June 17, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news | CNN

June 17, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news

ukraine defense minister 06.16.22
Ukrainian defense minister: Written military orders recovered from dead Russian officer reveal Moscow's initial plan
03:50 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • The European Union’s executive body recommended Ukraine become an EU candidate state, a boost to Kyiv’s bid to join the bloc. Leaders of the EU’s 27 member states will meet next week to discuss the process.
  • Russian President Vladimir Putin vowed to accomplish Russia’s “tasks” in the Ukraine invasion in a speech that the Kremlin said was delayed by cyberattacks.
  • More than 1,300 civilians died during the battle of Mariupol, including 70 children, but the real toll is “likely thousands higher,” according to a top UN official. Conditions in the Russian-occupied city are now “medieval,” said an adviser to the city’s Ukrainian mayor.
  • The number of Ukrainians who have died since Russia invaded Ukraine in February likely stands in the tens of thousands, according to Ukraine’s defense minister.
  • Having connection issues? Bookmark CNN’s lite site for fast connectivity.
38 Posts

Follow the latest news on Russia’s war in Ukraine here and read more about today’s developments in the posts below. 

Key things to know about Ukraine's bid to join the EU 

The European Union Commission said on Friday that Ukraine should be considered a candidate state. It is now up to the 27 EU member states to decide whether or not they agree with the Commission’s opinion.

Here are key things to know about Ukraine’s bid to join the EU:

What is the process for becoming a part of the EU? On paper, the process is relatively straightforward. A country applies and the Commission gives a verdict on whether or not it should be considered for candidacy. As is likely to be the case with Ukraine, the Commission will probably present a few ways for member states to go about accepting a new candidate.

As European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen made clear on Friday, Ukraine will still have to meet a series of criteria before proper accession negotiations can begin, even if the EU 27 agree to accept its candidate status next week.

The Copenhagen Criteria is a fairly opaque trio of requirements that the EU must be satisfied a candidate state has met in order to enter the proper accession negotiations. They focus on whether or not that country has a functioning free-market economy, if the country’s institutions are fit to uphold European values such as human rights and the EU’s interpretation of the rule of law and whether the country has a functioning, inclusive democracy.

Once the country has deemed to have met this criteria, they can begin the EU’s 35 chapters of negotiation, the final three of which return to some areas of the Copenhagen Criteria.

Then, when the leaders of the EU member states have agreed, it must then be ratified in the EU Parliament and by the legislative branches of each member state’s government.

How do EU countries feel about Ukraine joining the EU? This is where it starts to get complicated. While the EU and its 27 members have broadly supported Ukraine in its war effort, having a country that’s currently at war start the accession process raises all sorts of issues.

There are a number of candidate states that have been in the accession process for years, and have in some cases had their accession slowed down because of domestic political instability. One example of this is the case of Turkey, whose application has been essentially frozen following fears over a backslide over the rule of law and human rights. Starting the process with a country currently at war will raise questions from other candidate states who have had their applications similarly frozen.

There are also real concerns that Ukraine is a long way from meeting the Copenhagen Criteria any time soon. According to Transparency International’s 2021 Corruption Perceptions Index, Ukraine is 122nd on its list of 180 countries. For comparison, Russia sits in 136th place. Given that parts of Ukraine are currently occupied by Russia and could be long after the war is over, it is hard to predict if this improves or worsens in the coming years. Some EU officials have also expressed fears that after the war, it is hard to tell what human rights will look like inside Ukraine.

How long would it take? It really depends on what state Ukraine is in when war ends. It seems highly unlikely that Ukraine will be anywhere near meeting the criteria to even start negotiations for a significant period of time after the end of the war. Aside from the rebuilding project, Ukraine will have to make the transition from a country operating under various degrees of martial law and curfews to a functioning democracy.

The average time for a country to join the EU is four years and 10 months, according to the London think tank, UK in a Changing Europe. Member states that might be considered a sort of blueprint for Ukraine’s membership — Bulgaria, Romania, Poland, Slovenia – were all over the average wait time.

What would joining the EU mean for Ukraine? Ukraine would be a member of the world’s largest trading bloc, the EU’s single market and customs union, and would have the protection of EU courts and access to the EU budget.

Joining the EU would also place Ukraine very clearly in the club of countries that are considered to be part of the Western alliance and US-led world order.

Read more about Ukraine’s bid here and see a map below of the current EU members countries:

Exclusive: Former US serviceman in Ukraine describes battle where American fighters were reportedly captured 

Speaking exclusively to CNN’s Sam Kiley, a former US serviceman fighting with Ukrainian forces recounted the battle he witnessed on June 9 where American volunteer fighters Alexander John-Robert Drueke and Andy Tai Ngoc Huynh were reportedly captured by Russian forces. 

The man, who asked to be identified with the code name “Pip,” said his team was sent out on a mission east of Kharkiv where a full scale Russian armored assault was underway.

Drueke and Huynh fired a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) at a BMP vehicle that was coming through the woods and destroyed it. But the team had to quickly withdraw as more than 100 Russian infantry began advancing and the American fighters found themselves in a village they previously thought was in Ukrainian hands. 

When asked about what happened to Drueke and Huynh, Pip said that “we suspect they were knocked out by either the T-72 tank shooting at them or by the blast of the mine. This is only speculation we don’t know what really happened to them.” 

A photo of the two men emerged Thursday with their hands tied behind their back and in the back of a Russian truck. 

“As far as I’m aware, we’re paid about the same if not exactly the same as a Ukrainian soldier who is on the front… And money is certainly not my motivation for being here. And I know that it’s not Andy’s and it’s not Alex’s either,” he continued.

More background: On Wednesday, CNN reported that Drueke, 39, from Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and Huynh, 27, from Hartselle, Alabama, had been missing for nearly a week and there were fears that they may have been captured by Russian forces, according to their families and a fellow fighter. Drueke and Huynh had been fighting alongside Ukrainian forces north of Kharkiv.

CNN on Thursday reported a third American whom the State Department had identified as missing in action in Ukraine was US Marine veteran Grady Kurpasi. He served in the US Marine Corps for 20 years, retiring in November 2021.

US President Joe Biden said Friday he has been briefed on the three Americans who have gone missing in Ukraine. In brief remarks to reporters as he left for a weekend on the beach in Delaware, Biden said repeatedly Americans should not travel to Ukraine at this time.

“We don’t know where they are, but I want to reiterate: Americans should not be going to Ukraine now,” Biden said in response to a question from CNN’s MJ Lee at the White House.

State Department spokesperson Ned Price said the department is in contact with the families of the missing Americans as well as Ukrainian authorities and the International Committee of the Red Cross.

The US State Department on Thursday told the family of one of the Americans missing in Ukraine that there is potential evidence Drueke was captured, but could not verify the photo at the time, Bunny Drueke, Alexander’s mother, told CNN.

On Friday, videos surfaced on pro-Russian channels and social media appearing to show Drueke and Huynh detained at an unknown location. It is not clear who is holding them.

Price said Thursday the US was not in contact with Russia about the reportedly captured American citizens because they do not yet have “credible reason” to believe the Russians have captured them and also because Russia has not claimed to have captured them.

On Friday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told CNN that he does not know anything about the two American fighters. CNN has repeatedly reached out to Russia’s ministry of defense for comment but has not yet received a response.

Read more here.

CNN’s Kate Sullivan and Jonny Hallam contributed reporting to this post. 

German Chancellor Scholz says it is "absolutely necessary" to continue speaking to Putin

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz is seen during a press conference in Kyiv, on Friday.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Friday that it is “absolutely necessary” to continue speaking to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

In an interview with dpa news agency, Scholz said: “It is absolutely necessary to speak to Putin. And I will continue to do so, as the French President will also.”

“And if you really believe that you will rob some land and then hope that the times will change and all the things will become normal again, this is a mistake. You have to withdraw your troops and you have to find an agreement with Ukraine which is acceptable and right for the people of Ukraine,” the Chancellor added.

CNN speaks with Ukrainians sheltering without power or water in eastern cities destroyed by war

Conditions are becoming more dire for Ukrainians living in the eastern part of the country, CNN’s Ben Wedeman reports. The city of Lysychansk is on the front lines of the war, and civilians have been left living in a city that has been destroyed.

They have been in the line of fire for months and now have no gas, power or water, Wedeman reports. Dozens of people are sheltering in the basement of a school and cooking food over a fire.

“I’m alone,” one 82-year-old woman named Masha who spoke to CNN said. “My legs are tired. I can’t go anywhere.”

Another woman, Lydumila, said she’s leaving: “I can’t take these sounds anymore.”

“We thought it would calm down, but it only gets worse and worse,” she said.

Residents line up for unfiltered water so they can wash and flush toilets. The war in Ukraine has now dragged on for almost four months and people are frustrated.

The city is still under attack. A building that was serving as a shelter was hit, killing three people, Wedeman reports, before running out of the way to avoid more shelling close by.

One woman said she and her husband were in that building when it came under attack. She told CNN her husband was crushed under the rubble and now all she can do is wait for a ride to see him at a hospital.

Watch Ben Wedeman’s report:

ad016213-0cf7-4545-9694-6c7554892819.mp4
02:56 - Source: CNN

Analysis: Why Ukraine’s longshot bid to join the EU has been a contentious issue for years

Four days after Russian forces invaded Ukraine and started a bloody war that shows no signs of ending soon, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky officially applied for the country to join the European Union.

On the same day, Feb. 28, he asked that the EU “urgently admit Ukraine using a new procedure … Our goal is to be with all Europeans and, to be equal to them. I am sure we deserve it. I am sure it is possible.”

Nearly four months later, the EU Commission said on Friday that Ukraine should be considered a candidate state. It is now for the 27 EU member states to decide whether or not they agree with the Commission’s opinion.

The question of whether or not Ukraine should join the EU and how Russia would react has been a contentious issue for years. In 2013, pro-European protests erupted after former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych made a sudden decision to not sign an agreement with the EU that would pull Ukraine further into the EU’s orbit. Instead, he opted to pursue closer ties with Putin’s Russia.

The following year, Russia invaded Donbas and illegally annexed Crimea.

While most European nations are firmly behind Ukraine and have, to varying degrees, aided Zelensky in his war efforts, it’s far from certain that his wish will be granted.

For political and procedural reasons, it is possible that the EU ultimately decides that now is not the right time. And even if they did agree with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen’s opinion that Ukraine should be considered for membership, it could take years, even decades, for it to become a reality.

Here’s why:

KIEV, UKRAINE - JANUARY 28: A woman walks past a tent displaying the European Union and Ukrainian flags in Independence Square on January 28, 2014 in Kiev, Ukraine. Ukraine's parliament is holding a special session called over continuing unrest in the country and Prime Minister Mykola Azarov has offered to resign. (Photo by Rob Stothard/Getty Images)

Related article Analysis: Why Ukraine's longshot bid to join the EU is likely to enrage Putin

UK offers "major training program" to Ukrainian military forces

The United Kingdom has offered Ukrainian military forces to take part in a “major training program” that would “fundamentally change the equation of the war,” Downing Street announced Friday in a statement amid Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s visit to Kyiv.

“Two months on from my last visit, the Ukrainian grit, determination and resilience is stronger than ever, and I know that unbreakable resolve will long outlive the vain ambitions of President Putin,” he added.

According to Downing Street, the program has the potential to train up to 10,000 soldiers every 120 days, with each soldier spending three weeks on the training course outside of Ukraine, learning battle winning skills for the front line, as well as basic medical training, cyber-security and counter explosive tactics.

Ukraine has yet to accept the offer.

Putin says restoration of relations with Ukraine is "inevitable"

The restoration of Russia’s relations with Ukraine is “inevitable,” Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday at a plenary session at the St Petersburg International Economic Forum.

“We proceed from the fact that sooner or later the situation will normalize, and we are interested in prosperity for all our neighbors, then it is inevitable,” Putin said commenting on Ukraine’s possible accession to the European Union.

More context: CNN reported earlier this month that US officials had been meeting regularly with their British and European counterparts to discuss potential frameworks for a ceasefire and for ending the war through a negotiated settlement, according to multiple sources familiar with the talks.

These officials told CNN that there is a growing concern that if the Russians and Ukrainians don’t get back to the table and work out a deal, the war will drag on — potentially for years.

It’s not clear whether these discussions will translate into eventual settlement talks. The Biden administration still sees no real prospect for any diplomatic breakthroughs or ceasefires anytime soon and two NATO officials said that the western alliance sees little appetite to negotiate on the Ukrainian side — in part because of Russia’s brutal bombing campaign and myriad human rights violations have destroyed public support for any concession to Russia.

Moscow has also shown little interest in serious talks, officials say. Right now, Ukraine remains focused on ensuring a decisive military victory in the east and the south in order to put themselves in a superior negotiating position, these sources said.

CNN’s Natasha Bertrand, Katie Bo Lillis, Barbara Starr and Jeremy Herb contributed to this report

Zelensky on Boris Johnson: "We have a common view on how to move towards victory"

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson meets with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv, Ukraine on Friday.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday said he and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, “have a common view on how to move towards victory” in Ukraine’s war against the Russian invasion.

“In particular, we talked about the need to increase the supply of heavy weapons. The main thing today is to provide air defense for Ukraine as well. We begin to move in this direction. Russian missiles remain a threat to our people, to the entire territory of Ukraine. The vast majority of Russian missile strikes are conducted by the Russian army on ordinary people, on civilian infrastructure — housing, schools, hospitals, universities, transport,” Zelensky added.

The Ukrainian president said the two leaders also discussed Ukraine’s need of economic and financial support.

“This is not only finances, we also have a shortage of fuel due to the bombing of our refinery, our reserves by the Russian Federation. We also talked about a difficult issue — to ensure preparation for the heating season. I am grateful to Boris for his willingness to help our state,” he told reporters.

The two leaders also discussed increasing sanctions pressure on the Russian Federation.

“We can make sanctions so that Russia really feels that its aggression, its terrorist actions against Ukraine and against global stability will lead to losses for Russia itself,” he said. “The aggressor must pay the highest price for this aggression, for this war.”

Putin says "we have nothing against" Ukraine joining the EU

Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday that Russia has “nothing against” Ukraine joining the European Union. 

“The EU is not a military-political bloc, unlike NATO, therefore we have always said and I have always said that our position here is consistent, understandable, we have nothing against it,” Putin said during a panel discussion following his speech at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum. 

“This is the business of Ukrainian people and the Ukrainian current leadership, but the structure of the Ukrainian economy is such that it will require very large subsidies. Well, if you do not protect the internal market, Ukraine will turn into such a semi-colony, in my opinion. But, at the same time, it will receive quite significant support for current expenses. It is unlikely that this will lead to the restoration of the lost aircraft industry, shipbuilding and the electronics industry,” he added. 

More context: Ukraine’s bid to join the European Union received a major boost on Friday morning, after the European Commission’s President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc believed the country should be formally considered for candidate status in the wake of Russia’s invasion.

Speaking in Brussels, von der Leyen said the commission recommends “that Ukraine is given candidate status,” adding that “this is of course on the understanding that the country will carry out a number of further reforms.”

The Kremlin said Friday’s development about possible EU candidate status required Moscow’s “increased attention.”

“We all know about the intensification in Europe and discussions about strengthening the defense component of the EU. Therefore, there are different transformations that we observe,” spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said during a daily call with reporters.

Russia has lambasted the intention of Finland and Sweden, both EU member states, to join NATO due to the war in Ukraine. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said that the move would be a “mistake” with “far-reaching consequences,” according to state news agency TASS.

CNN’s Luke McGee contributed reporting to this post. 

US President Biden briefed on Americans missing in Ukraine

President Biden has been briefed on the three Americans missing in Ukraine, and he strongly encouraged Americans not to travel there.

US President Joe Biden said Friday he has been briefed on the three Americans missing in Ukraine and strongly encouraged Americans not to travel there. 

Some background: The men are Alexander John-Robert Drueke, 39, from Tuscaloosa, Alabama and Andy Tai Ngoc Huynh, 27, from Hartselle, Alabama.

In addition, the US State Department said Thursday that it was aware of reports that a third American who traveled to Ukraine to fight against Russia had gone missing “in recent weeks.”

“There are reports of one additional American whose whereabouts are unknown. I can’t speak to the specifics of that case. Unfortunately we don’t know the full details of that case,” said State Department spokesperson Ned Price at a news briefing on Thursday.

Drueke and Huynh went missing during a battle on June 9 near the town of Izbytske, according to a man who is acting as the team’s sergeant, and who provided CNN with photos of both men’s passports and their entry stamps into Ukraine. He wished to remain anonymous for security reasons.

CNN’s Mick Krever contributed reporting to this post.

"It's safer at home": Putin urges Russian elites to stay and invest in Russia as sanctions mount

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday urged Russian elites to not leave the country and invest in Russia. 

In one of the first more substantial speeches since the invasion of Ukraine started, he said, Russia “has a huge potential and there’s so much to do here, there is no end to it. Invest here.”

This comes after Russian oligarchs face mounting sanctions and superyacht seizures from several western countries, including the US, UK and the European Union bloc.

UK PM Boris Johnson makes second surprise visit to Kyiv to meet with Zelensky

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during their meeting on Friday in Kyiv, Ukraine.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson traveled to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv on Friday to visit President Volodymyr Zelensky for a second time, according to Ukraine’s Presidency. 

Video from the Presidency showed Zelensky warmly greeting Johnson before both men stepped inside a presidential building for a meeting. The two leaders were shown sitting at a table discussing Ukraine’s need for heavy weapons to counter Russia’s continuing aggression.

Zelensky said on Telegram:

Johnson posted a picture of him and Zelensky in the Ukrainian capital on Friday on his official Twitter account.

 Zelensky met yesterday with French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi and Romanian President Klaus Iohannis in Kyiv.

Putin blames the West for global food crisis as officials say Russia continues blockade of Ukrainian ports

Russian President Vladimir Putin said that Russia’s actions in Ukraine are not responsible for the global food crisis and accused the US of driving up food prices in his speech to the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum on Friday. 

“Famine in the poorest countries will be on the conscience of the US administration and the Eurocrats,” he said.  

Putin said Russia is ready to export more grain to balance the world food markets. Russia’s focus will be on supplying food to those countries that are at risk of facing famine, he said.

Some key context: Global leaders have strongly criticized Putin’s actions in Ukraine, saying that Russia is using food as a weapon of war.

Russia is blocking maritime access to the Black Sea ports held by Ukraine, meaning that even the grain that is still under Ukrainian control cannot be exported to the many countries that rely on it. Russia’s blockade has already raised global food prices and threatens to cause a catastrophic food shortage in parts of the world, according to the United Nations.

Ukrainian authorities, and some international officials, have accused Russia of robbing the country of grain and other commodities in areas it occupies. Denys Marchuk, deputy chairman of the Ukrainian Agrarian Council Public Union, said that Russia has “stolen about 600,000 tons of grain” from Ukrainian farmers.

Satellite photos of the Crimean port of Sevastopol provided by Maxar Technologies last month appeared to show Russian ships being loaded up with Ukrainian grain. Another set of satellite images revealed that one of the ships arrived in the Syrian port of Latakia last month, its second trip within four weeks.

Meanwhile: In his Friday speech, Putin also again blamed the West for “shifting the responsibility” to Russia for any problems in the global economy.  

Putin also said that Russia is not following the “path of isolation,” adding that Moscow seeks “partnerships with anyone who wants to work with us, and there are many of those.” 

The Russian leader said that any country who wants to work with Russia “experiences open pressure from the US and Europe including direct threats, but this blackmail means little when we talk about countries led by true leaders who understand what is someone else’s interest and what is their interest.” 

CNN’s Ivana Kottasová contributed reporting to this post.

Putin vows to accomplish all the "tasks" of Russia's invasion of Ukraine 

Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech during a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) in Saint Petersburg, Russia, on June 17.

Russian President Vladimir Putin vowed to accomplish all the alleged “tasks” of Moscow’s military action in Ukraine while speaking at an economic forum in St. Petersburg on Friday.

He called Russia’s “special operation” in Ukraine “the decision of a sovereign country based on the right to defend its security.” He vowed “all the tasks of the special operation will be met.”

The Russian leader claimed that Russia was “forced” to conduct its “operation” in the eastern Donbas region. 

“It was difficult, but forced and necessary. And it was based on the UN charter to defend our security,” Putin added.

Russian forces failed to take the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv and other areas of Ukraine in the earlier weeks of the war and have since been focused on the eastern part of the country.

Some context: The Russian president has long framed his decision to launch an invasion of Ukraine as a response to Kyiv’s growing diplomatic and security ties with the West. Last week, he hinted that his aim in Ukraine is the restoration of Russia as an imperial power.

Another one of Putin’s alleged goals in his invasion, which began in late February, includes a baseless battle for “denazification,” a description dismissed by historians and political observers alike.

In his Friday speech, Putin also called the attempts of the West to “crush” the Russian economy through punishing sanctions “not successful.”

“The economic dynamics are stabilizing; the state finances are stable,” he added. 

The Russian president also said “the era of the unipolar world is over,” referencing the United States, and stated that the European Union has “fully lost its political sovereignty.”  

Putin is now speaking after Kremlin claims cyberattacks delayed the speech

Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a speech during a session of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) in Saint Petersburg, Russia, on June 17.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has taken the stage at the International Economic Forum in St. Petersburg and is now speaking.

The speech was supposed to start at 7 a.m. ET, but was delayed due to a “massive DDoS [distributed denial-of-service] attacks” on the SPIEF systems, the Kremlin said Friday.

Ukraine scraps visa-free travel for Russians

Ukraine’s cabinet has decided to get rid of visa-free travel for Russians, Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal has confirmed.

President Volodymyr Zelensky said on Telegram that he suggested the change “in order to counteract the unprecedented threats to the national security, sovereignty, and territorial integrity of our state.”

He said that the change would come into effect on July 1.

Ceasefire being negotiated for civilians at Azot plant in Severodonetsk, district leader says

Smoke rises above Severodonetsk's Azot Chemical Plant, in the Luhansk region, Ukraine, on June 10.

Negotiations are underway to allow for the safe evacuation of hundreds of civilians sheltering at a chemical plant in Severodonetsk, the head of the district’s military administration told Ukrainian television.

Russia earlier this week said that it would open a “humanitarian corridor” for civilians at the plant to evacuate, but only to Russian-controlled territory to the north, not to Ukraianian-held Lysychansk to the west.

Serhiy Hayday, head of the regional military administration, told CNN on Thursday that an evacuation would be possible only if there were a complete ceasefire, but that he was highly skeptical of any promises made by Russia. 

Vlasenko said that the situation at the Azot plant was “tense.”

At repeated points during the war, Ukrainian officials say, Russian forces have broken promises to open evacuation corridors, driven civilian evacuees onto their territory and failed to observe ceasefire agreements.

It's mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know

Diplomatic efforts to bring Ukraine closer to the West continue, while Moscow says it knows nothing about two US citizens who went missing fighting alongside Ukrainian forces.

Here are the latest developments in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine:

Ukraine-EU process moves forward: Ukraine’s bid to join the European Union received a major boost on Friday morning, after the bloc’s executive said it believed the country should be formally considered for candidate status in the wake of Russia’s invasion.

NATO builds Ukraine ties: Ukraine’s defense minister on Friday morning said NATO allies told him at a summit in Brussels that his country was considered a “de facto” member of the alliance. 

Moscow denies any knowledge of missing US fighters: Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told CNN on Friday that he does not know anything about two American fighters who went missing north of Kharkiv, Ukraine.

Third US fighter missing: A third American whom the State Department has identified as missing in action in Ukraine is a US Marine veteran, Grady Kurpasi, his wife confirmed to CNN.

More than 1,300 civilians killed in Mariupol: The UN said 70 children were among at least 1,348 civilians killed during the battle of Mariupol. “The actual death toll of hostilities on civilians is likely thousands higher,” UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet said Thursday.

Ukraine-EU decision "requires our increased attention," says Kremlin

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said the European Commission’s decision to recommend Ukraine become an EU candidate state “requires our increased attention.”

“It still remains a different plane, although it requires our increased attention,” said Peskov during a daily call with reporters.

“We all know about the intensification in Europe and discussions about strengthening the defense component of the EU,” he added. “Therefore, there are different transformations that we observe.”