“Help me! I’m freezing to death!” — an 87-year-old woman screaming from a Kyiv balcony during blackouts.
Writer James Meek returns to Kyiv after 3 decades and finds a city surviving winter strikes, cold apartments, and exhausted people, The Guardian. 1/
“A Russian attack two nights earlier” tore up the grid. Even places with generators lost water.
Kyiv keeps getting patched up, then hit again — power, heating, water, repeat. 2/
A young photographer tells him she once saw a Russian drone operator’s POV locked onto her car — then it veered away.
Different scale of risk. People still take the lift when a foreigner hesitates. 3/
Kyiv looks normal until you notice the war’s fingerprints.
Billboards recruiting for brigades. Sirens mid-commute. Generators on streets. The exhaustion shows on faces in the metro. 4/
On the left bank, Soviet-era utilities fail hardest after strikes.
“The only real defense” against missiles is Patriot — expensive US interceptors — while Russia floods the sky with cheap targets and saturates air defense. 5/
Alla, 79, eats hot kasha in a heated municipal tent. Her building was hit by a downed drone.
A neighbour, already grieving family, heard her grandson was missing, had a stroke, then died in the fire: “calling for help” while gas fed the flames. 6/
Broneslava, 87, lived alone on the 8th floor with no heat, no power, no lift, no food, no money.
Police: nothing. Paramedics: nothing. They took her to hospital anyway — the room so cold “I felt the frost grip my toes.” 7/
Another front runs through the same city: demolition and speculative building.
A campaigner compares new Kyiv architecture to “a spaceship, a medieval castle and a toy car. Built into a vinaigrette.” Developers build, cash out, leave. 8/
“Nobody builds in Kyiv for the future now,” he says.
And still cafés run on generators, neighbors pool money for giant batteries, people stay. “Just staying here is like taking part in this war.” 9X
A Bundestag aide who tried to slow Germany’s Leopard 2 tank shipments to Ukraine was working with an FSB officer, The Insider and Der Spiegel.
Vladimir Sergienko, 52, aide to AfD MP Eugen Schmidt, corresponded with an officer of the FSB’s Fifth Service known as “Alexei.” 1/
His real name: Ilya Vechtomov, born 1987 — officer of the Fifth Service, the FSB unit tasked with destabilizing Ukraine before the Feb 24, 2022 invasion. 2/
Phone metadata shows Vechtomov in constant contact with dozens of FSB officers, including Vladimir Petrovsky, head of the Ninth Division.
Usernames, passwords and avatars linked his “Alexei” alias to his real identity. 3/
‘If Putin is ready for a trilateral meeting, we have months to try to finish the war. If not, after the U.S. elections it will be harder — Washington will focus on domestic issues.’
Zelenskyy on the narrowing window for talks.
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Zelenskyy: Russians know I won’t go to Moscow. I’m not playing games about ending the war.
I’m ready to meet and speak — but not on Russian or Belarusian soil. Belarus is Russian ally in this aggression.
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Zelenskyy: Russia tries to divide our free society. At home, they’ve shut everything down — people don’t even know their losses.
Body counts won’t shake them. Only the economy will. When Russians feel poorer each day, they’ll start asking the Kremlin questions.
Russia conducting sabotage campaign across Europe: arson, parcel bombs, disrupting air traffic, damaging undersea cables.
Hybrid attacks rose from 13 in 2023 to 44 in 2024. But Putin's attempts to intimidate Europe backfired, triggering strong pushback — Washington Post. 1/
MI6 chief Blaise Metreweli: "Russia is testing us in gray zone with tactics just below threshold of war. Drones buzzing airports and bases, state-sponsored arson and sabotage.
Attempts to bully, fearmonger and manipulate." 2/
Britain imposed nearly 300 new sanctions on people and companies aiding Russia's war effort.
Restrictions on 50 ships in shadow fleet transporting Russian oil and gas, bans on 175 companies linked with Azerbaijani oligarch, sanctions on 18 companies selling military products. 3/