This was CNBC’s live blog tracking developments on the war in Ukraine.
Ukraine’s capital Kyiv has experienced one of the largest Russian strikes on the city in weeks, with city officials stating that at least 13 people were injured in a drone and missile attack Thursday morning.
“Kyiv has not experienced such a powerful attack since spring,” Serhiy Popko, head of the Kyiv regional military administration said on Telegram. “The enemy launched a massive, combined attack using drones and missiles.”
He said that more than 20 Russian missiles and drones were destroyed by air defense forces, the falling debris causing damage to property and buildings in the city. “Unfortunately, people died,” Popko said, without providing further detail.
Earlier this morning, city officials reported explosions in the capital with a kindergarten, residential buildings and industrial units being damaged. Falling missile fragments set cars on fire in one district. A fire was also reported at a transformer substation and in a two-story non-residential building in the Podilskyi district, as a result of falling missile debris.
In other news, Russia’s defeat in the war is a matter of life and death for democracy, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly address.
Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban congratulated Russian President Vladimir Putin on his reelection, state news agency MTI reported on Thursday.
According to the agency, Orban wrote in a letter that cooperation between Hungary and Russia was “based on mutual respect, allowing the discussion of important issues even in the current very difficult geopolitical situation.”
— Reuters
Russia’s production of artillery and weapons has grown substantially, the defense ministry said on Thursday following an inspection of several factories by Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu.
In a Telegram post translated by CNBC via Google Translate, Shoigu was quoted as having said that artillery production has grown by nearly two and a half times since existing factories were expanded and new ones were opened.
The production of components for ammunition has increased close to 22 times, Shoigu further said, while one factory he visited produced five times more artillery and aviation weapons now than they did previously, according to the ministry.
Russian defense spending has soared since the war began, boosting the country’s economy which has fared far better than many observers previously expected. This may however not last, Radoslaw Sikorski, Poland’s minister of foreign affairs, told CNBC Tuesday.
“If you put your economy on a crisis or war footing, your GDP rises because you are producing more shells and tanks and all the things that are going to get destroyed, but you’re also wasting the resources and the wealth of your country, and this has limits,” he said.
— Sophie Kiderlin
A Russian missile attack on Ukraine’s southern city of Mykolaiv on Thursday killed at least one person and injured four others, a local official said.
It was not immediately clear what was being targeted. The regional governor Vitaliy Kim said that rescue work was continuing at the site. City mayor Oleksandr Sienkevych added that a ballistic missile was used. Residential buildings were not damaged, he said.
The afternoon strike on the southern region follows a massive overnight attack on Ukraine’s capital Kyiv and surrounding region that injured at least 17 people and damaged civilian and industrial facilities.
— Reuters
Pro-Ukrainian Russian rebel groups on Thursday said they intend to carry out more cross-border raids in the future.
Several anti-Kremlin and anti-war rebel groups have undertaken cross-border raids targeting Russian regions, including Belgorod and Kursk, in recent weeks and months.
It’s difficult to ascertain how successful such raids have been: Russia’s defense ministry said they repelled all attacks involving the factions, known as the Siberian Battalion, Freedom of Russia Legion and the Russian Volunteer Corps, respectively. The groups say their activities are ongoing.
Russian President Vladimir Putin earlier this week instructed Russia’s security service to root out such rebel fighters, calling them “traitors.”
Volunteers within the groups said in a Thursday statement that they intended to try to capture more settlements in the areas bordering Ukraine.
“Soon we will advance to other settlements as well. We call on Russians from all countries, people of all nationalities to join us and fight together against Putin’s dictatorship,” a Siberian Battalion fighter, who has the callsign “Kholod,” said at a conference hosted by Ukraine’s state-owned news outlet Ukrinform.
“Only up in arms and together will we win and create a new Russian Federation – a strong, a peaceful country that is respected, where there’s no shame in being its citizen,” he added, in comments reported by Ukrinform.
“Together with our allies, we proved to the whole world that Putin is losing control of the situation, more and more every day, and is no longer able to protect even the borders of his own country. Power is slipping out of his hands. He controls fewer and fewer processes going on in the Russian Federation. The Russians are seeing this so more and more compatriots are joining our ranks,” “Kholod” added.
— Holly Ellyatt
Russia said on Thursday that the United States was unlikely to agree to a Ukrainian proposal to lower the price cap on Russian oil to $30 a barrel because it would roil global energy markets and damage the U.S. economy.
After Russia sent troops into Ukraine in 2022, the West sought to sink the Russian economy by imposing a myriad of sanctions and in 2022 slapped a $60 a barrel price cap on Russian oil, which is currently traded at around $68 per barrel.
Before the cap was set, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in November 2022 urged a limit between $30 and $40 per barrel.
The $60 cap has so far been maintained despite fluctuations in the oil price and calls by some countries for a lower cap to further restrict Moscow’s revenues.
The United States has imposed sanctions on dozens of tankers suspected of carrying oil above the price cap agreed by G7, the EU and Australia.
President Vladimir Putin says Russia’s wartime economy — which grew 3.6% last year — has thrived despite the sanctions, and that Russia, the world’s second largest oil exporter, has plenty of buyers for its oil.
“The other day I read that Ukraine was trying to convince the United States to lower the cap price on Russian oil to $30 a barrel,” Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said in an interview published on the Foreign Ministry website. “This goes beyond all bounds.”
“It is significant that the United States is unlikely to go along with Ukraine,” Lavrov said. He argued that such a lowering of the cap would have a serious impact on both the global oil market and on the U.S. economy.
— Reuters
Russian forces’ gains in the eastern Ukrainian region of Donetsk have slowed in recent weeks, according to the U.K.’s Ministry of Defence, and that’s likely partially due to heavy losses sustained in the campaign to seize Avdiivka.
Nonetheless, the situation remains unstable and Ukrainian shortages of personnel and munitions are likely limiting their ability to hold positions, the ministry said in an intelligence update on social media platform X.
“Russian forces continue to focus operations in Donetsk Oblast [region], eastern Ukraine, making minor gains,” the ministry said, adding that “they have attempted to expand areas of control north-west of Donetsk city and are highly likely contesting a string of villages including Orlivka, Tonenke, Pervomaiske, and Nevelske.”
Russians armed forces have claimed this week that they have captured Orlivka, Tonenke and Nevelske. Ukraine has not yet commented on the claims and purported losses of territory.
— Min Maddison
Russia says its forces have captured the village of Tonenke in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine, marking the latest territorial claim for the army.
The Russian Ministry of Defense said in a statement, reported by news agency TASS, that “through the coordinated actions of units of the ‘Center’ group of forces, the settlement of Tonenkoye [Tonenke] of the Donetsk People’s Republic was liberated,” it said.
Russia annexed the self-proclaimed “Donetsk People’s Republic” in Sept. 2022 but only partially occupies it, although its forces are looking to claim the whole territory.
Russian forces have made a number of small but incremental advances in the region since capturing the industrial city of Avdiivka in February. On Wednesday, the defense ministry announced that the village of Orlivka, to the west of Avdiivka, had been captured.
— Holly Ellyatt
Russia will take retaliatory measures in accordance with its own interests and use every legal mechanism at its disposal if the European Union uses profits from frozen Russian assets to buy arms for Ukraine, the Kremlin said on Thursday.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov made the comments ahead of a meeting of EU leaders at which the matter is due to be discussed.
“Naturally, we will use all possible judicial mechanisms, those that are available now, and all those that become available in the future,” Peskov told reporters.
“And on the basis of reciprocity we will not retaliate in kind, but choose different methods in a way that corresponds to our own interests,” he said.
— Reuters
— Min Maddison
Five people were injured in Ukrainian shelling of the Russian border city of Belgorod Thursday morning, according to the region’s governor.
Two women and three men sustained injuries, including head injuries and shrapnel wounds, in the attack that targeted the region’s capital, Governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said on Telegram.
He said more than 30 apartments in six apartment buildings were damaged “as a result of an air attack” by Ukraine’s armed forces. Ukraine has not commented on the strike and CNBC was unable to immediately verify the information. Both Ukraine and Russia deny targeting civilian infrastructure.
“There is damage to the power line in the city; about 5,000 residents are temporarily without power. An operational team is working on the spot and has already begun to eliminate the consequences [of the attack]. According to preliminary data, 10 cars were damaged.” He said property in several other villages in the wider region had also been damaged by shelling.
Belgorod has frequently found itself at the center of Ukrainian attacks against Russian border territory. On Wednesday, a civilian was killed and two others were injured in an attack on the region in which residential buildings, cars, kindergartens and a school were hit.
On Thursday, Gladkov posted images of damaged buildings in his post although it’s uncertain when the images were taken.
— Min Maddison
European Union leaders will on Thursday discuss a plan to use billions of euros in profits from frozen Russian financial assets to buy arms for Ukraine as they try to bolster Kyiv in its fight against Moscow’s invasion.
The bloc’s 27 national leaders will also debate how Europe can do more to defend itself and boost its arms industry, reflecting fears that Russia may not stop at Ukraine and the U.S. may not be such a staunch protector of Europe in future.
“For decades, Europe has not invested enough in its security and defence,” Charles Michel, president of the European Council of EU leaders, wrote in his invitation letter for the summit.
“Now that we are facing the biggest security threat since the Second World War, it is high time we take radical and concrete steps to be defence-ready and put the EU’s economy on a ‘war footing’.”
In a two-day summit in Brussels due to start at 1200 GMT on Thursday, the EU leaders will also tackle topics as diverse as the war in Gaza, the prospect of opening membership talks with Bosnia and farmers’ protests. But Ukraine will top the agenda, with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy joining the leaders via video link.
EU leaders have voiced increasing alarm about the state of the war in recent weeks, with ammunition-starved Ukrainian forces struggling to hold back Russian troops and a $60 billion military aid package for Kyiv stuck in the U.S. Congress.
The European Commission, the EU’s executive body, this week proposed taking profits from Russian assets frozen in Europe after Moscow’s invasion and transferring some 90% to an EU-run fund used to finance arms for Kyiv. The Commission estimated the profits on the assets – various Russian central bank securities and cash – could be between 2.5 billion euros ($2.73 billion) and 3 billion euros per year.
Russia on Wednesday described the EU plan as banditism and theft.
— Reuters
Russia’s defeat in the war is a matter of life and death for democracy, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly address.
“We have to be resilient against various challenges, we have to be long-range to defeat Putin, and not be in a situation where doubts about the strength of the West help this madman,” the president said Wednesday night.
“Putin must lose — and this is a matter of life and death for the democratic world. When he loses, the democratic world will have a good perspective for generations to come,” he added.
Zelenskyy said he’d met earlier with Jake Sullivan, the U.S.’ national security advisor, with the officials having a “very meaningful, very specific conversation about defense cooperation and about the joint political results that we have to achieve.”
During his trip to Kyiv, Sullivan said that a major U.S. aid package worth $60 billion that has been blocked by Republicans for months would “get to Ukraine,” Reuters reported.
— Holly Ellyatt
Explosions have been reported in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv overnight, with city officials stating that a missile attack is now known to have injured at least 12 people.
Missile fragments fell on a kindergarten in one part of the city, and several industrial and residential buildings were damaged in other parts of the capital. Falling missile fragments, shot down by Ukrainian air defenses, set cars on fire in another district. A fire was reported at a transformer substation and in a two-story non-residential building in the Podilskyi district as a result of falling missile debris.
“The number of victims increased to ten. Two of them were hospitalized. Others were treated by medics on the spot. In particular, six people were injured in the Shevchenkiv district of the capital. Four [were injured] in Svyatoshynsk,” Kyiv Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko said on Telegram.
Serhiy Popko, head of the Kyiv regional military administration, said the number of injured people has since risen to 12.
Official information from Ukraine’s air force suggested, he said, that Russia had launched ballistic and cruise missiles against the city but that all 31 missiles had been shot down over the city. He posted images on his Telegram account showing burned-out cars, craters in the ground and damaged buildings. CNBC was not able to verify all the information in the officials’ posts.
— Holly Ellyatt
At least five people were killed and more were injured in Ukraine’s Kharkiv on Wednesday as a fire broke out in an industrial building following Russian shelling in the area. Oleh Syniehubov, head of the Kharkiv regional state administration, shared the figures on Telegram.
CNBC was not able to independently verify the report.
Pictures published via Getty Images showed the aftermath of the missile attack.
— Sophie Kiderlin
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday said he discussed Ukraine’s peace formula and bilateral relations with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
In a post on social media platform X, Zelenskyy said he expressed his gratitude for India being supportive of Ukraine’s territorial sovereignty, humanitarian aid and meetings about the peace formula.
“It will be important for us to see India attend the inaugural Peace Summit, which is currently being prepared in Switzerland,” he said.
Zelenskyy said Ukraine was keen to develop its trade and economic relationship with India.
“Ukraine is interested in strengthening our trade and economic ties with India, particularly in agricultural exports, aviation cooperation, and pharmaceutical and industrial product trade,” he said.
It comes just hours after Russian media reported that Russian President Vladimir Putin and India’s Modi discussed Ukraine, as well as their own trade relations which have remained close throughout the war.
— Sophie Kiderlin
Ukraine succeeding against Russia in the war has become a question of U.S. credibility, Radoslaw Sikorski, Poland’s foreign minister, told CNBC.
“The success of Ukraine is now a matter of U.S. credibility. And if U.S. support for Ukraine were to stop, I think U.S. allies around the world would notice and would start hedging,” he told CNBC’s Steve Sedgwick Tuesday.
Aid for Ukraine has become a highly contested topic among U.S. lawmakers in recent months, with an aid package that would see around $61 billion worth of support for the country currently being stuck in the U.S. House of Representatives.
Read the full story here.
— Sophie Kiderlin
Russia shot down 419 Ukrainian drones and 67 missiles during the presidential election that took place last weekend, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said Wednesday.
“During the election events, 419 unmanned aerial vehicles and 67 missiles were shot down,” Shoigu said at a ministry meeting, news agency Interfax reported. Shoigu did not present evidence to support his claims.
“To prevent terrorist attacks, Russian troops have strengthened the security of government and social facilities and strengthened the air defense system,” Shoigu said.
Shoigu accused Ukraine of trying to disrupt voting by targeting sites where polls were taking place from Friday to Sunday. Russian media reports said there had been several instances in which Ukrainian drones targeted polling stations in partially-occupied regions in Ukraine, including Kherson and Zaporizhzhia.
Russia declared that it had annexed the regions in Sept. 2022, along with Luhansk and Donetsk in eastern Ukraine. It has since made efforts to “Russify” the regions, including by handing out Russian passports and holding elections there. Ukraine and its allies have said such moves are illegal.
— Holly Ellyatt
Ukraine’s survival is at stake amid an ongoing funding impasse in the U.S. Congress, U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin warned Tuesday. He said additional aid for Ukraine was a matter of “honor” for the United States.
“Today, Ukraine’s survival is in danger and America’s security is at risk. They don’t have a day to waste, and we don’t have a day to spare either,” Austin said at a press conference after a meeting of the Ukraine defense contact group meeting at the Ramstein Air Base in Germany on Tuesday, with representatives from Ukraine and around 50 allied countries attending.
“I leave here today fully determined to keep U.S. security assistance and ammunition flowing. And that’s a matter of survival and sovereignty for Ukraine. And it’s a matter of honor and security for America. And make no mistake, Putin is watching. The world is watching and history is watching,” Austin said.
Speaking to CNBC separately Tuesday, Poland’s foreign minister called on America to act, warning that the success of Ukraine in the war against Russia was now a matter of U.S. credibility.
“We wouldn’t be on the backfoot if the American supplemental came through, and I again, appeal to Speaker Johnson to let it go to the vote. And let democracy take its course,” Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski told CNBC Tuesday.
— Holly Ellyatt
The Kremlin criticized on Wednesday the decision by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to ban Russians from the opening parade of the Paris Olympics this summer.
“We perceive this negatively. Of course, this is the destruction of the ideas of Olympism, this is an infringement of the interests of athletes, Olympians. Of course, this is absolutely contrary to the entire ideology of the Olympic movement. This does not look good on the IOC,” Peskov told reporters, news agency Interfax reported Wednesday.
The IOC announced on Tuesday that Russian and Belarusian athletes, who are competing in the Olympic Games in late July-early August as neutral competitors, will not be allowed to participate in the opening ceremony of the competition.
In a statement, the IOC said “an opportunity will be provided for them to experience the event” but did not provide further details. It said it has not yet made a decision regarding participation in the closing ceremony.
— Min Maddison
Ukraine’s survival is in danger, Pentagon chief warns; Putin could make China his first visit of new term