Russia Ukraine war update: Kyiv strikes Russia ‘with kamikaze drones’ as Putin’s troops suffer in Kharkiv

Zelensky says China trying to undermine Ukraine peace summit

Ukraine has struck several regions of Russia with kamikaze drones, officials have claimed, as Kremlin-approved outlets reported damage to multiple military sites.

Ukrainian military intelligence (HUR) officials said they targeted military facilities in the Lipetsk, Belgorod and Voronezh, all of which are within 250 miles of the Ukrainian border.

Russian state media outlet Astra reported that a pipeline had been damaged in one of the workshops of the Novolipetsk Metallurgical Plant in Lipetsk, while residents reported explosions and smoke over the tractor plant at about 1:40 a.m local time. The Russian defence ministry claimed that six drones had been shot down over the three regions.

It comes as a Russian soldier claimed their forces were suffering massive losses in their attempts to capture further territory in the northeast Kharkiv region of Ukraine.

“They just chop us up. We are sent under machine guns, under drones in daylight, like meat. And commanders just shout ‘forward and forward’,” soldier Anton Andreev said in a video message, in comments published by Astra.

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Kremlin says Swiss conference showed futility of talks without Russia

The Kremlin has said that a Swiss-hosted conference on the Ukraine war had produced negligible results and showed the futility of holding talks without Russia.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters the results of the meeting were “close to zero”.

President Vladimir Putin said last week that Russia was willing to end the war, but he set out conditions for Ukraine – renouncing its Nato ambitions and withdrawing troops from four regions claimed by Russia – that Kyiv rejected as tantamount to capitulation.

At the weekend summit in Switzerland, Western powers and their allies denounced Russia’s invasion of Ukraine but failed to persuade major non-aligned states to join their final statement, and no country came forward to host a sequel.

Over 90 countries attended the two-day talks at a Swiss Alpine resort at the behest of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, billed as a “peace summit” even though Moscow was not invited.

Russia ridiculed the event from afar. A decision by China to stay away all but assured that the summit would fail to achieve Ukraine‘s goal of persuading major countries from the “global South” to join in isolating Russia.

Brazil attended only as an “observer”. And in the end, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Saudi Arabia and South Africa all withheld their signatures from the summit communique, even though some contentious issues were omitted in the hope of drawing wider support.

Still, the conference provided Kyiv with a chance to showcase the support from Western allies that it says it needs to keep fighting against a far bigger enemy.

Tom Watling17 June 2024 11:40

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LGBT soldiers in Ukraine hope their service is changing attitudes as they rally for legal rights

Tom Watling17 June 2024 11:10

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Russian spy chief says next peace terms in Ukraine will be tougher, Tass reports

If Russian President Vladimir Putin’s current proposals for a peace treaty with Ukraine are rejected, the next peace terms will be tougher, Russian spy chief and close Putin ally Sergei Naryshkin has said, according to the Kremlin-approved Tass news agency.

He didn’t specify whom the proposals could be accepted or rejected by in the report.

Chairman of the Russian Historical Society Sergei Naryshkin (3-L) is pictured at the Red Square in Moscow, Russia
Chairman of the Russian Historical Society Sergei Naryshkin (3-L) is pictured at the Red Square in Moscow, Russia (EPA)

Tom Watling17 June 2024 10:45

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Kidnapped, abused, humiliated – the Ukrainian children stolen by Russia

Tom Watling17 June 2024 10:10

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Putin treats international law like ‘toilet paper’, says Kyiv’s top official as peace summit meets

Tom Watling17 June 2024 09:45

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Denmark aims to limit shadow fleet of Russian oil tankers

Denmark is considering ways to limit the passage of old tankers carrying Russian oil through the Baltic Sea, the Nordic country’s foreign minister said in a statement on Monday, in a move that could trigger confrontation with Moscow.

Russia sends about a third of its seaborne oil exports, or 1.5 per cent of global supply, through the Danish straits that sit as a gateway to the Baltic Sea, so any attempt to halt supplies would send oil prices higher and hit the Kremlin’s finances.

Denmark has brought together a group of allied countries evaluating measures targeting the so-called shadow fleet of ageing ships transporting the Russian oil, Foreign Minister Lars Lokke Rasmussen told Reuters.

Crude oil tanker Nevskiy Prospect, owned by Russia's leading tanker group Sovcomflot, transits the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Turkey
Crude oil tanker Nevskiy Prospect, owned by Russia’s leading tanker group Sovcomflot, transits the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Turkey (REUTERS)

Tom Watling17 June 2024 09:20

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We could start negotiating with Russia tomorrow, says Zelensky

Ukraine could begin negotiating a peace plan with Russia “even tomorrow” if it takes seriously Kyiv’s demands to withdraw its troops entirely from Ukraine, president Volodymyr Zelensky has said.

In his concluding speech at a Swiss peace summit over the weekend, Mr Zelensky said: “If Russia is at the next summit, it shows that it wants peace … it can start [negotiations] even tomorrow, if it withdraws its troops from our territory.”

He added that the next summit could take place “in months, not years”.

Russian leader Vladimir Putin claims he is willing to negotiate a peace deal but the terms of his proposal, which includes not only the seizure of Ukrainian territories currently occupied by Russia but also land still within Ukraine’s control, has been described by Kyiv as a Hitler-like “ultimatum”.

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky (C) walks to attend bilateral talks during the Summit on peace in Ukraine
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky (C) walks to attend bilateral talks during the Summit on peace in Ukraine (POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

Tom Watling17 June 2024 08:52

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Putin would be allowed to attend next peace summit, says Swiss president

An exception to Vladimir Putin’s travel embargo, the result of an arrest warrant for genocide issued last year by the International Criminal Court, “can be made” if the Russian leader wishes to attend Switzerland’s next peace summit, the country’s president has said.

Speaking after the first summit over the weekend, Swiss president Viola Amherd said: “An exception can be made. In the case of peace talks between Ukraine and Russia, this could be an exception.”

A similar statement was made by Swiss Foreign Minister Ignazio Cassis. He also said that the second conference on Ukraine could be held before the US presidential election scheduled for November this year.

After the ICC issued an arrest for Putin in March 2023 for his commanding role in the forcible deportation of tens of thousands – if not hundreds of thousands – of Ukrainian children to Russia, the autocrat has been barred from visiting any of the 124 countries that are signatories to the international court. They are legally obliged to arrest him as soon as he steps on their territory.

It is unclear how Switzerland would circumvent this obligation.

Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with participants of the 'Time of Heroes' project that will virtually help veterans of the special military operation to become government administrators
Russian President Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with participants of the ‘Time of Heroes’ project that will virtually help veterans of the special military operation to become government administrators (EPA)

Tom Watling17 June 2024 08:42

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Signatories of Ukraine peace summit drops to 78

The number of countries that have signed their support for a Ukraine peace plan after an international summit in Switzerland has dropped to 78, a Swiss statement has said.

Originally, it was reported that 80 countries had signed their backing for the proposal, which calls for Russian forces to withdraw completely from Ukrainian territory.

But the communique shows that Iraq and Jordan have withdrawn their signatures.

At least 12 countries – including Saudi Arabia – had already withheld their signature.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky flashes a V sign as he addresses Ukraine’s closing press conference of the Summit on peace in Ukraine, at the luxury Burgenstock resort, near Lucerne, Switzerland
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky flashes a V sign as he addresses Ukraine’s closing press conference of the Summit on peace in Ukraine, at the luxury Burgenstock resort, near Lucerne, Switzerland (AFP via Getty Images)

Tom Watling17 June 2024 08:32

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Here we have some of the latest photos from Ukraine

Below we have some of the latest photos coming from Ukraine.

A Ukrainian serviceman rides a motorcycle on a road in the Donetsk region
A Ukrainian serviceman rides a motorcycle on a road in the Donetsk region (AFP via Getty Images)
A Ukrainian trainee puts on his helmet ahead of a flight with an unseen French military instructor onboard an Alpha Jet fighter jet, at a French Army air base in south-western France
A Ukrainian trainee puts on his helmet ahead of a flight with an unseen French military instructor onboard an Alpha Jet fighter jet, at a French Army air base in south-western France (AFP via Getty Images)
A French-made Caesar howitzer is pictured running on a road in the Donetsk region
A French-made Caesar howitzer is pictured running on a road in the Donetsk region (AFP via Getty Images)

Tom Watling17 June 2024 08:22

Reference

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