.
EU membership process
All 27 EU member states have given the “green light” to begin negotiations with Ukraine on joining the bloc, however, Hungary is blocking them.
Last year Budapest presented Ukraine with a list of 11 demands to unblock the path to the European Union. All are aimed at strengthening protection of national minority rights in Ukraine.
The Ukrainian side traveled to Budapest with additional proposals for resolving the entire complex of issues. Ukraine and Hungary then agreed from 12 May to organize regular consultations to work on the stated demands. However, Budapest postponed such consultations due to the Security Service of Ukraine’s detention of Hungarian spies in early May.
Hungarian authorities conducted a so-called consultative referendum in their country regarding Ukraine’s EU membership, based on which they announced that 95% of votes were against. Orban himself claimed that Ukraine’s EU membership would mean “destruction of the European Union” and war with Russia on EU territory.
Lithuania proposed starting negotiations with Ukraine and Moldova on the first chapter of EU membership without Hungary’s consent. It is proposed that after approval by 26 member states, negotiations would take place at a technical level, de facto, and later an official agreement would be reached legally when all 27 EU states approve it, if Viktor Orban’s position or that of the entire Hungarian government changes.
Lithuania has approved a new alert system that will warn citizens with sirens and mobile phone notifications when drones pose a potential threat in the country’s airspace, LRT reported on 5 September.
Interior Minister Vladislav Kondratovich explained the two-tier warning system during the announcement.
“If a drone flies into the country and it is established that it may carry explosives, a red alert level may be declared,” Kondratovich said.
For drones that military forces determine pose no threat, authorities will issue a yellow alert level.
The minister warned Lithuanians they will receive both mobile phone notifications and hear sirens when threats are detected.
“Therefore, he warned Lithuanians that they will receive not only danger notifications on mobile phones, but sirens will also sound,” according to LRT.
The new protocols extend beyond immediate alerts. When Russia launches drone attacks on Ukraine, Lithuanian authorities and the army will mobilize forces and strengthen threat monitoring, the regulations specify.
Lithuania has already encountered Russian drones within its borders twice this summer. On 10 July, State Border Service personnel spotted an unidentified aerial object flying at approximately 100 meters altitude at speeds of 50-60 km/h. The object crashed minutes later near the closed Šumskas border crossing, roughly one kilometer from the Belarus border. Investigation revealed it was a Russian “Gerbera” type drone.
Lithuanian police reported a second incident on 28 July, when they detected an unidentified drone type that entered the country from Belarusian territory.
Ukraine’s state power operator finished building physical barriers around key equipment just as Russia continues targeting energy facilities nationwide.
Supervisory board member Yuriy Boyko announced Thursday that Ukrenergo has completed the first phase of passive protection construction for critical equipment at its substations, with the second phase set to finish by the first quarter of 2026.
The phased construction requires carefully managed power shutdowns to avoid disrupting the electricity supply while building protective structures.
According to Boyko, the company has completed the first phase. It is now actively constructing the second phase, with over 80% of the second phase scheduled for completion by year’s end during a briefing at the Media Center of Ukraine in Kyiv.
Engineering protection for 20-70 hectare sites
The passive protection focuses on the most critical equipment at Ukrenergo’s massive substations spanning 20-70 hectares each. Boyko explained that it’s impossible to cover entire substations, and therefore, resources must concentrate on the most critical elements, particularly autotransformers, which the Russians actively targeted in the war’s first year.
Boyko noted that work progresses more slowly in frontline regions where air raid alerts and military risks create extended pauses.
The construction represents part of Ukraine’s three-tier defense system against Russian strikes on energy infrastructure.
Three levels of protection against attacks
Ukraine has developed multiple protection levels for its energy system. The first level involves gabions—wire cages filled with rocks or sandbags—and sandbags protecting 90 facilities across 21 regions from debris.
Overall, international partners have provided over $1.5 billion in technical assistance to Ukraine’s energy sector during the war.
Strategic push for decentralization
The protection construction aligns with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s recent directive to National Security and Defense Council Secretary Rustem Umerov to coordinate additional short and medium-range air defense procurement while increasing funding for drone manufacturers.
The priority remains intercepting Shahed drones that regularly target Ukraine’s energy infrastructure.
Ukraine’s energy strategy now emphasizes replacing large, vulnerable power plants with hundreds of smaller distributed generators. In 2024, Ukrenergo purchased 600 MW of auxiliary generation services, and almost 500 MW from new facilities will come online by 2026.
European Council President António Costa announced that Brussels has begun work on a new sanctions package against Russia, with a European delegation traveling to Washington to coordinate with American partners, Interfax-Ukraine reported on 5 September.
During his visit to Uzhhorod, Costa emphasized the need to increase sanctions pressure to force Russia to end the war. “We are working with the US and other partners to strengthen our pressure through further sanctions, direct sanctions and secondary sanctions,” he said. “More economic measures to force Russia to stop this war, stop killing people, stop this war in Ukraine.”
The European Council President confirmed that coordination efforts are already underway. “In Brussels, work on a new sanctions package is beginning, and our European team is heading to Washington to work with our American friends,” Costa said.
Costa also addressed Ukraine’s EU membership prospects during his visit. “It is clear that Ukraine’s membership in the European Union is not only the best security guarantee, it is also the most effective path to prosperity and a better future for Ukrainians,” he said.
The EU official praised Ukraine’s reform efforts despite ongoing hostilities. “We are impressed by the reforms that Ukraine is carrying out despite the war,” Costa said, adding that the bloc supports Ukraine “in your struggle in this war as it continues” and “in efforts aimed at achieving peace, in peace negotiations.”
According to Costa, the EU also backs “your future as a full member of the European Union.”
The announcement comes after High Representative for Foreign Affairs Kaja Kallas previously outlined potential components of the 19th sanctions package against Russia. The EU is reportedly considering implementing secondary sanctions to prevent third countries from helping Russia circumvent existing restrictions.
The main pyramid at Burning Man festival in Nevada featured Ukrainian symbols including sunflowers, wheat, and blue and yellow colors through an AI-generated video created by director Olha Navrotska, Suspilne Culture reported on 4 September.
The audiovisual animation was conceived by philanthropist and initiator of educational projects “Skarb” and “War Diaries: Unheard Voices of Ukrainian Children” Khrystia Khranovska and displayed on the festival’s central pyramid structure used for projections, performances and light shows.
“My idea was to make Ukraine visible even in the middle of the Nevada desert. With this video, I wanted to show our country as modern, noble, intelligent, authentic, unique and understandable to the world. We must be heard everywhere,” Khranovska said.
Director Olha Navrotska brought the concept to life using artificial intelligence. The video incorporated Ukrainian cultural symbols: blue sky colors, sunflowers as signs of life, wheat ears and horses as images of freedom and fertility, along with figures of Ukrainian women and brave men.
The musical component features an ethno-house track “Skarb” by Fahot, leader of the band TNMK.
“This video is another opportunity to remind the world about ourselves, and to do it at a huge international festival. We chose yellow-blue colors both because it’s our flag and because it’s an incredibly powerful color combination that should immediately be associated with us and create a bright picture in the night,” Navrotska explained.
According to Suspilne Culture, the animation on Burning Man’s main pyramid served as a tribute to the 34th anniversary of Ukraine’s independence.
Burning Man, an annual eight-day independent art event in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert, runs from 24 August to 1 September under this year’s theme “Tomorrow Today.” Organizers define it as an experiment in creating a community of radical self-expression, culminating in burning a massive wooden human statue on the final day.
Forbes reported that Ukraine was represented by five artworks at the festival: “Black Cloud” by Oleksiy Say, “The Point of Unity” by Mykola Kabluka, “Death Conquered Death” by Volodymyr Semkiv, “Merman” by Merman Team, and “Blue Bull” by “Workshop of Wonders.”
Pragmatika reported that an additional installation called “HeyDay” by Kharkiv artist Volodymyr Ponomarenko – a mirrored flower made of stainless steel.
Say’s original installation was destroyed by a storm on the festival’s first day, leading the artist to transform it into a new work titled “No Fate” – shortened from the phrase “No fate but what we make,” borrowed from Sarah Connor’s line in the “Terminator” franchise.
The new installation continues the message “Get Ready!” from “Black Cloud”: invisible threats are real, but the future is not predetermined and remains in human hands, emphasizing the choice to resist threats rather than become accustomed to them.
Ukraine has already redefined modern warfare with Operation Spiderweb. In the course of the mission, Kyiv used drone swarms, surprisingly unleashed from trucks in Russia, to destroy its aircraft. Now, it has gone even further in its technological developments.
The operation has reshaped global perceptions of non-nuclear deterrence, as players now have received an instrument for how to incinerate elements of the nuclear triad, without actually possessing long-range missiles.
In Donetsk Oblast, at an old Soviet warehouse, Ukrainian engineers are assembling ground-based unmanned systems. They deliver ammunition, food, and medical supplies, evacuate the wounded, and carry out assault operations, Forbes reports.
Drones resilient to Russian jammers
Teams are upgrading standard drones with digital communication channels, such as Starlink and LTE, which allow them to bypass Russian electronic warfare systems.
“The conditions on the ground dictate their own rules, and we have to convert all drones to digital control,” explains engineer Oleksandr.
Also, fully robotic assaults have already been recorded on the Ukrainian front lines. The battle took place near the village of Lyptsi, north of Kharkiv, in 2024. During the clash, Russian positions were destroyed solely by unmanned ground vehicles (UGVs) and FPV drones.
A robot under fire instead of a soldier
Ground drones act as communication relays and even as platforms for electronic warfare.
“The drone drives up to a trench or dugout, releases the load, and leaves,” he adds.
Ukraine — a global leader in military robotics
According to Army Technology, up to 80% of Russian losses on the battlefield are now caused by drones. Russia is also developing its own systems, but Ukraine is ahead due to volunteer initiatives and decentralized solutions.
“Ukrainian engineers are creating the future of warfare, not just for Ukraine, but for the world,” emphasizes Liuba Shypovych, CEO of Dignitas Ukraine.
For decades, China held a monopoly on strategic metals. But now a new player, Georgia, has found 240 million tons of manganese ore on its territory, already being called “the new lithium,” The Diary 24 reports.
Lithium is most commonly used in batteries for mobile phones, laptops, electric vehicles, and other electronic devices. In military technology, it is also a component in rocket fuel and gas-phase nuclear rocket engines.
A colossal discovery in Chiatura
In the Chiatura region, reserves of manganese ore amounting to 240 million tons have been confirmed. Manganese is increasingly seen as an alternative to lithium for electric vehicle batteries. It allows the creation of cheaper and more reliable cathodes, which could radically change the balance of the global market.
For Georgia itself, this could be a historic chance to become a key player in global energy and take on the role of a safe alternative supplier for the West.
Georgia between China and the West
At the same time, the pro-Russian Georgian Dream party holds power in Georgia. As is known, China is Russia’s main economic partner, which sponsors its war against Ukraine. In addition, about 20% of Georgia’s territory is currently controlled by Russia, something Moscow can use as leverage for blackmail.
The current government has effectively stalled Georgia’s accession to the European Union. This reduces the country’s chances of democratization and, therefore, hinders alliances with Western nations.
A chance for the West and a challenge for China
The emergence of a competitor like Georgia has become an unexpected challenge for China, which has dominated strategic resources for decades. The US and other Western countries are already considering cooperation with Tbilisi to reduce dependence on Beijing.
Ukraine may have replenished its fleet of MiG-29 fighters with aircraft from Azerbaijan, The War Zone reports. A photo appeared on social media showing a single-seat Ukrainian Air Force MiG-29 with a camouflage pattern characteristic of Azerbaijani jets.
Ukrainian forces used MiG-29 aircraft in a recent operation in Russia’s Kursk Oblast, destroying Russian drone teams with American-made Small Diameter Bombs (SDBs). Kyiv is also testing a new domestic analogue of the Russian UMPK kit, a guided bomb, or a so-called KAB, which is installed on MiG-29 jets. Such a bomb can glide up to 60 km.
“The date and location of the photo are unknown, but the jet appears to be on a combat mission, with a full armament…While it remains possible that the photo has been manipulated, there is presently nothing to indicate that it’s not genuine,” the report says.
Azerbaijani aircraft in Ukraine
Back in the summer of 2022, another photo appeared on Twitter showing three Azerbaijani MiG-29s undergoing repairs in Lviv. After the start of the all-out war, they remained in Ukraine and likely entered service with the Air Force.
“It seems the aircraft (or at least one of them) survived the March 2022 Russian attack on the Lviv State Aviation Repair Plant, which we reported on at the time,” the report says.
The plant was a key facility for overhauling MiG-29s not only for Ukraine but also for foreign clients, including Azerbaijan.
Traces of Baku’s support
There are also suggestions that Azerbaijan may have provided Ukraine with other “unofficial” assistance — precision bombs, mortars, and fuel. Azerbaijan’s MiG-29 fleet itself originally came from Ukraine: in 2007, the country acquired about 15 aircraft after major overhaul and modernization.
“Between 2015 and 2017, Azerbaijani MiG-29s took part in joint exercises with the Turkish Air Force, representing one of its closest military allies, and, starting in 2017, Fulcrum overhauls were conducted in Lviv,” the journalists recall.
The coincidence of the evidence emerging now, alongside rising tensions between Azerbaijan and Russia, only adds intrigue.
Ukrainian-Azerbaijani relations significantly improved in 2024–2025 following a series of aggressive actions by 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.
Russian President Vladimir Putin told the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok that he was ready for contact with Ukraine but questioned whether Kyiv has the political will to reach agreements on key issues, according to Ukraine’s Center for Countering Disinformation.
Putin claimed Ukraine had previously excluded direct contacts with Russia but now “asks for them.” He dismissed peace negotiations in a third country as an “excessive request from Kyiv” and suggested Moscow as the preferred meeting location.
“Ukraine wants a meeting, I’m ready, come, we will provide working conditions and security,” Putin said at the forum.
The Russian leader declared that Russia would consider any foreign troops on Ukrainian territory “legitimate targets for destruction.” He added that security guarantees for both Ukraine and Russia had not been seriously discussed with Moscow at a high level.
Ukraine’s Center for Countering Disinformation said Putin’s statements confirmed he rejects peace proposals while using rhetoric about readiness to negotiate as a stalling tactic.
“Putin continues to stall, putting forward deliberately unacceptable demands for negotiations, but almost no longer hides that he does not intend to agree on anything. Sanctions and pressure on Russia must be strengthened,” the Center concluded.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy responded that Putin pretends he does not need peace or agreements, but global pressure can shape Russia’s interest in ending the war.
Zelenskyy reacted to Putin’s Moscow invitation, saying: “If you want there to be no meeting, invite me to Moscow.”
Recent diplomatic developments include Donald Trump’s 25 August statement that he would observe for two weeks before intervening “very decisively” in potential Zelenskyy-Putin talks. On 4 September, French President Emmanuel Macron announced that 26 countries would provide peacekeepers or assistance as part of security guarantees for Ukraine.
Trump said he plans to speak with Putin soon after his conversation with Zelenskyy, calling Russia’s war against Ukraine “the most difficult of everything” for him.
On 4 September, the biggest news comes from the Russian Federation.
Here, the Russian war effort has reached a breaking point, forcing the state to adopt measures once thought unthinkable to keep its military machine running. With millions of casualties mounting and the labor force collapsing, Russian teenagers are now rapidly being pulled into the war economy to fill the gaps.
A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.
In recent weeks, reports have begun to emerge about significant shifts within Russia’s defense sector. What makes the reports especially alarming is that one of the first confirmed cases of underage labor has emerged at the Alabuga complex, where teenagers are now being used to assemble drones. Some are recruited from technical schools, while others are brought in with minimal training. Most live in guarded dormitories and work under surveillance, with punishments for errors and accounts of forced overtime.
A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.
The danger is not only the working conditions themselves, but also the fact that Alabuga has always been a high-priority target for Ukraine. Since the Shahed production line supports Russia’s long-range strikes, the entire complex is now a legitimate military target, and the students inside are, in effect, being placed on the frontline.
A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.
The situation reflects the broader collapse of Russia’s manpower base, and after more than 1 million wartime losses, including dead, wounded, captured, and discharged, there is no longer enough adult labor to sustain both the military and the economy. Key industries, such as construction, transportation, and manufacturing, are now overstretched, particularly in military zones. The conditions at Alabuga are likely not unique, as similar facilities across the country face pressure to maintain output with a shrinking workforce and rising demand. The same pattern is likely repeating elsewhere: quiet expansions, untrained labor, and no safety net.
A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.
Before resorting to underage labor, Moscow attempted to compensate through foreign recruitment, launching large-scale efforts to bring in workers from Central Asia, South Asia, and Africa; however, the results fell short. Most recruits were poorly integrated, lacked relevant training, and faced growing hostility from Russian society.
A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.
That pressure has also opened doors for Ukrainian intelligence, as some of Russia’s most destructive drone and airfield losses, including the strike that destroyed a third of its long-range bombers in one day, were made possible by operatives exploiting these weak points from inside the labor system. Several were even redirected to combat support roles. These scandals, combined with public resentment, undermined the entire approach. Today, foreign recruitment still exists but is no longer seen as a sustainable solution.
A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.
Russia’s reliance on teenagers is not just a labor problem; it is structural, as Russia’s war machine is burning through manpower faster than it can replace it, but instead of scaling back, it just widens the net: first migrants, then prisoners, now pupils. The goal is always the same: sustain the output, whatever the cost. That is why classrooms are turning into dormitories, teachers are being sidelined for production quotas, and students are being taught to wire warheads instead of learning math.
A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.
However, these adaptations come with a price, as civilian infrastructure is repurposed for military use, the dividing line between civilian and combatant becomes blurred. By militarizing industrial sites and filling them with untrained minors, Russia is exposing them to direct retaliation.
A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.
If a drone factory becomes a military hub, then civilian workers, including students, are placed in the line of fire. The shift toward mass militarization of society is not strengthening Russia; it is exposing its core, and with every adaptation, that vulnerability grows.
A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.
Overall, the use of teenage workers in drone factories is not a temporary fix; it is a warning sign. Russia has run out of spare labor, exhausted its foreign recruitment options, and is now facing a shortage of internal resources. If the war effort now depends on minors to keep production lines moving, it indicates that Russia has exhausted its reserve labor capacity, a sign of accelerating internal depletion. As Russia expands its system to maintain wartime output, the likelihood increases that Ukraine will escalate its deep-strike campaign, targeting not just supply lines, but the very infrastructure and labor model sustaining Russian production.
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
NATO allies to help Finland build air bases for F-35. With the first F-35 fighters scheduled to arrive in Rovaniemi in late 2026, NATO members are preparing to fund one-fifth of Finland’s fighter base construction across three cities
Ukraine’s parliament failed to pass a critical local government oversight law required for EU funding yesterday, potentially jeopardizing access to billions in European financial support as a key reform deadline expired in March.
The Verkhovna Rada rejected draft law №13150 with only 206 votes in favor of the required 226.
The legislation would have established oversight mechanisms for local government decisions and created a registry of municipal acts—requirements embedded in Ukraine’s €50 billion Ukraine Facility agreement with the European Union.
Another missed EU reform target
Ukraine has already missed its 31 March 2025 deadline for implementing this reform. This is part of a broader pattern of legislative delays that risk the country’s access to Europe’s largest financial support package during wartime.
The Ukraine Facility provides quarterly payments based on Ukraine meeting specific milestones, including democratic governance and rule of law requirements.
The rejected bill would have created a supervision system in which the Cabinet of Ministers oversees regional council decisions, while regional state administrations monitor local councils.
These bodies would have the authority to demand corrections to illegal decisions and take violators to court when necessary.
Why local oversight matters during war
The European Union structured the Ukraine Facility around strengthening democratic institutions even as Ukraine fights Russia’s invasion. At least 20% of the program’s €5.27 billion in grants must support sub-national authorities, making local government accountability essential for unlocking EU funds.
European oversight requirements reflect lessons from previous aid programs where weak local controls enabled corruption.
The Ukraine Facility regulation specifically mandates “effective democratic mechanisms and institutions, including a multi-party parliamentary system and the rule of law,” as well as systems “to effectively prevent, detect and correct irregularities, corruption and in particular fraud, all forms of corruption, including high-level corruption, or any other illegal activity ”
Stakes beyond one law
Since March 2024, the EU has expended over €12 billion to Ukraine under the facility, funding teacher salaries, healthcare workers, and essential government operations while the country allocates domestic resources to defense.
Parliament’s rejection of reform legislation signals broader challenges in meeting European integration requirements during active combat.
The failure comes as Ukraine depends on international financing to cover roughly half its $37.5 billion external funding needs for 2024.
Beyond the Ukraine Facility, the country relies on additional EU support through the European Peace Facility and bilateral aid from member states.
Parliament had initially approved the bill for further development in May, but the final version failed to gain sufficient support nearly four months after the EU’s implementation deadline.
Russian forces launched 157 drones and 7 missiles of various types against Ukraine during the night of 5 September, according to the Air Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine. All seven missiles reached their targets.
The missile arsenal included six S-300 surface-to-air guided missiles and one X-59 guided aviation missile, the Air Forces reported. Ukrainian aviation, anti-aircraft missile forces, electronic warfare units, unmanned systems, and mobile fire groups of the Defense Forces repelled the air attack.
By 9:00 AM, Ukrainian military forces had shot down or suppressed 121 Russian Shahed-type UAVs and various decoy drones in the northern and eastern oblasts of the country. However, 7 missiles and 35 strike drones hit 10 locations. One enemy drone remained airborne at the time of the report.
The Dnipropetrovsk Regional Military Administration reported that their region bore the brunt of the massive Russian drone attack. In Dnipro, Russian forces hit an enterprise, causing fires that emergency services have since extinguished. No casualties were reported.
“Defenders of the sky eliminated 15 of them,” the Air Defense Command said regarding the drones targeting Dnipropetrovsk Oblast overnight.
The attack pattern varied across the oblast. In Dnipro, “the aggressor hit an enterprise. Fires broke out there, and rescuers quickly began extinguishing them,” according to regional authorities. Meanwhile, “the enemy struck the Pokrovsk community in Nikopol district with an FPV drone.”
The strikes caused significant property damage beyond the targeted enterprise. Private houses near the drone impact sites in Dnipro were damaged, with windows shattered in apartment buildings. Specialists are now inspecting the homes and documenting the damage while accepting residents’ claims to calculate losses accurately.
Local charities are distributing building materials at the sites, providing OSB boards and film for residents to temporarily cover damaged roofs, doors, and windows. The state assists in rebuilding through the “eRecovery” program, with applications available through the Diia platform.
All relevant emergency services are working at the affected locations alongside local volunteers providing immediate assistance to residents.
On 4 September, InformNapalm, a volunteer intelligence initiative focused on Russian aggression in Ukraine, published the personal data of 33 Russian prison staff reportedly involved in the torture of Ukrainian POWs at Mordovia’s IK-10. The exposé builds on survivor testimony broadcast by RFE/RL’s Skhemy.
Russia’s treatment of Ukrainian POWs amounts to systemic war crimes. Over 90% of released prisoners report torture—ranging from beatings and electrocution to sexual violence and psychological torment. These violations, along with executions of surrendering soldiers and illegal civilian trials, reflect a consistent pattern of abuse by Russian forces dating back to Russia’s initial invasion of Ukraine in 2014, including attacks on civilians, forced deportations, and the use of banned weapons.
According to InformNapalm, IK-10 has become a conveyor of abuse and repression since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion. The Mordovia-based colony reportedly held about 700 Ukrainian POWs as of April 2025. Just 177 have been released.
“The rest remain in captivity, continuing to fight not only for freedom but for their lives,” InformNapalm wrote.
InformNapalm publishes 33 names of Russian prison staff tied to Ukrainian POW torture
A volunteer intelligence group investigating Russian war crimes has publicly identified 33 staff members of Russia’s notorious penal colony No. 10 (IK-10) in Mordovia. InformNapalm, which since 2014 has gathered open-source intelligence to expose war-related abuses, released names, ranks, addresses, contact information, social media profiles, and roles of individuals allegedly responsible for the torture and inhumane treatment of Ukrainian prisoners of war.
The release follows a 17 July 2025 investigation by the Ukrainian news program Skhemy (“Schemes”), a project of Radio Svoboda, which aired testimony from survivors held at IK-10.
Ukrainian POWs described brutal conditions: electric shocks, hours-long forced standing, sleep and food deprivation, and denial of medical care. Many did not even know where they were imprisoned until they were exchanged.
Russia’s IK-10 prison in Mordovia is about 600 km from Ukraine. Map: Google Maps
Inside a prison built to erase identity
Located in the settlement of Udarnyi, Zubovo-Polyansky district, IK-10 is operated as a special-regime facility. InformNapalm and “Schemes” both describe an atmosphere of total psychological suppression, where prisoners were routinely denied medical care, beaten, forced to stand for hours, and cut off from any knowledge of their whereabouts.
Guards and staff reportedly concealed their identities behind balaclavas and medical masks. Even the place of the facility was hidden from detainees. The goal, according to survivor accounts, was to strip POWs of identity and autonomy, reducing them to a state of helplessness under constant threat.
Reports of abuse at IK-10 go back to 2012–2014, but the colony’s role expanded after Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.
InformNapalm now describes it as a systematized torture center where brutality was not random, but institutional, the researchers refer to the facility as a “conveyor of torture.”
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33 names, ranks, and faces behind the brutality
The list published by InformNapalm identifies a wide range of staff. At the top is Sergei Zabaiykin, who served as head of IK-10 from 2022 until March 2024 and is now deputy head of the FSIN directorate in Mordovia. FSIN is Russia’s federal authority for the prisons and detention of suspects and convicts. Inform Napalm cites a Russian publication describing Zabaikin as “a thieving head of the colony with a ‘beastly’ attitude toward inmates.”
Sergei Zabaikin’s data in the Inform Napalm article, including his post, rank, home address, social media profile, phone number, email, passport number, and the mentions of him, available on the web. Similar profiles are presented for all other described suspects.
His successor, Aleksandr Gnutov, served as deputy chief, then acting chief, and became official colony head in July 2024.
Other high-ranking figures named include multiple deputy heads: Aleksandr Pavlushkin, Aleksei Anashkin, Yegor Averkin, and Sergei Muymarov. InformNapalm says these individuals oversaw the daily operations during the peak periods of reported violence.
Medical personnel also figure prominently in the report. Field medic Ilya Sorokin—known by the nickname “Doctor Evil”—was named as a central figure. “Schemes” reported that Sorokin left his post at the end of 2024 and joined the Russian Defense Ministry, now operating under the call sign “Doctor” in military supply units. InformNapalm says he remains in contact with his former colleagues and continues to receive medical supplies for use in Russia’s war effort.
Chief physician Galina Mokshanova, her deputy Aleksandr Levin, and multiple other medics and nurses are named as having supported or enabled torture through medical neglect or complicity.
Not just jailers: engineers, psychologists, and guards
InformNapalm’s list includes more than command and medical staff. It also names psychologists, engineers, and guards believed to have played roles in the abuse. Senior psychologist Alesia Avdonina, for example, is described as a captain of internal service and also a part-time nail technician, showing the stark dissonance between professional responsibilities and daily online life.
Others identified include engineer Konstantin Anchin, psychologist Olga Khremkina, and senior inspector Anna Shcherbakova. InformNapalm notes that several individuals had no social media presence, while others shared openly under their real names.
Each individual entry includes date of birth, passport numbers, home address, phone contacts, and links to their online profiles. According to InformNapalm, the list will serve as both evidence for legal prosecution and a warning to other FSIN personnel.
Russia reacts with panic and suppression
Following the initial broadcast of “Schemes” in July, InformNapalm says insider sources reported increased activity from the Russian Investigative Committee and FSB. These agencies allegedly warned IK-10 staff about harsher penalties for information leaks and tried to prevent future exposures.
InformNapalm interprets this response as a sign that Russian authorities fear accountability. The group emphasized that “no mask will protect you” and called the release a first step toward identifying all individuals involved in war crimes inside Russia’s penitentiary system.
“Every new fact strengthens the chain of responsibility”
InformNapalm stresses that the publication of these 33 names is not the conclusion, but the beginning. The group is now encouraging anyone with further knowledge—especially former inmates or staff—to come forward with verified information.
The group seeks specific details: names or nicknames, job roles, periods of employment, specific incidents of abuse, supporting media, and contact information. All information will be carefully verified and sources anonymized when necessary.
InformNapalm warns against directly contacting any of the named individuals and urges caution for those living in temporarily occupied territories. Safe devices, VPNs, and page archiving are strongly recommended when submitting tips.
“This publication is not the final point,” the report concludes. “It’s the foundation for further documentation. Every confirmation is a contribution to truth and justice.”
Ukrainian forces attacked an oil refinery in the Russian city of Ryazan and an oil depot in occupied Luhansk during the night of 5 September, Robert Brovdi, commander of Ukraine’s Unmanned Systems Forces, said.
The Ryazan Oil Refinery, one of Russia’s four largest refineries, was struck by Ukraine’s 14th Unmanned Systems Regiment together with Special Operations Forces, Main Intelligence Directorate, and other Defense Forces components. The same regiment targeted the Luhansk oil depot.
Russian Telegram channel Astra earlier cited eyewitnesses reporting that the Ryazan refinery was burning following drone strikes. Ryazan region governor Pavel Malkov claimed that eight drones were shot down over the region overnight, with debris falling on an industrial facility.
Russian media and Telegram channels reported a large fire in occupied Luhansk on the evening of 4 September. The strike reportedly hit a key oil depot that supplies fuel to Russian forces.
Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian oil refineries have occurred regularly since the beginning of 2024. Some facilities have sustained damage to primary oil processing units requiring repairs.
Ukraine’s General Staff has confirmed most attacks, stating that the Defense Forces “systematically implement measures aimed at reducing the combat potential of Russian occupation forces, as well as forcing the Russian Federation to cease armed aggression against Ukraine.”