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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Nato ‘waiting for Trump’ over key decision as Putin’s planes ‘stole children’

At least 314 Ukrainian children taken to Russia in early months of war, report says

Arpan Rai,Jabed Ahmed
Wednesday 04 December 2024 10:36 GMT
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Related: Vladimir Putin hints at strikes on West

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Some Nato members are waiting for Donald Trump to enter the White House before they make a decision on Ukraine joining the alliance, Latvian foreign minister Baiba Braze has said.

Kyiv has urged Nato foreign ministers to issue an invitation at a meeting in Brussels this week, but movement appears unlikely amid opposition from some capitals and the transition in Washington.

Mr Trump has said he will end Russia’s war with Ukraine in a day, but his team’s plans for Ukraine policy remain unclear.

"Everybody is waiting for the new US administration to start working," Ms Braze told Reuters. "That is one aspect that is said or unsaid - but it's a reality."

Meanwhile, a new report has found Russia took children away from occupied Ukrainian territories using Vladimir Putin’s presidential aircraft and funds.

At least 314 Ukrainian children were taken to Russia in the early months of the war in Ukraine in a Kremlin-funded programme, according to a report by Yale’s School of Public Health set to be presented to the UN security council today.

Mr Putin is already wanted on arrest warrants issued by the International Criminal Court for the alleged war crime of deportation of Ukrainian children

South Korean president calls off martial law following tense showdown

South Korean president Yoon Suk Yeol has announced he will undo his dramatic declaration of martial law just hours after his military clashed with protesters outside parliament.

The short-lived decree, which opposition figures described as a coup, shocked South Korea as the president vowed to eliminate “anti-state” actors he accused of sympathising with communist North Korea.

After the edict late on Tuesday night, the military surrounded the National Assembly in Seoul and clashed with protesters outraged at the declaration.

Follow live updates here:

South Korean president lifts martial law — live updates

Opposition says it will try to nullify shock move by embattled president Yoon Suk-yeol

Arpan Rai4 December 2024 05:05

Kremlin says latest US aid for Kyiv shows Biden administration wants to keep Ukraine war going

The Kremlin has said that a US decision to send another weapons package to Ukraine worth $725 million showed that the outgoing Biden administration was determined to throw oil on the fire of the war in Ukraine to ensure the conflict kept going.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the aid package would not change the situation on the frontline.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement on Monday that the new aid would include Stinger missiles, ammunition for High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS), and drones and land mines.

Asked about the aid package, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters: “The current administration is pursuing its goals, its consistent line is to keep this war from slowing down.

“The (Biden) administration is doing everything it can to further add fuel to the fire. At the same time, this and other aid packages cannot change the course of events, cannot affect the dynamics on the frontlines.”

Jabed Ahmed4 December 2024 05:00

Could South Korea send troops to fight for Ukraine?

The alleged deployment of North Korean soldiers to aid Russia’s war effort in Ukraine has prompted South Korea to warn that it could send military monitors as well as weapons to Kyiv.

South Korean foreign minister Cho Tae Yul said earlier this week that all options were on the table, but experts noted that Seoul was more likely to send a variety of military support short of soldiers.

The alleged presence of around 12,000 North Korean troops in Russia, reportedly under a defence treaty that Russian president Vladimir Putin signed with Korean leader Kim Jong Un earlier this year, has set off alarm bells on the Korean peninsula.

Could South Korea send troops to fight for Ukraine?

Seoul says all options are on table

Arpan Rai4 December 2024 04:44

Russia says no grounds for negotiations on Ukraine yet

A top Russian official has said there are no grounds yet for negotiations on how to bring the war in Ukraine to an end.

“There are no grounds for negotiations yet,” the Kremlin’s spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told the Izvestia newspaper, reiterating Moscow’s long-standing position on the talks.

“Many countries have declared their readiness to provide their territory... And we are grateful to all countries for such goodwill, including Qatar.”

Qatar has mediated several returns of Ukrainian children taken to Russia from the conflict zone since the start of the war. Thousands of civilians, the vast majority of them Ukrainians, have been killed since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of the country in February 2022.

Valentina Matviyenko, speaker of the Federation Council, Russia’s upper house of parliament, said on Monday that there could be attempts to begin peace talks with Ukraine in 2025.

In late November, sources told Reuters that Russian president Vladimir Putin was open to discussing a ceasefire deal in Ukraine with Trump and could agree to freeze the conflict along the front line. Russian forces control about 20 per cent of Ukraine’s territory and have been advancing lately at the fastest pace since the early days of the war.

But the Kremlin has said repeatedly it will not negotiate with president Volodymyr Zelensky unless Ukraine renounces its ambition to join Nato and withdraws troops from territories now controlled by Russian troops.

Arpan Rai4 December 2024 04:30

Putin’s Kremlin planes took away Ukrainian children for adoption – report

Russian presidential aircraft and funds were used in a program that took children from occupied Ukrainian territories, stripped them of Ukrainian identity and placed them with Russian families, according to a report by Yale’s School of Public Health.

The US State Department-backed research, published yesterday, identified 314 Ukrainian children taken to Russia in the early months of the war in Ukraine as part of what it says was a systematic, Kremlin-funded program to “Russify” them.

In March 2023, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Russian president Vladimir Putin and his child rights’ commissioner, Maria Lvova-Belova, for the alleged war crime of deportation of Ukrainian children.

The new research, reported first by Reuters, offers details of the alleged deportation programme and individuals involved, including what its lead researcher said were new links to Putin.

The researcher, Nathaniel Raymond, executive director of Yale’s Humanitarian Research Lab, said he was scheduled to present the findings to the UN security council today. The US holds the rotating presidency of the 15-member body this month.

Mr Raymond said the research offers evidence that would support additional charges by the ICC against Putin of “forcible transfer” of people from one national and ethnic group to another.

He further said the report proved “the deportation of Ukraine‘s children is part of a systematic, Kremlin-led program” to make them citizens of Russia.

Forcible transfer is a crime against humanity under international law. Because they must be widespread and systematic, crimes against humanity are considered more serious than war crimes.

Arpan Rai4 December 2024 03:29

Russian defence units trying to repel drone attack on Novorossiisk, city head says

Russia’s air defence units were trying to repel a Ukrainian drone attack on Novorossiisk, the head of the Russian Black Sea port said this morning.

Novorossiisk is one of Russia’s most important oil export gateways.

“Air defence is operating in Novorossiisk,” Andrei Kravchenko, the head of the Novorossiisk municipality, said on his Telegram messaging channel. “All emergency services have been put on combat alert.”

Arpan Rai4 December 2024 03:24

Zelensky calls for reinforcement of eastern front against Russian advances

Volodymyr Zelensky called for major reinforcement of sectors in eastern Ukraine of the 1,000-km (600-mile) frontline, where Russian forces have made consistent gains in recent months.

Analysts and war bloggers say that Russian forces in the east are advancing at the fastest rate since the early days of the February 2022 invasion.

Mr Zelensky issued his appeal as Russia’s defence ministry said its troops had captured two new frontline villages – one in Donetsk region, the main focus of the 33-month-old war, the other further south in Zaporizhzhia region.

The president was speaking in his nightly video address after a discussion with Ukraine‘s top commander, Oleksandr Syrskyi. He said much depended on Ukraine‘s Western allies providing vital weaponry in a timely manner.

“The Donetsk directions require significant reinforcement. This particularly involves the supply of weapons from our partners,” Mr Zelensky said.

“It’s a direct relationship: The greater our army’s firepower and technological capabilities, the more we can destroy Russia’s offensive potential and protect the lives of our soldiers.”

The key, he said, was to boost Ukraine‘s long-range capabilities, partly by boosting domestic weapons production.

The United States, the biggest supplier of military aid to Ukraine, announced its latest military aid package on Monday, valued at some $725m. But Ukraine is concerned about the continued flow of weapons under president-elect Donald Trump, who has pledged to put a quick end to the war.

Arpan Rai4 December 2024 03:03

Putin would not accept any part of Ukraine being in Nato, analyst suggests

James Nixey of the Chatham House think-tank has warned that any part of Ukraine being in Nato would be unacceptable to Vladimir Putin, after Volodymyr Zelensky said he could accept territory being temporarily ceded to Russia in exchange for security assurances from the alliance.

“After all, [Nato] is, for him, an abhorrence. Putin doesn’t want a pause anyway – he believes he’s on the brink of an historic and strategic victory, kindly deal-sealed by Donald Trump,” Mr Nixey told The Independent.

Jabed Ahmed4 December 2024 03:00

Russia and Belarus to sign landmark security pact, Russian news agency says

Vladimir Putin and his Belarusian counterpart, Alexander Lukashenko, will sign a landmark security pact on Friday that reflects global geopolitical changes, Russian state news agency RIA has said.

The agreement will be among the documents the leaders are set to sign in Minsk, the capital of Belarus, on the 25th anniversary of the Union State, a borderless union and alliance between the two former Soviet republics and neighbours.

“We are covering the topics of state, public, economic security, talking about ensuring stability in the development of our economies,” the agency quoted Belarusian Deputy Foreign Minister Igor Nazaruk as saying.

“It is designed to take into account the changed external conditions, when the world is moving to a polycentric world order,” he added, describing what he called a “landmark” agreement.

As president, Lukashenko has kept Belarus in a firm authoritative grip for the past three decades, and been a loyal ally of Putin, allowing his territory to be used as a launch pad for Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Jabed Ahmed4 December 2024 02:01

Nato’s chief avoids talk of Ukraine’s membership. He says the priority is helping Kyiv defend itself

NATO's chief avoids talk of Ukraine's membership. He says the priority is helping Kyiv defend itself

NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte has sidestepped questions about Ukraine’s possible membership in the military alliance

Jabed Ahmed4 December 2024 01:00

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