Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Chosen by us to get you up to speed at a glance
The Ukrainian army has attacked the Russian army with its new weapon, the Palianytsia drone missile, for the first time.
Speaking during Independence Day celebrations, Volodymyr Zelensky said that the Palianytsia represents a “completely new class” of weaponry.
The Ukrainian president said: “This is our new method of retaliation against the aggressor. The enemy has been defeated. I thank everyone who made it possible.”
Russians struggle to pronounce Palianytsia correctly, so it is also being used as a checkpoint password to identify Ukrainian speakers and test suspected spies, according to reporters on the ground.
The introduction of the Palianytsia comes amid a broader push to enhance Ukraine’s drone capabilities.
“Our new weapons solutions, particularly the Palianytsia missile, are a real way we can act while some of our partners, unfortunately, are slowing down with their decisions,” Mr Zelensky said.
Thank you for following today’s live coverage of the war in Ukraine.
We’ll be back soon with more updates and analysis from the conflict.
Russia and Ukraine announced Saturday they had exchanged 115 prisoners of war each, just over two weeks after Kyiv launched a surprise incursion into Russia’s Kursk region.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said “another 115 of our defenders have returned home today”, while Moscow’s defence ministry said: “As a result of a negotiation process, 115 Russian servicemen taken prisoner in the Kursk region have been returned from territories controlled by the Kyiv regime.”
Mr Zelensky previously said the Russian soldiers captured in the Kursk region are considered an “exchange fund”, and that he hopes they can be swapped for some of the roughly 6,5000 Ukrainian soldiers that Moscow says it holds.
The majority of those taken are also understood to be young Russian conscripts. Conscription is a politically sensitive issue in Russia – particularly as Vladimir Putin previously promised conscripts would not take part in active combat – and it appears that Ukraine is now leveraging the thorny issue to its advantage.
Hungary’s foreign minister has said that the European Commission’s decision not to mediate in a dispute over blocked oil supplies from Russia via Ukraine suggested that Brussels was behind the stoppage.
Hungary and its neighbour Slovakia have been protesting since Ukraine put Russian oil producer Lukoil on a sanctions list in June, stopping that company’s oil from passing through Ukrainian territory to Slovak and Hungarian refineries.
The assertion from Hungary’s Peter Szijjarto, which he made without providing evidence, came a day after the European Commission declined a request from Hungary and Slovakia for it to mediate between them and Ukraine over the sanctions.
“The fact that the European Commission declared that it was unwilling to help to secure the energy supply of Hungary and Slovakia suggests that the order was sent from Brussels to Kyiv to cause challenges and problems in the energy supply of Hungary and Slovakia,” Mr Szijjarto said.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz has reaffirmed Berlin’s “continued and unwavering solidarity” with Ukraine in spite of a budget reduction for military aid to Kyiv next year, his office said.
In a telephone call with Volodymyr Zelensky, Mr Scholz “reaffirmed the continued and unwavering solidarity with Ukraine in the face of Russia’s ongoing aggression”, according to a readout of the phone call released by his office.
President Volodymyr Zelensky has said that Russia’s invasion can only end with the restoration of Ukraine’s territorial integrity and the prevention of future Russian aggression.
Speaking on the country’s thirty-third Independence Day, Mr Zelensky said: “The war can only end with the restoration of Ukraine’s territorial integrity and the prevention of further aggression from Putin and Russia.”
He continued: “We will do everything in our power to compel Putin to end this war diplomatically in order to minimise our losses, first and foremost in terms of people and time. But if we are unable to do so… we will do everything we can to ensure that our Armed Forces are ready to rightfully push Putin out of our country.”
His statement comes after some recent reports had suggested that the Ukrainian president was beginning to consider negotiations with Moscow.
President Volodymyr Zelensky said that he briefed Germany’s Chancellor Olaf Scholz on Saturday on the battlefield situation after Ukraine’s incursion into Russia’s Kursk region and that they discussed the need for air defence and armored vehicles.
In his speech on Ukraine’s Independence Day in Kyiv, Polish president Andrzej Duda expressed confidence that Ukraine would be able to defend its freedom and that “the war will soon end in [Ukraine’s] victory.”
“I have never had, and do not have, the slightest doubt that, through their united efforts and struggle, the courageous Ukrainian people will uphold their independence. Although Ukraine is currently battling the Russian aggressor, fiercely fighting for its independence, I am confident that the war will soon conclude with the triumph of freedom over tyranny. Out of the darkness of war and the devastation of scorched territories, a new world will emerge,” Mr Duda said.
Ukraine said the 115 servicemen who were freed were conscripts, many of whom were taken prisoner in the first months of Russia’s invasion.
Among them are nearly 50 soldiers captured by Russian forces from the Azovstal steelworks in Mariupol.
Another 115 of our defenders have returned home today. These are warriors of the National Guard, the Armed Forces, the Navy, and the State Border Guard Service.We remember everyone. We are searching for them and making every effort to bring them all back.I am grateful to each… pic.twitter.com/XiMAeANsOd
President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Saturday that Ukraine would do everything to force Russian president Vladimir Putin to end the war through diplomacy.
Asked how he sees the end of the war with Russia which is nearing its 30th month, Mr Zelensky reiterated his position that Ukraine’s territorial integrity should be restored.
Ukraine said Saturday it had carried out an attack on a Russian ammunition depot in the southern Russian region of Voronezh.
“On August 24, the Defence Intelligence of Ukraine (DIU) servicemen successfully struck a field ammunition depot located near Ostrogozk, Voronezh region of Russia,” Ukraine’s military intelligence agency said.
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said on Saturday that Ukraine’s operation in the Kursk region was a preventive strike to stop Russian attacks in the north and towards the regional city of Sumy.
Mr Zelensky told a news conference the operation in Kursk was difficult but he viewed its progress positively.
Volodymyr Zelensky has warned that Ukraine will soon be able to attack “any point” of the Russian federation that is a “source of danger” to his country and people.
Speaking in a 13-minute Ukrainian Independence Day video address – that was said to be recorded in the border area from where Kyiv launched its surprise incursion into Russia – Mr Zelensky said that Russia wanted to “destroy” Ukraine but war has “returned to its home”.
“Our enemy will know what the Ukrainian way of retaliation is…. They will know that, sooner or later, a Ukrainian response will reach any point in the Russian federation that is a source of danger to the life of our state or our people,” he said.
Mr Zelensky continued: “And the one who wanted to turn our land into a buffer zone should think about preventing his country from becoming a buffer federation.”
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said “another 115 of our defenders have returned home today”, while Moscow’s defence ministry said: “As a result of a negotiation process, 115 Russian servicemen taken prisoner in the Kursk region have been returned from territories controlled by the Kyiv regime.”
Russia and Ukraine have exchanged 115 prisoners of war from each side after the United Arab Emirates acted as an intermediary, the Russian state-run news agency has reported.
The exchanged Russian servicemen, captured by Ukraine during its incursion into the Kursk region, are now on the territory of Belarus, the Russian Defence ministry said.
It is the seventh such exchange the UAE has mediated since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022. Abu Dhabi, a close security partner of the United States, has maintained warm relations with Moscow throughout the war, frustrating some Western officials. It has also strengthened ties with Kyiv.
Posting on social media, the UAE foreign ministry said: “230 captives released following the seventh UAE mediation effort between Russia and Ukraine.”
Ukraine has not yet commented.
A Russian attack killed at least five civilians and wounded five others on Saturday in the eastern Ukrainian town of Kostiantynivka, a regional governor said.
Vadym Filashkin, governor of the Donetsk region, said rescuers and police were working at the scene of the attack, which took place early on Saturday.
“I urge you all again: take care of yourselves, evacuate,” Mr Filashkin wrote on the Telegram messaging app, without giving further details about the attack.
Kostiantynivka is located close to the active combat zone in Donetsk, where Russian forces have been inching forward for months.
The Russian advance quickened in recent weeks as Moscow’s troops are mounting relentless attacks in the direction of the strategic logistics hub of Pokrovsk.
The Ukrainian army has attacked the Russian army with a new weapon, the Palianytsia drone missile, for the first time.
Speaking about the weapon on Ukrainian Independence Day, Volodymyr Zelensky said: “This is our new method of retaliation against the aggressor. The enemy has been defeated. I thank everyone who made it possible. All developers, manufacturers and our soldiers. I am proud of you.”
Russia has destroyed the memorial museum of Nestor Makhno, a Ukrainian anarchist revolutionary and the commander of the Revolutionary Insurgent Army of Ukraine during the Ukrainian War of Independence, according to the country’s Ministry of Interior.
The building caught fire and burned to the ground as a result of a missile strike, in Huliaipole, Zaporizhzhia Oblast.
Russia and Ukraine are set to exchange 115 prisoners today following mediation from the United Arab Emirates, an Emirati official told Reuters.
It would be the first such prisoner swap between the countries since the Ukrainian military launched its offensive inside Russia on August 6.
The US Department of Defense has announced details of a new $125 million package of US aid for Ukraine, which includes air defence equipment, ammunition for missile systems and artillery, and anti-tank weapons.
This announcement is the Biden Administration’s sixty-fourth tranche of equipment to be provided from Department of Defense inventories for Ukraine since August 2021.
“As Ukraine prepares to celebrate its Independence Day on August 24 – more than two and a half years since the Kremlin launched its full-scale invasion – the United States and the international coalition of some 50 Allies and partners remain committed to supporting Ukraine’s brave defenders that continue to fight against Russian aggression,” the Pentagon statement said.
The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) has confirmed the advance of Ukrainian troops near the town of Sudzha in Russia’s Kursk Oblast.
“Ukrainian forces continued to marginally advance near Sudzha amid continued Ukrainian operations in Kursk Oblast on 23 August,” the ISW said in a statement.
Ukraine. Our land. Given by God. Kissed by the sun. Rocked by the winds. Tempered by fire. Defended by its sons and daughters.It cannot be mistaken for anything else.It can never be given away to anyone.Happy Independence Day of Ukraine! pic.twitter.com/LwnRAjnZnc
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has signed a law on Ukraine ratifying the Rome Statute, allowing the country to join the International Criminal Court (ICC).
The law published on the parliament’s website was also a key to Ukraine’s efforts to move closer to the European Union.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky on Saturday signed a law banning the Moscow-linked Orthodox Church in Ukraine with the decision published on Ukraine’s parliament website.
The bill approved by parliament earlier this month created the legal tools for the government to ban activities of a Russia-linked branch of the Orthodox church and paved the way for a historic rupture with an institution that Kyiv has accused of complicity in Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
Mr Zelensky approved the bill, slammed by Russia, on Kyiv’s independence day from the Soviet Union and two and a half years into Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The Ukrainian leader said the move will strengthen his country’s independence and in an address on Saturday declared: “Ukrainian Orthodox (church) today is taking a step towards liberation from Moscow’s devils.”
Sir Keir Starmer has told Ukrainians the UK will back them “today and always”, as Kyiv marks 33 years since it declared independence from the Soviet Union.
“My message to all Ukrainians, whether on the front line or here in your second home in the UK, is crystal clear: we are with you today and always,” Sir Keir said.
“That is what I told President Zelensky when he sat at our Cabinet table and where, on behalf of the British people, I outlined that it is not just the British government that’s behind Ukraine – it’s all of us.
“We are with you for as long as it takes.”
“Slava Ukraini,” he said, a national salute in the country, which translates to glory to Ukraine.
The EU’s diplomatic service has called on member states to better adapt a military training mission for Ukraine to Kyiv’s needs but stopped short of recommending the bloc send military instructors to the war-torn country, German weekly Welt am Sonntag reported on Saturday.
The EUMAM mission, launched in November 2022, has trained some 60,000 Ukrainian troops mainly in Poland and Germany and is set to be extended by another two years once the current mandate runs out in mid-November.
“It is imperative to train AFU (Ukraine) soldiers on the same equipment that they will use later in combat,” the report cited a review of the mission by the EU’s diplomatic service as saying.
Kyiv asked the EU in May to conduct some training on Ukrainian soil but member states are divided with sceptics warning that the bloc could be drawn into the war and raising doubts about Kyiv’s ability to protect training sites against Russian attacks.
The EU review said Kyiv’s request could be met by opening the possibility to deploy some EUMAM instructors to Ukrainian training facilities, “in a discrete form”, far from the battlefield and possibly in the western part of the country, although it did not recommend that they be sent.
Russia has declared a state of emergency in part of the Voronezh region bordering Ukraine after an overnight drone attack, local governor Alexander Gusev said in his Telegram channel.
According to Mr Gusev, Russian forces intercepted five drones. Falling debris ignited a fire, leading to the detonation of explosive materials.
The incident damaged no civilian buildings, but prompted authorities to impose emergency measures in three settlements in the Ostrogozhsky district and evacuate 200 people, he said.