Wednesday, July 15, 2026

‘We existed, exist and will exist!’

Today Ukraine commemorates Ukrainian Statehood Day, a remembrance that extends millennia into antiquity.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy marked this historic anniversary in his remarks during ceremonies in a Kyiv broadcast by the Office of the President.

"...A state that was given 72 hours, and it has held out for 12 years of Russian aggression and 1,603 days of full-scale war," the president said. “Russia launched it and called it a 'special military operation.' Even in that, they wanted to humiliate our statehood, to portray Ukraine as supposedly incapable and weak.”

Zelenskyy noted that Russian forces had expected to seize Ukraine within three days, but that even Russian state propagandists now acknowledge Ukraine is a strong state that Russia cannot and will not defeat.

“Ukraine respects its history. It remembers every joy and every pain our people have had to endure. But we do not live constantly looking back. We are not focused solely on the history that has already been written. We are shaping Ukraine’s history – the history being written today and the history yet to come. A state that will succeed. An independence that will be guaranteed.

“We are building a state that has enough strength and self-respect to do both at once: preserve its heritage and pursue ambitious plans. A Ukraine that values its past and believes in its own future. A state that is not afraid of the phrase “for the first time” – and that, for the first time, is doing what until recently could only have been a dream. We are shaping this reality – a reality of unwavering respect for us, for Ukraine, for our people,” he said

"A state that Europe and NATO need, that does not wait but creates, that does not ask but offers — unique experience, technology, capabilities, a unique security and political partnership," he stated.

This anniversary and commemoration is a needle in the eye of Russian dictator Putin, who claims that Ukraine does not have a legacy and heritage worth mentioning.

In his address, Zelenskyy recalled Ukraine’s centuries-long history and its recent technological and strategic achievements, stressing that Ukraine's main goal is “not a Russia without gasoline, but a Ukraine without Russia, without war — a Ukraine with Europe.”

Zelenskyy also said that none of Ukraine’s innovations would matter without the people defending the country. He presented state honors to Ukrainian defenders and gave posthumous awards to the families of fallen soldiers.

While Moscow denies or belittles this memorial, European leaders, among others, beg to differ. On Wednesday, July 15, European leaders, including European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, arrived in Kyiv as Ukraine marked Statehood Day and the Day of the Baptism of Kyivan Rus’-Ukraine, which occurred in 988 AD.

Von der Leyen announced her visit on X, described this as her 11th trip to Ukraine since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion.

“Just arrived in Kyiv for my 11th visit to Ukraine in wartime. It’s a special moment. Ukraine has built a strong military momentum. The tide is turning,” she wrote.

She said the visit would focus on launching new initiatives to integrate Ukraine’s and Europe’s defense industries to boost joint weapons production, as well as discussions on Ukraine’s EU accession and preparations for the coming winter.

Romanian President Nicușor Dan, Moldovan President Maia Sandu, and Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić also arrived in Kyiv.

Readers of The Torn Curtain 1991 may wonder what is the meaning of Ukrainian Statehood Day. Isn’t that like Independence Day? Don’t Ukrainians mark that on August 24?

As Ukraine observes Ukrainian Statehood Day, the country celebrates a profound legacy that stretches far beyond the 1991 declaration of modern independence. While August 24 is a vital national day commemorating breaking free from the Soviet empire, Statehood Day is about deep roots, civilizational choices, and unbroken historical continuity.

1. Defining "Statehood" vs. "Independence"

To fully understand this commemoration, it is essential to distinguish it from Independence Day:

Independence Day (August 24), which commemorates a specific, vital political event—the 1991 restoration of sovereignty and the rebirth of Ukraine as a modern, sovereign nation. It is a celebration of the act of self-determination.

Statehood Day (July 15): Honors a thousand-year tradition of state-building. It traces an unbroken historical line from medieval Kyivan Rus' through the Kingdom of Galicia-Volhynia, the Cossack Hetmanate, the Ukrainian National Republic of the early 20th century, and ultimately to the modern democratic republic of today. It represents the permanence of Ukrainian identity.

2. The Civilizational Anchor: The Baptism of Rus'

Statehood Day is intentionally paired with the Day of the Baptism of Kyivan Rus'—Ukraine, honoring a landmark moment in the nation's history.

The Legacy of Volodymyr the Great: In 988 AD, Grand Prince “Kniaz” Volodymyr the Great adopted Christianity as the state religion, baptizing the people of Kyiv in the Dnipro River.

A Turn Toward Europe: This was not merely a spiritual conversion; it was a profound geopolitical and civilizational pivot. By aligning with the Christian world, Prince Volodymyr integrated Kyivan Rus' into the broader European political, legal, and intellectual community.

A Foundation for Law and Culture: This era established the Cyrillic script, libraries, stone architecture, and eventually Rus' Truth (the first unified legal code compiled under Yaroslav the Wise), laying down the fundamental rule of law. The first constitution of Ukraine is the Constitution of Pylyp Orlyk (also known as the Bendery Constitution), adopted on April 5, 1710. Drafted by Hetman Pylyp Orlyk in exile in Bendery (modern-day Moldova), it is celebrated as one of the earliest democratic, separation-of-powers constitutions in European history.

3. Dismantling Historical Revisionism

In the context of contemporary defense and survival, Statehood Day also serves a crucial role in reclaiming historical truth against hostile narratives:

Reclaiming the Narrative: The holiday directly refutes hostile propaganda claiming that Ukrainian identity is a modern or “artificial” construct. It asserts the historical reality that Kyiv was a thriving, powerful European capital centuries before Moscow was established.

Ancient Symbols of Modern Identity: Symbols like the Trident (Tryzub)—originally the personal seal of Prince Volodymyr the Great—and the Hryvnia (the national currency) trace their origins back a millennium, reminding the world of a deep-seated cultural inheritance.

4. The Power of Continuity in Times of War

Celebrating statehood during a struggle for survival is a powerful act of national resilience:

It reminds the world and Ukrainians alike that they are defending not just a political boundary drawn in 1991, but a thousand-year-old culture, language, and heritage that generations before them fought to preserve.

It honors a unified lineage of defenders—from medieval warriors and Cossacks, through the Ukrainian armies of World War One and World War Two to the modern Armed Forces of Ukraine—who have defended the right of the Ukrainian nation to exist. In the 20th century alone the Ukrainian nation was called on to defend and restore its right to exist freely and declared its national independence a half a dozen times. On the other hand, Ukraine and the Ukrainian nation have never in its history invaded or occupied  any foreign neighbor.

"All stages of the history of Ukrainian statehood can be described in one sentence: we existed, exist and will exist." — President Volodymyr Zelenskyy

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Europe Forms New Security Architecture against Russian Aggression 

European nations form anti-ballistic coalition and a Multinational Force for Ukraine in order to boost European and Ukrainian security architecture in the face of continuous Russian threats and aggression.

The Coalition of the Willing, formed in March 2025 and consisting of 35 nations that support Ukraine, concluded its high-level summit with the participation of Ukraine, in Paris on July 13.

The meeting focused heavily on long-term European security architecture, protecting Ukraine's airspace ahead of winter, and laying the groundwork for a binding peace process.  

The meeting focused heavily on long-term European security architecture, protecting Ukraine's airspace ahead of winter, and laying the groundwork for a binding peace process.  

Co-chaired by French President Emmanuel Macron and UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, the summit was attended by major heads of state, including German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, and NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte.  

A major deliverable was the formation of The Anti-Ballistic Missile Coalition.

The goal is to build a shared, integrated ballistic missile defense capability for Europe, utilizing Ukraine’s extensive battlefield experience in intercepting advanced Russian ballistic missiles.  

The members of this group is a core of 10 nations—Ukraine, the UK, France, Germany, Denmark, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, and Sweden.

The agreement opens the door to granting Ukraine licenses to domestically produce high-tech interceptor systems with Western defense backing.  

Additionally, President Macron announced that a Multinational Force for Ukraine (a “reassurance force” planned to deploy in the event of a future ceasefire) will begin military exercises in neighboring countries in the coming months to validate deployment blueprints.  

The official joint statement released by the co-chairs established concrete baseline parameters for any future peace negotiations and ongoing material support:

Red Lines for Peace Negotiations

The Coalition reaffirmed its push for a just and lasting peace based on international law and the UN Charter, laying down strict diplomatic boundaries:  

“No Peace Without Ukraine": Any future peace or ceasefire agreement must be fully negotiated with Kyiv's direct participation. No backroom deals.

No European Decisions Without Europe: The Coalition made it clear that European security and interests cannot be negotiated by third parties without European leaders at the table.  

Frozen Assets: Russian sovereign assets will remain completely frozen and immobilized until Russia halts its aggression and fully compensates Ukraine for war damages.  

Ceasefire Proposal: The group endorsed pursuing direct dialogue between Ukraine and Russia—with active US and European mediation—aimed at implementing an immediate ceasefire starting at the current line of contact, to be followed by deeper security negotiations.  

Ramping Up Military & Economic Pressure

Air Defense Boost: Partners agreed to immediately accelerate the delivery of air defense systems, interceptors, and long-range strike capabilities.  

Crackdown on the “Shadow Fleet”: The Coalition committed to a highly coordinated, systematic effort to disrupt Russia's maritime “shadow fleet” of oil tankers. This will include increased boarding operations, tighter maritime controls, and intelligence sharing to block Russian sanctions-evasion at sea.  

Hard Security Guarantees

The communique welcomed recent positive signals regarding security guarantees for Ukraine—specifically referencing supportive statements made during the recent NATO Summit in Ankara. The Coalition emphasized that any final peace settlement must be anchored by politically and legally binding security guarantees that take effect immediately when a ceasefire begins.

There is definitely a strong sense of gravity and serious commitment coming out of Paris, but it is paired with a heavy dose of pragmatism. No one at the Hôtel des Invalides was under the illusion that signing a declaration instantly builds an air defense shield, but the concrete actions and financial backing behind the scenes show they are very serious.

Here is what points to their sincerity—and where the real-world friction lies:

Instead of relying on vague diplomatic promises, the summit delivered binding legal and financial frameworks:

The Freya Project has Real Corporate Backing: Rather than a distant dream, the joint statement was signed alongside major European defense giants like Thales, Diehl Defence, Saab, Kongsberg, and Leonardo. They are looking to build a cost-effective alternative to the Patriot system within 12 months using Ukraine's real-time combat data.  

The UK Signed the Checks: Prime Minister Keir Starmer didn't just show up for a photo; the UK officially signed onto the EU's €90 billion ($100B) loan package for Ukraine. This allows UK defense firms to immediately start manufacturing weapons funded by those assets.  

The "Reassurance Force" Is Actually Training: President Macron announced that multinational forces will begin exercises in neighboring countries shortly. Preparing the physical logistics of a postwar peacekeeping deployment demonstrates they are anticipating and planning for the day after the shooting stops.  

While the determination is genuine, analysts and officials are clear-eyed about the steep hurdles ahead:

The Clock Is Ticking on Winter: President Zelenskyy’s primary concern is the immediate threat to Ukraine's energy grid before the winter freeze. While the long-term anti-ballistic plan is historic, it will take significant time to scale up production.  Political Durability: Leaders like Macron and Starmer are pushing hard to lock in these defense structures now, knowing that upcoming domestic elections (such as France's in 2027) could threaten the long-term political will to deploy troops or maintain massive funding.  

Ultimately, the mood in Paris was one of “strategic autonomy.” European leaders are realizing they must take collective, long-term charge of their own continent’s security, a point that Zelenskyy has been emphasizing in recent months. The steps taken in Paris show the leaders of the coalition are treating this not as a temporary emergency, but as the blueprint for Europe's future defense posture.

This is another great step toward building a solid secure, European defense wall against Russian aggression, which can flare up at any time. Call this an updated NATO.

Reaffirming Ukrainian Statehood 2026

The following statement was issued by the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America.

Ahead of Ukrainian Statehood Day, tomorrow, July 15th, the Ukrainian Congress Committee of America joins Ukrainians around the world in honoring the long, unbroken continuity of Ukrainian nationhood and honoring the men and women who, in 1990, took a risk declaring Ukrainian sovereignty openly during Soviet rule.

Ukrainian statehood reaches back more than a millennium to Kyiv, St. Volodymyr the Great, and the civilizational choice made through the Christianization of Kyivan Rus in 988. From that foundation came generations of Ukrainian state-building: the legacy of Kyivan Rus, the Galician-Volhynian state, the Cossack Hetmanate, the Ukrainian National People’s Republic, the Western Ukrainian National People’s Republic, Carpathian Ukraine, the restoration of independence in 1991, and the modern Ukrainian state now defending its freedom against russian aggression.

For Ukrainians in America, this day carries a special meaning.

For generations, Ukrainian Americans carried the idea of Ukrainian statehood in their hearts and affirmed it in their communities. They did so even when Ukraine’s fate seemed hopeless, when the land itself was painted over on the maps drawn by the empires that oppressed Ukraine. In churches, schools, newspapers, cultural organizations, youth groups, veterans’ associations, and civic institutions, our community carried forward the language, history, and political conviction that Ukraine was a nation with the right to live free.

For decades, Ukrainian Americans raised their children to know the truth when the rest of the world was told lies. The Ukrainian American community commemorated the Holodomor when Soviet propaganda denied it. The community defended the memory of Ukraine’s independence while moscow tried to erase it. Our community advocated in Washington when Ukraine had no seat of its own among free nations. Our community built institutions that kept Ukrainian identity alive and helped ensure that the dream of an independent Ukraine would survive across oceans and generations. UCCA is one of such institutions, born out of a collective and generational effort.

When Ukraine restored its independence in 1991, it did so following centuries of state-building and decades of sacrifice by Ukrainians in Ukraine and throughout the diaspora. Ukrainian Americans were part of that story.

In a generation-spanning slight of hand, moscow sought to steal Ukraine’s history and appropriate the Kyivan Rus legacy in order to claim that Ukraine and russia are one people. Ukrainian Statehood Day is an opportunity to expose that lie, while honoring those who told the truth of Ukraine’s sovereignty and those who fight and die for that truth to this day.

Today, as the wheel of history turns and russia yet again wages war to destroy Ukrainian sovereignty and deny the existence of the Ukrainian nation, Ukrainian Statehood Day is a declaration of historical truth.

Ukraine’s statehood is ancient, legitimate, and non-negotiable.

Слава Україні. Glory to Ukraine.

Monday, July 13, 2026

Ukraine’s Destruction of Russian Vessels Causes more than Military Damage

NATO leaders, especially America’s top military command, are certainly scratching their heads wondering why they haven’t yet accepted Ukraine into its Euroatlantic fraternity.

On the other side, Russia, the former second mightiest military force on the planet that is facing defeat if not a questionable victory, is perhaps grateful that Ukraine’s demonstrated military prowess has been kept outside of the alliance.

While Ukraine has forced Russian cutthroats to a standstill on the ground, it is successfully striking Russian vessels with ferocious precision that gives new meaning to the phrase “shooting ducks in a barrel.”

The tactical objective of Ukraine’s drone strikes is “functional destruction.” Utilizing specialized 50-100 kg (110.23 to 220.46 lbs.) warheads, drones systematically disable a vessel’s bridge, steering gear, and communications arrays, before targeting fuel manifests to trigger uncontrollable onboard fires. In response to the scale of these casualties, Russian maritime authorities have been forced to temporarily suspend all commercial navigation through the Don-Azov Canal and the Kerch Strait in mid-July 2026.

According to maritime intelligence, multiple Russian tankers have been left burning, crews have had to be evacuated, and Russia’s domestic ship-repair facilities now lack the capacity to handle dozens of heavily damaged commercial vessels simultaneously. In fact, as of the weekend of July 11-12, Russia has reportedly been forced to completely halt commercial shipping navigation through the Don-Azov Canal and the Kerch Strait due to the severity of Ukraine’s threat.

The situation over the weekend of July 11-12 has escalated dramatically into a massive, highly coordinated campaign targeting Russian maritime logistics. Ukraine’s newly formed Unmanned Systems Forces (USF) – specifically the drone units led by Maj. Robert "Magyar" Brovdi —have launched relentless nightly strikes primarily targeting Russia’s “shadow fleet” in the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov, an inland body of water considered by Moscow as its domestic lake.

The primary strategist behind this campaign is Maj. Robert Brovdi, widely known by his callsign “Magyar” (a reference to his Hungarian descent and roots in Uzhhorod, Zakarpattia, Ukraine). Brovdi has earned the distinction of being known as the bane of the Kremlin and Russia’s military command. His battlefield strategy, tactics and successes have made him the most feared and hated Ukrainian officer of the war.

Fear of Brovdi's units among Russian forces stems from systematic precision and psychological integration of his campaign:

Pioneering Drone Doctrine: Long before the formal creation of the Unmanned Systems Forces, Brovdi’s unit treated drone warfare as an exact science, mastering custom-built FPV strike drones and large night-bomber octocopters.

Psychological Warfare: Brovdi’s detached, calm narration style over strike videos – utilizing signature catchphrases and physical mapping indicators –has established a potent psychological footprint, lowering adversary morale.

Asymmetric Maritime Shift: The transition from tactical trench operations in the Donbas to sweeping maritime interdictions demonstrates how low-cost, decentralized technology can paralyze traditional naval assets without requiring a conventional navy.

The latest data shows a historic surge in the number of hit vessels, aiming squarely at crippling fuel supplies and isolating occupied Crimea.  

According to official updates from the Ukrainian General Staff and Major Brovdi, this weekend’s strikes added massive numbers to the tally of damaged Russian vessels:

Night of Friday, July 10 – Saturday, July 11: A colossal raid struck 28 Russian vessels in the Sea of Azov. This included 21 oil tankers, 4 tugboats, 2 dry cargo ships, and 1 dredger. Concurrently, the SBU used a Sea Baby naval drone to hit another shadow fleet tanker in the Black Sea.  

Night of Saturday, July 11 – Sunday, July 12: Drone operators struck another 14 vessels overnight, specifically knocking out 10 tankers and 4 crucial ferries.  

Night of Sunday, July 12 – Monday, July 13: The momentum carried straight into this morning, with an overnight strike hitting 15 more vessels (7 tankers, 5 dry cargo ships, 1 ferry, and 2 tugboats).  

The shocking total for the weekend is 57 vessels targeted and a broader eight-day tally of 105 ships. This concentrated offensive, which began in earnest around July 6, represents a major strategic shift toward disrupting Moscow’s maritime fuel supply lines to make up for disrupted land routes. It’s also a 55% drop in active shipping.

While the recent drone blitz has heavily targeted the commercial “shadow fleet” tankers supplying the front line, it represents the second phase of a broader naval strategy. Ukraine has spent the past four years systematically dismantling Russia’s actual navy—the Black Sea Fleet—despite not having a functional navy of its own.

By combining Neptune anti-ship missiles, Storm Shadow cruise missiles, and Magura V5/Sea Baby maritime drones, Ukraine has sunk, destroyed, or heavily damaged roughly one-third of Russia’s Black Sea warships. This campaign has effectively broken the Russian naval blockade and forced Moscow to withdraw its remaining major assets from occupied Crimea to safer ports like Novorossiysk.

Unlike the commercial tankers carrying raw oil and grain, these warships carried the literal teeth of Russia’s maritime campaign:

Kalibr Cruise Missiles: Corvettes like the Tsiklon and the Rostov-na-Donu submarine were high-priority targets precisely because they carried vertical launch cells for Kalibr cruise missiles. These weapons were regularly used to strike Ukraine's energy grid and civilian infrastructure.

Heavy Armor and Logistics: The Ropukha-class landing ships acted as a floating bridge. When the physical Crimean Bridge was damaged, these ships were stuffed with heavy military vehicles, main battle tanks, and tons of artillery ammunition to resupply the southern front lines. When the Novocherkassk was hit in Feodosia, secondary explosions proved it was heavily loaded with ammunition (suspected to be Iranian-made Shahed drones).

Air Defense Systems: The flagship Moskva carried long-range S-300F missile systems meant to lock down the airspace over the entire Black Sea. Losing it left the rest of the fleet highly vulnerable to air attacks, which paved the way for Ukraine to successfully strike subsequent targets.

Ukraine’s warship campaign has completely changed how the naval war is fought. On land, Ukraine’s successful drone warfare has launched a new, historic strategy of fighting the enemy. By utilizing low-cost, explosive-laden robotic boats, Ukraine also proved that massive, multi-million-dollar steel warships can be systematically overwhelmed. This complete loss of naval dominance in the western Black Sea is exactly what forced Russia to rely on the smaller, commercial shadow-fleet vessels in the Sea of Azov – the very ships that are now the target of Ukraine's current drone campaign.

While these warheads are rarely large enough to instantly sink a massive steel hull, the tactics are intentionally designed to achieve functional destruction:  

1. Immobilization: The first drone strikes typically target the bridge/deckhouse to destroy steering equipment, communications, and electronics.  

2. Ignition: Subsequent drones target the main deck near fuel hatches to ignite intense, long-burning fires.  

According to maritime intelligence, multiple tankers have been left burning, crews have had to be evacuated, and Russia's domestic ship-repair facilities lack the capacity to handle dozens of heavily damaged commercial vessels simultaneously. In fact, as of this weekend, Russia has reportedly been forced to completely halt commercial shipping navigation through the Don-Azov Canal and the Kerch Strait due to the severity of the threat.

The primary target of this targeted blitz is Russia’s maritime economic lifeline:

Sanctioned Oil and Fuel: The vast majority of the vessels hit—such as the Chelsea-6, Sanar-1, Sanar-17, Climena, and Penelope—are part of Moscow's international "shadow fleet." These small tankers (averaging about 7,000 tons deadweight) transport crude oil and refined petroleum products with deactivated satellite transponders to evade international sanctions. This fuel directly funds the Russian war budget and keeps military assets moving in the south.  

Military Logistics and Grain: The dry cargo ships hit (including the Donstar and Vladimir Yarygin) are utilized as auxiliary supply links. They transport military vehicles, ammunition, and bulk goods between mainland Russia and occupied ports like Mariupol and Berdiansk. Additionally, these routes are heavily used to export grain out of the Don River basin.  

Kyiv’s campaign has introduced critical friction points into both the Russian war economy and domestic military stability and fear into the hearts and minds of Russians.

Logistical and Refinery Strains: These seaborne tanker strikes occur alongside long-range strikes on domestic Russian infrastructure, such as the Syzran oil refinery. Because Russia relies heavily on its shadow fleet to bypass international sanctions and move petroleum products, the sudden degradation of transport capacity has caused domestic consumer gasoline prices inside Russia to climb steeply.

Network Paralysis: Traffic through the Don-Azov Canal and the Kerch Strait has faced severe restrictions, cutting off primary agricultural and fuel shipping arteries. According to maritime intelligence data, the number of active vessels broadcasting AIS transponders in the Sea of Azov plummeted by 55% within a week, as civilian crews go “dark” or refuse to sail due to the lack of integrated naval air defenses.

Command Panic: Culturally, the Sea of Azov was long treated by Moscow as a secure internal lake. Prominent Russian military bloggers have entered a phase of severe recrimination, openly blaming naval command for failing to field localized defenses against nimble aerial and aquatic drone units. The explicit targeting of control cabins and command bridges sends a stark psychological signal directly to the crews operating the ships.

Ukraine’s NATO and European friends would do well to take into consideration Kyiv’s successes and grant it membership in the Atlantic alliance.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Even 1 Ukrainian Casualty is too much 

Depending on the day, you may get the impression that Russians have taken a break from bombing Ukrainian towns and killing innocent Ukrainian men, women and children.

After all, you’ve pored through the internet and old-fashioned newspapers and you couldn’t find anything more than one or two mentions about a drone attack here or there.

That’s what I thought today, Saturday, July 11. Russian bombing has been relatively quiet. But when I took a moment and counted the episodes of brutality committed by Russians against Ukraine and Ukrainians, a different image emerges.

It has been a heavily coordinated and brutal day of strikes across the Ukraine, with Russia utilizing a mix of ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, guided aerial bombs, and massive waves of drones.  

According to reports from Ukraine’s Air Force and regional military administrations, Russia launched a total of 12 missiles (including six high-speed ballistic missiles) and 121 Shahed-type drones overnight and into today. While Ukrainian air defenses managed to intercept 111 drones and several missiles, severe gaps in stopping ballistic weapons resulted in hits across multiple regions.  

The total casualty count reported so far today stands at 6 civilians killed (including one child) and at least 37 wounded. And that doesn’t count the invisible damage such has psychological pain and suffering and environmental contamination of the land, crops and water.

Breakdown of Today's Attacks (July 11, 2026)

Sumy Region (Northeast)

 The Attack: Two Russian aerial glide bombs struck a crowded, civilian area.  

 Casualties: 4 killed (including one child), and 17 wounded.

 Odesa Region (South)

 The Attack: A Russian missile struck a civilian building. Russia's Defense Ministry claimed to be targeting port infrastructure in Chornomorsk and Izmail.  

 Casualties: 2 killed, and 1 wounded by shrapnel.  

 Kyiv (Capital Region)

 The Attack: A combined overnight barrage of ballistic missiles, cruise missiles, and drones. Hits and falling debris caused significant fires and explosions across the Solomianskyi, Darnytskyi, and Dniprovskyi districts, striking residential areas, a roadway, and a three-story office/warehouse building.  

 Casualties: 11 wounded (including one child).   

 Kharkiv (East)  

 The Attack: A Russian drone hit a civilian enterprise later in the morning.  

 Casualties: 7 wounded.

Note on Air Defenses: President Zelenskyy noted today that while forces performed incredibly well downing the bulk of the drones, the ballistic missiles largely reached their targets before air raid alerts could even be issued, underscoring an acute and critical shortage of interceptor munitions.

As President Zelenskyy has said to world leaders, including President Trump: Ukraine needs air defense units, Patriot batteries and other weapons to freeze Russian air assaults against Ukraine.

Friday, July 10, 2026

US Senators, Administration Agree To Advance Russia Sanctions Bill; Kyiv Hails Move; Sen. Graham Meets News Media in Kyiv

A bipartisan group of US senators said they had reached an agreement with the Trump administration to advance long-delayed legislation aimed at imposing tougher economic penalties on Russia and countries that continue to support Moscow’s war economy.

The breakthrough, announced Friday, July 10, as Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) visited Kyiv for talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, could give President Donald Trump a powerful new tool to pressure Kremlin dictator Vladimir Putin as Washington seeks an end to Russia’s war, now in its fifth year.

Graham said the agreement with the White House clears the way for the bill to move forward, arguing that the legislation would allow the United States to punish countries helping Russia evade Western sanctions while creating leverage for negotiations.

“We’ve reached an agreement with the White House on a version of the Russian sanctions bill that they will support. It means it’s going to become law,” Graham told reporters in Kyiv after concluding his 10th wartime visit to Ukraine.

The legislation, known as the Sanctioning Russia Act, has been under negotiation for months by Graham and Democratic Senator Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, along with Democrat Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire and Republican Roger Wicker of Mississippi.

In a joint statement, the four senators said they expected to release the updated legislation soon, describing the agreement as a major step toward strengthening pressure on Moscow.

“We are proud to announce that we have reached an agreement with the Trump Administration to move our updated Russia sanctions legislation forward. We are very pleased with this significant progress and expect to roll out the legislation very soon. As Russia intensifies its slaughter of civilians, it is imperative that the legislative and executive branches work together to create tools to exact a heavy price on those who buy Russian oil and natural gas, fueling the Putin war machine,” the statement said.

President Zelenskyy also met with Graham in Kyiv. Zelenskyy thanked the United States for all the support for Ukraine since the start of Russia's full-scale aggression, including for air defense systems that have saved thousands of lives and for the PURL initiative.

Zelenskyy highlighted the agreements reached during his meeting with President Trump in Ankara that will further strengthen Ukraine’s ability to protect lives. In particular, this includes the political decision to grant Ukraine licenses to produce Patriot systems.

Zelenskyy briefed Graham on Russia’s constant attacks against our cities and the urgent need for additional anti-ballistic missiles. The Senator praised the courage of the Ukrainian people and reaffirmed Congress's continued support for Ukraine. "I'm grateful to Lindsey for recognizing our warriors. The stronger Ukraine is on the battlefield, the greater the chances that diplomacy will ultimately succeed," Zelenskyy said.

The meeting also focused on diplomatic efforts to end the war and increasing sanctions pressure on Russia and everyone backing its war. The Senator briefed the President on work on the relevant bill. According to him, now is the right time to move forward because Ukraine's success on the battlefield must be reinforced by the right pressure.

Zelenskyy thanked the United States for all the support for Ukraine since the start of Russia's full-scale aggression, including for air defense systems that have saved thousands of lives and for the PURL initiative -- The Prioritized Ukraine Requirements List (PURL) is a NATO-coordinated mechanism where member states and partner countries pool funds to purchase critical US-made weapons and military equipment for Ukraine.

Thursday, July 9, 2026

 UN Official Condemns Highest Level of Ukrainian Civilian Casualties

The United Nations said Thursday, July 9, that civilian casualties in Russia’s war against Ukraine climbed to a new high in June 2026, as a senior official urged “meaningful dialogue and negotiations” to put an end to the four-plus-year-long war.

“In the past week alone, three massive waves of Russian aerial strikes targeted Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities, further raising the alarming civilian death toll and widening the destruction,” Rosemary DiCarlo, UN under-secretary-general for political and peacebuilding affairs, told the Security Council.

She said the strikes followed a clear pattern, as “they targeted urban centers with large civilian populations and destroyed or severely damaged residential buildings, with devastating consequences for the people living there,” adding, “We condemn these attacks in the strongest terms.”

Citing the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), DiCarlo reported that “civilian casualties in Ukraine, killed and injured, were higher in May than in any other month since the beginning of the conflict.”

“Preliminary figures for June indicate an even higher toll, with at least 265 people killed and 1,816 injured. This concerning trend is seemingly continuing into July,” she said.

On the cumulative toll, she said that since Russia’s full-scale invasion began in February 2022, OHCHR “has verified that at least 16,402 civilians, including 802 children, have been killed in Ukraine,” cautioning that “actual figures are likely significantly higher.”

DiCarlo said, “There are no military solutions that could bring about lasting peace,” stressing, “Only inclusive, meaningful dialogue and negotiations can reverse the current dangerous trajectory.”

Echoing those concerns, Indrika Ratwatte, acting assistant secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and deputy emergency relief coordinator at the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), said that “the past week has brought another surge in civilian casualties and suffering,” with “families with children have been killed in their homes, civilians injured on their way to work, and cut off from essential services.”

He said attacks harming aid workers and damaging their assets “have increased by more than 20% compared with the same period last year.”

Ratwatte urged Council members “to use their influence to pursue every practical opportunity to prevent further civilian suffering,” saying, “Whatever the pace of political efforts, civilians cannot wait. Their needs are immediate and growing. They need protection and assistance now.”

As a source of unrelenting suffering, death and evil, Ukrainian Permanent Representative to the United Nations Ambassador Andrii Melnyk is right in demanding that Russia be expelled from the international body.