Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Russia Launches Record Number of Aerial Ordnance against all of Ukraine

Moscow intensified it attacks against Ukraine with all the fury in its arsenals today, March 24, as it launched some 1,000 drones, missiles and other aerial ordnance across Ukraine in 24 hours, destroying civilian homes and transport, wounding scores and killing some dozen Ukrainians in their homes. It was the largest Russian strike series against Ukraine of the war thus far.

The scale of the attack threatened peace and tranquility in Poland as Polish jets scrambled to monitor flight patterns of Russian drones and missiles that in the past were known to stray across the border into Poland.

The Internet was filled with dramatic videos of the Russian airborne attacks as ordnance after ordnance hit civilian targets. One frequently posted clip showed a Shahed flying over the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, located some 70-80 miles from the Polish border. The drone hit targets including a UNESCO World Heritage site in Lviv. The 17th century St Andrew’s Church, part of a UNESCO World Heritage site, is more than 400 years old.

More than 550 of the drones were launched at targets across the country in a rare and deadly daytime assault, the military said. So far, the attacks left at least 40 people in the country injured including five children, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said.

Ukrainian officials condemned Tuesday’s attack on the bustling downtown district of Lviv and called on the international community to react. “Russia brutally struck the center of Lviv, a city of exceptional cultural value and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. I urge the UNESCO Director General to immediately respond to this crime in the strongest terms,” commented Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha. “Russia is doing exactly what the Iranian regime is doing in the Middle East, but in the middle of Europe.”

The latest Russian attack should have also lain to rest illusions about Moscow’s desire to reach peace and end the war.

“Iranian Shaheds, modernized by Russia, are striking the church in Lviv – this is an absolute perversion, and only someone like Putin could take pleasure in it,” Zelenskyy said in his nightly address. “The scale of this attack clearly shows that Russia has no real intention of ending this war.”

The morning strikes followed a large-scale missile and drone attack on multiple Ukrainian cities through Monday night, which killed at least five people and injured 16 others.

The explosions were reported from the cities of Poltava and Zaporizhzhia shortly before 3 AM.

Meanwhile, Poland scrambled fighter planes and allied aircraft to respond to the Russian strikes, though it later confirmed that “no violations of the country’s airspace were observed.”

At least two people in the western Ukrainian oblast of Ivano-Frankivsk have been killed, the region’s governor Svitlana Onyshchuk said. The victims included a National Guard soldier and his 15-year-old daughter, according to Ivano-Frankivsk mayor Ruslan Martsinkiv. They were at a hospital maternity ward visiting the soldier’s wife who had given birth to a son just days prior.

Four others, including a 6-year-old, were injured. And in Vinnytsia, a 59-year-old man was killed while 11 others were injured, according to Mayor Serhiy Morhunov.

“This was one of the largest attacks over the course of the day,” with drones directed towards central and western Ukraine, Ukrainian air force spokesperson Yuriy Ihnat said.

In Lviv, at least 22 people were wounded in the attack, the city’s mayor Andriy Sadoviy said.

The air force said at least 15 hits were identified and at least 541 drones were shot down or neutralized.

Residential buildings and city centers in the country were hit, including a maternity hospital in Ivano-Frankivsk that sustained damage, according to Ukrainian officials.

Meanwhile in Russia, a 55-year-old man was killed and 13 others injured in Ukrainian drone attacks in the Kursk region, according to Acting Governor Alexander Khinshtein.

Ukrainian officials reported that Russian strikes overnight and during the day damaged civilian, energy, and transport infrastructure in Chernihiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Ivano-Frankivsk, Kharkiv, Kyiv, Lviv, Mykolaiv, Odesa, Sumy, Vinnytsia, and Zaporizhzhia oblasts.

As of March 24, Kharkiv has been undergoing intense, consecutive Russian aerial assaults, including daytime and overnight drone/missile strikes that have hit residential areas and caused multiple casualties. The attacks, often involving glide bombs and missiles, are heavily damaging civilian infrastructure. Fighting continues in the northern Kharkiv Oblast, while students utilize underground schools. 

Russia has targeted Kharkiv with sustained drone and missile attacks, part of a broader wave affecting 11 regions. Attacks have resulted in at least 10 deaths and dozens of injuries, including children, with significant damage reported in residential and commercial areas. Intense fighting continues near Kharkiv city, specifically around Vovchansk, Starytsya, and other border areas. Due to persistent danger, about 20,000 children are attending school in underground classrooms for safety. 

A Russian drone struck a commuter train in Kharkiv Oblast, killing a passenger who, according to preliminary information, refused to evacuate, Ukrainian Railways (Ukrzaliznytsia) said on March 24. Targeting passenger trains is the latest target of choice for Russians. The strike came amid intensified Russian attacks on Ukraine's railway infrastructure since July 2025. As Russia targets passenger trains, Ukrainian Railways implemented additional security measures on January 28, including stopping trains and evacuating passengers if there is a threat of a train being hit.

According to Ukrainian Railways, the train that was attacked on March 24 was traveling between the regional capital of Kharkiv and Slatyne, a rural settlement located 13 kilometers (eight miles) from the Russian border

“Russia’s decision to bomb a heritage site in the middle of a major Ukrainian city in broad daylight was a signal of intent that points unmistakably toward a coming escalation. Putin is clearly struggling to defeat Ukraine on the battlefield, but he remains committed to extinguishing Ukrainian statehood and is prepared to ruthlessly target the civilian population in order to break the current deadlock and force the country’s surrender,” observed Peter Dickinson, editor of the Atlantic Council’s UkraineAlert service.

Russian forces intensified operations across multiple fronts in Ukraine, carrying out 619 assaults within four days, Ukraine's Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi said on Facebook on March 23.

The statement follows remarks by President Zelenskyy, who said in mid-March that Ukrainian forces had repelled a large-scale Russian offensive planned since late 2025 and set for early March.

Russian troops attempted to breach Ukrainian defenses across several sectors of the front line between March 17 and 20, Syrskyi said.

Russian forces launched an offensive involving “tens of thousands of soldiers” and, after four days of fighting, lost 6,090 troops killed or wounded, with a total of 8,710 infantry losses over the past week, Syrskyi added.

Most Russian assaults took place in eastern Ukraine, particularly in the Pokrovsk sector in Donetsk Oblast and the Oleksandrivka sector at the intersection of Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Dnipropetrovsk oblasts.

According to the commander-in-chief, Russian forces attacked Ukrainian positions near Pokrovsk 163 times and near Oleksandrivka 96 times over the past four days.

As for the illusory peace talks, Ukraine and US still need to develop the security guarantees, Zelenskyy told journalists. Security guarantees were one of the topics discussed over the weekend between Kyiv and Washington's representatives at a meeting in Florida.

Kyiv wants iron-clad promises from the US and other allies to come to its aid should Russia attack again after the end of the war.

Ukraine-Russia peace talks are stalled with no real progress, according to President Zelenskyy, following reports from negotiators returning from the US Russia is currently escalating its spring offensive with massive aerial attacks and shows no genuine interest in diplomacy. The talks are on a “situational pause” due to the conflict in Iran. 

“The most important task is to develop security guarantees in a way that brings us closer to ending the war,” Zelenskyy wrote on social media after meeting with his negotiating team.

Zelenskyy had said in January that the security guarantees document between Ukraine and the US was “100% ready” and waiting to be signed.

“The geopolitical situation has become more complicated due to the war against Iran, and unfortunately, this is emboldening Russia,” he said on Tuesday. 

Friday, March 13, 2026

Easing Sanctions now Gives Russia Money to Bomb Ukraine

President Donald Trump’s premature, unwarranted and dangerous lifting of sanctions against terrorist Russia now will not achieve the illusory goal of defeating Iran but rather it will give Moscow more money and drones with which to bomb Ukrainian cities and kill Ukrainian civilians.

This decision will ultimately demonstrate to America’s enemies, Russia and Iran, that it is weak and incapable of fulfilling its original mission – as well as endanger Americans and Ukrainians alike.

The US Treasury Department announced Thursday a 30-day waiver on Russian oil sanctions. The step aims to free up Russian cargoes stranded at sea and stabilize supply shortages caused by the Iran war.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy condemned today that the US 30-day waiver on Russian oil sanctions amid the Iran war as being “not the right decision” and won’t help bring a stop to Russia’s more than four-year-old invasion of Ukraine.

The American move to ease pressure on Russia was met with exasperation by Ukrainian leadership. Speaking in Paris on Friday, Zelenskyy said the US decision was "not very logical.”

“This easing alone by the United States could provide Russia with about $10 billion for the war,” Zelenskyy said. “This certainly does not help peace.”

“I believe that lifting sanctions will, in any case, lead to a strengthening of Russia’s position. It spends the money from energy sales on weapons, and all of this is then used against us,” Zelenskyy said at a news conference with French President Emmanuel Macron during a visit to Paris.

“Therefore, ultimately lifting sanctions only so that more drones will later be flying at you is, in my opinion, not the right decision,” he said.

Analysts noted that spiraling oil prices due to Persian Gulf production blockages are benefiting the Russian economy. Moscow relies heavily on oil revenue to finance its invasion of Ukraine and acquisition of weapons and military materiel, and sanctions were a growing handicap.

European Union leaders continued their support for Ukraine, siding with Zelenskyy, and called out Trump’s decision to lift sanctions on Russian oil as fueling the war machine against Ukraine, as Washington tries to ease energy prices after a second week of conflict in the Middle East. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said six of the seven G7 leaders had agreed that lifting sanctions was not “the right signal to send” when they held a joint meeting this week. The US was the exception.

Merz, French President Emmanuel Macron and Zelenskyy all denounced the decision to allow the delivery and sale of Russian oil stranded at sea, which will allow the Kremlin to replenish its war chest for the ongoing full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

“The unilateral decision by the US to lift sanctions on Russian oil exports is very concerning, as it impacts European security,” António Costa, President of the European Council, added in separate comments, stressing that Russia is the only beneficiary of the current situation, which sees Moscow coffers cashing in on the war.

“Any step that would enable Russia to increase its revenues from oil sales would be problematic in view of the larger goals that we have regarding crippling Russia’s war capabilities against Ukraine,” Merz added. “We want to ensure that Russia does not exploit the war in Iran to weaken Ukraine.”

European leaders rounded on the Trump Administration Friday for temporarily lifting sanctions on Russian oil in an effort to bring down surging energy prices amid the U.S. and Israeli attacks on Iran.

“We think that’s wrong,” Merz said, speaking alongside Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Støre. “There is currently a price problem, but not a supply problem. And in that regard, I would like to know what other factors led the US government to make this decision.”

Merz said the decision by the US Administration had come as a surprise on Friday morning, crushing his hopes that Washington might refrain from taking such steps, as other G7 members had strongly urged Trump not to ease the pressure on Moscow during a joint video call on Wednesday.

“We want to ensure that Russia does not exploit the war in Iran to weaken Ukraine,” Merz said. “Nor will we allow Moscow to test NATO on its eastern flank and up here in the north.”

Merz stressed that Germany, together with its G7 partners and Israel, was working to end the war. He also reiterated his fears that the U.S. and Israel lack a strategy for ending the conflict.

In view of soaring prices, Merz pointed to the release of international oil reserves in recent days, including by Germany, which he said, “will help to moderate energy prices to some extent.”

Kemi Badenoch, leader of the British Conservative Party, joined the chorus of opponents saying lifting sanctions now is wrong. She added that twisting Ukraine’s arms into agreeing to territorial concessions is also a mistake and it will make Russia’s Vladimir Putin think the West is weak and malleable.

Western political analysts and pundits have also sided with Ukraine by criticizing Trump for being soft in his dealings with Putin. Indeed, the US President seems to be reluctant to hold Putin to the full count.

Undeniably, Trump’s Russia policy, which favors Russia, is simultaneously filled with contradictions. On the one hand, he supports Moscow versus Kyiv in this war while on the other hand he is opposing Russia when it comes to Iran, which is supplying drones with which Russia bombs military and civilian targets in Ukraine. 

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Russians Charged with War Crimes for Stealing Ukrainian Children

It has been evident since Russian terrorists invaded Ukraine in February 2022 that not only are they aiming at military and non-military targets and infrastructures and civilians but most of all children. A March 2026 UN investigation has found that 80% of Ukrainian children documented as taken – yes, stolen right from their parents’ arms – by Russians have not been returned, with the systematic transfer and failure to repatriate them constituting war crimes and crimes against humanity.

The forced deportation and transfer of Ukrainian children by Russia throughout its full-scale war in Ukraine amounts to crimes against humanity, a United Nations (UN) investigation published on March 10 found.

Since the start of Moscow’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, Ukraine’s national “Children of War” database has documented 20,000 Ukrainian children that have been abducted from Russian-occupied territories and taken to Russia or Russian-controlled areas.

"The Commission concluded that crimes against humanity and war crimes by Russian authorities have targeted children, who are among the most vulnerable victims," a report by the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine found.

The United Nations found on Tuesday, March 11, that Russia’s deportation and transfer of Ukrainian children since Moscow’s full-scale invasion in 2022 amounted to crimes against humanity.

Ukraine says some 20,000 children have been illegally sent to Russia and Belarus where they are sometimes subject to military training and forced to learn Russian and salute the Russian flat as well as fight against their own troops. This inhuman tactic is meant to deprive the Ukrainian nation of new generations of Ukrainian children.

The International Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants for Russian führer Vladimir Putin and five other Russians over illegal deportation of Ukrainian children. Moscow denies it is taking children against ⁠their will, saying it has been evacuating people voluntarily to remove them from a war zone.

In this report, the commission concluded that crimes against humanity and war crimes by Russian authorities have targeted children, who are among the most vulnerable victims, said the report. “These crimes have irreversible consequences on their lives and their future.”

The report by the Independent International Commission of Inquiry on Ukraine studied the cases of 1,205 children from five regions in Ukraine and said that 80% of them have yet to return.

The commission’s work is based on analysis of thousands of documents and submissions from rights groups as well as over 200 ⁠interviews, including with families of the missing and some children who made it home.

“The deportations and transfers have originated from various locations across a wide geographic area in Russian-occupied areas in Ukraine, following a well-established pattern of conduct, indicating that these acts have been widespread and systematic,” added the report, to be presented to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on Thursday.

It also said that Russian authorities at the highest level of government have helped coordinate the actions.

Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha welcomed the report and called on states to increase pressure on ⁠Russia to secure the return of deported children.

US-funded research last year showed Russia expanded its forced re-education programs ⁠of deported children. US First Lady Melania Trump has advocated for their release and has been in touch with Putin’s representatives as part of her work.

Its work is based on analysis of thousands of documents and submissions from rights groups as well as over 200 interviews, including with families of the missing and some children who made it home.

“The deportations and transfers have originated from various locations across a wide geographic area in Russian-occupied areas in Ukraine, following a well-established pattern of conduct, indicating that these acts have been widespread and systematic,” added the report, to be presented to the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva on Thursday.

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Trump’s Insistence to Discuss Peace Deal Falls on Deaf Ears in Kremlin

It seems as if President Donald Trump’s recurring pressure on Ukraine and Russia to return to the negotiating table is falling on deaf ears in the Kremlin. Despite Trump’s immoral and irrational policy of addressing parity between victim and attacker, Ukraine continues to feel the brunt of Russia’s obnoxious disregard for global pleas to cease its aggression.

Russia’s latest massive airborne attack against unarmed Ukrainian civilian targets triggered a nationwide air raid alert at around 3 AM, Saturday, March 7, local time (8 PM EST) to warn people against incoming projectiles. Civilians in Kyiv and Kharkiv again suffered Russia’s bloody wrath. Russia’s arsenal of Iranian drones and missiles is apparently unlimited.

Russian troops struck a five-story building in the city of Kharkiv with a ballistic missile, killing 10 people, including two children, and injuring at least 15, local authorities reported.

Russia launched 480 drones, including Shahed-type unmanned aerial vehicles, and 29 missiles, including hypersonic Zircon anti-ship missile and Iskander-M ballistic missiles, targeting energy infrastructure across Ukraine, the Ukrainian Air Force reported. Ukrainian forces downed 453 drones and 19 missiles, the statement read.

Kharkiv Mayor Ihor Terekhov said the Russian attack on the city killed a teacher and her nine-year-old son, as well as a 13-year-old girl and her mother. Among the injured in Kharkiv are two boys, aged six and 11, and a 17-year-old girl, according to Kharkiv Oblast Governor Oleh Syniehubov. The number of victims could grow as rescue operations are still underway. Eleven people are believed to be trapped under the rubble. Syniehubov said fires were reported as a result of a ballistic missile attack.

A secondary school in Kharkiv’s Kyivskyi district was damaged in a Russian strike. The building has been damaged for the third time since Russia's full-scale invasion, with about 160 windows blown out and classrooms damaged.

“Since the start of 2022, this is the third time our windows have been blown out like this. But it’s the first time on this scale. There is a huge amount of damage. Not a single classroom has been left undamaged,” Karina Kruk, deputy head of the institution, speaking to Suspilne Kharkiv, a local branch of Suspilne, Ukraine’s national public broadcaster.

Two people were injured in the town of Chuhuiv in Kharkiv Oblast after a Russian drone attacked a home at around 1:20 AM, according to State Emergency Service.

“There must be a response from partners to these savage strikes against life,” President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said. “Russia has not abandoned its attempts to destroy Ukraine’s residential and critical infrastructure, and therefore support must continue.”

The attack came hours after Zelenskyy said he had visited the eastern front on Friday.

Zelenskyy condemned the attack and called for an international response. However, this Russian attack was again met with silence from the White House. Zelenskyy said that Russia struck Ukraine overnight with 29 missiles and 480 drones, targeting energy facilities in Kyiv and other central regions and with damage reported in at least seven other locations across the country.

According to preliminary data, air defense systems downed 19 missiles and 453 drones, with hits from 9 missiles and 26 strike drones recorded at 22 locations.

In Kharkiv, in Ukraine’s northeast, emergency workers were combing the rubble, looking for survivors. Among the dead are a primary school teacher and her son, a second-grade student, who were killed in their home and an eighth-grader who also died with her mother, according to the city's mayor, Ihor Terekhov.

“There must be a response from partners to these savage strikes against life,” Zelenskyy said on social media. “Russia has not abandoned its attempts to destroy Ukraine’s residential and critical infrastructure, and therefore support must continue. We count on active work with the European Union to guarantee greater protection for our people. I am grateful to everyone who helps strengthen our protection.”

In Kyiv, 1,905 buildings in the Pecherskyi, Dniprovskyi, Holosiivskyi and Solomianskyi districts have been left without heating following a Russian attack on the night of March 6-7 and damage to a critical infrastructure facility.

This includes some high-rise apartment blocks in the Darnytskyi and Dniprovskyi districts, where it is not yet possible to restore the heat supply due to critical damage to the Darnytsia Combined Heat and Power Plant, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said. He stated that utility services are working to restore heating to these residential buildings as quickly as possible.

Zelenskyy visited Donetsk Oblast on March 6, meeting Ukrainian brigades defending key eastern cities as Kyiv warns Russia may be preparing a new offensive this spring.

“The Russians are not abandoning the war, and here, in Donetsk Oblast, they are preparing an offensive for the spring,” Zelenskyy said on X.

Donetsk Oblast, on the border with Russia, remains one of the war’s most active front-line regions, as Russian forces continue pressing Ukrainian defensive positions around Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad – two key logistics hubs west of Russian-occupied Donetsk.

“It is important that our positions are strong. It is important that our brigades are adequately supplied,” the Zelenskyy said. “Our warriors are holding their ground with dignity. And this is how our country, our diplomacy, and our people will hold strong as well.”

At least two people were killed and eight others injured in Russian attacks against Ukraine over the previous day, local authorities said on March 6.

Russian forces launched 141 different types of drones against Ukraine overnight, of which roughly 100 were Shahed-type unmanned aerial vehicles, the Air Force said on March 6. It reported downing 111 of them.

In Kherson Oblast, one person was killed, and four others were wounded by Russian attacks over the past day, regional governor Oleksandr Prokudin reported on March 6.

In Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, Russia attacked three districts of the region with artillery, drones, and "Uragan" multiple launch rocket systems, regional governor Oleksandr Hanzha reported on March 6.  He said three people were wounded, including a 15-year-old girl.  

Curiously, after publically berating Ukraine and its President for pursuing a war that it cannot win because of Russia’s superiority, President Trump reportedly begged Zelenskyy for help in dealing with Iranian drones.

“We received a request from the United States for specific support in protection against shaheds in the Middle East region,” Zelenskyy was quoted as saying by the Kyiv Post. “I gave instructions to provide the necessary means and ensure the presence of Ukrainian specialists who can guarantee the required security.”

Later on Thursday last week, Zelenskyy appeared to respond to Trump’s comments about the peace negotiations with Russia – saying that Kyiv’s priority is “to do everything to end the war.”

“We will continue the diplomatic process when our American partners are ready to work as we agreed – bilateral formats with them, trilateral formats with Russia, as well as work with the Europeans.”

“Right now, practically all of the world’s attention is focused on the situation around Iran, and no matter how long the hostilities last there, we must be ready to resume diplomacy at any moment. That’s exactly how the Ukrainian team works,” he added. “Ukraine helps partners who help ensure our security and protect the lives of our people,” Zelenskyy said. “Glory to Ukraine!”

Trump apparently decided to quickly deal with criminal Venezuela and Iran but he’s still in a quandary about the true nature of Russia. Who is the greater threat to global peace and security? The answer is Russia.

Friday, March 6, 2026

8 Countries Condemn IPC for Supporting Russia Paralympic Winter Games 

Eight European countries condemn IPC for allowing Russia and Belarus to compete in 2026 Winter Paralympic Games. Expressing their complete support for Ukraine, the eight nations also deplored the decision to ban Ukrainian athletes from wearing uniforms that displayed maps of these countries.

Following is their full text:

Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania and Sweden firmly condemn the 

recent decision by the International Paralympic Committee (IPC) to allow Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete in the 2026 Paralympic Winter Games under their national flags, also allowing the display of their anthems and state symbols. This decision undermines international efforts to isolate Russia and Belarus in response to Russia’s ongoing war of aggression against Ukraine.

We also deplore the decision by the IPC to prohibit Ukrainian athletes from wearing costumes featuring a map of Ukraine. Misrepresenting a map of Ukraine within its internationally recognized borders as propaganda is deeply concerning and mocks the principles of international law.

We express our full solidarity with Ukraine and its people. We jointly call on the IPC to reconsider its decisions and call on Member States’ authorities to consider boycotting the Opening Ceremony of the Games. We support Italy as the Host Nation of the Games in its call on the IPC to revoke its decisions, thus aiming to prevent the display of the state symbols of the aggressor state and its accomplice during the Games.

Wednesday, March 4, 2026

Zelenskyy Declares He’ll never Surrender Donbas to Russia

Despite Russian demands that Ukraine cede its land to Muscovy and Washington’s acceptance of such a gambit to end Moscow’s latest aggression against Ukraine, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has again categorically declared that he would never surrender Donbas to terrorist Russia.  

Zelenskyy said Ukraine is not prepared to give up Donbas, as the region holds the country’s strongest defensive strongholds. Withdrawing troops would open the way for Russian forces to advance deeper into Ukraine, he said in an interview with the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera.

Responding to a question about whether Ukraine would be willing to abandon Donbas in exchange for security guarantees from allies, Zelenskyy emphasized that “Russians do not want foreign troops in Ukraine, and Europe must be firmer on this issue.”

“I am not going to question whether there are foreign troops in Russia — for example, 10,000 North Korean soldiers. I do not understand why Moscow should decide which troops are stationed on our land,” the president insisted.

“But I want to state clearly: I will never abandon Donbas and the 200,000 Ukrainians who live there. Why should I do that? Because Putin imposes it as a condition for peace? And will he immediately put forward new demands? No, I will not tolerate that,” he added.

When asked whether negotiations included exchanging Russian-unoccupied areas of Donbas for territories captured by Russia in the Sumy and Kharkiv regions, the president stressed that “these lands cannot be compared.”

“First of all, when we talk about border territories — any border territories — they are very difficult for the enemy to hold. The Russians clearly understand they won’t be able to keep them, and the time will come when we will push them out. So this is not a gift,” Zelenskyy said.

At the same time, he noted that Donbas remains a key objective for Russia. The president emphasized that Russia’s strategic goals have hardly changed since the start of the war.

“You could say their appetite has decreased slightly, but only for now. Therefore, we are not talking about exchanging small border territories for the large territory of Donbas or the Donetsk region that we currently control,” Zelenskyy said.

He added that if the aggressor state chooses to withdraw from negotiations, Ukraine will seek another way to end the war.

Zelenskyy noted that Ukraine’s best defensive positions are located in Donbas, and if Ukrainian troops withdraw, Russian forces would gain full freedom of action toward the center of the country.

“Let’s imagine it’s not Europeans but Americans who send their troops — for how long?” he said.

Zelenskyy also drew a parallel with the withdrawal of US forces from Afghanistan.

“What will happen if, in 10 years, it’s not Trump but another US president who decides to withdraw troops? We need a strong Ukrainian defense line,” he concluded.

In the meantime, Russia’s war against Ukraine continues along with its killings.

At least six people were killed and 35 others were injured in Russian attacks against Ukraine over the past day, local authorities said on March 3.

Russia launched 136 drones at Ukraine overnight, the Ukrainian Air Force said, reporting that Ukrainian air defenses intercepted 127 unmanned aircraft. At least five drones evaded defenses and struck three locations. The fall of debris was recorded in three locations.

At least three people were killed and 30 others injured in Russian attacks against Ukraine over the past day, local authorities said on March 4.

Russia launched 149 drones at Ukraine overnight, the Air Force said, reporting that Ukrainian air defenses intercepted 129. At least 19 drones evaded defenses and struck 15 locations. The fall of debris was recorded at one location.

Apparently Iran saved some of its drones for Russians to use against Ukraine.

Russians Brutally Execute 337+ Ukrainian POWs

Russia has “deliberately and brutally” executed at least 337 Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs) as of the end of 2025, Ukraine’s Human Rights Ombudsman, Dmytro Lubinets, said on March 3 during a meeting of the UN Human Rights Council, according to The Kyiv Independent.

“Russia has turned torture into state policy and uses it as a weapon,” Lubinets said in a post on Telegram.

Lubinets added that, according to UN data, 95% of Ukrainian POWs are systematically tortured in captivity.

Lubinets called on the international community to increase pressure on Russia, ensure that every crime is fully documented, and bring those responsible to justice.

“This issue is critically important — the world cannot stand aside,” he said.

The mistreatment of prisoners of war constitutes a violation of international humanitarian law, including the 1949 Geneva Conventions.

The European Union, condemning the execution of Ukrainian soldiers, stated in 2024: Executions of Ukrainian prisoners of war by Russia are increasing, with at least 177 prisoners of war having died in Russian captivity since the beginning of Russia’s war of aggression, according to reliable sources. Nine Ukrainian prisoners of war were reportedly shot by Russian troops in the Kursk region on 10 October. On 1 October, 16 prisoners of war were reportedly executed by Russia in Donetsk oblast after their surrender.

“The European Union strongly condemns these killings, which are another abhorrent example of Russia’s brutalization of the Ukrainian people. These cases are appalling and represent grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions. They demonstrate Russia’s continued and systematic disregard for international law, and in particular, international humanitarian law. Russia has clear obligations under the United Nations Charter and international law it must fulfill.

“That Russian public figures publicly call for the execution of Ukrainian prisoners of war, and glorify these executions, calling for more, exposes yet again the real nature of the regime in the Kremlin.

“The UN Human Rights Office (OHCHR) already confirmed the systematic use of a wide range of different methods of torture, including sexual violence, against Ukrainian prisoners of war by their Russian captors. The EU also condemns the prisoners’ lack of access to the outside world and the denial of humanitarian access for independent monitors.

“The EU reiterates its firm commitment to holding to account all perpetrators and accomplices of Russian war crimes against Ukraine.”

Russian torture and mistreatment of Ukrainian POWs is a repeated crimes against humanity

The HRMMU reported that Ukrainian soldiers had their personal belongings stolen during admission into POW camps, and that the prisoners were taken to the camps into overcrowded buses, with little to no access to water and toilets; many were blindfolded with their wrists bound with duct tape in a way that left many with wounds in these areas. The same was reported inside the camps themselves, with many POWs reporting overcrowded cells, as well as a lack of food, hygiene and contact with their families.

Humiliation of captured Ukrainian soldiers

Videos showing Ukrainian prisoners of war being forced to sing pro-Russian songs or carrying bruises have attracted concerns about their treatment. Dmytro Lubinets claimed that Russians forcibly shaved heads of female Ukrainian prisoners.

Ukrainian prisoner of war and human rights activist Maksym Butkevych was sentenced to 13 years in prison. The vast majority of Ukrainian prisoners who had in the hands of the Russian and Russian-affiliated armed groups reported that they had been interned in dire conditions and subjected to torture and ill-treatment, including beatings, threats, dog attacks, mock executions, as well as electric and positional torture. Several women and male prisoners were threatened with sexual violence and subjected to degrading treatments and enforced nudity. A male prisoner reportedly had been pulled with ropes tied around genitalia. The UN agency also collected information about nine possible cases of death during the “admission procedure” to the internment camps.

The United Nations Special Rapporteur on torture said in September 2023 that Russia’s use of torture “is not random, aberrant behavior” but “orchestrated as part of state policy to intimidate, instill fear or punish to extract information and confessions.”