A gas pumping station in Sudzha, in the Russian border region of Kursk is on fire having been rocked by a major explosion
Vladimir Putin’s forces are bombing stations along their own crucial gas pipeline in an effort to sabotage any ceasefire deal with Ukraine, Kyiv’s military has said.
The army accused Russia of seeking to pin the blame on Ukraine with “groundless” accusations its military was involved – all to undermine any truce and longer peace deal currently being negotiated by Donald Trump and the US.
The Sudzha pipeline has been a critical hub for Russian gas transit to Europe via Ukraine.
Meanwhile, Sir Keir Starmer has warned Putin will face “severe consequences” if he breaches any peace deal with Ukraine, as western military planners begin drawing up plans to enforce any agreement between the two countries that Mr Trump and the US is trying to secure.
In Ukraine, a mass drone attack launched by Russia on Odesa overnight caused fires in three different parts of the city.
US pushing Ukraine to agree new terms on minerals deal - report
Donald Trump is seeking to reopen negotiations on a deal for the US access to critical minerals and energy assets in Ukraine, after earlier talks collapsed following a public clash between the leaders of the two countries.
Volodymyr Zelensky had said he was ready to sign the previous agreement, but the US is now expanding its economic demands, the Financial Times reported citing Ukrainian officials.
Washington is seeking assurances from Kyiv on the ownership and control structure of a joint investment fund, as well as broader provisions that could extend to US ownership of other key economic assets, including Ukraine’s nuclear power plants, according to two Ukrainian officials.
Speaking at the White House on Thursday, Mr Trump stated that the US was actively pursuing deals on rare earths and minerals worldwide, with Ukraine being a particular priority.
Ukrainian officials expressed concern about being pressured into accepting unfavourable terms in a wider agreement, particularly following Washington's temporary suspension of weapons deliveries and intelligence sharing with Kyiv earlier this month.
It comes after Mr Zelensky and Mr Trump said they held a "positive" but "frank" phone call after their public spat at the White House.
Explosion shakes burning Russian oil depot after Ukrainian strike
An explosion rocked an oil depot in Russia's Krasnodar region where firefighters are trying to extinguish a blaze that broke out after a Ukrainian drone attack earlier this week, regional authorities said on Friday.
"During the extinguishing process, due to depressurisation of the burning tank, there was an explosion of oil products and release of burning oil," officials said on the Telegram messaging app.
The fire spread to another tank, and the fire area increased to 10,000 square metres, they added. Two firefighters were injured.
The depot, near the village of Kavkazskaya, is a rail terminal for Russian oil supplies to a pipeline linking Kazakhstan to the Black Sea.
Russia's foreign ministry said on Thursday that Ukraine had already violated a proposed ceasefire on energy sites by attacking the depot
Ukrainian strike on closed Sudzha gas station 'damages pipeline'
The Ukrainian military suggested it had carried out a "successful strike" in western Russia's Kursk region on the Sudzha gas station, through which Russia sends gas to Europe.
A picture showing a huge fireball rising skyward was shared on the Ukrainian military Telegram channel following the strike.
"Media are reporting a successful strike on the Sudzha gas transport system through which the enemy used to transport gas to Europe,” it said, citing media reports.
There was no official word on the incident from the government in Kyiv.
Authorities in Moscow also did not report the incident.
Ukrainian forces have faced pressure from the Russian army in the area for the last seven months.
The station at Sudzha was the only point through which Russian gas had passed on its way through Ukraine and on to Europe until Ukraine declined to prolong a transit agreement in January this year.
A view shows a building of gas metering station, damaged during recent fighting between Ukrainian and Russian forces near Sudzha border crossing (REUTERS)
Ukrainian media also reported the strike and posted video footage of the blaze, as did Telegram channels in the Kursk region.
The Baza Telegram channel, close to the Russian security services, said the pipeline had been damaged.
Russia's foreign ministry said on Thursday that Ukraine had already violated a proposed ceasefire on energy sites in the three-year-old war by attacking an oil depot in the southern Russian region of Krasnodar.
Russia has imposed a state of emergency in the district of Engels in the Saratov region after 10 people were injured in a Ukrainian drone attack on a military airfield.
All those wounded are being treated in hospital and there is no threat to their lives, the head of the regional health ministry told a local TV channel.
A view of smoke rising from Engels airbase, in the course of Russia-Ukraine conflict, in Engels, Saratov Region, Russia (SOCIAL MEDIA via REUTERS)
Ukraine struck Russia's Engels strategic bomber base on Thursday with drones, triggering a major blast and fire.
Several buildings in the area were damaged following the strike.
France will host summit with Zelensky next week, Macron says
French president Emmanuel Macron said he will host a meeting of European leaders with Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky in Paris next Thursday to discuss ways to help defend Ukraine.
He said his goal was to discuss ways to speed up immediate military support, how to make a possible ceasefire work, and draw up plans to beef up the Ukrainian military after a deal and possibly deploy troops there.
French president Emmanuel Macron will be meeting Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky next week (AP)
Russian president Vladimir Putin's top security adviser Sergei Shoigu has arrived in North Korea and plans to meet its leader Kim Jong Un today, Russian news agencies reported this morning.
Further details of the former Russian defence minister's visit to North Korea are not immediately clear. North Korea's state media have not reported on Shoigu's arrival.
Mr Shoigu had earlier made visits to Pyongyang as North Korea geared up to deploy troops to fight for Russia in its war against Ukraine.
According to the US and South Korean officials, North Korea has deployed more than 10,000 troops who were sent into combat in Russia's eastern Kursk region and also shipped heavy weapons including artillery and ballistic missiles.
Russia's security council secretary Sergei Shoigu poses after his bilateral meeting in Jakarta (AFP/Getty Images)
Analysis: Now Zelensky has his opportunity to beckon Trump back into Ukraine’s corner
Seizing the opportunity to drive a wedge between Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin, Ukraine’s president has moved swiftly to usher the American president back towards his corner.
By respecting, vocally, Trump’s efforts to get a ceasefire with Russia, Ukraine has exposed Putin’s deep reluctance to agree to any lowering of hostilities until he can be sure of permanently mangling Ukraine’s sovereignty.
According to a briefing on a call between Volodymyr Zelensky and Trump, the US president has calmed down, stopped calling him a “dictator”, and come up with an agreement to supply some badly needed air defences for Ukraine.
Putin’s rejection of ceasefire terms means Zelensky has been handed a chance to bring the US president on side – and he is beginning to understand his new American audience, writes Sam Kiley in Odesa
Starmer says time for Ukraine peacekeeping force planning is now
Prime minister Keir Starmer said he didn't know whether there would be a peace deal in the Russia-Ukraine war, but "we are making steps in the right direction" as a "coalition of the willing" led by Britain and France moves into an "operational phase."
"We hope there will be a deal but what I do know is if there is a deal, the time for planning is now," he said during a visit to the meeting of military planners at a British base in Northwood, just outside London. "It's not after a deal is reached."
"It is vitally important we do that work, because we know one thing for certain which is a deal without anything behind it is something that (Russian president Vladimir) Putin will breach," he said.
His remarks come as senior military officers from more than 30 countries across Europe and beyond met in England yesterday to flesh out plans for an international peacekeeping force for Ukraine as details of a partial ceasefire are worked out.
Prime minister Sir Keir Starmer and defence secretary John Healey (PA Wire)
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