
Russia's military losses top 1 million in 3-year-old war, Ukraine's military says
Article content
Ukraine responded to the Russian attacks with drone raids. Russia's Defense Ministry said that air defenses downed 52 Ukrainian drones early Thursday, including 41 over the Belgorod region that borders Ukraine. Regional Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov said three people were injured by Ukrainian attacks.
Article content
The recent escalation in aerial attacks has come alongside a renewed Russian battlefield push along eastern and northeastern parts of the more than 1,000-kilometer (over 600-mile) front line.
Article content
While Russian missile and drone barrage have struck regions all across Ukraine, regions along the front line have faced daily Russian attacks with short-range exploding drones and glide bombs.
Article content
Article content
On Thursday, the Russian Defense Ministry claimed its troops captured two more villages in the Donetsk region, Oleksiivka and Petrivske. The Ukrainian military had no immediate comment on the Russian claim.
Article content
The attacks have continued despite discussions of a potential ceasefire in the war. During their June 2 talks in Istanbul, Russian and Ukrainian negotiators traded memorandums containing sharply divergent conditions that both sides see as nonstarters, making a quick deal unlikely.
Article content
The only tangible outcome of the talks was an agreement to exchange prisoners of war and the bodies of fallen soldiers.
Article content
Russia and Ukraine conducted another POW swap on Thursday that included severely wounded and gravely ill captives, although the sides did not report the numbers.
Article content
'Our people are coming home,' Zelenskyy said in a statement on Telegram. 'All of them require medical treatment, and they will receive the necessary help. This is already the second stage of returning those who are severely wounded and seriously ill.'
Article content
According to Ukraine's Human Rights Ombudsman Dmytro Lubinets, some of the repatriated soldiers had been listed as missing in action. The oldest among them is 59, the youngest is 22, he said.
Article content
At the same time, Rutte criticized Putin for appointing his aide Vladimir Medinsky as the top negotiator for the talks in Istanbul. Medinsky ascended through the Kremlin ranks after writing a series of books exposing purported Western plots against Russia and denigrating Ukraine.
Article content
'I think that the Russians sending this historian now twice to these talks in Istanbul, trying to start with the history of 1,000 years ago and then explaining more or less that Ukraine is at fault here, I think that's not helpful,' Rutte said. 'But at least step by step, we try to make progress.'
Article content
Article content
Also on Thursday, German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius arrived in Kyiv on an unannounced visit, noting the stepped-up Russian attacks send a message from Moscow that it has 'no interest in a peaceful solution at present,' according to German news agency dpa.
Article content
Pistorius said his visit underlines that the new German government continues to stand by Ukraine.
Article content
'Of course this will also be about how the support of Germany and other Europeans will look in future — what we can do, for example, in the area of industrial cooperation, but also other support,' he said.
Article content
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Globe and Mail
3 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
In this brave new world, the economy is highly political
Christopher Collins is a visiting fellow at the Cascade Institute at Royal Roads University. Jens Hillebrand Pohl is the director of the Helsinki Geoeconomics School. Thirty-five years ago, an American author named Edward Luttwak wrote a landmark essay popularizing the term 'geoeconomics.' Mr. Luttwak, an influential political scientist who has been called 'the Machiavelli of Maryland,' argued that as the Cold War ended, traditional military power would be joined by economics as a way for countries to exert power. We were entering an age where, as Mr. Luttwak wrote, the world order would be shaped by 'the logic of war in the grammar of commerce.' This fusion of economics and geopolitics remained an obscure area of study for years following Mr. Luttwak's essay. Indeed, in the 1990s, the world went in the opposite direction; free trade, open markets and global investment soared in an era of hyperglobalization. Economics appeared increasingly disconnected from geopolitics, and economic activity was focused on maximizing value, rather than on projecting power. Some went so far as to argue the world had reached 'the end of history,' following the 'unabashed victory of economic and political liberalism.' However, recent developments, such as the Russian invasion of Ukraine and escalating U.S.-China tensions, show that the world may be, as the late U.S. secretary of state Henry Kissinger said, 'in the foothills of a new Cold War.' As the IMF warns, increasing trade restrictions, technological decoupling, disrupted capital flows and migration restrictions are fragmenting the global economy, splitting the world into competing 'blocs.' However much we may have wanted to be done with geopolitics, it is not done with us. In this era, economic policies are increasingly driven by political and power dynamics, and geopolitical questions are informed by economic concerns. All the components of the global economy – currencies, supply chains, technology, trade and capital flows, and information networks – have become tools of power and influence. More and more, these instruments serve as expressions of national sovereignty, whether through export licensing, cross-border data regimes, or control over investment standards. And across the world, economic policy is no longer reactive or technocratic: It is being politicized and weaponized. As a resource-rich, trade-dependent middle power, Canada must navigate this increasingly fragmenting world while protecting its core economic interests. To do so, Canada will first need to develop a sophisticated capability to engage in what experts call 'economic statecraft.' This will include developing economic tools to manage both bilateral and multilateral relations with the U.S., China and Europe. Fortunately, as history has shown, this is something at which Canadians are skilled. As Robert Bothwell, one of the leading historians of Canadian foreign policy, once said, when it comes to trade talks, Canadians 'are notoriously tough.' Canada's private sector will also need to adapt to this new reality. Geoeconomic shifts have reshaped how companies do business around the world, leading to what some have called 'a new geography of manufacturing.' In this environment, firms are not just adapting to geopolitics, they are becoming its agents. Global businesses and investors must now align their operational models with geostrategic risks, navigate extraterritorial legal exposure, and anticipate shifts in access to data, talent and capital. Managing all of this will require new ways of thinking, something the CEO of one large global Canadian financial services firm likened to 'swapping out your cross-country skis for downhill skis midslope.' Canadian investors will also be affected. As economist David Skilling has said, 'trade wars are a precursor to capital wars.' In a sign of the times, Larry Fink – the CEO of BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager – has argued that global capital markets are becoming more attuned to national goals in what he calls 'the second draft of globalization.' Canadians invested approximately $2.5-trillion abroad in 2024, and Canadian investors may increasingly find themselves caught between competing political pressures in a fragmenting global investment landscape. Arguably, the most immediate challenge for Canada lies in managing its relationship with the U.S. while preserving economic diversification. Unlike some other middle powers, which can hedge between competing blocs, Canada's geographic position and economic integration with the U.S. make strategic ambiguity nearly impossible. For Canadian investors, a provision in Donald Trump's Big Beautiful Bill Act to increase tax rates on some foreign investors is particularly concerning. It signals a broader shift: the weaponization of access to U.S. capital markets as an instrument of statecraft. As Mr. Luttwak predicted, economics is increasingly becoming a venue for geopolitical competition, especially among the great powers. Meeting this challenge will be tough. But, as we have seen before, Canadians are tough, too.


CBC
7 hours ago
- CBC
Russia and Ukraine are returning the bodies of their soldiers. It's a grim snapshot of battlefield loss
In a social media group dedicated to finding Russian soldiers missing in action, the dozens of posts made each day typically contained names and pictures, along with pleas from desperate mothers, wives and sisters looking for their loved ones. But on Wednesday, some group members were voicing their frustration and anger. Moscow announced it had returned the bodies of more than 1,200 Ukrainian soldiers, and in turn received the remains of 27 Russian soldiers. "How are they getting their fighters, and we can't ours?" said one woman. Another group member said that her husband, who is currently listed as missing, told her during one of their last conversations that the fields were "covered with corpses and no one takes them away." A third woman replied, "Officials only talk pretty, but in reality it is the opposite." As part of a limited deal reached in Istanbul on June 2, Russia and Ukraine agreed to exchange prisoners of war, including the severely wounded and those under the age of 25. They also agreed to repatriate up to 6,000 bodies each, a grim snapshot of the scale of battlefield losses that both sides rarely address. Neither side has commented on why the numbers of remains repatriated on Wednesday appear so lopsided, with Moscow receiving just 27 bodies. Repatriating remains As Russia appears set to ramp up a summer offensive, various groups have tried to estimate the number of soldiers killed and wounded on each side during more than years of war. The number of Russian soldiers killed and injured is "extraordinary," wrote the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in a report from earlier this month. It estimated that this summer, Russia will hit its one millionth casualty — which includes both deaths and injuries — with as many 250,000 soldiers killed. The last time Russian officials publicly spoke about the country's fatalities was September 2022, when they said just under 6,000 had died in the fighting. CSIS estimated the number of Ukrainian fatalities to be between 60,000 and 100,000, with more than 300,000 soldiers injured. In December, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said that 43,000 had been killed. He had revealed the information in an effort to correct U.S. President Donald Trump, who had posted online that Ukraine had "lost" hundreds of thousands of soldiers. Tens of thousands missing Kyiv says more than 70,000 Ukrainians have been registered missing since 2022. The majority are from the military, but the figure also includes civilians. Another 12,000 have been removed from the list after being identified among the dead or being freed in exchanges. On Thursday, Ukraine's Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of the Prisoners of War said that it has received more than 100,000 requests from Russian citizens, looking for relatives who had gone missing while serving in the military. Thousands of bodies had already been repatriated by both sides before Wednesday's exchange, in arrangements where numbers are often not publicly announced. Russia accused Ukraine of trying to delay the most recent repatriations. Over the weekend, state media showed a line of refrigerated trucks it said were carrying the Ukrainian bodies and were posted near the border with Ukraine, ready to be handed over. In response, Ukrainian officials accused Russia of manipulating the facts, saying a date for the exchange had not yet been agreed upon when the trucks arrived. Prisoner exchanges Russian officials said the group it returned included soldiers who were killed in the Ukrainian city of Donetsk, where Russia's military continues to advance, and also from Kursk, which Russia has taken back after the surprise Ukrainian offensive last summer. On Thursday, as both sides published videos of newly released prisoners of war calling their family members to say they had been freed, Russian President Vladimir Putin met with military members and veterans who have served in what Russia still calls its special military operation. "Let's remember those guys who are now on the line of combat contact, on the front," said Putin, before he led a group assembled in front of him in a cheer, where they shouted "hoorah" three times. In recent days, Russia has stepped up its attacks on Ukrainian cities, launching a record number of drones, while its military continues to try and press forward in the east and in the north. The First Deputy of the Defence Committee for Russia's state Duma said the military is trying to create a 100-kilometre buffer zone in Ukraine's Sumy region. More evacuations According to open source maps created by pro-Ukrainian groups,Russia has taken more than 190 square kilometres of the Sumy region in less than a month. While in the Donetsk region in the southeast, Russia's forces are advancing toward the border with the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, according to the U.S.-based Institute for the Study of War. Throughout its invasion, Russia has already laid claim to four Ukrainian regions over which it insists it will keep control. Entering into the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast would mean the country is trying to take an even greater swath of Ukrainian territory. "One after another there are settlements and cities, where thousands of people lived, which are being destroyed," said Pavlo Diachenko, head of communications for the Donetsk region police. Diachenko is helping evacuate civilians coming under increasing shelling. Earlier this week, he told CBC News, he was assisting people with leaving the city of Lyman, which has come under heavy fighting throughout the war. In May 2022, the city was captured by Russian forces and then taken back by Ukraine four months later. The frontline remains barely eight kilometres away.

CTV News
21 hours ago
- CTV News
Gaza to be sidelined in G7 summit, senior government source says
Vehicles pass a security gate and fence outside the site of the G7 Leaders meeting in Kananaskis, Alta., Monday, June 2, CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh Details are emerging on the agenda for next week's G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alta., including that discussions on the war in Gaza may not make the cut, and climate change will be addressed through other topics. Set to begin early next week, the meeting's priorities are said to include international peace and security, economics, technology, global migration and private investment, among others. A senior government source shared in a technical briefing Thursday that while the security of Ukraine and the Indo-Pacific region will be discussed between G7 leaders and invited guests, the conflict between Israel and Hamas, and its associated humanitarian crisis, is not on the official agenda. Meanwhile, climate change is likely to be addressed through related issues rather than as a distinct line item. 'With respect, climate is integrated in (the) agenda,' the source said. 'The focus on critical minerals and supply chains, those are essential to tackling climate change that's required for energy transition … When you think about wildfires. You think climate change – and you would expect that climate change is behind the wildfires.' In addition, this year's summit is not expected to end with a joint communique from the pact's leaders, unlike previous years. Instead, some brief joint statements may emerge on individual issues discussed at the talks. At a previous Canadian meeting of G7 leaders in 2018, U.S. President Donald Trump departed the Charlevoix, Que., summit without signing that years' joint communique. Roland Paris, a University of Ottawa professor of international affairs, told CTV News in an interview that Trump's presence in the room will be 'a challenge.' With global relations now so strained amid a far-reaching trade war, talks may be a matter of managing the U.S. president's mood, he says. 'There will be private sessions for just the G7 leaders. This is part of what has been historically quite special about the G7, is that you could have an unscripted, private discussion among the leaders of these industrialized democracies,' he told CTV. 'But, they're not so likeminded now, and it'll be important to try and come out of that private meeting without Trump having gone completely off the rails.' Officials say that Carney will attempt to arrange bilateral discussions with each of the leaders in attendance, time permitting. While planning for this year's Alberta meeting began under former prime minister Justin Trudeau, the decision not to release a single statement from leaders came from Prime Minister Mark Carney, CTV News has learned. '(Prime Minister) Carney will be host of the summit and the approach we are taking to this summit is under his direction,' the government official said. 'The G7 is a consensus body – we want to focus on actions we can take together.' Who will be attending? In addition to G7 member countries, leaders in attendance will include those of Australia, Brazil, India, Indonesia, Mexico, South Korea, South Africa and Ukraine. The government source said that foreign interference has been a topic of discussion at the G7 for 'quite a number of years now' and this year there will be a 'specific focus on transnational repression.' But the official did not offer further details about what that would entail. This comes as Prime Minister Mark Carney faces criticism from within his own caucus about extending an invitation to India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The G7 Summit begins just three days before the two-year anniversary of the murder of Sikh-Canadian activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in June 2023. Canadian police authorities have linked his killing to agents working with the Modi government. Carney has also extended invitations to president of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan and Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman of Saudi Arabia. While the UAE leader has accepted the prime minister's invitation, CTV News has learned that the Saudi crown prince will not be in attendance next week. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Antonio Costa will also attend the summit, and according to the Office of the Prime Minister, so will NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte and Ajay Banga, president of the World Bank. Most leaders are expected to arrive in Kananaskis on Sunday, with official events beginning the following day. With files from The Canadian Press