Russian air defenses shot down a drone early Friday over Moscow, according to Mayor Sergei Sobyanin. No casualties or significant damage was reported, he said.
The United States will approve the transfer of F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine as soon as pilots are fully trained, a US official said Thursday. The training was expected to start this month — but it’s unclear when it will begin or how long it will take.
On the battlefield, Ukrainian forces reclaimed the village of Urozhaine, partly due to the use of cluster munitions, according to military experts.
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg said it is up to Ukraine to decide when to come to the negotiating table, following controversial remarks made by the director of his office earlier this week.
Russian air defenses shoot drone down near Moscow Expocentre, Moscow mayor says
From CNN's Josh Pennington
Russian air defenses shot down a drone early Friday over Moscow, according to Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin.
Sobyanin said no casualties or significant damage has been reported.
Russian state media reported that the airspace over Vnukovo International Airport is currently closed and that arrivals and departures have been delayed.
This marks the third time in the past month that this district of Moscow has been struck by drone debris.
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Russia says it thwarted attack by an unmanned Ukrainian gunboat in Black Sea
From CNN's Josh Pennington and Michael Rios
Russia says two of its patrol ships repelled a new Ukrainian attack on the Black Sea.
According to Russia’s defense ministry, Ukraine targeted the ships with an unmanned gunboat lateThursday night. But Russia says its ships opened fire on the vessel and destroyed it before reaching its target.
The ships, the Pytlivy and the Vasily Bykov, were overseeing navigation in the area when the alleged attack happened, the Russian defense ministry said. Earlier this month, Russia said the Vasily Bykov was one of two ships that repelled another uncrewed boat attack by Ukraine.
The Vasily Bykov also participated in Russia’s attack on Ukraine’s Snake Island at the start of the full-scale invasion.
Earlier this week, the ship fired warning shots on a cargo ship on the Black Sea after it failed to respond to a request to stop for an inspection, according to Russia.
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US commits to approving F-16s for Ukraine as soon as training is complete
From CNN's Oren Liebermann and Natasha Barrett
A US Air Force F-16 aircraft flies near the Rionegro Airport during military drills in Colombia, on July 12, 2021.
Joaquin Sarmiento/AFP/Getty Images
The US has committed to approving the transfer of F-16 fighter jets for Ukraine as soon as pilot training is complete, according to a US official.
The training program was initially expected to start this month, but it is now unclear exactly when it will start or how long it is expected to take.
Denmark and the Netherlands have taken the lead in preparing a program to train Ukrainian pilots on the American jet, but the US is still working with other countries to see who may provide F-16s to the Ukrainian Air Force.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken sent letters to his counterparts in Denmark and the Netherlands assuring them that the transfer of the jets would have the “full support” of the Biden administration and would move quickly when training on the advanced aircraft is complete.
Reuters first reported on the US approving the transfer of the jets.
A one-page training concept from the Danish Ministry of Defense laid out a six-month plan to prepare pilots and ground crews to operate the fighter jet.
But the US has yet to receive a formal training plan to familiarize and prepare Ukrainian pilots for the fourth-generation fighter jet. Even though a number of other countries fly the F-16, the US needs to sign off on the transfer of training materials, simulators and manuals for the jet because it is an American aircraft carrying sensitive technology.
The country’s marines advanced for the second time in two weeks on the southeastern frontlines, towards the key port city of Mariupol, with the recapture of the village of Urozhaine appearing to have been partially aided by the Ukrainian use of controversial cluster munitions.
Drone footage of the intense fight for the village has emerged in which dozens of Russian troops can be seen fleeing to the village’s south.
The National Guard of Ukraine also said Thursday that its forces are entrenched near the village of Urozhaine in the eastern Donetsk region and are repelling Russian attacks after retaking the area.
Here are other headlines you should know:
Military equipment and trainings: The Russian assault Ka-52 helicopters shot down in Ukraine Thursday morning were manufactured using foreign chips and processors, according to Andriy Yermak, the head of the Office of the President of Ukraine. Also, Germany’s army trained Ukrainian troops on Leopard 1 battle tanks Thursday in the eastern German town of Klietz, just outside Berlin. The Russian Education Ministry announced Thursday that the country’s vocational schools are to train the operators of unmanned aircraft systems (UAVs), according to state media TASS. And Ukraine does not expect US-made F-16 fighter jets to arrive this year, a Ukrainian Air Force spokesperson said Wednesday.
The latest on the grain deal: Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal called for increased international pressure to restore the Black Sea grain deal in a meeting with World Trade Organization Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala in Kyiv Thursday. Shmyhal said in a social media post that he stressed that Ukraine is counting on WTO support in restoring agricultural exports.
NATO update: NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg stressed Thursday that it is up to Ukraine to decide when to come to the negotiating table, following controversial remarks made by the director of his office earlier this week.
Fines and sanctions: A magistrate’s court in Moscow fined US tech giant Google 3 million ruble (about $31,800) Thursday for its failure to delete questionable information about what Russia calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine, as well as information that is banned in Russia, according to state news agency TASS. Meanwhile, Yermak called for tougher sanctions to prevent Russia from procuring components for the weapons it uses in Ukraine. Ukraine has repeatedly called for stronger Western sanctions against Russia, arguing that despite the existing tough sanctions imposed by the US, NATO and the EU, Russia is still able to procure components for the weapons.
Comments from the Belarusian president: The war in Ukraine was avoidable, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said in an interview on Thursday, according to Belarus state news outlet BelTa. The outlet also reported that Belarus would immediately respond to aggression if provoked, including by using nuclear weapons, Lukashenko said.
Detainees in Russia: A Moscow court has charged a Russian-born US citizen with espionage, Russian state news agency TASS reported Thursday quoting the court’s press service. And on Wednesday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke by phone with American Paul Whelan, who is being held in a remote prison camp in Russia, a source familiar told CNN.
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Moscow court adds new charge for jailed Russian-born US citizen, state media reports
From CNN's Radina Gigova, Josh Pennington, Jennifer Hansler, Katarina Krebs and Matthew Chance
A general view of the pre-trial detention center "Lefortovo" in Moscow, on December 9, 2000.
AP
A Moscow court has charged an imprisoned Russian-born US citizen with espionage, Russian state news agency TASS reported Thursday, citing the court’s press service.
The individual, named Gene Spector, is currently serving a prison sentence after pleading guilty to bribery charges, according to TASS.
Spector was born and raised in St. Petersburg but later moved to the United States and received US citizenship, according to TASS. He was the chairman of the board of directors of Medpolymerprom Group, specializing in cancer drugs, according to TASS.
In 2020, Spector was charged with mediating bribes for Anastasia Alekseyeva, a former aide to former Russian Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich, according to TASS.
A US State Department spokesperson said the US is “aware of reports of charges against a US citizen in Russia” and that it is monitoring the situation.
There is no indication the US has deemed Spector to be wrongfully detained.
Detainees in Russia: Several Americans have been held in Russian custody during Moscow’s war in Ukraine.
Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich was arrested by Russian authorities in March, marking the first detention of an American reporter in Russia on allegations of spying since the Cold War.
Gerskovich’s arrest rattled White House officials and further strained wartime relations between Moscow and Washington.
Other high-profile detentions — including that of US basketball star Brittney Griner, who was released in December, and former US Marine Paul Whelan — have raised concerns that Americans could be used as pawns in the broader geopolitics surrounding the war.
Clarification: This post has been updated to note Spector was already serving a prison sentence, and that this is a new charge.
CNN’s Anna Chernova, Sophie Tanno and Jo Shelley contributed to this report.
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Ukrainian armed forces chief and US Gen. Mark Milley discuss military aid and frontline conditions
From Yulia Kesaieva and Radina Gigova
Valerii Zaluzhnyi, the commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, and his US counterpart Gen. Mark Milley discussed the situation along the frontlines during a phone call Thursday, Zaluzhnyi said in a Facebook post.
The two spoke about “plans for the near-term, midterm and more remote prospect,” Zaluzhnyi said. He also mentioned that he discussed “actions” by Russian forces in Ukraine, without going into any detail in his post.
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Belarus would use nuclear weapons only to respond to aggression, president says
From CNN's Radina Gigova in London
Belarus would immediately respond to aggression if provoked, including by using nuclear weapons, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said in an interview on Thursday, according to state news outlet BelTa.
Lukashenko reiterated that “the nuclear weapons deployed in Belarus will definitely not be used unless we face aggression.”
“If only an act of aggression is committed against us, an attack against Belarus, we will not tarry, wait and the rest. We will use the entire arsenal of our weapons for deterrence. Why? Belarus is not Russia. Belarus cannot observe and wait for something. There is a great distance between Brest (a city in southwestern Belarus) and Vladivostok (a city in far eastern Russia), but our territory can be captured within a month and there will be nothing left,” he said.
Lukashenko said that he has publicly approved plans in case of aggression, but he would not specify the contents. “We didn’t bring nuclear weapons here in order to scare someone. Yes, nuclear weapons represent a strong deterring factor. But these are tactical nuclear weapons, not strategic ones. This is why we will use them immediately once aggression is launched against us,” he added.
Earlier this year, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced plans to station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus and said that Moscow would also construct a special storage facility for the weapons.
The Belarusian president also said Thursday his country would not get directly involved in Russia’s war in Ukraine, unless Ukrainians cross the border.
“If you, Ukrainians, do not cross our border, we will never get involved in this war, in this hot war,” Lukashenko said in the interview. “Yet, we will keep helping Russia — they are our ally,” he added, saying that over 50 countries are helping Ukraine “with coordination, training, ammunition, weapons, and so on” but “only Belarus is openly helping Russia.”
He called claims that Putin is pushing him to get involved in the war “complete nonsense.”
For context: Belarus helped Russia launch its initial invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, allowing the Kremlin’s troops to enter Ukraine from the north.
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Belarus' president says Ukraine war was avoidable and that Minsk should be involved in peace talks
From CNN's Radina Gigova
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko speaks in Minsk, Belarus, on February 16.
NATALIA KOLESNIKOVA/AFP via Getty Images)
The war in Ukraine was avoidable, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko said in an interview on Thursday, according to Belarus state news outlet BelTa.
Lukashenko said he was “familiar with all the issues” regarding Ukraine and Russia because at one point he liaised between former Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Lukashenko is a longtime ally of Putin. Belarus, which is west of Russia on Ukraine’s long northern border, helped Russia launch its initial invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, allowing the Kremlin’s troops to enter Ukraine from the north.
Lukashenko said in the interview that Belarus should be involved in peace talks about Ukraine.
“We border on Ukraine. We are ‘co-aggressors’” in the eyes of the West, Lukashenko said. “Of course, we have our interests there, and our position should be heard. I believe that Belarus should be involved in the negotiation process.”
Lukashenko said he thinks Belarus’ participation in peace talks would be positive.
As for the current state of affairs in Moscow, the Belarusian president said claims that the Wagner Group’s short-lived rebellion weakened Putin are “total nonsense.”
Lukashenko said he allowed the private military group into his country to “quell this mutiny,” and that Russia’s leader had emerged from the ordeal stronger.
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German army trains "highly motivated" Ukrainian soldiers on Leopard tanks near Berlin
From CNN’s Catherine Nicholls in London
German Lieutenant General Andreas Marlow stands in front of a Leopard 1A5 battle tank as he speaks to the press in Klietz, Germany, on Thursday.
Annegret Hilse/Reuters
Germany’s army trained Ukrainian troops on Leopard 1 battle tanks Thursday in the eastern German town of Klietz, just outside Berlin.
The Ukrainian army needs to train more soldiers after many have either been wounded or killed during the fight against Russia’s invasion, German Lt. Gen. Andreas Marlow told reporters at the training site.
The Ukrainian soldiers are “highly motivated,” said Marco Maulbecker, a German armed forces commander and trainer.
“They have to be. After all, if you want to learn the basic skills of the main battle tank, the instruction manual is a good 700 pages long. And you can see the motivation above all in the fact that they also deal with the system after duty and are really willing to learn the system in a really short time.”
Ukrainian soldiers also spoke to journalists at the training site.
“The training is very important for us because we receive (new) tanks with technical (systems), and the soldiers have to learn to use this equipment,” one service member said. “Therefore, it is very important for us, so that our soldiers can use it efficiently during battles.”
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After aide's controversial remark, NATO chief says only Ukraine can decide when to negotiate with Russia
From CNN’s James Frater and Niamh Kennedy
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg speaks during a press conference in Vilnius, Lithuania, on July 12.
Kacper Pempel/Reuters/FILE
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg stressed Thursday that it is up to Ukraine to decide when to come to the negotiating table, following controversial remarks made by the director of his office earlier this week.
On Tuesday, Stian Jenssen, the director of the Private Office of the NATO Secretary General, said during an event in Norway that ceding territory to Russia could be a way for Ukraine to achieve peace and join the alliance, according to Norwegian newspaper Verdens Gang.
The remarks sparked outrage among Ukrainian officials, including the adviser to the head of the Ukrainian presidential office, Mykhailo Podolyak, who called the remarks “ridiculous,” saying such a move would only encourage Moscow’s “appalling indulgences.”
Speaking during a conference in Arendal, Norway, on Thursday, Stoltenberg maintained that if NATO allies want peace, “military support for Ukraine is the solution,” according to Norwegian public broadcaster NRK.
Tension in the Baltic states: In his remarks Thursday, Stoltenberg also issued a warning that “great powers” such as Russia are not entitled to hold “spheres of interest,” according to NRK.
“Small countries like Latvia and Lithuania cannot accept that (just) because they are small neighboring countries, then Russia shall rule over them,” the NATO chief said.
Lithuania announced Wednesday that it would temporarily suspend operations at two checkpoints along its border with Belarus due to concerns about the presence of Wagner private military forces.
Wagner fighters are stationed in Belarus — a close ally of Russia — in the wake of their short-lived rebellion against the Kremlin. Their presence has raised tensions on NATO’s eastern flank.
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Moscow court fines Google for failing to delete banned content about "special military operation" in Ukraine
From CNN's Radina Gigova in London
A magistrate’s court in Moscow fined US tech giant Google 3 million ruble (about $31,800) Thursday for its failure to delete questionable information about what Russia calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine, as well as information that is banned in Russia, according to state news agency TASS.
Google had been served with an official notification requiring it to delete videos from YouTube that included instructions for viewers on how to access false information about the “special military operation” and how to illegally enter guarded facilities, which would jeopardize a person’s life and health, according to TASS.
Previously, the same court had repeatedly imposed fines on Google for administrative violations, including a 3 million ruble fine (about $31,800) in May for hosting videos on YouTube that promoted non-traditional sexual relations, defamed Russia’s armed forces, and contained instructions on the so-called illegal practice of “roofing” or climbing up tall structures to enter their roof premises, according to TASS.
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Ukrainian prime minister calls for increased international pressure to restore grain deal
From Yulia Kesaieva
Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal speaks in Kyiv, Ukraine, on July 19.
Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters/FILE
Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal held a meeting with World Trade Organization Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala in Kyiv on Thursday, in which he called for increased international pressure to restore the Black Sea grain deal.
Shmyhal said in a social media post that he stressed that Ukraine is counting on WTO support in restoring agricultural exports.
The prime minister also thanked the WTO for its political support and help with overcoming challenges posed by Russia, having described Russia as “provoking a global food crisis.”
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala also emphasized the importance of reopening the grain corridor, according to the Ukrainian government readout of the meeting.
Wheat grains are unloaded inside a storage facility in Zghurivka, Ukraine, on August 9.
Viacheslav Musiienko/Reuters/FILE
Russia withdrew from the grain deal exactly one month ago. The agreement was brokered in July 2022 by the United Nations and Turkey in order to ensure safe passage for the ships exporting Ukrainian grain.
Shmyhal also used Thursday’s meeting to express hope for WTO assistance in removing mines from Ukrainian land, according to the readout.
Kostan Nechyporenko contributed to this report.
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National Guard of Ukraine says its forces are repelling Russian counterattacks in Donetsk village
From Kostan Nechyporenko and Lauren Kent
The National Guard of Ukraine said on Thursday that its forces are entrenched near the village of Urozhaine in the eastern Donetsk region and repelling Russian attacks after retaking the area.
“National Guard units have cleared and demined the liberated settlement. At the moment, they have consolidated their positions and are repelling counterattacks by enemy assault groups trying to regain their lost ground,” one of the National Guard’s deputy directors said in a televised statement on Thursday.
Russian forces inside Urozhaine had been in a precarious situation for some time, especially since Ukraine took the neighboring village of Staromaiorske roughly two weeks ago. Russian soldiers and well-connected military bloggers had hinted it was a matter of time until Urozhaine would fall too, given that Ukrainian forces had since been able to attack it from several sides.
CNN’s Kostan Nechyporenko and Alex Stambaugh contributed reporting to this post.
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Ukraine’s counteroffensive gradually moving forward with the help of cluster bombs
From CNN's Nick Paton Walsh, Florence Davey-Attlee, Kostyantin Gak and Brice Lâiné
Ukrainian soldiers stand with Ukrainian flag in Urozhaine, Donetsk Region, Ukraine, in this screen grab obtained from a handout video released on August 16.
Ukrainian Armed Forces/Reuters
Ukrainian marines have advanced for the second time in two weeks on the southeastern frontlines, towards the key port city of Mariupol, with the recapture of the village of Urozhaine appearing to have been partially aided by the Ukrainian use of controversial cluster munitions.
Drone footage of the intense fight for the village has emerged in which dozens of Russian troops can be seen fleeing to the village’s south. They are apparently shelled as they flee, at times by what seem to be cluster munitions, two arms experts who reviewed videos of the incidents said. The experts did not want to be identified discussing a sensitive issue.
Dykyi, the callsign of an assault company commander, said of the Russian rout: “Very many died, especially when they started to run.”
The videos show dozens of Russian troops running along an open road, seemingly forced to use the asphalt as the adjacent fields and treelines had been mined. Dykyi said. The Russians also gathered in large numbers in houses which were then hit by artillery.
“Lots of them died there,” Dykyi said, adding that mortars and tanks were used in the rout. He would not comment on the use of cluster munitions.
The drone videos also showed a Ukrainian tank charging alone at Russian positions, firing, and dragging behind it a cable on which were attached mine-clearing explosives. The charges detonate when the tank turns away from the clashes, ensuring the clear advance of the next units through minefields that have caused significant losses.
The supply of cluster munitions to the Ukrainian military was preceded by great ethical debate inside the Biden administration, US officials have said. While brutally effective against infantry on open ground, the weapons scatter small droplet explosives that often fail to detonate and can be a residual hazard to civilians for decades to come.
More than 100 countries have banned the use of cluster weapons via treaty, though the Ukraine, Russia and the United States are not signatories to that international treaty.
The US military says the models they are supplying Ukraine have an improved “dud” rate in which only 2.5% of them fail to detonate on dispersal – a claim that is viewed skeptically by critics. By comparison, Russian cluster weapons, also said to be in use during their invasion of Ukraine, are claimed by Western officials to have a dud rate of 30%.
The Ukrainian military has confirmed the US weapons are in use on the frontlines, but declined to offer details. CNN was unable to confirm the devices identified by experts as likely cluster munitions in the videos from Urozhaine were US-supplied weapons. Ukraine is thought to have produced several similar devices domestically that could be in use on the frontlines.
Russian general reportedly dismissed for failings in Ukraine dies from "long illness" at age 58
From CNN's Ivana Kottasova, Darya Tarasova and Lauren Kent in London
An official portrait of Russian Army General Gennady Zhidko.
mil.ru
A Russian general who reportedly served as the top military commander for Ukraine last year died on Wednesday, according to Russian state media.
Army Gen. Gennady Zhidko died “after a long illness” on Wednesday, according to the state news agency TASS. He was 58, TASS reported.
Zhidko served as Russia’s Eastern Military District commander between May and October last year. He was reportedly the overall theater commander in Ukraine during Moscow’s offensive against Lysychansk and Severodonetsk in the summer of 2022.
Zhidko’s death was first announced on Telegram by the governor of Russia’s Khabarovsk territory, Mikhail Degtyarev, who said, “I was lucky to know this man, very attentive to the needs of a simple soldier and very demanding to the service. It is these commanders who are called commanders.”
No official announcement of Zhidko’s death has been released. Zhidko’s biography published on TASS does not mention his time serving as commander in Ukraine.
He reportedly took over the leadership of Russian forces in Ukraine some after Moscow abandoned its botched attempt to take over Kyiv last spring, the investigative group Conflict Intelligence Team reported in May 2022.
The appointment was never officially confirmed, but in June 2022, Zhidko was seen sitting next to Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu during the minister’s visit to forces involved in the war in Ukraine, an event that appeared to confirm Zhidko’s elevation to the top role.
Russian helicopters downed in Ukraine had foreign high-tech components, Ukrainian official says
From CNN's Kostan Nechyporenko
Russian assault Ka-52 helicopters shot down in Ukraine on Thursday morning were manufactured using foreign chips and processors, according to Andriy Yermak, the head of the Office of the President of Ukraine.
Yermak called for tougher sanctions to prevent Russia from procuring components for the weapons it uses in Ukraine. “Shooting down the Ka-52 is great. But it is much better to deprive Russia of the ability to produce it,” he wrote on his Telegram.
Russian assault helicopters contain “high-tech components” from “Western and Asian countries,” he added. Chips, processors, flash memory, telecommunication transformers, linear stabilizers, and other components are among the parts necessary to operate and repair the Ka-52 helicopters.
Ukraine has repeatedly called for stronger Western sanctions against Russia, arguing that despite the existing tough sanctions imposed by the US, NATO and the EU, Russia is still able to procure components for the weapons.
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It's mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know
Elsewhere, a Ukrainian Air Force spokesperson has said that US-made F-16 fighter jets are not expected to arrive in the country this year amid requests for the long-awaited aircraft.
Here are the latest developments:
Kupiansk attack: Ukraine’s northeastern city of Kupiansk has come under Russian shelling, killing one woman and wounding another, according to officials. The Thursday morning strikes damaged a private house and outbuilding.
Drone training: Russia’s vocational schools will soon train the operators of unmanned aircraft systems (UAVs), the Russian Education Ministry announced on Thursday, according to state media.
Support for Kyiv: The Prime Ministers of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania have confirmed they will join the G7 Declaration of Support for Ukraine. In the signed Thursday statement, they said: “We firmly believe that only NATO membership will provide Ukraine with security guarantees.”
Grain ship travels south: Data from MarineTraffic on Thursday showed the Hong Kong-flagged Joseph Schulte traveling toward the Turkish port of Ambarli. It is carrying more than 30,000 metric tons of cargo, including food products, according to Ukraine’s infrastructure minister.
Ukrainian drone shot down over Russia: Russian air defenses destroyed a Ukrainian drone over the southwest Belgorod region on Thursday, state-run news agency TASS reported, citing Moscow’s defense ministry. No casualties or damage were reported. Drone attacks have become an almost daily occurrence in the border province.
Here’s the latest map of control:
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Russia claims it hit 4 US-supplied Stryker armored vehicles
From CNN's Darya Tarasova
Russia said on Thursday that it hit four US-supplied Stryker armored personnel carriers, marking the first time the country has claimed to hit the US-supplied vehicles.
Russian units in Zaporizhzhia repelled a Ukrainian attack near the village of Robotyne, the Russian Ministry of Defense said, and claimed to inflict heavy losses on Ukrainian troops and equipment.
CNN could not independently verify Russia’s claims.
American Bradley and Stryker vehicles, German Leopard 2 tanks, and British Challenger 2 tanks are among the Western equipment that has been sent to Ukraine.
More on Stryker vehicles: In January, the Pentagon announced a $2.5 billion Ukraine security package that included for the first time Stryker armored vehicles and more Bradley fighting vehicles. It marked a significant escalation in the armored vehicles the US has committed to Ukraine in its fight against Russia.
Also in the briefing: The Russian defense ministry also said Thursday that it carried out successful offensive operations in the Donetsk region, improving the position of its troops along the front line.
“In the Donetsk direction, units of the Southern group of troops, in close cooperation with aviation and artillery, repelled four attacks of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in the areas of the settlements of Zaliznyanskoye, Staromikhaylovka and Krasnogorovka of the Donetsk People’s Republic,” said the ministry in its daily update.
CNN’s Katharina Krebs in London contributed to this post.
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Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania join G7 Declaration of Support for Ukraine
From CNN’s James Frater and Louise McLoughlin
G7 leaders, President of the European Council Charles Michel, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky pose for a family photo during an event to announce a Joint Declaration of Support to Ukraine, as the NATO summit is held in Vilnius, Lithuania, on July 12.
Kacper Pempel/Reuters
The Prime Ministers of Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania have released a joint statement confirming they are joining the G7 Declaration of Support for Ukraine.
In the signed Thursday statement, they said: “We firmly believe that only NATO membership will provide Ukraine with security guarantees.”
Some context: The G7 is shorthand for Group of Seven, an organization of leaders from some of the world’s largest economies: Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Its Declaration of Support for Ukraine was issued following the NATO summit in Vilnius last month. It aims to provide Ukraine with sustained political, military, financial, and economic assistance through bilateral agreements and to help hold Russia to account.
The document outlined that G7 countries will work with Ukraine on “bilateral, long-term security commitments and arrangements” toward three goals.
The goals include “ensuring a sustainable force capable of defending Ukraine now and deterring Russian aggression in the future,” “strengthening Ukraine’s economic stability and resilience” and “providing technical and financial support for Ukraine’s immediate needs stemming from Russia’s war as well as to enable Ukraine to continue implementing the effective reform agenda.”
Estonia’s Government website says 18 countries — including Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania — have now joined the declaration.
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One woman killed and one wounded in Russian attack in northeast Ukraine on Thursday
From CNN's Kostan Nechyporenko and Lauren Kent
One woman died and another woman was wounded in Russian shelling of a village near Kupiansk, in Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region, according to the head of the region’s military administration.
The Thursday morning shelling damaged a private house and outbuilding.
Another attack in Kupiansk in the last 24 hours damaged a private household, seriously wounding a 55-year-old man who later died in the hospital, according to the official, Oleh Syniehubov.
The State Emergency Service of Ukraine has inspected more than three hectares of territory in the region and defused 81 explosive items in the last 24 hours, Syniehubov added.
Some context: Kupiansk has come under heavy Russian shelling amid Ukraine’s counteroffensive, as its forces attempt to break Moscow’s’s land-bridge between annexed Crimea and eastern Donetsk.
On Thursday morning, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that the government is working on evacuations from the Kupiansk district.
Zelensky added that the government is focused on providing help to victims of Russian shelling of civilian targets, including through the construction of new housing in the Kherson and Kyiv regions.
Last week, Ukrainian officials ordered the first evacuations of the city and its surrounding areas as Russian shelling intensified.
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Russia's vocational schools will soon train drone operators
From CNN's Kostan Nechyporenko
The Russian Education Ministry announced Thursday that the country’s vocational schools are to train the operators of unmanned aircraft systems (UAVs), according to state media TASS.
Instruction will be offered in secondary vocational education institutions and other learning centers to teach operators “of unmanned aircraft systems with a maximum take-off weight of 30 kg and less,” Education Minister Sergei Kravtsov said in remarks made during a speech at the Moscow Urban Forum, according to TASS.
Kravtsov did not give a timeline for when those training programs would be put in place.
Some context: Last month, US intelligence officials warned that Russia is also building a drone-manufacturing facility in-country, with Iran’s help.
Analysts from the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) told a small group of reporters during a briefing in July that the drone-manufacturing facility now under construction is expected to provide Russia with a new drone stockpile that is “orders of magnitude larger” than what it has been able to procure from Iran to date.
When the facility is completed, likely by early next year, the new drones could have a significant impact on the conflict, the analysts warned.
In April, the US released a satellite image of the planned location of the purported drone manufacturing plant, inside Russia’s Alabuga Special Economic Zone about 600 miles east of Moscow.
They added that to date, it is believed that Iran has provided Russia with over 400 Shahed 131, 136 and Mohajer drones – a stockpile that Russia has almost completely depleted, they said.
Russia is primarily using the drones to attack critical Ukrainian infrastructure and stretch Ukraine’s air defenses, a senior DIA official said.
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The first ship to depart from Odesa since collapse of grain deal has left Ukrainian waters
From CNN's Lauren Kent
Hong Kong-flagged container ship Joseph Schulte leaves the sea port, in Odesa, Ukraine, in this handout picture released August 16.
Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov/Facebook/Reuters
A container ship laden with grain has reached Romanian waters in the Black Sea after departing from Ukraine’s southern port of Odesa Wednesday.
The Hong Kong-flagged Joseph Schulte is the first vessel to use a temporary Black Sea shipping corridor established following the breakdown of a UN-brokered grain deal last month, according to Ukrainian authorities.
Data from MarineTraffic on Thursday showed the vessel traveling south toward the Turkish port of Ambarli. It is carrying more than 30,000 metric tons of cargo, including food products, Ukrainian Infrastructure Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov said Wednesday.
Some context: Russia pulled out of a UN and Turkish brokered deal in July that allowed Ukraine to move its grain via the Black Sea and warned that any ships headed to Ukraine would be treated as potentially carrying weapons.
Last week, the Ukrainian navy issued an order declaring “temporary corridors” for merchant ships sailing to and from Ukrainian ports. However, it admitted that the military threat and mine danger from Russia remained along all routes.
On Sunday, a Russian warship fired warning shots and boarded a Turkish-owned cargo ship it claimed was headed to Ukraine, in what Kyiv said was “an act of piracy.”
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Russia shoots down drone over Belgorod, state media reports
From CNN's Josh Pennington and Lauren Kent
Russian air defenses destroyed a Ukrainian drone over the southwest Belgorod region on Thursday, state-run news agency TASS reported, citing Moscow’s defense ministry.
No casualties or damage were reported.
In recent months, drone attacks have become an almost daily occurrence on the border province, which is located just 80 kilometers from Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region.
Russian towns bordering Ukraine have also recently seen an uptick in cross-border attacks, with two people injured by shelling in Belgorod on Tuesday.
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F-16 fighter jets won't arrive this year, Ukrainian Air Force says
From CNN's Josh Pennington
Portuguese Air Force F-16 military fighter jets participate in NATO's Baltic Air Policing Mission in Lithuanian airspace near Siauliai, on May 23.
Petras Malukas/AFP/Getty Images
Ukraine does not expect US-made F-16 fighter jets to arrive this year, a Ukrainian Air Force spokesperson said Wednesday.
Kyiv has been pleading for the advanced jets from Western allies for more than a year, arguing they will provide the military with additional air defense and offensive capabilities.
CNN reported on August 1 that the United States was waiting for European officials to submit a final plan for training Ukrainian pilots on F-16s, which the US will have to authorize before the program can begin, according to officials familiar with the matter.
The training is supposed to start this month, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and European officials have said publicly. But more than two months after President Joe Biden announced US support for training Ukrainian pilots on F-16s, there remain a number of critical details to work out.
Ihnat said Wednesday that progress was being made toward training pilots.
Some context: The F-16s would be an upgrade to the largely Soviet-era aircraft currently in Ukraine’s fleet but analysts have cautioned that the jets aren’t a cure-all and have vulnerabilities that Moscow would be well aware of and could exploit.
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Russian missile attack takes out power in Dnipropetrovsk
From CNN's Kostan Nechyporenko
Some 10,000 people endured a temporary power outage after Russian missiles struck Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region early Thursday, a Ukrainian military official said.
In a Telegram post, Serhii Lysak, head of the region’s military administration, said no casualties were reported and power had been restored.
It comes a day after Russian shelling killed one civilian and injured six others in the region, according to Lysak.
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It's early morning in Kyiv. Here's the latest on Russia's war in Ukraine
From CNN staff
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Wednesday accused Russia of targeting global food security following a drone attack on a Danube River port, saying it marked the seventh time Russia had targeted Ukrainian ports since Moscow pulled out of the Black Sea grain deal last month.
“Russian terrorists again targeted our ports. Our infrastructure, which is involved in ensuring not ours, but the common — global — food security,” Zelensky said.
Small ports on the Danube have become vital for Ukrainian grain exports following the collapse of the grain deal. Ukrainian officials say Russian forces are deliberately targeting port infrastructure on the river as part of efforts to block the exports — posing a threat to food security in developing nations that rely on Ukrainian grain.
Here are the latest developments:
G20 hopes: Citing the economic impact of Russia’s grain deal withdrawal, Ukraine’s Deputy Foreign Minister Nikolay Tochitsky said Kyiv hopes to take part in the G20 summit in India next month. “We believe that what the Russian Federation is doing to end the grain deal is a challenge not only for the countries of Africa and Asia, but also for the global economy,” he said. Ukraine has not been invited to the summit.
Casualties mount: Russian shelling in the Kherson and Dnipropetrovsk regionskilled two people and wounded several others, Ukrainian officials said Wednesday, Meanwhile, Ukrainian shelling killed one person and injured two others in the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, a Moscow-backed official said.
Wagner fears: Lithuania said Wednesday it would temporarily suspend operations at two border checkpoints with Belarus due to concerns about Wagner mercenary forces stationed in the country. The Belarusian border force slammed the decision, describing it as “another unconstructive and unfriendly step of our neighbors.”
Sabotage claim: Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) said it stopped an attempt by a Ukrainian sabotage and reconnaissance group to enter the southwestern Bryansk region, which neighbors Ukraine, Russian state media reported. It comes after the region’s governor said Tuesday that another attempted cross-border incursion had been thwarted.
Kupiansk under fire: Oleksandr Syrskyi, the commander of Ukrainian Land Forces, has acknowledged some complications around the northeastern city, where Russian forces have recently been making a push. “The enemy is trying to break through the defense of our troops with assault units, staffed mainly by prisoners, every day, in different directions, with the aim of blocking and then capturing Kupiansk,” Syrskyi said in a Telegram post Wednesday.
EU funds: The European Commission said it transferred $147 million in funding for Ukraine and Moldova that was originally earmarked for Russia and Belarus. “The decision to cancel the originally envisaged cooperation with Russia and Belarus through our Interreg programmes is the result of the brutal war of Russia against Ukraine,” EU Commissioner Elisa Ferreira said.
Prisoner call: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke by phone Wednesday with American Paul Whelan, who is being held in a remote prison camp in Russia, a source familiar told CNN. The top US diplomat told Whelan to “keep the faith and we’re doing everything we can to bring you home as soon as possible,” the source said of the call.
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US secretary of state speaks by phone with American detained in Russia
Exclusive from CNN's Kylie Atwood, Jennifer Hansler and Kayla Tausche
Paul Whelan, who was detained and accused of espionage, stands inside a defendants' cage during a court hearing on extending his pre-trial detention, in Moscow, Russia on October 24, 2019.
Tatyana Makeyeva/Reuters/File
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke by phone on Wednesday with American Paul Whelan, who is being held in a remote prison camp in Russia, a source familiar told CNN.
The top US diplomat told Whelan to “keep the faith and we’re doing everything we can to bring you home as soon as possible,” the source said of the call. This the second time Blinken has spoken to Whelan, who has been detained in Russia for more than four years, the source said. The other call between Whelan and Blinken happened on December 30, another source familiar told CNN.
Whelan, who is deemed wrongly detained by the US government, is able to make calls from his prison camp in Mordovia, but the source would not get into further details about how the call to Blinken came about.
Paul Whelan told his parents that “he was able to have a long, frank conversation with Secretary Blinken,” his brother David Whelan told CNN Wednesday. David Whelan did not have further details about the call.
The conversation comes as the Biden administration continues to reiterate to Russia the serious proposal that they put on the table for Whelan’s release more than eight months ago. Russia has not responded in a substantive way, two administration officials told CNN.
Russia has attacked Ukrainian ports 7 times since Moscow pulled out of grain deal, Zelensky says
From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva and Radina Gigova
A grain warehouse heavily damaged by a Russian drone strike is seen at a compound of a port on the Danube in Odesa region, Ukraine on August 16.
National Police of Ukraine/Reuters
An overnight drone attack on Wednesday in Ukraine’s southern Odesa region marked the seventh time Russia has targeted Ukrainian ports since Moscow pulled out of the Black Sea grain deal, according to President Volodymyr Zelensky.
The drone attack on Reni damaged warehouses and granaries, said Oleh Kiper, head of the Odesa regional military administration. No casualties were reported, he said.
Small ports on the Danube River have become vital for Ukrainian grain exports following the collapse of the Black Sea grain deal last month. Ukrainian officials say Russian forces are deliberately targeting port infrastructure on the river as part of efforts to block the exports — posing a threat to food security in developing nations that rely on Ukrainian grain.
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Belarus border force slams Lithuania's closure of 2 border checkpoints over Wagner concerns
From CNN’s Katharina Krebs and Sugam Pokharel
The Belarusian border force on Wednesday criticized Lithuania’s decision to temporarily suspend operations at two border checkpoints between the countries due to concerns about Wagner forces, describing it as “another unconstructive and unfriendly step of our neighbors.”
Lithuanian Interior Minister Agnė Bilotaitė said earlier that the closure of the two border checkpoints was in response to the recent relocation of Wagner forces to Belarus.
Belarusian border force called Lithuania’s reasoning “far-fetched.”
“In fact, the Lithuanian authorities are using any pretext to not only prevent the movement of goods, but also to reduce the flow of Lithuanians traveling on a visa-free basis,” the force said.
It also blamed the Lithuanian government for “purposefully and deliberately” creating “artificial barriers on the border for the sake of its political ambitions.”
More context: The Šumskas and Tverečius border checkpoints will be temporarily suspended beginning on Friday. Lithuania shares six border checkpoints with Belarus, according to the news release.
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Top Ukrainian general acknowledges complications in defense of Kupiansk
From CNN's Vasco Cotovio, Kostan Nechyporenko and Katharina Krebs
The commander of Ukrainian Land Forces has acknowledged some complications around the northeastern city of Kupiansk, where Russian forces have recently been making a push.
Despite the difficult situation, the Ukrainian general said the defense of the city, located in the Kharkiv region, would be ensured.
“Based on the results of work with commanders in this area, a number of important decisions were made that will ensure the reliability of defense,” he said.
On Tuesday, Ukraine said it had reinforced its positions in the city.
“Our firing positions were strengthened, [command] provided certain methodological recommendations, and redeployed reserves,” the Deputy Commander of the Eastern Military Group for Strategic Communications, Serhii Cherevatyi said.
Russia on Wednesday said it had made small gains in the area.
Last week, Ukraine ordered a mandatory evacuation of Kupiansk and its surrounding areas, as Russia intensified shelling and claimed to have captured Ukrainian positions near the city.
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Russia claims it thwarted another cross-border attempt by Ukraine sabotage group
From CNN's Katharina Krebs
Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) said it stopped an attempt by a Ukrainian sabotage and reconnaissance group to enter the southwestern Bryansk region, which neighbors northern Ukraine, Russian state media reported on Wednesday.
The agency added that “in addition to foreign weapons, explosive devices, communication and navigation devices, FPV drones with stickers ‘Property of the FSB of Russia’ and Russian symbols were found at the site of the clash.”
Some more background: In March, Russian security officials claimed that a small Ukrainian armed group crossed the border into Bryansk, allegations dismissed by Kyiv as a “classic deliberate provocation” by the Kremlin.
The FSB said it was carrying out operations following “armed Ukrainian nationalists who violated the state border” in the district, according to state-run news agency RIA Novosti. Russian President Vladimir Putin later described the incident as a terrorist attack, and a local official said two civilians were killed.
Then in May, a group of anti-Putin Russian nationals, who are aligned with the Ukrainian army, claimed responsibility for an attack in Russian’s southwestern region of Belgorod.
Last month, a Ukrainian drone hit the Department of Internal Affairs in Bryansk, destroying the building’s roof and windows, Bogomaz said.