logo
Russians try to take more Ukrainian land with sudden advance before Putin meets Donald Trump

Russians try to take more Ukrainian land with sudden advance before Putin meets Donald Trump

Irish Independent12 hours ago
In one of the most extensive incursions so far this year, Russian troops advanced near the coal-mining town of Dobropillia, part of Putin's campaign to take full control of Ukraine's Donetsk region. Ukraine's military dispatched reserve troops, saying they were in difficult combat against Russian soldiers.
Mr Trump has said any peace deal would involve 'some swapping of territories to the betterment of both' Russia and Ukraine, which has up to now depended on the US as its main arms supplier. But because all the areas being contested lie within Ukraine, president Volodymyr Zelensky and his EU allies fear that he will face pressure to give up far more than Russia does.
Mr Trump's administration tempered expectations yesterday for major progress toward a ceasefire, calling his meeting on Friday with Putin in Alaska a 'listening exercise'.
Mr Zelensky and most of his European counterparts have said a lasting peace cannot be secured without Ukraine at the negotiating table, and a deal must comply with international law, Ukraine's sovereignty and its territorial integrity.
This breakthrough is like a gift to Putin and Trump during the negotiations
They will hold a virtual meeting with Mr Trump today to underscore those concerns before the Putin summit, the first US-Russia summit since 2021.
'An imitated rather than genuine peace will not hold for long and will only encourage Russia to seize even more territory,' Mr Zelensky said in a statement yesterday.
Mr Zelensky said Russia must agree to a ceasefire before territorial issues are discussed. He would reject any Russian proposal that Ukraine pull its troops from the eastern Donbas region and cede its defensive lines.
Asked why Mr Zelensky was not joining the US and Russian leaders at the Alaska summit, a White House spokeswoman said that the bilateral meeting had been proposed by Putin, and that Mr Trump accepted to get a 'better understanding' of how to end the war.
'Only one party that's involved in this war is going to be present, and so this is for the president to go and to get a more firm and better understanding of how we can hopefully bring this war to an end,' press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters. 'You need both countries to agree to a deal.'
Mr Trump is open to a trilateral meeting with Putin and Mr Zelensky later, Ms Leavitt said.
Ukraine faces a shortage of soldiers after Russia invaded more than three years ago, easing the path for the latest Russian advances. 'This breakthrough is like a gift to Putin and Trump during the negotiations,' said Sergei Markov, a former Kremlin adviser, suggesting it could increase pressure on Ukraine to yield territory under any deal.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Budget supports for life sciences firms hit by US tariffs a 'priority', says finance minister
Budget supports for life sciences firms hit by US tariffs a 'priority', says finance minister

Irish Examiner

time24 minutes ago

  • Irish Examiner

Budget supports for life sciences firms hit by US tariffs a 'priority', says finance minister

Supports for life sciences companies hit by US tariffs will be a "priority" in the Budget, the finance minister has said. While the final shape of a trading agreement between the US and EU remains to be seen, concern has been raised about the impact on the life sciences and medical device industries in even the case of a base rate 15% tariff. Speaking in Clonmel on Wednesday, Paschal Donohoe said that he would be examining the impact that the agreement between the EU and Ireland will have on the life science sector in Europe, and "what further measures we can take at national level to support a really important pillar of the economy of Ireland". He said the 15% tariffs that are in place "at least bring certainty regarding where we are, but will still bring cost". "And what we need to do, and are doing, is working with large employers in life science and elsewhere to look now at how we can support them and the jobs and investment that they have here in Ireland," said the minister. "We have expertise that we've built up over many, many decades of supporting the life science sector. I will continue to use that expertise to do all we can to protect jobs like we have here in Tipperary." He said those kinds of investments are replicated all over the length and breadth of Ireland "and it's a really important priority for me as we form the budget". Mr Donohoe once again reiterated that there will be no cost-of-living package in October's Budget, but said the Government is "very conscious that the cost of living continues to be a challenge for so many". Ticket prices Asked if he would be attending this weekend's Oasis concerts in Dublin, the minister said he is "more of a Blur fan", but indicated that he does not want to see the surge in pricing of Oasis tickets to become the norm. "This is something that the Competition and Consumer Protection Authority has already indicated that it wants to review because these tickets are really expensive. "They're really expensive because there is a demand for them. Oasis fans are willing to pay a lot of money to go and see them play. "But I wouldn't like this to be the future of live performances. Live performances are really, really important for fans. Lots of other gigs at the moment continue to be really affordable, and I'd like to see that as being the future."

Russia tries to align stars for historic deal with Trump at Alaska summit
Russia tries to align stars for historic deal with Trump at Alaska summit

Irish Times

time24 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

Russia tries to align stars for historic deal with Trump at Alaska summit

As allies of US president Donald Trump try to reassure Kyiv and other European capitals that he will not do anything rash at Friday's summit in Alaska, Russia wants the talks to mark a dramatic – even historic – shift in relations between the nuclear powers. US secretary of state Marco Rubio has said it will be just a 'feel-out meeting', and White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt has called it a 'listening exercise,' amid concerns that Trump and Russian president Vladimir Putin could make sweeping decisions about the war in Ukraine and the continent's security without Kyiv or Europe being at the table. The rhetoric in Russia is very different. The Kremlin often says that Putin sees no point in talks for the sake of talks, and Moscow expects the summit to deliver concrete benefits that were unimaginable before Trump returned to power in January. 'The Alaska summit could be historic in terms of delivering complex solutions to key problems. Including in Russian-American relations,' said Leonid Slutsky, chairman of the foreign relations committee in Russia's lower house of parliament. READ MORE 'Most constructive politicians in the world are hoping for this ... At the same time, putting pressure on our country or speaking in the language of ultimatums is useless.' Politicians and state media in Moscow say the summit could deliver not only a favourable outcome to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, but set the stage for grand US-Russia agreements on everything from arms control to co-operation in the Arctic. Kirill Dmitriev, the senior Russian finance official and former Goldman Sachs banker who has become a key point man in Moscow for Trump's team, said the choice of Alaska as the summit venue had particular significance. 'Born as Russian America – Orthodox roots, forts, fur trade – Alaska echoes those ties and makes the US an Arctic nation. Let Russia and the US partner on environment, infrastructure and energy in Arctic and beyond,' he wrote on social media. Dmitriev described Alaska – a Russian colony from 1799 to 1867 – as the 'perfect stage' for the summit, because of its history and its location as the closest US point to Russia, where they are separated by the Bering Strait and the international date line. 'Let us go from yesterday to tomorrow in peace,' he said. [ Why Putin has good reasons to be hopeful for Friday's summit meeting with Trump Opens in new window ] Dmitriev's posts on X relentlessly amplify Maga talking points: that Trump and Putin want peace and their critics are warmongers; media that question Trump's attitude to Russia are the same ones that pushed the 'Russia hoax' about alleged collusion between the Trump camp and Moscow in 2016; advocates of tougher action against Russia are repeating the 'failed' policy of Trump's predecessor, Joe Biden. 'Neocons and other warmongers won't be smiling on Aug 15, 2025. Putin-Trump dialogue will bring hope, peace and global security,' he wrote. In a subsequent post, referring to one of Trump's books, he said: 'The Art of the Deal on Friday August 15.' The Art of the Deal on Friday August 15. — Kirill A. Dmitriev (@kadmitriev) Russia has been assiduously preparing the ground for the sort of deal, or deals, that it desires from the summit. Over several months this year, Kyiv and Europe strengthened co-ordination with the White House over the war in Ukraine, as Trump become increasingly annoyed by what he called Putin's 'bullshit' on the issue. Putin changed the mood music simply by agreeing to meet. It prompted Trump to quietly shelve plans to impose sanctions on all countries that buy Russian oil, and pitched Ukraine and Europe back into the position of trying to rein in Trump – a dynamic that is only likely to renew friction between the US and its erstwhile allies. Putin has also brought Trump to the table without agreeing to a ceasefire or any concessions. Russia still demands permanent control of five regions of Ukraine and limits on its future sovereignty, including a ban on joining Nato. Kyiv says that would be a capitulation, and European states insist borders cannot be changed by force – leaving them vulnerable to allegations from Moscow and some US politicians that they are blocking a deal and should be ignored by America's self-declared 'president of peace'. Moscow also knows that Trump wants a bigger US role in the resource-rich and strategic far north – having threatened to take over Greenland – and more than half the entire coastline of the Arctic Ocean is Russian territory. 'It is in Alaska and in the Arctic that the economic interests of our countries converge and prospects for implementing large-scale mutually beneficial projects arise,' said senior Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov. Trump said last month that he wanted to begin work on arms control with Moscow before the expiry next February of the 2010 New Start agreement, which is the last remaining US-Russia nuclear arms pact. The Kremlin flagged the issue last week by saying it had scrapped a self-imposed moratorium on deployment of short- and mid-range missiles and would now place them wherever it liked, in response to alleged US threats in Europe and Asia. On the battlefield too, Moscow is trying to strengthen its position before the summit. In recent days, Russian troops have pierced a section of the front line in eastern Ukraine and advanced about 10km near the mining town of Dobropillia, as they try to encircle the nearby small cities of Pokrovsk and Kostyantynivka and put more pressure on Kyiv's two main strongholds in Donetsk region – the cities of Slovyansk and Kramatorsk. Kyiv says these are very small groups, moving on foot or in light vehicles, who cannot hold territory but aim to sow chaos behind the front line and – above all – give the impression that Ukraine's defences are collapsing on the eve of the summit. Russian media claim Ukrainian troops are nearly surrounded in some areas, which Kyiv denies. It recalls how Trump said in March that he had asked Putin to spare the lives of 'thousands' of Ukrainian soldiers who were supposedly encircled in Russia's Kursk region. The claim was false, but no one in Trump's administration acknowledged that fact or explained why Trump was unquestioningly repeating Kremlin propaganda. While Moscow's preparations for the summit have been meticulous, Washington's look haphazard, even amateurish. The meeting was agreed when Steve Witkoff, one of Trump's special envoys, visited Moscow last week. US and European media reports say Witkoff – a real-estate developer and donor to Trump's re-election campaign – may have misunderstood Putin's position on Ukraine. He has also been accused of parroting positions espoused by the Kremlin. To compound the sense of chaos, Trump has placed inexperienced loyalists in important intelligence and foreign policy roles, and approved massive cuts at the state department that have culled many of its analysts on Ukraine and Russia. With so many factors in its favour, Russia wants to strike a deal now, not least to gain relief from western sanctions that are combining with high inflation and labour shortages to slowly strangle its economy. Ukrainian drone strikes on oil facilities are also taking their toll, and petrol prices in Russia are now at record highs despite an export ban. Russia's main stock market reflects the national mood, having surged by more than 8 per cent since the summit was announced. 'Everyone is expecting a breakthrough in Russia-US relations,' said Alexei Antonov at Moscow investment firm Alor Broker, 'and also the beginning of a resolution to the Ukrainian problem.'

Russia in major advance in eastern Ukraine, residents told to leave
Russia in major advance in eastern Ukraine, residents told to leave

RTÉ News​

timean hour ago

  • RTÉ News​

Russia in major advance in eastern Ukraine, residents told to leave

Russia is making rapid progress in its offensive in eastern Ukraine, seizing ground in a narrow but important section of the front line. Analysis of battlefield data from the US-based Institute for the Study of War shows that Russian forces have made their biggest 24-hour advance in more than a year. The head of the Donetsk region ordered civilians with children to evacuate from towns and villages under threat. It comes as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky holds talks with European colleagues ahead of a meeting between the Russian and US presidents, Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump, on Friday. Mr Zelensky has not been invited to the encounter, fuelling fears that his country could be forced into painful concessions. Ukrainian soldiers in Kramatorsk, an eastern city about 20km from the front line, said they had low expectations for the diplomatic efforts. "There have already been so many negotiations between the heads of state, but nothing is changing," said 21-year-old Dmytro. "If something changes for the better, I will be only happy." The analysis of Institute for the Study of War data shows that the Russian army took or claimed 110sq/km of land yesterday compared to the previous day - the most since late May 2024. In recent months, Moscow has typically taken five or six days to progress at such a pace, although its advances have accelerated in recent weeks. President Zelensky acknowledged that Russian troops had advanced by up to 10km near the eastern coal mining town of Dobropillia, but said that his forces would soon "destroy them". "We see that the Russian army is not preparing to end the war. On the contrary, they are making movements that indicate preparations for new offensive operations," he added. Russia - which has full or partial control over 19% of Ukrainian territory - said that it had taken two villages close to Dobropillia. Donetsk governor Vadym Filashkin said the region was beginning the mandatory evacuation of families with children from the town of Bilozerske and a dozen other settlements. The Russian military also fired at least 49 drones and two ballistic missiles at Ukraine during the night, the Ukrainian air force said. At least three people were killed in Russian artillery and drone attacks on the southern Kherson region, according to regional officials. Artem, a 30-year-old serviceman in Kramatorsk, said the war would likely continue for "a long time". "(President Vladimir) Putin is massing an army, his army is growing, he is stockpiling weapons, he is pulling the wool over our eyes," he said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store