
Ukraine's Zelenskiy vows to press on with prisoner exchanges with Russia
June 8 - Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy vowed on Sunday to press on with prisoner exchanges with Russia and said any failure by Moscow to uphold humanitarian accords cast doubt over U.S. and other efforts to end the more than three-year-old conflict.
Zelenskiy also warned Ukrainians to be attentive to air raid warnings in the aftermath of heavy Russian air attacks.
The president was speaking a day after Russian officials accused Ukraine of postponing the latest prisoner swap indefinitely. A Ukrainian official had already rejected the Russian allegation.
Speaking in his nightly video address, Zelenskiy said Ukraine had not yet received the full list of prisoners to be released under agreements clinched in talks in Turkey.
"The Russian side is therefore, like always, even in these matters, is trying to play some kind of dirty political and information game," Zelenskiy said.
"The important thing is to get a result, to ensure that people are brought home. We believe that the exchanges will continue and will do everything for this.
"If the Russians do not stand by agreements even in humanitarian matters, it casts great doubt on all international efforts including those by the United States in terms of talks and diplomacy."
U.S. President Donald Trump has put pressure on both Ukraine and Russia to move towards a resolution on the war. Ukraine has said it backs a U.S. call for a 30-day ceasefire, while Russia says certain conditions must first be met.
In concluding his address, Zelenskiy urged Ukrainians to be especially attentive to air raid warnings.
"In the coming days we must pay attention to air raid warnings," he said. "Look after yourselves, look after Ukraine."

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


India.com
an hour ago
- India.com
‘Silent Enemy', ‘Dangerous Adversary': What Russia's Spy Files Reveal About Its Best Friend China
Moscow, New York, New Delhi: While Vladimir Putin sings praises of an 'unbreakable friendship' with China, a leaked internal document from Russia's top security agency paints a very different picture – one that could shatter illusions of brotherhood between the two authoritarian giants. In the damning eight-page report leaked from the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB), Beijing is labelled not as a partner, but as a 'dangerous adversary' silently undermining Moscow from within. According to the classified files accessed by The New York Times, the FSB has sounded alarm bells over China's growing espionage operations. The document accuses the country of covertly recruiting Russian agents, targeting disillusioned scientists, stealing sensitive military technologies and snooping on Russian Arctic expeditions – right under Moscow's nose. The timing of the leak could not be more dramatic. As Putin wages war in Ukraine and leans on China to survive Western sanctions, these revelations hit like a geopolitical thunderclap. The FSB report warns that Chinese operatives are using mining companies and academic partnerships as cover to gather intelligence and assert long-term claims on Russian territory, especially in the Arctic – a resource-rich zone Moscow considers its strategic jewel. Even more shocking, the document alleges that China has been spying on Russian troop movements in Ukraine to extract battlefield data to study Western weapon systems in action. Secret Spy File Leaked by Hackers Lacking a date, the FSB document is believed to have been drafted in late 2023 or early 2024. It was leaked by a hacking group known as Ares Leaks and later verified by The New York Times after consulting six Western intelligence agencies – all of whom confirmed its authenticity. While Moscow has stayed publicly mum, the leak is one of the strongest indicators that show that the trust between Russia and China may be a facade. The report outlines clear counter-espionage priorities aimed at stopping Chinese infiltration. It signals deep-rooted mistrust behind the scenes. Friends with Benefits? China and Russia have portrayed a united front. Since the Ukraine invasion, Beijing has bought up discounted Russian oil and gas, propped up Moscow's collapsing tech supply chains with chips and software and filled the vacuum left by fleeing Western companies. The two nations have even discussed joint moon bases and co-producing films. But the FSB's own assessment makes it clear that the so-called 'friendship without limits' may in fact be a marriage of convenience and an increasingly toxic one at that. As China continues to rise and Russia bleeds in Ukraine, Putin's trust in Xi might soon cost him more than just military secrets. It could unravel one of the world's most strategically fragile alliances. Russia and China may smile in public but in the shadows, the knives are already out.


Mint
2 hours ago
- Mint
Russian intelligence document calls China ‘the enemy', leak exposes Moscow's deep fear
A leaked internal document from Russia's powerful Federal Security Service (FSB) reveals growing distrust toward China, with the agency branding Beijing as 'the enemy' in an eight-page planning document obtained by The New York Times. The document, reportedly authored by a previously undisclosed FSB unit, warns that China poses a serious and expanding threat to Russian national security. China is increasingly trying to recruit Russian scientists and intelligence officers, the document states, adding that Beijing is aggressively targeting 'dissatisfied individuals" with access to sensitive military and technological information. FSB officers claim that Chinese agents are actively monitoring Russian military operations in Ukraine. Their aim, according to the document, is to analyse Western-supplied weapons and learn modern warfare techniques. 'Chinese intelligence conducts espionage in the Arctic using mining companies and university research centers as cover,' the report alleges, raising alarms over Beijing's dual-use civilian infrastructure and scientific engagement. The document also expresses concern that China could be laying groundwork to eventually challenge Russian territorial claims, particularly in sparsely populated and strategically significant regions near their shared border. Strikingly, just three days before Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, the FSB launched a new counterintelligence program titled Entente-4—a name seen as a pointed irony, given Moscow's public embrace of Beijing. The report notes that with most of Russia's espionage resources focused on Ukraine, the FSB feared China might take advantage of the shift. The timing was likely not accidental. Since 2022, the FSB says it has documented a sharp increase in Chinese efforts to infiltrate Russian institutions. In response, Russian officers were directed to hold face-to-face meetings with Russian citizens cooperating closely with China. They were instructed to eliminate the threat and prevent the transfer of critical information, the document states, adding, Beijing seeks to exploit Russia and gain access to advanced scientific research. The report further reveals a climate of deep mutual suspicion between the two powers. Chinese intelligence reportedly monitors returning operatives using polygraph tests and controls over 20,000 Russian students currently in China. The FSB warns that Chinese agents often seek out Russians married to Chinese citizens for potential recruitment. The goal: to penetrate Russia's state institutions through trusted, vulnerable personal connections. Though Russia and China have publicly declared a 'no limits' partnership, the FSB document reveals a behind-the-scenes intelligence struggle. It describes a 'tense and dynamically developing intelligence battle in the shadows between the two outwardly friendly nations.' While the document is undated, clues suggest, as per the news report, it was likely drafted in late 2023 or early 2024, underscoring the ongoing strain in bilateral ties despite surface-level cooperation.


Mint
3 hours ago
- Mint
Ukrainian President Zelensky urges Donald Trump to step up, says, ‘Putin does not want to end this war'
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said his country is ready to agree to a ceasefire — but only if Russian President Vladimir Putin halts aggression too. Zelensky accused Putin of aiming for the 'total defeat' of Ukraine and urged the US to step up efforts to broker peace. Speaking to ABC News, Zelensky expressed Ukraine's willingness to pause hostilities. 'We are ready to lay down our arms without conditions — if Russia will, too,' Zelensky said in the interview. He said Ukraine would even forgo security guarantees from the US, which it has long demanded in lieu of NATO membership, in exchange for a 30-day cessation of hostilities. Zelensky strongly criticised the Russian leader's intentions, comparing the invasion to a massacre. 'We are not kids with Putin at the playground in the park,' Zelensky said. 'This is why I am saying he is a murderer who came to this park to kill the kids.' 'I feel strongly that Putin does not want to finish this war. Inside his mind, it's impossible to end this war without total defeat of Ukraine.' The Ukrainian president insisted that the US holds the key to halting the war. 'I am convinced that the president of the United States has all the powers and enough leverage to step up,' Zelensky told the news outlet. 'Probably people don't realize that,' he added. 'They have to understand that we are under strikes, under attack every day.' He said US President Trump has the global influence to bring European allies together for a unified pressure campaign on the Kremlin. 'They [European leaders] are all looking at President Trump as a leader of the free world … and they are waiting for him,' he said. Zelensky maintained that Putin will only agree to peace if faced with forceful diplomatic and military opposition. 'Only hard pressure from the U.S. and allies can make Putin pragmatic,' he told ABC. 'Then they will stop the war.' He noted that Russia has previously continued bombing even during supposed 'temporary ceasefires.' The interview came just days after Ukraine launched Operation Spiderweb, a bold military strike that reportedly rattled Russian infrastructure. The Kremlin denounced the assault as an 'act of terrorism,' but Zelenskyy dismissed the charge. 'It's a clean and clear military operation,' he said. 'It's a step that showed everyone that we do not want this war. We do not want to fight.' Zelensky emphasised Ukraine's historical familiarity with Russia, implying that Western leaders don't fully grasp Moscow's mindset. 'Trust me, we understand the Russians much better … than the Americans understand the mentality of Russians. We are neighbors for ages,' he said. While the US has conducted bilateral talks with both Ukraine and Russia, and delegations met recently in Istanbul, Zelensky signaled deep skepticism about any genuine Russian interest in peace. 'We don't really know if they will stop this war,' he said. 'We have to prepare such plans, and we are not stopping.'