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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
World
Hayden Vernon (now) and Sammy Gecsoyler (earlier)

Russia-Ukraine war: overextended Russian military struggling to maintain border defences, says UK – as it happened

Ukrainian infantryman is seen in his combat position on the Kharkiv frontline.
Ukrainian infantryman is seen in his combat position on the Kharkiv frontline. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Anadolu/Getty Images

Closing summary

  • The UK Ministry of Defence said Russia’s military was being overextended by the war in Ukraine. In its latest daily intelligence update, the MoD said that the likely need for Russia to reallocate surface-to-air missile (Sam) systems from distant parts of its territory to maintain coverage over Ukraine showed the conflict was straining its military.

  • A Ukrainian diplomat said a global peace summit for Ukraine may take place next year. The Ukrainian president’s top diplomatic adviser, Ihor Zhovkva, said it might take place in February 2024.

  • Ukraine said queues were growing at its border with Poland as Polish lorry drivers continued to block crossings for a fourth day. The protests, which started on Monday, involved the drivers blocking three border crossings with Ukraine. They are protesting against competition from Ukrainian drivers.

  • Ukraine told its western allies that giving it the interest accrued from frozen Russian assets would not be enough to compensate for damage sustained by the war and that it hoped to receive the assets in full. Ukraine’s deputy justice minister, Iryna Mudra, said Kyiv’s partners were considering introducing a tax on income or investment of frozen Russian assets, an idea she said Kyiv welcomed but saw as insufficient.

  • Germany issued new defence policy guidelines for the first time in over a decade. The 19-page document details what the Zeitenwende, the major shift of policy German Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, means for the workings of Germany’s military.

  • Hungary said the EU should not start membership talks with Ukraine. EU leaders are expected to decide next month whether to accept the European Commission’s recommendation to invite Kyiv to begin membership talks with the bloc, but Hungary prefers a form of “privileged partnership” for Ukraine, rather than full membership.

  • But Ukraine will be able to overcome Hungary’s political opposition to its progress on EU membership, according to Kyiv’s minister for European integration, Olga Stefanishyna. “We understand that there is a such a statement, but we also understand there is a dialogue with Budapest,” she said.

Updated

Ukraine says global 'peace summit' may take place next year

A global “peace summit” for Ukraine may take place in February 2024, according to a top Kyiv official.

Ihor Zhovkva, the Ukrainian president’s top diplomatic adviser, told Reuters that the country would arrange a fourth meeting of national security advisers in late November or early December “and the global summit might take place in February 2024,” he said in a written statement.

“The summit will definitely take place, as it will mark both the symbolic beginning of the practical implementation of the Ukrainian ‘peace formula’ and summarise all the results that have already been achieved on this track.”

The peace formula is a 10-point plan calling for the restoration of Ukraine’s territorial integrity, withdrawal of Russian troops, protection of food and energy supplies, nuclear safety and the release of all prisoners.

News of the summit comes as concerns mount in the west that the war in Gaza is making it harder to win over diplomatic support for Kyiv’s blueprint for peace.

The peace formula talks will not involve Russia, which has rejected the plan, saying it would be impossible to implement.

Updated

The European Commission will host technical experts from the G7 next week to hash out a final plan for a ban on Russian-origin diamonds, Reuters reports.

Sources said the planned 1 January 2024 implementation date was slipping as talks have dragged, but that the G7 intended to implement the ban starting in the first quarter of next year.

The commission is expected to propose its twelfth package of sanctions on Russia to member states next week, with a focus on cutting Moscow’s revenues from diamonds.

An EU diplomat said Belgium’s proposal that suggests tracing the diamonds from the rough stage in Antwerp – the main hub for the world’s rough diamond trade – would be closely mirrored in the commission’s proposal.

Russia’s state diamond miner Alrosa has been placed under sanctions by the US but not the EU. Major western jewellery brands began shunning Russian diamonds soon after Russia invaded Ukraine in February last year.

Updated

The Kremlin is moving to absorb former Wagner soldiers into Russia’s military structures, the Guardian’s Russian affairs reporter Pjotr Sauer writes.

Russia is seeking to recruit battle-tested Wagner fighters for its war in Ukraine more than two months after the death of Yevgeny Prigozhin, the mercenary group’s founder.

Putin has cast the Wagner chief as a traitor but struck a much milder tone with regular Wagner soldiers, urging them to sign contracts with the military and swear an oath of allegiance to Russia.

Weeks after Prigozhin’s death, Putin met Andrei Troshev, a former senior Wagner commander, to discuss how its fighting force could be used in Ukraine. After the meeting, the Kremlin said Troshev had signed a contract with the defence ministry.

The regular army is only one of many pathways open to former Wagner soldiers, with Russia’s national guard, known as Rosgvardia, and several state-linked private military groups also poaching Wagner veterans.

A group of Russia’s national guard soldiers stand in front of St Basil’s Cathedral in Moscow.
Russia’s national guard, known as Rosgvardia (pictured), are poaching Wagner veterans as well as several state-linked private military groups. Photograph: Alexander Nemenov/AFP/Getty Images

Updated

Germany has issued new defence policy guidelines for the first time in over a decade, Reuters reports.

The 19-page document details what the Zeitenwende, the major shift of policy German Chancellor Olaf Scholz announced after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, means for the workings of Germany’s military, the Bundeswehr.

As a first step to bring the military back up to scratch after decades of attrition after the cold war, Germany set up a €100bn fund last year to purchase modern weapons and pledged to reach Nato’s target of spending at least 2% of the national GDP on defence from 2024.

“With the Zeitenwende, Germany becomes a grown up country in terms of security policy,” the country’s defence minister, Boris Pistorius, said as he presented the guidelines, the first since Berlin suspended conscription in 2011.

He called the document Berlin’s response to a new reality as Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 had brought back war to Europe and raised the level of threat, thereby fundamentally changing the role of Germany and the Bundeswehr.

Pistorius laid out Germany’s new defence policy in an editorial for newspaper Tagesspiegel earlier on Thursday.

Updated

Here are some of the latest images from the newswires:

Ukrainian soldiers drive their tank down a near the Kharkiv frontline
Ukrainian soldiers drive their tank down a near the Kharkiv frontline. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Anadolu/Getty Images
Drivers walk among lorries queuing at the Rava-Ruska checkpoint on the Ukraine–Poland border
Drivers walk among lorries queuing at the Rava-Ruska checkpoint on the Ukraine–Poland border. Photograph: Yuriy Dyachyshyn/AFP/Getty Images
A Ukrainian serviceman attends Holodomor Memorial Day commemorations, which remember the victims of the 1932–1933 famine that killed millions of people in Ukraine
A Ukrainian serviceman attends Holodomor Memorial Day commemorations, which remember the victims of the 1932–1933 famine that killed millions of people in Ukraine. Photograph: Global Images Ukraine/Getty Images

Updated

Ukraine said queues were growing at its border with Poland as Polish lorry drivers continued to block crossings for a fourth day over what they see as unfair competition from Ukrainian firms, Agence-France Press reports.

“Traffic on the Ukrainian-Polish border has remained complicated since 6 November in three directions,” Andriy Demchenko, a spokesperson for Ukraine’s border service said.

Kyiv estimates that around 1,700 lorries were queuing to enter Ukraine.

Poland’s border service has published estimates of the wait time at entry points into Ukraine. It estimated that crossing by freight lorry at the Hrebenne checkpoint would take 150 hours, while the wait at the border at Medyka, further south, would be 55 hours.

“It is wrong to close the border with Ukraine during the war,” Oleksandr, a 36-year-old driver who had been queing for two days at the Rava Ruska crossing, told AFP. He declined to give his surname.

Updated

In an editorial for newspaper Tagesspiegel, Germany’s defence minister, Boris Pistorius, said Berlin is aiming to make its armed forces “the backbone of deterrence and collective defence in Europe”.

Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine meant the continent faced a renewed military threat that fundamentally altered the role of Germany and its armed forces, Pistorius said.

Just as Germany had benefitted from the deployment of allied troops during the cold war, Germany’s partners now expected Berlin to live up to its responsibility and exercise leadership in Europe, he said.

Announcing fundamental changes across all areas of the German army – the Bundeswehr – to make it “ready to fight a war”, he said the future structure of the German forces would be determined by what was needed for the defence of the country and its allies.

Pistorius said Germany would deploy around 5,000 troops permanently to Lithuania – a first for the Bundeswehr – that would demonstrate proof that his country was stepping up to its new role.

Germany is set to issue new defence guidelines – its first since 2011 – this week.

Updated

Ukraine’s infrastructure minister, Oleksandr Kubrakov, has discussed Polish lorry drivers’ protests at the Ukrainian border with his Polish counterpart, Reuters reports.

The protests, which started on Monday, involved the drivers blocking three border crossings with Ukraine. They are protesting against competition from Ukrainian drivers.

After Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the EU waived a system of permits for Ukrainian transport companies to enter the bloc.

Polish hauliers claim the move has triggered an influx of Ukrainian competitors, hitting their profits. One of the protesters’ main demands is for Ukrainian drivers to receive a limited number of permits.

Ukraine’s infrastructure ministry said in a statement that Kyiv would not compromise on permits for Ukrainian drivers.

“Ukraine respects the right to protest and is ready for a constructive dialogue to resolve the situation ... At the same time, we note that the border-blocking by Polish protesters violates logistics routes, that already affects both the economy of Ukraine and the European Union,” the statement said.

Updated

Ukraine told its western allies on Thursday that giving it the interest accrued from frozen Russian assets would not be enough to compensate for damage sustained by the war and that it hoped to receive the assets in full.

Kyiv estimates that $400bn (£325bn) will be needed to rebuild the country devastated by Russia’s invasion, an amount it believes could double if compensation for the war’s victims is taken into account.

The European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said last month that the value of frozen Russian sovereign assets was about €211bn (£184bn)

Ukraine’s deputy justice minister, Iryna Mudra, told Reuters Kyiv’s partners were considering introducing a tax on income or investment of frozen Russian assets, an idea she said Kyiv welcomed but saw as insufficient.

There was no alternative to the solution of confiscating the assets in full and handing them to Ukraine, she said.

“Yes, such a decision requires political will, and therefore it is especially dangerous if additional initiatives are considered a successful solution to all problems.”

The issue of finding funds to rebuild the economy and fight the war with Russia is more urgent than ever, as Kyiv fears a reduction in western aid and the Ukrainian economy is unable to generate sufficient funds.

Updated

Summary so far ...

  • The UK Ministry of Defence said Russia’s military is being overextended by the war in Ukraine. In its latest daily intelligence update, the MoD said that the likely need for Russia to reallocate surface-to-air missile (Sam) systems from distant parts of its territory to maintain coverage over Ukraine showed the conflict is straining its military.

  • Hungary said the EU should not start membership talks with Ukraine. EU leaders are expected to decide next month whether to accept the European Commission’s recommendation to invite Kyiv to begin membership talks with the bloc, but Hungary prefers a form of “privileged partnership” for Ukraine, rather than full membership.

  • But Ukraine will be able to overcome Hungary’s political opposition to its progress on EU membership, according to Kyiv’s minister for European integration, Olga Stefanishyna. “Today, Hungary has made such a statement,” she said. “We understand that there is a such a statement, but we also understand there is a dialogue with Budapest.”

  • Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Russia does not believe the European Union’s promises to admit Ukraine are “real”. “Most likely we are talking about a carrot that is tied in front of the cart,” Peskov said in comments to the Kremlin reporter Pavel Zarubin.

  • Ukraine’s parliament voted to approve its 2024 state budget. Reuters reports that more than half of all Ukrainian budget spending is planned for the defence sector to fund its war effort against Russia.

  • Ukraine’s security service (SBU) confirmed in a statement to Reuters that Russian hackers were behind a cyber-attack that disrupted part of Ukraine’s power grid in late 2022. The attack was likely to have been carried out to maximise the impact of Russian missile strikes, Illia Vitiuk, the head of the SBU’s cybersecurity department, said.

Updated

Russia does not believe the European Union’s promises to admit Ukraine are “real”, according to the Kremlin spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, Reuters reports.

“Most likely we are talking about a carrot that is tied in front of the cart,” Peskov said in comments to the Kremlin reporter Pavel Zarubin.

The European Commission has recommended that Ukraine be invited to begin talks to join the bloc as soon as it meets final conditions, even as it continues battling to repel Russian forces.

For talks to begin, all 27 EU member states have to approve them. Earlier today, Hungary said the EU should not start the talks, instead favouring a form of “privileged partnership” for Ukraine with the EU.

Updated

More on Ukraine’s parliament approving its 2024 budget earlier on Thursday.

More than half of next year’s budget will used to fund the war effort against Russia.

“The priorities are clearly set in the budget. All our internal resources will go so we can withstand and win over the enemy,” Ukraine’s prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, said after the vote.

“Practically 50% of our spending for defence and security of Ukraine,” Shmyhal said. “There will be more weapons and vehicles, more drones, ammunition and missiles. Every hryvnia from a taxpayer will go to the army.”

Shmyhal also said the government planned to increase the minimum wage and pensions to help millions cope with the rising cost of living during the war.

Updated

Ukraine’s security service (SBU) has confirmed in a statement to Reuters that Russian hackers were behind a cyberattack that disrupted part of Ukraine’s power grid in late 2022.

The statement from the country’s main intelligence agency backs up earlier claims by the US cybersecurity firm Mandiant, part of Google, that Russian spies were responsible for the hack in October last year.

The SBU said the hacking group know as Sandworm had been behind the attack, and that the group was staffed by officers from Russia’s GRU military intelligence agency. The attack was likely to have been carried out to maximise the impact of Russian missile strikes, Illia Vitiuk, head of the SBU’s cybersecurity department, said in a statement.

Updated

Ukraine will be able to overcome Hungary’s political opposition to it beginning talks on EU membership, Reuters reports Kyiv’s minister for European integration, Olga Stefanishyna, as saying.

The European Council will decide next month whether to begin membership talks with Ukraine, which will require unanimous support among all 27 states. Hungary said on Thursday that the EU should not start talks, but instead offer the country some form of “privileged partnership”.

“Today, Hungary has made such a statement,” Stefanishyna said. “We understand that there is a such a statement, but we also understand there is a dialogue with Budapest.”

She said bringing Hungary on side over the next month would be a challenge, but that she was confident Ukraine would succeed.

Updated

Hungary says EU should not start membership talks with Ukraine

Reuters reports that Hungary does not want the European Union to begin membership talks with Ukraine.

It should instead offer some form of “privileged partnership” for the country, the Hungarian prime minister Viktor Orbán’s chief of staff told a briefing on Thursday.

EU leaders are expected to decide next month whether to accept the European Commission’s recommendation to invite Kyiv to begin membership talks as soon as it meets final conditions, including boosting safeguards for minorities.

The commission’s recommendation is an important milestone on Kyiv’s road to western integration, but any such decision requires unanimity of the bloc’s 27 members, with Hungary seen as the main potential obstacle.

Budapest has said it would not support Ukraine’s European integration unless Kyiv changes its laws on minorities, in particular regarding education. Hungary has clashed with Kyiv over what it says are curbs on the rights of roughly 150,000 ethnic Hungarians to use their native tongue.

Ukraine’s Hungarian minority was adequately protected and Ukrainian and Hungarian officials were working together on legislative changes recommended by Brussels, Olga Stefanishyna, the minister overseeing Ukraine’s European integration, said at a news briefing in Kyiv.

“Any country that makes a conscious political decision, first and foremost, to block the decision regarding Ukraine will find a reason,” she said.

Orbán said last month that the EU’s strategy on the war had failed and that he saw no reason for Hungary to send its taxpayers’ money to support Ukraine.

Updated

Ukraine’s parliament has voted to approve its 2024 state budget.

Reuters reports that more than half of all Ukrainian budget spending is planned for the defence sector to fund its war effort against Russia.

Last month, Ukraine’s finance ministry said in a statement on the draft 2024 budget that spending on defence was expected to be more than 21% of the country’s gross domestic product.

The 2024 budget plans for 4.6% economic growth and sets a deficit at about $43.58bn (£35.5bn). The budget revenues are set at 1.77tn hryvnias (£39.5bn), while spending is planned at 3.35tn hryvnias.

Updated

Reuters reports that some of Ukraine’s drone pilots fear their early advantage over Russia in the use of small, unmanned assault drones has been lost.

The use of agile First Person View (FPV) drones in battle has been one of the most successful of the various low-cost strategies Ukraine has used to defend itself from invasion by Russia.

However, Moscow has also gradually mirrored and increased its use of these drones, which were originally made for racing, but are modified to carry explosives.

Reuters spoke to drone pilots from the 80th Airborne Assault Brigade fighting near Bakhmut, who said Russia was gaining the upper hand through more organised supplies and greater spending.

“Their drones are always in the air, day and night. We can see they’ve implemented serial production of drones for reconnaissance, surveillance and for strikes,” said a 34-year-old drone platoon commander, who introduced himself by the callsign “Komrad”.

Russia has ramped up production of FPV drones this year, Reuters reports. A Russian state-owned defence enterprise announced this May that it planned to start making up to 3,000 of the devices a month.

The Ukrainian digital minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, told Reuters in September that Ukraine had boosted its overall aerial drone production by more than 100 times in 2023. Another minister said in October Ukraine would be making “dozens of thousands” of drones a month by the end of this year.

Updated

The Ukraine war is overextending Russia's military, MoD says

The Ukraine conflict is overextending Russia’s military and straining its ability to maintain secure defence of its borders, the UK’s Ministry of Defence has said.

In its latest daily intelligence update, posted to X, formerly Twitter, the ministry said that Russia will probably need to reallocate surface-to-air missile (Sam) systems from distant parts of Russia to maintain coverage over Ukraine, after the reported losses of several of its SA-21 long range Sam systems last week.

Russia positions Sams at strategically important locations, such as around its borders. Removing systems would almost certainly weaken Russia’s air defence on its peripheries, the MoD update said.

The need for Russia to move its strategic air defence assets would “demonstrate how the Ukraine conflict continues to overextend Russia’s military and strains its ability to retain baseline defences across its vast area”, according to the update.

Updated

Reuters reports that Russia will not abandon its plans to increase liquefied natural gas (LNG) production to 100m tonnes a year because of US sanctions, the Russian foreign ministry spokesperson, Maria Zakharova, said on Thursday.

In a new package of sanctions announced this month, the US targeted a major Russian entity involved in the development, operation and ownership of a massive project in Siberia known as Arctic-2 LNG.

Russian companies have already learned to overcome such obstacles, Zakharova told a briefing.

Updated

Reuters reports that five people were killed on Thursday in a missile strike by Ukraine’s armed forces on the town of Skadovsk in the Russian-controlled part of Ukraine’s Kherson region, the Tass news agency reported, citing preliminary information.

The agency was quoting the Russian-installed Emergencies Ministry of the Kherson region, which Russia claims to have annexed along with three others since the start of what it calls its special military operation in Ukraine.

Updated

Russia suspects western countries will not find those responsible for the blasts that damaged the Nord Stream pipelines last September, the foreign ministry spokesperson, Maria Zakharova, said on Thursday during a weekly briefing, Reuters reports.

Updated

The Russian president, Vladimir Putin, called for the development of wheat and fertiliser cargo transport routes in Asia during a visit to Kazakhstan on Thursday, as Russia seeks to forge new export routes due to western sanctions, Reuters reports.

Chairing a conference on agricultural cooperation with Kazakhstan’s president, Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, Putin said Russia would have about 60m metric tons of wheat available for exports from this year’s strong crop.

Putin said: “We are confident, certainly, that we will retain the number one spot globally in terms of exports of this important commodity, wheat.”

He called for further development of shipping routes to large Asian markets such as China and India.

Western sanctions on Russian banks and companies have made it more difficult for Russian exporters to ship grains and arrange payments, although the sanctions do not specifically target such commodities.

Moscow has also reportedly asked exporters to adopt a minimum wheat export price in order to protect farmers’ income, though the functioning of the semi-official scheme is unclear.

Kazakhstan, in turn, is seeking to become a logistics hub for Russian commodities bound for China and Iran, officials say. The country already operates a railroad link between Russia and China and has a railroad connection with Iran along the Caspian.

Updated

Avdiivka is important to Ukrainian defenders as a gateway for recapturing territory in the east. The large Russian-held town of Donetsk is 20km away.

Avdiivka was seized briefly in 2014 when Russian-backed separatists captured chunks of eastern Ukraine, but Ukrainian troops retook it and built up fortifications.

Local officials have said the Russians are holding back on a “third wave” of assaults after a week of heavy rain. “The third wave hasn’t started yet, but they are preparing for it,” Vitaliy Barabash, head of the town’s military administration, told national TV. “Today is already the second day when the weather is favourable for this.”

Ukrainian analysts suggest Russia has little to gain in a protracted drive that has already sustained high losses. “This task now has a more political nature, given the losses the Russian army has already suffered here,” military analyst Denys Popovych told NV Radio. “Unfortunately, this task will continue. There will be a third wave of attacks. And a fourth.”

Updated

Reuters reports that Russian cyber spies were behind a hack which disrupted part of Ukraine’s power grid in late 2022, the US cybersecurity firm Mandiant, part of Google, said in a report on Thursday.

Successful hacks against industrial control systems are relatively unique, with Russia one of the few countries with the capabilities to carry out such cyber-attacks.

“This attack represents the latest evolution in Russia’s cyber physical attack capability, which has been increasingly visible since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,” said the report, which did not identify the specific facility against which the attack had been carried out.

Last October, a massive wave of Russian missile strikes on Ukraine’s power network caused blackouts in many parts of the country, prompting Kyiv to halt electricity exports and leaving four regions temporarily without electricity.

The hacking group, known in cybersecurity research circles by the moniker “Sandworm”, was able to cause a power cut in an unidentified area of Ukraine by tripping circuit breakers at an electrical substation at the same time as the missile strike, the report said. The group then deployed data-wiping malware in a move to cover their tracks, the report added.

Sandworm has been previously identified as a cyberwarfare unit of Russia’s GRU military intelligence agency.

Russia’s foreign ministry did not respond to a request for comment. The GRU could not be reached for comment. Ukraine’s foreign ministry and its SBU intelligence agency did not provide comment.

Updated

Blinken expresses 'profound concern' over Russia-North Korea military cooperation

The US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said on Thursday he and South Korea’s foreign minister, Park Jin, share “profound” concerns about the growing military cooperation between North Korea and Russia, Reuters reports.

Blinken and Park also said they discussed working together to implement a so-called extended deterrence strategy of countering threats from North Korea and furthering strategic cooperation with Japan.

“Already our three countries are taking steps to improve our joint response through real-time sharing of DPRK missile warning data, trilateral defence exercises and efforts to counter DPRK’s malicious cyber activities.”

DPRK, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, is North Korea’s official name.

The US, South Korea and Japan have condemned what they say is the flow of arms and military equipment from North Korea to Russia, saying movements of cargo from the reclusive state to Russia was evidence.

North Korea and Russia have denied any arms deals though their leaders pledged closer military cooperation when they met in September in Russia’s far east.

Park also said after his meeting with Blinken the two foreign ministers urge North Korea to call off a plan to launch a spy satellite.

North Korea is preparing to launch a spy satellite after having failed twice this year to put one in orbit. South Korea said last week North Korea was in the final stages of preparations for a launch after apparently getting technical help from Russia.

South Korea’s military said on Monday it was on alert after North Korea designated 18 November as “missile industry day” to mark its launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile last year.

Blinken’s two-day visit to South Korea is the first by a US secretary of state in two-and-a-half years and part of a broader Asia trip that will include a stop in India. He was in the Middle East before Japan.

Updated

Russian forces continue to attempt to encircle Avdiivka

Here are some of the most important developments in the Russian war against Ukraine:

  • Russian forces reinforced by reserves continue to attempt to encircle Avdiivka, Ukrainian military officials have said. Anton Kotsukon, spokesperson for the 110th separate mechanised brigade, said a Russian force of 40,000 was massed on three sides of the town. General Oleksandr Tarnavskyi, head of Ukraine’s southern group of forces, said troops around Avdiivka were “stoutly holding their defences”.

  • A Russian missile damaged a civilian vessel under a Liberian flag entering the Black Sea port of Odesa, killing one and injuring four people, the Ukrainian military said.

  • Russia is sending Ukrainian prisoners of war to fight against their own side, the Russian state news agency RIA Novosti has reported. It was unclear whether they were coerced, the Associated Press said. Yulia Gorbunova from Human Rights Watch said: “Russian authorities might claim they are recruiting them on a voluntary basis but it’s hard to imagine a scenario where a prisoner of war’s decision could be taken truly voluntarily, given the situation of coercive custody.”

  • A deadly missile attack on Donetsk city struck a Russian training centre for military drone operators, reports said. It was portrayed by Russian occupation authorities on Tuesday as a Ukrainian attack on civilian government offices, but analysis identified the target as the “Zhoga Republican Centre for Unmanned Systems”, Newsweek and other outlets said.

  • Ukraine’s military spy agency claimed responsibility for the assassination of a Russia-backed lawmaker with a car bomb in the occupied eastern city of Luhansk, an operation it said it conducted with local resistance forces.

  • Research by Russian media outlet Mediazona suggested 76 cases of railway sabotage within Russia had reached court since the invasion, the UK’s Ministry of Defence (MoD) said in its latest intelligence update. The alleged saboteurs were “anti-war activists” mostly aged under 24 and their work “continues to represent a significant challenge for the Russian authorities”, the MoD said.

  • The US has gone through 96% of the funds that it allocated for Ukraine, the national security council spokesperson, John Kirby, has told reporters.

  • Slovakia’s new government has rejected a previously drafted plan to donate rockets and ammunition to Ukraine, following through on a pledge by the incoming prime minister Robert Fico to halt military aid to Kyiv as it fights a Russian invasion.

  • Leaders of the G7 group of countries have insisted that their support for Ukraine will “never waver”.

  • Military cooperation between Russia and China is becoming increasingly important, but the two countries do not intend to build a cold war-style military alliance, Vladimir Putin said as he hosted a top Chinese general.

  • The EU’s executive recommended that the bloc starts membership negotiations with Ukraine once it fulfils outstanding conditions. “The Commission recommends that the [EU] council opens accession negotiations with Ukraine,” the Brussels-based European Commission said.

  • Ukraine’s energy ministry said that Russia had attacked Ukrainian energy infrastructure with different weapons 60 times in recent weeks.

Updated

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