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The official Washington Post channel, sharing live news coverage of Russia’s war in Ukraine. You can find our full coverage at https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/ukraine-russia/.

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In eastern Ukraine, small assault teams quietly advance against Russia

DONETSK REGION, Ukraine — While big, complex maneuvers unfold in Ukraine’s southern counteroffensive, and long-range artillery duels thunder along the front lines, such small-team tactics are less visible.

But these stealthy assaults of a handful of soldiers storming enemy positions have been quietly instrumental in recent gains in the eastern Donetsk region outside Bakhmut, Ukrainian fighters and commanders said.

Outnumbered and outgunned, Ukrainian teams numbering four to a dozen can attack on foot far less conspicuously than with vehicles, surprising complacent enemies and triggering chaos along the front.

The strategy, soldiers said, helped Ukrainian forces retake Andriivka and another village, Klishchiivka — important steps to increase pressure on Russians resupplying forces in and around Bakhmut.

This intense fighting has come with steep costs, troops and medical personnel said.

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Here is the latest from Ukraine:

- If damage to the Balticconnector gas pipeline is found to be from a deliberate attack, NATO will meet it with “a determined and united response,” NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg said Thursday at a news conference after the meeting of NATO defense ministers in Brussels.

- Senior U.S. officials have stepped up their efforts to lead Western governments to use hundreds of billions of dollars of frozen Russian central bank reserves to help Ukraine, The Post reported.

- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said “we are holding our ground” in Avdiivka, as Russian forces advanced toward the town in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region after launching an offensive Tuesday, the Institute for the Study of War said.

- Three people, including a child, were killed in the Russian city of Belgorod when a Ukrainian drone was downed, Belgorod Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov said Thursday on Telegram.

More live updates here.
U.S. intensifies push to use Moscow’s $300 billion war chest for Kyiv

Senior U.S. officials have stepped up their efforts to lead Western governments to use hundreds of billions of dollars of frozen Russian central bank reserves to help Ukraine, according to three people who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal conversations.

The intensifying push to use the assets for Ukraine comes as U.S. and European governments that support Kyiv encounter new domestic political roadblocks for their plans to send taxpayer money to the war effort, although officials insist the matters are unrelated. The Kremlin has an estimated $300 billion frozen in various bank accounts throughout Western countries, but experts have warned that simply taking that money would face legal challenges and pose major financial risks.

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Ukraine hits Russian navy ships with sea drones

KYIV — “Experimental” naval drones damaged two Russian military vessels — the Buyan mission carrier and the Pavel Derzhavin patrol boat — over the past two days, Ukrainian intelligence officials said Friday, as Kyiv continued a series of strikes against Moscow’s Black Sea Fleet.

The attacks on the Black Sea Fleet, which is based in occupied Crimea, have demonstrated Ukraine’s ability to operate in Kremlin-controlled waters but do not appear to have seriously reduced Moscow’s capabilities.

An official with Ukraine’s State Security Service, the SBU, said a joint operation with Ukraine’s navy had damaged the Buyan missile carrier on Friday in the port of Sevastopol. The Pavel Derzhavin patrol boat was hit two days earlier. The Russian submarine Alrosa came under attack on Thursday but escaped damage, the official said.

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Poland faces a pivotal election. Observers say it isn’t a fair vote.

Poland will vote Sunday to determine whether a political party accused of whittling away the country’s democracy can stay in power, but an election billed as the most important in a generation has been clouded by concerns it will be only partially free and far from fair.

The outcome will be closely watched across Europe, where diplomatic clashes with Poland have become an enduring source of division and angst, as well as in the United States, which has grown closer with Poland since Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

But officials and analysts say what Polish voters really want is being distorted by state-controlled media, new electoral rules and a controversial referendum that’s been tacked on to the vote.

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What to know about Poland’s election, Europe’s most-watched vote of 2023

Poland’s parliamentary election Sunday is being billed as the most consequential in years, with potential ramifications for Europe, the war in Ukraine and democracy itself.

Poland has been one of Ukraine’s biggest supporters, but relations between the countries soured following disputes over grain.

When Russia sought the pressure the country with a blockade, the E.U. offered support to Kyiv by opening its market. But Polish farmers say a glut of cheap Ukrainian grain has made it hard for them to make any profit from their own stocks. Law and Justice has come to their defense, pumping out subsidies to Polish farmers, while extending an embargo on Ukrainian grain.

Some commentators say this was a way for the ruling party to better position itself among its supporters in rural areas and small towns where the economy is heavily dependent on agriculture.

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After facing death, injured Ukrainian soldiers relearn intimacy

KYIV — The two Russian Lancet drones hovered briefly over a small house-turned-military base in northeast Ukraine, then exploded. Inside, shrapnel pierced through the pelvis and thigh of a Ukrainian combat medic who goes by the call sign Alaska.

As the house burned and she was evacuated to safety, Alaska texted her boyfriend, who is in a different Ukrainian unit, using the military code for wounded: “I’m 300.”

That short message marked the start of a new chapter in their emotional — and physical — relationship, an experience now confronting many couples in Ukraine. Tens of thousands of Ukrainians have been severely wounded since Russia invaded in early 2022. Many soldiers return from the front in wheelchairs or needing prostheses. Often, the injuries — including amputations, facial damage and severe concussions — are life-altering.

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Here's the latest from Ukraine:

- Putin will meet with the leaders of Kyrgyzstan, Azerbaijan and Tajikistan, as well as representatives from the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), which is made up of some former Soviet nations, according to Putin’s office. This is Putin’s first known foreign trip since the International Criminal Court issued a warrant for his arrest in March.

- If damage to the Balticconnector gas pipeline is found to be from a deliberate attack, NATO will meet it with “a determined and united response,” NATO secretary general Jens Stoltenberg said Thursday at a news conference after the meeting of NATO defense ministers in Brussels.

- Senior U.S. officials have stepped up their efforts to lead Western governments to use hundreds of billions of dollars of frozen Russian central bank reserves to help Ukraine, The Post reported.

More live updates here.
Russia releases four Ukrainian children after mediation by Qatar

KYIV — Russia has agreed to free four Ukrainian children — ranging in age from 2 to 17 — and allow them to return to their families in Ukraine after Qatar intervened as a mediator, according to a government official briefed on the matter.

Two of the children are now back with relatives and two others are expected to be reunited with their families in the coming days, the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive diplomatic negotiations, said.

Qatar’s role in the negotiations, which lasted several months, came at the request of the Ukrainian government.

The Ukrainian children passed through Qatar’s Embassy in Moscow and took different routes home. Some traveled or were scheduled to travel from Russia to Ukraine via Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland. Others went through Belarus.

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Poland’s opposition jubilant, ruling party wary ahead of final election count

Poland’s centrist opposition rode a wave of jubilant optimism Monday following historic elections, as an exit poll suggested it had a better chance of forming the next government than the ruling hard right. But the country remained locked in what could be a protracted period of political uncertainty, as the governing Law and Justice party scrambled for ways to stay in power.

An opposition victory would mark a sea change in Europe, bringing a bastion of illiberalism allied with Trump Republicans and Hungary’s Viktor Orban back into line with the continent’s core democracies.

At a time when the once firmly pro-Ukrainian government in Poland had begun to waver in its support, the opposition has also promised continued military backing for Kyiv.

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North Korea may be sending arms to Russia for Ukraine war, images suggest

Russian ships linked to military transport networks have collected cargo from North Korea and delivered it to an apparent Russian military port on multiple occasions over the past two months, according to new satellite images providing the clearest evidence yet that Pyongyang may be helping Moscow’s war effort.

The two ships had no record of running this route between North Korea and Russia until August, when high-level meetings between North Korean and Russian officials began.

White House officials named one Russian vessel Friday, alleging that North Korea has transported as many as 1,000 containers with “equipment and munitions” from North Korea to Russia “in recent weeks.”

But new satellite images, analyzed by the London-based Royal United Services Institute and provided first to The Washington Post, suggest this operation is more regular, extensive and ongoing than the White House revealed.

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Russia arrests lawyers for imprisoned opposition leader Navalny

Three lawyers who represent the imprisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny have been arrested, Navalny’s spokeswoman said Friday — depriving the Kremlin critic of one of his few remaining channels to the outside world.

Navalny is serving sentences totaling 30 years on charges including extremism that are widely viewed as trumped up for political retribution. He is being held at a “special regime” colony in Russia, a maximum-security facility reserved for prisoners who are labeled as dangerous and are given limited communication rights.

Since Navalny’s initial detention in 2021, he has been routinely subjected to harsh treatment behind bars — regularly placed in solitary confinement and denied medical care.

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Ukraine strikes Russian depot in Berdyansk with long-range ATACMS

KYIV — Ukraine’s military used a version of U.S.-provided ATACMS long-range missiles early Tuesday to strike Russian military aircraft and ammunition depots in occupied Ukraine, according to a senior Ukrainian military official, marking the first-known use of the munitions.

Ukraine had pleaded for more than a year for Washington to send ATACMS, which can strike targets 100 miles or more away — father than other weapons that the United States has sent to Kyiv.

The version used by Ukraine to hit targets in Berdyansk, on the Azov Sea coast, were armed with cluster bomblets, rather than a single warhead,

Ukraine’s special operations forces confirmed in a Telegram message on Tuesday that they had carried out an overnight operation called “Dragonfly” overnight in Berdyansk and the occupied Luhansk region resulting in “significant losses” on the Russian side.

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Navalny lawyer flees Russia, leaving opposition leader alone in court

RIGA, Latvia — Jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny appeared at a court hearing without legal representation Tuesday after three of his lawyers were arrested on extremism charges and two others left the country.

Navalny’s court appearance, by video link from Penal Colony No. 6 where he is being held, highlighted the dire state the Russian legal system. Barred from attending court in person, Navalny was shown by video from a small room in a prison colony, but he had no attorney. At one point his sound cut out. Later, the entire video stream was lost.

Navalny only learned of the arrest of the three lawyers Monday from journalists, and Tuesday he found out that a fourth lawyer, Alexander Fedulov, had fled the country. A fifth, Olga Mikhailova, was not in Russia when the others were arrested, but her offices were raided and a search warrant was issued.

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Analysis: War in Gaza complicates Ukraine battle for both Zelensky and Putin

For over a year and a half, the war in Ukraine has dominated global attention due to the bloody scenes after Russia’s invasion. But last week's shocking attacks in Israel, led by the Palestinian group Hamas, and an impending war in the Gaza Strip in retaliation, look set to change the battlefield for both Kyiv and Moscow.

For Ukraine, there is a real risk that a conflict in the Middle East diverts Western attention — and with that, the military and economic support needed to continue its fight against Russia. And while Russia may welcome that diversion, a broader conflict in the Middle East could sever its already frosty relations with Israel, a former economic partner and a potential high-tech military supplier for Ukraine.

Read the full analysis here.
Putin meets Viktor Orban in China, in a boost for the Kremlin

RIGA, Latvia — Russian President Vladimir Putin, increasingly isolated over the war against Ukraine, met Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban in China on Tuesday.

The meeting was Putin’s first with a European Union leader since the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant in March, accusing him of war crimes in the forced deportations of Ukrainian children.

Orban, a self-proclaimed proponent of “illiberal” Christian democracy, has a cozy relationship with Putin and Tuesday declared his determination to maintain his ties with Moscow, despite the tensions between Europe and Russia over the nearly two-year-old war.

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Russia detains radio journalist accused of being ‘foreign agent’

RIGA, Latvia — Russian authorities have arrested an editor for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, an American news outlet based in Prague and financed by the U.S. government, accusing her of collecting information about the Russia military that could damage the nation’s security.

The editor, Alsu Kurmasheva, holds dual U.S. and Russian citizenship and had traveled to Russia for family reasons. Her detention Wednesday in Kazan, southwestern Russia, follows the arrest of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, a U.S. citizen, who was seized by agents of the Federal Security Service in March and charged with spying — an accusation that his newspaper and the State Department strongly deny.

Kurmasheva’s arrest highlights the continuing dangers for journalists traveling in wartime Russia and operating in an environment in which senior officials have described their work as part of an “information war” against Moscow.

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Putin, flexing U.N. veto, takes aim at global rules

RIGA, Latvia — At a recent public policy forum, President Vladimir Putin extolled his “new world” and rejected a global rules-based order as “some kind of nonsense.”

“What rules?” Putin snapped at a meeting of the Valdai Discussion Club in Sochi on Russia’s Black Sea coast. He dismissed the rules-based international order as Washington’s “openly boorish way” of telling Russia how to behave. The era of global rules “is long over and will never return,” Putin said. “Never!”

Moscow’s rejection of a rules-based international order is evident in its war in Ukraine — where it has violated borders, killed civilians and targeted infrastructure, and where there is evidence its forces committed torture and abducted children. It is also evident in international diplomacy, most strikingly at the United Nations, where Russia has used its veto in the Security Council to defy calls for its withdrawal from Ukraine.

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