How airlines are managing the risk of missile threats and airspace closures
Carriers are struggling with the threat from missiles and drones, airspace closures, location spoofing, and the risk of passenger flights being shot down.
These challenges are leading to increased costs and loss of market share due to flight cancellations and expensive, last-minute re-routings, forcing the industry, which prides itself on its safety performance, to also invest more in data and security planning as a result.
"Flight planning in this kind of environment is extremely difficult … The airline industry thrives on predictability, and the absence of this will always drive greater cost," said Guy Murray, who leads aviation security at European carrier TUI Airlines.
With increasing airspace closures around Russia and Ukraine, throughout the Middle East, between India and Pakistan and in parts of Africa, airlines are left with fewer route options.
"Compared to five years ago, more than half of the countries being overflown on a typical Europe-Asia flight would now need to be carefully reviewed before each flight," said Mark Zee, founder of OPSGROUP, a membership-based organisation that shares flight risk information.
The Israeli-Palestinian conflict in the Middle East since October 2023 has led to commercial aviation sharing the skies with short-notice barrages of drones and missiles across major flight paths, some of which were reportedly close enough to be seen by pilots and passengers.
Russian airports, including in Moscow, are now regularly shut down for brief periods due to drone activity, while interference with navigation systems, known as GPS spoofing or jamming, is surging around political fault lines worldwide.
When hostilities broke out between India and Pakistan last month, the neighbours blocked each other's aircraft from their respective airspace.
"Airspace should not be used as a retaliatory tool, but it is," Nick Careen, International Air Transport Association (IATA) senior vice president for operations, safety and security, told reporters at the airline body's annual meeting in New Delhi on Tuesday.
Isidre Porqueras, chief operating officer at Indian carrier IndiGo, said the recent diversions were undoing efforts to reduce emissions and increase airline efficiencies.
Finances aside, civil aviation's worst-case scenario is a plane being hit, accidentally or intentionally, by weaponry.
In December, an Azerbaijan Airlines flight crashed in Kazakhstan, killing 38 people. The plane was accidentally shot down by Russian air defences, according to Azerbaijan's president and Reuters sources.
In October, a cargo plane was shot down in Sudan, killing five people.
Six commercial aircraft have been shot down, with three near-misses since 2001, according to aviation risk consultancy Osprey Flight Solutions.
Governments need to share information more effectively to keep civil aviation secure as conflict zones proliferate, IATA Director General Willie Walsh said this week.
Safety statistics used by the commercial aviation industry show a steady decline in accidents over the past two decades, but these do not include security-related incidents such as being hit by weaponry.
IATA said in February that accidents and incidents related to conflict zones were a top concern for aviation safety, requiring urgent global coordination.
Each airline decides where to travel based on a patchwork of government notices, security advisers, and information-sharing between carriers and states, leading to divergent policies.
The closure of Russian airspace to most Western carriers since the outbreak of war in Ukraine in 2022 put them at a cost disadvantage compared to airlines from places like China, India and the Middle East that continue to take shorter northern routes that need less fuel and fewer crew.
Shifting risk calculations means Singapore Airlines flight SQ326 from Singapore to Amsterdam has used three different routes into Europe in just over a year, Flightradar24 tracking data shows.
When reciprocal missile and drone attacks broke out between Iran and Israel in April 2024, it started crossing previously avoided Afghanistan instead of Iran.
Last month, its route shifted again to avoid Pakistan's airspace as conflict escalated between India and Pakistan. Flight SQ326 now reaches Europe via the Persian Gulf and Iraq. Singapore Airlines did not respond immediately to a request for comment.
Pilots and flight attendants are also worried about how the patchwork of shifting risk might impact their safety.
"IATA says airlines should decide if it's safe to fly over conflict zones, not regulators. But history shows commercial pressures can cloud those decisions," said Paul Reuter, vice president of the European Cockpit Association, which represents pilots.
Flight crews typically have the right to refuse a trip due to concerns about airspace, whether over weather or conflict zones, IATA security head Careen said.
"Most airlines, in fact, I would say the vast majority of them, do not want crew on an aircraft if they don't feel comfortable flying," he said.
Hashtags

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


CBS News
5 minutes ago
- CBS News
Gabbard barred sharing intelligence on Russia-Ukraine negotiations with "Five Eyes" partners
Washington — As Russia's war in Ukraine rages on despite high-level meetings to discuss a possible path to peace, CBS News has learned that Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, issued a directive weeks ago to the U.S. intelligence community ordering that all information regarding the Russia-Ukraine peace negotiations not be shared with U.S.-allied intelligence partners. The memo, dated July 20 and signed by Gabbard, directed agencies to not share information with the so-called Five Eyes, the post-World War II intelligence alliance comprising the U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia and New Zealand, multiple U.S. intelligence officials told CBS News. They spoke under condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive national security matters. The officials said the directive classified all analysis and information related to the volatile Russia-Ukraine peace negotiations as "NOFORN," or no foreign dissemination, meaning the information could not be shared with any other country or foreign nationals. The only information that could be shared was information that had already been publicly released. The memo also limited distribution of material regarding peace talks to within the agencies that created or originated the intelligence. The memo does not seem to prevent the sharing of diplomatic information gathered by other means separate from the U.S. intelligence community, or military operational information unrelated to the talks — such as the details the U.S. shares with the Ukrainian military to aid in their defensive operations. Contacted by CBS News, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence referred questions to the White House, which did not respond. "In general, the value of the Fives Eyes intelligence partnership is that when we are making and they are making policy decisions, we can both augment each other's intelligence and therefore know more about the plans, intentions, and capabilities of our adversaries," explained Steven Cash, a former intelligence officer at the Central Intelligence Agency and Department of Homeland Security. "Among the reasons for that sort of default is the expectation that we and the other four are all sitting on the same side of the table with some other adversary on the other side," Cash said. He said it's important for the allies to have "a common intelligence picture" so policymakers and negotiators "can coordinate our positions and get the best deal we can, or fight the best war we can." Cash is the executive director of The Steady State, a nonprofit organization made up of former U.S. intelligence and national security professionals and government officials concerned with threats to American democracy. In March 1946, Winston Churchill spoke of the "special relationship" between the U.S. and the U.K. and the threat of the "Iron Curtain" that had "descended across the Continent." The United States and Britain first forged their intelligence alliance in secret, signing an agreement to pool information as a bulwark against the Soviet Union. Later, Canada, Australia and New Zealand joined the arrangement, transforming what began as a bilateral pact into the five-nation network that would come to be known as the Five Eyes. But now, nearly 80 years later, some former U.S. government officials warn that the breadth of Gabbard's order could undermine the intelligence community alliance — discouraging analysts from sharing insights and eroding trust among allies who have long relied on open exchanges to form a common picture of global threats and paths to successful negotiation. Cash and CBS News national security contributor Sam Vinograd, a former homeland security official, said Five Eyes often has intelligence that helps the U.S. produce comprehensive intelligence assessments, especially about Russia, given the access Five Eyes partners have to other intelligence sources. "Shutting our most trusted partners off from intelligence assessments could have a chilling effect on critical intelligence sharing if our partners believe they're being shut out of key access — including on key matters in their region. They could decide to take similar steps toward the U.S.," Vinograd said. She added, "Policy-wise, if our Five Eyes partners think they are being shut off from key information. They could choose to create new structures and channels without us. A lack of full collaboration with our closest partners could lead them to discuss matters impacting our national security without our input and perspective." Still, other former intelligence officers contend Gabbard's directive is commonplace within the U.S. intelligence community, and the criticism is much ado about nothing. They say both the U.S. and the other members of the intelligence alliance frequently withhold information from each other in diverging interest areas. Ezra Cohen, a Hudson Institute fellow who served as the acting undersecretary of defense for intelligence at the Pentagon, suggested that condemnation of Gabbard's memo likely stems from a dislike of Trump administration policies and her leadership as director of national intelligence. "There is a lot of information we do not share even with our Five Eyes partners, and it works in the reverse. There's a lot of U.K. eyes-only material. There's a lot of Australian eyes-only material," said Cohen. "Our interests are not always aligned with our Five Eyes partners," Cohen said. "And where we have diverging interests, and it's not just Ukraine, we absolutely mark things NOFORN." He admits it's possible the directive could result in depriving the U.S. of information, but maintains these types of decisions have historically been the norm between all of the Five Eyes members. He said the claim that the directive represents "a chilling of the relationship" between the U.S. and Five Eyes seems "a little bit like faux outrage." As intelligence work and diplomatic efforts continue, largely out of the public eye, the war in Ukraine continues to take a deadly toll. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy condemned Moscow Thursday for launching hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles in an attack overnight, "as if nothing had changed at all. As if there were no efforts by the world to stop this war."
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Trump suggests Ukraine should attack Russia to win war
Donald Trump has suggested it would be 'impossible' for Ukraine to win the war without attacking Russia. The US president also criticised his predecessor, Joe Biden, for not granting Kyiv permission to 'fight back', in an ambiguous social media post. He proceeded to share a picture of himself poking Vladimir Putin in the chest, above an image of Richard Nixon doing the same to Nikita Khrushchev, a former prime minister of the Soviet Union. 'It is very hard, if not impossible, to win a war without attacking an invaders country. It's like a great team in sports that has a fantastic defence, but is not allowed to play offence. There is no chance of winning! It is like that with Ukraine and Russia,' Mr Trump wrote in his Truth Social website. 'Crooked and grossly incompetent Joe Biden would not let Ukraine FIGHT BACK, only DEFEND. How did that work out?' The president's social media musings could be interpreted as a tacit show of support for Ukraine's recent campaign of deep strikes on Russian oil refineries. Similar strikes were opposed by Mr Biden, who believed they could escalated the conflict and spike international oil prices. Mr Trump's language appears to mimic a question he reportedly asked Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine's president, over whether his forces had the ability to strike Moscow during a telephone call in July, according to a readout obtained by the Telegraph. 'Volodymyr, can you hit Moscow?… Can you hit St Petersburg too?' the US president asked, the FT reported at the time. Mr Zelensky reportedly said he would if handed the right Western weapons. Ukraine has received donations of a number of long-range Western missiles, including Britain's Storm Shadow and American Atacms. However, for most of the war, the weapons were restricted to only strike targets in occupied areas of Ukraine and Crimea, the peninsula illegally annexed by the Russians in 2014. Mr Zelensky and Ukrainian officials lobbied hard for Mr Biden to overturn those restrictions. The former US president eventually relented to the requests, allowing strikes in small areas of Russia, on its southern border, where it was mounting new attacks into Ukraine's Kharkiv and Sumy regions. Ukraine has been carrying out a series of successful attacks on Russian military installations and oil infrastructure, using its own Intelligence and homemade weapons. Kyiv is not publicly known to have received resupplies of Storm Shadow or Atacms missiles for months. Mr Trump's vague social media post came the same day as Associated Press published images of what it reported to be a facility storing Flamingo missiles, a Ukrainian-made weapon with a range of 3,000km. Two of the missiles were etched with the numbers '479' and '480', suggesting that many at least had been produced by Ukrainian engineers. Mr Zelensky has claimed in previous social media posts that the weapon has already been tested on the battlefield. If the cruise missile is capable of hitting a target at its touted range, Moscow would be comfortably within its limits. Ukraine, however, would likely need Western intelligence assistance to pull off such an audacious attack against the Russian capital. 07:17 PM BST Our live coverage has ended. Here's a round-up of today's events: Sergei Lavrov said that any ideas for peace in Ukraine that depart from those set out by Russia in talks in Istanbul in 2022 are 'hopeless' Donald Trump will step back from organising peace talks between Russia and Ukraine, instead leaving Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky to organise a bilateral meeting Russia struck an American business with cruise missiles overnight in one of the largest aerial attacks of the war so far Italy arrested a Ukrainian citizen on suspicion of helping to orchestrate the underwater bombing of the Nord Stream pipelines Volodymyr Zelensky said that he will only meet with Vladimir Putin after his allies have agreed on security guarantees for Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky said that Russia is attempting to avoid the 'necessity' of holding bilateral talks 07:14 PM BST Putin 'trying to avoid the necessity to meet', says Zelensky Volodymyr Zelensky has said that Russia is attempting to avoid the 'necessity' of holding bilateral talks despite US-led efforts to facilitate talks between the warring countries. 'Current signals from Russia are, to be honest, indecent. They're trying to avoid the necessity to meet. They don't want to end this war,' Mr Zelensky said in his evening address. Earlier this week, an agreement seemed to have been met to hold a summit between Mr Zelensky and Vladimir Putin. However, the Kremlin has demurred, issuing vague statements which do not confirm or deny its willingness to participate. On Thursday, Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov claimed that Ukraine is 'not interested' in a long-term peace deal. 'The Ukrainian regime and its representatives comment on the current situation in a very specific way, directly showing that they are not interested in a sustainable, fair, long-term settlement,' Mr Lavrov said at a news conference. 07:13 PM BST Pictured: Ukrainian firefighters battle the aftermath of a Russian attack in Kostiantynivka 07:05 PM BST Top US, European officers work on military options for Ukraine Top officers from the US and Europe held talks this week to work on military options for Ukraine's security in the event that a peace deal can be brokered with Russia. US General Dan Caine and his counterparts from the United Kingdom, Finland, France, Germany, Italy and Ukraine met on Tuesday and Wednesday in Washington, a spokesperson for the US Joint Staff said in a statement. 'They developed military options to support negotiations to bring a lasting peace to Europe,' which 'will be presented to each nation's respective national security advisors for appropriate consideration in ongoing diplomatic efforts,' according to the statement. Details on the options being discussed were not provided. 07:00 PM BST Where could a Putin-Zelensky summit be held? Donald Trump had initially aimed to hold a trilateral meeting with Volodymyr Zelensky and Vladimir Putin as early as Aug 22. Today, sources said that US president has decided to take a step back to allow Moscow and Kyiv to negotiate with each other directly. Yet progress appears to have stalled on the bilateral summit, even after it was reported on Monday that Putin had agreed to meet with his Ukrainian counterpart for the first time since 2019. One of the questions that remains open is where a possible summit could be held. Putin reportedly suggested Moscow, a source told AFP earlier this week, a proposal that Mr Zelensky immediately rejected. Hungary has been lobbying to host for several days now, but there are concerns that it might not be sufficiently neutral given prime minister Viktor Orban's ties with Putin and pro-Russian views. On Wednesday, Polish prime minister Donald Tusk quipped that it would be best not to hold talks in the Hungarian capital, Budapest, given that it was the location of a 1994 summit under which Kyiv surrendered its share of the Soviet nuclear arsenal in exchange for security guarantees from Russia. Mr Tusk said 'maybe I'm superstitious, but this time I would try to find another place.' Switzerland and Austria have both said that they would grant immunity to the Russian president from an International Criminal Court warrant if he attended peace negotiations there, with Mr Zelensky expressing a preference for the Austrian capital. 06:39 PM BST Zelensky says he will only meet with Putin after security guarantees agreed Volodymyr Zelensky has said that he will only meet with Vladimir Putin after his allies have agreed on security guarantees for Ukraine to deter future Russian attacks. In comments released on Thursday, Mr Zelensky said 'we want to have an understanding of the security guarantees architecture within seven to 10 days', adding 'we need to understand which country will be ready to do what at each specific moment'. In additional remarks, Mr Zelensky said that Donald Trump wants to see a bilateral meeting between Kyiv and Moscow, but that it should be held in a 'neutral' European country, ruling out a summit in the Russian capital. The Ukrainian head of state also rejected the idea of China playing a role in guaranteeing Ukraine's security, citing Beijing's alleged support for Moscow. 06:24 PM BST Lithuania closes airspace near Belarus ahead of military drills Lithuania has closed its airspace along the border with Belarus, citing security risks linked to drones and the upcoming Russian-Belarusian military exercises, the Defence Ministry has said. The ministry said in a statement that the decision, approved by Lithuania's Ministry of Transport and Communications at the request of Lithuania's armed forces, was taken 'in view of the security situation and threats to society, including risks to civil aviation due to violations of airspace by unmanned aerial vehicles.' Officials added that the ban could be extended if drone incursions from Belarusian territory continue. The Zapad-2025 training, which will take place in mid-September with the participation of Moscow and Minsk, will focus in part on operating the intermediate-range Oreshnik missile that has been used in Russian-launched attacks on Ukraine. The drills will involve 13,000 troops and are some of the largest joint exercises held by Russia and Belarus. 05:46 PM BST Germany will pursue criminal investigation against Ukrainian citizen for Nord Stream attacks German justice minister Stefanie Hubig has confirmed that Germany will continue to support Ukraine amid Russia's invasion, but will be forced to pursue a criminal investigation into the Nord Stream pipeline attacks under rule of law. 'Politically we are firmly on Ukraine's side and will continue to be so,' said Ms Hubig when asked if the arrest would affect Berlin's ties to Kyiv. 'What is important for me is that Germany is a country of law, and crimes in our jurisdiction are fully investigated.' Earlier today, it was announced that Ukrainian citizen Serhii K had been arrested on suspicion of being part of a group of people who planted devices on the pipelines in September 2022. Nobody had ever claimed responsibility for the attacks, which were seen by both Russia and the West as an act of sabotage. 05:11 PM BST Pictured: Ukrainian emergency services work at home set ablaze by Russian strike 05:10 PM BST Vance's 'icebreaker' with Zelensky after Oval Office blowup US vice president JD Vance made a joke to break the ice with Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday after their Oval Office showdown some months ago. Speaking to Fox News, the vice president said, 'So President Zelensky walked into the Oval Office. I was chatting with him, with the President, with some of the senior Ukrainian delegation. I said, 'Mr President, so long as you behave, I won't say anything', and he just chuckled a little bit. It was a good little icebreaker.' 05:02 PM BST Ukraine's answer to Russia's drone blitz Shortly before dawn on July 9, Russia had fired 728 drones and 13 missiles into Ukraine, making it the largest Russian aerial bombardment of the war so far. The previous record had been set on July 4, and the one before that five days earlier. Russia's 'swarm' warfare, enabled by its ability to mass-produce low-cost, long-range attack drones, has exhausted and overwhelmed Ukraine's air defences, allowing targets to now be hit three times the typical rate. With its stocks of Western air defence missiles depleted and Russia's Iranian-designed Shahed-type drones flying faster, higher and with greater precision, Ukraine has become increasingly vulnerable. Volodymyr Zelensky had set a target by the end of July for Ukraine to produce 1,000 interceptor drones a month and blunt Russia's relentless drone offensive. The Ukrainian president bet big, estimating it would cost £4.4bn to ramp up production and train more pilots. 04:43 PM BST Flamingo missile storage facility spotted in Ukraine Mr Trump's vague social media post came the same day as Associated Press published images of what it reported to be a facility storing a Flamingo missiles, a Ukrainian-made weapon with a range of 3,000km. Two of the missiles were etched with the numbers '479' and '480', suggesting that many at least had been produced by Ukrainian engineers. Mr Zelensky has claimed in previous social media posts that the weapon has already been tested on the battlefield. If the cruise missile is capable of hitting a target at its touted range, Moscow would be comfortably within its limits. Ukraine, however, would likely need Western intelligence assistance to pull off such an audacious attack against the Russian capital. 04:40 PM BST Pictured: Donald Trump's provocative post on Truth Social 03:47 PM BST Lavrov: 'Coalition of the willing' undermining peace in Ukraine Russia's foreign minister has accused the Coalition of the Willing of 'undermining' efforts to secure peace in Ukraine. Sergei Lavrov said the coalition, led by the UK and France, had tried to 'shift the focus away from resolving the root causes of the conflict', a term frequently used by Moscow to reference Ukraine's ambition to join Nato. Leaders from the UK, France, Germany, Finland and Italy have all indicated their willingness to defend a future peace deal, which could involve putting boots on the ground in Ukraine. Ukraine and its European allies have been pushing for the US to support these efforts, though Washington only appears to be willing to help police the skies, rather than committing troops. Mr Lavrov also suggested that Europe was trying to 'undermine' Donald Trump's efforts to end the war and said Vladimir Putin would be willing to meet Volodymyr Zelensky. His comments come after Russia launched one of the largest aerial attacks of the war so far, targeting an American microelectronics company in western Ukraine. 03:44 PM BST Ukrainian forces reclaim most of Tovste Ukrainian forces have retaken most of the village of Tovste in the eastern Donetsk region, Ukraine's Dnipro Group of Forces said on Thursday. A statement on Telegram from the operational and strategic group of forces said: 'Our soldiers tirelessly destroy the enemy from the air and on the ground, driving them out of Ukrainian territory step by step. This achievement was made possible by the bravery and professionalism of infantry units, UAV pilots, and artillery crews.' Tovste is a frontline village southwest of the Russian-occupied city of Donetsk and near to the occupied town of Vuhledar. Credit: Courtesy of 5th Separate Mechanized Brigade via Reuters 03:31 PM BST Rubio to host Ukraine security talks with Europe US Secretary of State Marco Rubio will host a conference call on Thursday with the national security advisers of European countries expected to play a role in future security guarantees for Ukraine, a senior US official said. One of Kyiv's conditions for signing any peace deal is getting Western-backed military assurances to deter Russia from mounting another invasion in the coming years. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Wednesday that making security arrangements for Ukraine without Moscow's involvement was pointless. 02:36 PM BST Russian fuel prices at near-record highs Russian fuel prices have surged after a slew of Ukrainian attacks on oil refineries, stock exchange data showed on Thursday. Ukraine routinely targets Russian refineries and oil depots in a bid to cut off Moscow's funds for its war machine, and the country claims to have hit and damaged three refineries in enemy territory this month. In an attempt to tame prices, Russia introduced a total ban on fuel exports last month, but it appears to have done little to mitigate the effects of the attacks. Ukrainian strikes have also disrupted air and railway travel, further contributing to the surge. 02:01 PM BST Trump claimed peace was closer than ever. Then Lavrov threw a hand grenade Donald Trump would like to have you believe that he has never been closer to settling the war in Ukraine. A high-stakes meeting with Vladimir Putin in Alaska was said to have ushered in a series of concessions from Moscow, which meant a peace deal was at his fingertips. An apparent compromise on security guarantees for Kyiv was leapt on by the European leaders who accompanied Volodymyr Zelensky to the White House as a real success. But with Mr Trump scrambling to bring the two warring leaders together, Russia appears to be rowing back against any suggestion that it was prepared to drop its maximalist position to deliver peace. On Wednesday, as European military leaders met to discuss how to secure a ceasefire, Russia's veteran foreign minister hurled a metaphorical hand grenade into the mix. Sergei Lavrov suggested Russia would agree only to security guarantees over which it and China have a veto. He said a document drawn up during initial peace talks in the spring of 2022 would serve as a 'very good example' for a potential blueprint. 01:37 PM BST Pictured: Emergency services work at the scene of Russian airstrikes 01:30 PM BST Belarus looking at arming missiles with nuclear warheads, Minsk says Belarus is looking at how to increase domestic production of missiles, including exploring how to equip them with nuclear warheads, a senior Belarusian security official said on Thursday. Belarus, which is a close ally of Russia, does not possess its own nuclear weapons but holds Russian tactical ones which remain under Moscow's control. Alexander Volfovich, who heads the country's State Security Council, told reporters that Minsk is exploring how to arm its Polonez rocket artillery system with nuclear warheads. 'Today, it is a state-of-the art system,' said Mr Volfovich, according to the Belta state news agency. 'Questions are already being raised about equipping these missiles with nuclear warheads.' Volfovich also claimed that Belarus is exploring how to integrate the technology of the Oreshnik, a Russian-made, intermediate-range hypersonic missile, to create a 'joint missile'. Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukashenko, who has led the country for more than three decades, also said on Thursday that 'military threats' from its Western neighbours are compelling Minsk to develop its defensive capacities. 'The dynamics of military threats and the substantial increase in military spending by our Western neighbours force us to constantly devote the closest attention to the issue of the defence capability of Belarus, Russia and our alliance,' state media quoted Lukashenko as saying. 01:17 PM BST Watch: Ukraine hits Russian patrol boat with drone-guided laser Ukraine's military intelligence (HUR) says it destroyed a Russian patrol boat in the Black Sea on Wednesday with a drone-guided laser. The attack was reportedly carried out with a missile guided by a laser designator operated from a drone, according to HUR. The boat was located near the occupied town of Zaliznyi Port in the Kherson region. Five crew members were killed. Credit: @DI_Ukraine / Instagram 01:03 PM BST Italy arrests Ukrainian man over Nord Stream pipeline bombings Italy has arrested a Ukrainian citizen on suspicion of helping to orchestrate the underwater bombing of the Nord Stream pipelines, the German prosecutor has said. The suspect, who was identified only as Serhii K under German privacy laws, is the first person known to be arrested in connection with the blasts. Both Russia and the West have seen the explosions, which seriously damaged three pipelines carrying gas from Russia to Europe, as an act of sabotage, and nobody has taken responsibility for the attacks. The suspect acted as part of a group of individuals who planted devices on the pipelines near the Baltic Sea island of Bornholm in September 2022. Ukraine previously denied involvement. 12:54 PM BST Hungary repeats offer to host peace talks Peter Szijjarto, the Hungarian foreign minister, has reaffirmed Hungary's offer to host peace talks between Russia and Ukraine. Speaking in a daily podcast broadcast on Facebook, Mr Szijjarto said: 'If we are needed, we are ready to provide appropriately fair and safe conditions for such peace negotiations. We are pleased if we can contribute to the success of peace efforts.' On Tuesday, it was reported that the US secret service was preparing to hold the summit in the central European nation whose prime minister, Viktor Orban, boasts strong ties with Donald Trump. Vladimir Putin supposedly pushed for Moscow as a venue, while French president Emmanuel Macron suggested Geneva. 12:26 PM BST France condemns Russian strikes France has condemned Russia's overnight strikes in Ukraine as showing Moscow's 'lack of will to seriously engage in peace talks', describing the strikes as the 'most massive attack in a month'. 'While Russia says it is ready to negotiate, it is continuing its deadly attacks on Ukrainian territory, launching 574 drones and 40 missiles at residential areas,' said a foreign ministry statement. These strikes 'once again show the need to end the killings and to maintain and step up pressure on Russia,' it added, reaffirming support for 'President Trump's initiative for a just and lasting peace'. 12:11 PM BST Russia bombs US factory in Ukraine Russia struck an American business with cruise missiles overnight in one of the largest aerial attacks of the war so far, Ukraine has said. The Ukrainian air force said some 574 drones and 40 missiles were fired overnight, primarily targeting western regions of the country – far from the battlefield's front line in the east and south of the country. The strikes killed one person and injured 15 more and struck a 'major American electronics manufacturer', according to Andrii Sybiha, Ukraine's foreign minister. It was Russia's third-largest aerial attack this year in terms of the number of drones fired and eighth-largest in terms of missiles. It came days after Vladimir Putin travelled to Alaska to meet US president Donald Trump to lay out his terms for peace, which includes Ukraine withdrawing from the entire Donetsk region, despite not being under Russian military control. 11:56 AM BST Trump to 'step back' from Ukraine peace talks Donald Trump will step back from organising peace talks between Russia and Ukraine, instead leaving Vladimir Putin and Volodymyr Zelensky to organise a bilateral meeting, according to a report. The US president told advisers that he would only host a trilateral meeting with both leaders once they had met first, sources told The Guardian. Mr Trump will not be involved in the effort to arrange a meeting between the two, the newspaper added. It follows a frantic week of diplomacy during which Putin travelled to Alaska for talks with the US president, which was followed by a meeting of Mr Zelensky and European leaders in Washington on Monday. 11:46 AM BST Lavrov lays out template for peace Sergei Lavrov has said that any ideas for peace in Ukraine that depart from those set out by Russia in talks in Istanbul in 2022 are 'hopeless'. Russia and Ukraine held peace talks between Feb and April 2022 - at the start of the war - during which Moscow proposed banning Western nations from providing assistance to Ukraine in the event of another attack. He repeated that position on Thursday, saying European troops in Ukraine would be 'absolutely unacceptable'. 'As the West's discussions with the Ukrainian side show, all these plans are connected, in essence, with providing guarantees through foreign military intervention in some part of Ukrainian territory,' he said. 'And I very much hope that those who are hatching such plans, either they are simply trying to attract attention to themselves, or I hope that they understand that this will be absolutely unacceptable for the Russian Federation and for all sensible political forces in Europe.' Instead, Russia is keen to ensure China, one of Moscow's main allies, plays a role in enforcing security guarantees, but this has been dismissed by Mr Zelensky. 'First, China did not help us stop this war from the start. Second, China assisted Russia by opening its drone market... We do not need guarantors who do not help Ukraine and did not help Ukraine at the time when we really needed it.' 11:40 AM BST Putin ready to meet Zelensky, says Lavrov Vladimir Putin is ready to meet with Volodymyr Zelensky, Russia's foreign minister has said, but warned 'issues of legitimacy' would need to be resolved before a peace deal is signed. Russia has repeatedly sought to undermine the Ukrainian president's legitimacy by highlighting that Mr Zelensky's term was due to end last year. However, elections cannot be held under martial law, as per the Ukrainian constitution. 'Putin has repeatedly said he is ready to meet [Zelensky],' Mr Lavrov said, adding: 'I remind you of the Zelensky decree on 'no talks with Putin.'' 11:37 AM BST Welcome to our live coverage Good morning and welcome to our live coverage of the war in Ukraine. We'll bring you the latest news and analysis throughout the day. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.
Yahoo
32 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Boeing's $37B Comeback? China Nears 500-Jet Megadeal After Years of Silence
This article first appeared on GuruFocus. After years on the sidelines, Boeing (NYSE:BA) may be inching back into China's good graces. Talks are progressing on what could be a blockbuster sale of up to 500 jetsits largest with the country in nearly a decade. Sources familiar with the matter say Beijing is sounding out domestic airlines on demand, focusing heavily on the 737 Max series. The deal is still being finalized, with details like jet types and delivery timelines in flux, but the scale mirrors an unannounced order China is also lining up with Airbus (EADSY). Notably, this could be Boeing's first major order from Chinese carriers since 2017, when then-President Trump announced a $37 billion package on a state visit. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 6 Warning Signs with BA. Is BA fairly valued? Test your thesis with our free DCF calculator. This time, the stakes are higher. The order could serve as the centerpiece of a broader trade detente between President Trump and President Xi, who've resumed talks after years of tariff tensions. A final announcement may align with a potential Trump trip to China or the APEC summit in South Korea this October. With production slots nearly sold out into the 2030s, both Boeing and Airbus are dealing with tight supplyyet analysts suggest Boeing still has some room to accommodate key strategic buyers. China, now the world's second-largest aviation market, is expected to double its fleet to nearly 9,800 planes over the next two decades, far outpacing what its homegrown jetmaker Comac can deliver. For Boeing, it's not just about planesit's about reclaiming relevance. The company has only recorded 30 orders from Chinese customers since 2019, after the 737 Max grounding and deteriorating USChina ties shifted momentum toward Airbus. CEO Kelly Ortberg, who's spearheaded Boeing's turnaround, has signaled confidence that this prolonged dry spell may finally end. We certainly hope there's an opportunity for some additional orders in the next year with China, he told Bloomberg earlier this year. Investors seem cautiously optimistic. Boeing shares nudged higher Thursday, outperforming most Dow stocks, as word of the potential deal made its rounds.