Volodymyr Zelensky has warned the situation on the battlefield against Russia is “very, very difficult” as Vladimir Putin’s invasion enters its third autumn.
“Reports on each of our frontline sectors, our capabilities, our future capabilities and our specific tasks: The situation is very, very difficult,” he said in his nightly video address.
“Everything that can be done this autumn, everything that we can achieve must be achieved,” he said.
Russia is ramping up its military recruitment before ground conditions deteriorate with the arrival of winter, ordering the conscription of 133,000 new servicemen in an autumn draft campaign that starts today.
That figure is on top of the additional 180,000 active servicemen Putin ordered in an expansion of the regular Russian army last month.
Meanwhile, outgoing Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg has said the alliance’s members should not be deterred from giving more military aid to Ukraine by “reckless Russian nuclear rhetoric”.
Watch: Russian fighter jet narrowly misses American aircraft off coast of Alaska
Alexander Butler1 October 2024 10:20
Nato head Rutte says alliance must deliver on promises made to Ukraine
New Nato chief Mark Rutte said he was determined to prepare the transatlantic alliance for the challenges of the future.
He added that the group must deliver on the promises it made to Ukraine to help the country in its war against Russia. The conflict in Ukraine is not contained to the front lines, Mr Rutte said.
Alexander Butler1 October 2024 09:44
Russia will not sign a replacement for nuclear treaty with US
Russia will not sign a new treaty with the United States to replace the agreement limiting each side’s strategic nuclear weapons that expires in 2026, the Izvestia newspaper reported on Tuesday, citing an unidentified senior Russian source.
The New Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, or New Start, is the last remnant of efforts to slow the nuclear arms race between the former Cold War superpowers and increase transparency by imposing verifiable limits on the number of weapons.
President Vladimir Putin in 2023 suspended Russian participation in the treaty due to U.S. support for Ukraine, though Moscow has kept to the warhead, missile and bomber limits imposed by the agreement – as has the United States.
Alexander Butler1 October 2024 09:24
Five killed in Russian strike on Ukraine’s Kherson, governor says
At least five people were killed when Russian forces struck a market in the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson on Tuesday morning, the regional governor said.
Another three people were wounded in the attack, Oleksandr Prokudin said on the Telegram messaging app.
Alexander Butler1 October 2024 08:30
Vladimir Putin wants to wipe us off the map, Ukraine’s top tennis player warns
Russian president Vladimir Putin is waging war to try and wipe Ukraine off the map, the country’s top tennis player has warned.
Elina Svitolina, 30, accused Russia of genocide and urged the West to help bring back roughly 20,000 Ukrainian children deported to Russian camps since Putin’s invasion in February 2022.
More than 70 camps used to forcibly “re-educate” children have been found across Russia, Belarus and occupied Crimea, according to the Ukrainian government.
Svitolina stunned the sporting world in 2023 after she beat world No 1 Iga Swiatek in the Wimbledon quarter-finals just eight months after giving birth to her daughter.
Alexander Butler1 October 2024 07:50
Ukraine’s defence minister fires three deputies
Ukraine’s defence minister Rustem Umerov said he has submitted to the government a request to dismiss three of his deputies in a new military shake-up.
Mr Umerov also added that he has requested the dismissal of Liudmyla Darahan, the state secretary of the defence ministry.
Arpan Rai1 October 2024 07:33
Ukraine downs 29 Russian drones in overnight attack
Ukraine’s military shot down 29 out of 32 drones launched by Russia during an overnight attack, Kyiv’s air force said today.
It added that the Iranian-made “Shahed-type” drones were downed over parts of central, southern and northeastern Ukraine.
Arpan Rai1 October 2024 07:22
Trump now says he likes Zelensky
Donald Trump has said he “likes” president Volodymyr Zelensky, a week after he called the war-time leader a “great salesman”.
The two met in New York on Friday as Mr Zelensky wrapped up his bilateral visit to the US, seeking a boost in support for fast military action from Kyiv’s most important ally.
Mr Trump did not meet with the Ukrainian leader till the last day of his trip and at one stage it looked like the meeting might not happen.
“I had a good relationship with Zelensky…I like him. Because during the impeachment hoax … he could have said he didn’t know the [conversation] was taped. … But instead of grandstanding and saying, ‘Yes, I felt threatened,’ he said, ‘He [Trump] did absolutely nothing wrong’,” the Republican presidential candidate told the Washington Post in an interview.
Mr Trump has been consistently critical of US spending on Ukraine since Vladimir Putin’s invasion. Two days before meeting Zelensky, he described Ukraine in bleak and mournful terms, referring to its people as “dead” and the country itself as “demolished”.
Arpan Rai1 October 2024 07:12
Putin: Russia will accomplish “all goals set” in Ukraine invasion
Vladimir Putin has told the Russian people that its military will accomplish “all goals set” in Ukraine.
Putin was speaking in a video message to mark the second anniversary of “Reunification Day” – when Moscow officially claimed the Ukrainian regions of Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson as its own.
“The truth is on our side. All goals set will be achieved,” Putin said on Monday as he addressed the nation.
He said Ukraine’s western allies had “turned Ukraine into their colony, a military base aimed at Russia” and promoted “hate, radical nationalism” against Russia.
“Today we are fighting for a secure, prosperous future for our children and grandchildren,” Putin added.
Russia held sham referendums in the four regions on September 30, 2022, seven months after Putin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February.
Putin signed a document to unilaterally incorporate the occupied regions of Ukraine into the Russian Federation – a move which has not been recognised by any western countries.
Russia does not fully control the territories which it has laid claim to.
Alex Croft1 October 2024 07:00
Mark Rutte becomes new Nato chief
Former Dutch prime minister Mark Rutte takes over as Nato boss today, his immediate task being to support Ukraine at a critical time in its war with Russia.
Mr Rutte will take over as secretary-general from Jens Stoltenberg of Norway today at a ceremony at Nato headquarters in Brussels. Mr Stoltenberg has overseen the organisation during a turbulent decade marked above all by Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
Mr Rutte, who stepped down as Dutch premier this year after a record 14 years in the job, has been a staunch supporter of Ukraine. He has also urged Europeans to “stop whining” about former US president Donald Trump and get on with boosting the continent’s defences.
His key tasks are laid out – primary being pushing Nato nations to spend more on defence and keep the US engaged in European security.
However, uncertainty hangs over both – the conflict in Ukraine, which has turned into a grinding war of attrition, and future US support for Nato and Kyiv, with Nato-sceptic Trump in a close electoral contest with vice president Kamala Harris.
Arpan Rai1 October 2024 06:55