Opening
summary
Hello and
welcome to the Guardian’s live coverage of the war in Ukraine.
The
development of drones is key to give Kyiv an advantage over “a numerically
superior” Russian forces, Ukraine’s commander-in-chief, Oleksandr Syrskyi, has
said.
“The
development of the use of unmanned systems is my priority,” Syrskyi wrote on
Telegram after meeting his deputy, Vadym Sukharevskyi. “We are looking for
asymmetric solutions to gain a qualitative advantage over a numerically
superior opponent.”
Military
analysts say drones could give Ukraine a technological edge over Moscow, given
its shortages in artillery shells and other more traditional weapons, though
Russia’s drone industry is also developing rapidly.
In other
key developments:
- Following his landslide presidential election win – condemned as illegitimate by western leaders – Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin, addressed a crowd at a Red Square pop concert on Monday to mark 10 years since Russia’s annexation of the Crimean peninsula from Ukraine. Putin, who was basking in his election victory, told the crowd that Crimea was the “pride of Russia” and that the Black Sea peninsula had “come back to its native harbour” when Moscow annexed the region. “Through decades, they carried faith in their fatherland. They never separated themselves from Russia and that’s what allowed Crimea to return to our common family,” he said. The official tally from the three-day election was a 87.28% share of the vote for Putin, which the Kremlin on Monday portrayed as a dominant victory, saying the results showed that the people had consolidated around the Russian president.
- Ukrainian troops are strengthening fortifications in the Sumy region, in the north-east of the country, an official has been quoted as telling the Ukrainian news agency Ukrinform. “The defence forces in the Sumy region perform combat tasks to protect the state border and prevent Russian sabotage and reconnaissance groups and the Russian military from crossing the border,” Vadym Mysnyk said.
- The EU is preparing to levy tariffs on grain imports from Russia and Belarus to placate farmers and some member states, the Financial Times reported. The European Commission is in the coming days expected to impose a duty of €95 (£81) per tonne on cereals from Russia and Belarus, the FT said, adding that tariffs of 50% would also be placed on oil seeds and derived products.
- Russian attacks against Ukraine have killed four people and injured six others over the past day, damaging homes and civilian infrastructure, regional officials reported on Tuesday. Russia reportedly targeted nine Ukrainian regions – Dnipropetrovsk, Sumy, Mykolaiv, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia, Chernihiv, Kherson, Kharkiv, and Donetsk, with the casualties being killed in the latter three areas.
- During a visit to Kyiv, the Republican US senator, Lindsey Graham, said he was confident an aid package stalled by Republican opposition in the US Congress would soon be approved, but called for aid to take the form of a low-interest, waivable loan. He and other Republicans have backed the notion of loans rather than grants for US allies to make the expenditure more sustainable and popular, a plan espoused by former president Donald Trump, the likely Republican candidate in the 2024 presidential election.
- Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, has congratulated Putin on his re-election and offered to mediate between Moscow and Ukraine, the Turkish presidency announced. Turkey’s top diplomat, Hakan Fidan, also hit out at “dangerous” rhetoric coming from both Europe and Moscow. “This war must end,” Fidan said in an interview with CNN Turk aired on Monday evening. “On both sides, tens of thousands of mothers are burying their children and it’s continuing. Both sides have only too much to lose and nothing to gain,” he said.
- EU foreign ministers strongly support taking the revenues from frozen Russian assets to help Ukraine, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said. “I am not saying there was unanimity but [there was] a strong consensus to take this decision,” Borrell told reporters on Monday after a meeting with the ministers held in Brussels.
- The Council of the European Union ratified an agreement to increase the EU’s support for the Ukrainian military by €5bn (£4.3bn) through a dedicated assistance fund. The EU said the money would fund training and both lethal and non-lethal military gear.
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