At least five killed as Russia launches major attack on Ukraine
Russian forces have accelerated attacks on Ukraine in recent weeks, with the Kremlin vowing to retaliate over a brazen attack on its air bases last weekend.
The Ukrainian air force said Moscow had fired 206 drones and nine missiles, adding that 'the air attack was repelled by aviation, anti-aircraft missile troops, electronic warfare and unmanned systems units, and mobile fire groups of the Ukrainian Defense Forces'.
In Kharkiv, Mayor Igor Terekhov counted 48 Iranian-made drones, two missiles and four guided bombs before dawn in the city of some 1.4 million residents located less than 50 kilometres from the Russian border in northeastern Ukraine.
'Kharkiv is currently experiencing the most powerful attack since the beginning of the full-scale war,' Terekhov posted on Telegram around 4.40am (2.40am Irish time), adding that drones were still buzzing overhead.
The Russian strikes pummelled homes and apartment blocks, killing at least three people and wounding 17 more, the mayor said. A woman was also pulled alive from the rubble of a high-rise building.
Kharkiv region Governor Oleg Synegubov said the wounded included two children.
'Medical personnel are providing the necessary assistance,' he wrote.
The northeastern city was already reeling from an attack on Thursday that wounded at least 18 people, including four children.
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Rescuers carry a wounded woman after Russian attack that hit a residential building in Kharkiv.
Alamy Stock Photo
Alamy Stock Photo
In the southern port city of Kherson, Russian shelling killed a couple and damaged two high-rise buildings, regional Governor Oleksandr Prokudin said.
In the central Dnipropetrovsk region, governor Sergiy Lysak said Ukrainian forces had repelled 27 drones and two missiles overnight, but two women aged 45 and 88 were injured.
Rescuers in the western city of Lutsk, near the Polish border, meanwhile discovered a second fatality from Friday's strikes, describing the victim as a woman in her 20s.
The aerial bombardments come days after Ukraine launched a brazen attack well beyond the frontlines, damaging nuclear-capable military planes at Russian air bases and prompting vows of revenge from Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Russia's defence ministry meanwhile said that 36 Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles had been downed across a wide swath of territory.
Ukraine has been pushing for an unconditional and immediate 30-day truce, issuing its latest proposal during peace talks in Istanbul on Monday.
But Russia, which now controls around one-fifth of Ukraine's territory, has repeatedly rejected such offers to end its three-year war.
The Kremlin said on Friday the Ukraine war was 'existential' for Russia.
Ceasefire hopes dim
The comments are Moscow's latest to dampen hopes for a breakthrough amid a flurry of meetings between Russian and Ukrainian delegations, as well as telephone calls between President Vladimir Putin and US President Donald Trump, aimed at stopping the fighting.
'For us it is an existential issue, an issue on our national interest, safety, on our future and the future of our children, of our country,' Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, responding to remarks by Trump on Thursday comparing Moscow and Kyiv to brawling children.
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Ahead of the talks this week in Istanbul, an audacious Ukrainian drone attack damaged nuclear-capable military planes at Russian air bases, including thousands of kilometres behind the front lines in Siberia.
Putin had told Trump he would retaliate for the brazen operation, 18 months in the planning, in which Ukraine smuggled more than 100 small drones into Russia, parked them near Russian air bases and unleashed them in a coordinated attack.
Putin has issued a host of sweeping demands on Ukraine if it wants to halt the fighting.
They include completely pulling troops out of four regions claimed by Russia, but which its army does not fully control, an end to Western military support, and a ban on Ukraine joining Nato.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has dismissed the demands as old ultimatums, questioned the purpose of more such talks and called for a summit to be attended by him, Putin and Trump.
With reporting from
© AFP 2025
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Irish Examiner
29 minutes ago
- Irish Examiner
No Ukraine ceasefire but a PR victory for Putin: key takeaways from Trump's Alaska summit
Donald Trump's much-hyped summit in Alaska with Vladimir Putin ended on Friday after just a few hours with few details given about what they discussed and no agreement to end the war in Ukraine, despite warm words between the two leaders. Six key takeaways from the meeting: 1. The summit produced slim pickings … in other words, no deal As Donald Trump conceded during his brief press conference with Vladimir Putin, 'understanding' and 'progress' are oceans apart from an agreement. At the end of a summit more notable for its choreography than its substance – frustrated reporters were not permitted to ask questions – the leaders failed to negotiate even a pause in fighting, let alone a ceasefire. 'There's no deal until there's a deal,' Trump conceded, while Putin described their talks only as a 'reference point' for ending the conflict and, significantly, a potential launchpad for better diplomatic and economic ties between Washington and Moscow. 2. This was a PR victory for a dominant Putin Putin may have been the guest at a meeting held on US territory, but the Russian leader gained far more cachet than his host. Putin spoke to reporters first – a break with convention that gave him the opportunity to set the tone of a brief and, at times, quixotic press conference in Anchorage. Russian President Vladimir Putin stands on the steps of the plane prior to departure at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025, after meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump. (Gavriil Grigorov, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP) Clearly mindful of his surroundings, Putin, who had hitched a ride from to the venue in 'the beast' – the secure US presidential limousine – reminded the world that the US and Russia were, in fact, geographical neighbours, although he stopped short of mentioning that Alaska had once been a Russian colony. Trump was effusive in his praise for the Russian leader, repeatedly thanking him for his time and later, in an interview with Sean Hannity on Fox, awarding a '10' for the Anchorage summit because 'it's good when two big powers get along'. As if to underline his dominant role in proceedings, Putin ended the briefing by suggesting that their next meeting be held in Moscow – an invitation that slightly wrongfooted Trump, who had to admit that it would generate 'a little heat' at home. But he did not rule it out. 3. Putin is still talking about 'root causes' that stand in the way of a breakthrough That is code for his non-negotiable demand that Russia retain the eastern Ukrainian regions it has captured during the three-and-a-half-year war, as well as other Kremlin 'red lines': no Ukrainian membership of Nato and the European Union, and an end to Volodymyr Zelenskyy's presidency. In a message to Keir Starmer and other regional leaders who made a public show of support for Zelenskyy on the eve of the summit, Putin warned 'European capitals' against 'creating obstacles' to peace in Ukraine. 'I have said more than once that for Russia, the events in Ukraine are associated with fundamental threats to our national security,' he said. 4. Trump appears to have more in common with Putin than with Zelenskyy President Donald Trump, right, and Russia's President Vladimir Putin depart at the conclusion of a joint press conference at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong) The summit was notable for the absence of the man who leads the country whose fate now lies in the hands of Trump and an alleged war criminal. The contrast between the public ambushing of Zelenskyy by Trump and JD Vance in the Oval Office in February and the personal connection – some might even call it warmth – on show in Anchorage was hard to ignore. Kyiv could perhaps take solace in the fact that Trump did not appear to have accepted all of Putin's demands, but the summit did little to reassure Ukraine that it can, in Zelenskyy's words, continue to 'count on America'. As he ended his comments to the media, Trump, almost as an afterthought, said he would call the Ukrainian leader 'very soon', along with Nato leaders. 5. Trump couldn't resist revisiting domestic political grievances Trump is not a man to let go of the long list of resentments he harbours towards his political opponents at home; not surprisingly, he used a summit called in an attempt end the bloodiest war in Europe for eight decades as a platform to revisit some of those grievances. Perhaps encouraged by Putin – who revealed he had told Trump he agreed with the US president's contention that the Ukraine war would not have started had he, and not Joe Biden, been in the White House when Russia began its full-scale invasion in February 2022 – Trump repeatedly referenced 'hoax' claims, backed by US intelligence, that Russia had interfered in the 2016 US presidential election. President Donald Trump, right, walks to shake the hand of Russia's President Vladimir Putin during a joint press conference at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, Friday, Aug. 15, 2025. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong) In his interview with Hannity, he also claimed that Putin had told him that the 2020 US presidential election 'was rigged' through the widespread use of postal voting. 6. The fighting in Ukraine will continue The Ukraine war raged on even as Trump and Putin sat in a room in front of a screen proclaiming that they were 'Pursuing Peace'. As preparations were made for their first face-to-face meeting since 2019, there were no signs that Russian forces were preparing for a possible ceasefire, with reports that small sabotage groups had pierced Ukrainian defences in the eastern Donbas. Zelenskyy also warned that Russia was planning new offensives on three parts of the frontline. On the day of the summit Ukrainian military intelligence claimed that Russia was preparing to conduct tests of a new nuclear-capable, nuclear-powered cruise missile that, if successful, would be used to bolster its negotiating position with the US and European countries. As the two leaders met, most eastern Ukrainian regions were under air raid alerts, while the governors of Russia's Rostov and Bryansk regions reported that some of their territories were under attack from Ukrainian drones. The continued fighting was proof that Putin had never been interested in negotiating a ceasefire, the Ukrainian opposition lawmaker Oleksiy Honcharenko said on Telegram: 'It seems Putin has bought himself more time. No ceasefire or de-escalation has been agreed upon.' - The Guardian

The Journal
an hour ago
- The Journal
Trump and Putin end meeting in Alaska with no deal on Ukraine but insist 'progress' was made
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Irish Independent
an hour ago
- Irish Independent
Inside the Ukrainian city that reveals the brutal reality of a frozen front line
His eyes scan the sky before sprinting for his rifle. 'It's a drone,' shouts Kostya, the commander of a Ukrainian artillery battery. His men run for cover. Hidden in a dugout on the right bank of the Dnipro River, experience makes all the difference here − a sharp ear is worth its weight in gold.