Russia targets Ukraine’s railway operations in overnight strikes

Russian attacks overnight have targeted railway infrastructure, including a strike on an electrical substation which disrupted operations, Ukrainian state rail operator Ukrzaliznytsia said.

At least 46 trains were experiencing delays this morning and passenger services were disrupted on routes to Odesa and Dnipro.

Oleksii Kuleba, the deputy prime minister said: “The enemy tried to disable substations that power the railway network with a massive drone attack this night.”

“Such strikes have a clear goal — to complicate the transportation of passengers and cargo, disrupt the stable operation of transport, and create additional pressure on people and the economy,” he siad.

Arpan Rai17 September 2025 09:55

Russian attacks kill three and injure more than 50 in Ukraine over the past day

At least three people were killed and 54 were injured in Russian attacks across Ukraine over the past day, officials said this morning.

The casualties were reported from the Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk and Kherson regions, which are facing the brunt of Russia’s onslaught.

Regional governor Ivan Fedorov confirmed one person was killed and 23 were wounded in Zaporizhzhia – including four children.

Another nine people were injured in Donetsk’s Kostiantynivka, regional governor Vadym Filashkin said.

At least one person was killed and 15 others were injured in Kherson as Russia rained drones and missiles on residential areas over the past day, regional governor Oleksandr Prokudin said, adding that the aerial assault targeted nine apartment buildings and 17 houses.

Firefighters work at the site of a building of a pharmaceutical university hit by a Russian drone strike in Kharkiv

Firefighters work at the site of a building of a pharmaceutical university hit by a Russian drone strike in Kharkiv (Reuters)

Arpan Rai17 September 2025 09:53

Canada’s Chrystia Freeland appointed Ukraine envoy after resignation from cabinet

Canadian minister Chrystia Freeland has said she will step down from prime minister Mark Carney’s cabinet to take up her new role as Canada’s special envoy to Ukraine.

Freeland, who is of Ukrainian heritage, has been a staunch supporter of Ukraine in its war against Russia.

“I have decided to step down from cabinet today and turn the page on this chapter in my life. I do not intend to run in the next election,” she said.

She recounted the Carney cabinet’s work to support Ukraine, and said: “We stood with Ukraine against dictatorship.”

In a statement, Carney thanked Freeland “for her extraordinary service in the Cabinet of Canada’s federal government over the last decade”.

He said that he has asked her to serve as Canada’s new Special Representative for the Reconstruction of Ukraine, in addition to her role as a Liberal MP.

Arpan Rai17 September 2025 09:49

Russian drone incursions part of long trend of sabotage, says German chancellor

Russia’s violation of Polish and Romanian airspace is part of a long-running trend of boundary-testing and sabotage by Vladimir Putin, said German chancellor Friedrich Merz.

“Russia wants to insidiously destabilise our free societies,” Merz told the Bundestag lower house of parliament today.

The German chancellor also warned that a peace deal in the Ukraine war cannot come at the expense of Kyiv’s political sovereignty and territorial integrity.

“A dictated peace, a peace without freedom, would encourage Putin to seek his next target,” added Merz.

Arpan Rai17 September 2025 09:00

EU’s new sanctions will hit Russia’s crypto banks, says von der Leyen

New sanctions proposed by the EU Commission will target Russia’s crypto assets along with its banking and energy sectors, president Ursula von der Leyen said.

The top EU official announced the move after a call with US president Donald Trump.

“I had a good call with @POTUS on strengthening our joint efforts to increase economic pressure on Russia through additional measures. The Commission will soon present its 19th package of sanctions, targeting crypto, banks, and energy,” von der Leyen said on X.

“Russia’s war economy, sustained by revenues from fossil fuels, is financing the bloodshed in Ukraine. To put an end to it, the Commission will propose speeding up the phase-out of Russian fossil imports,” she said.

Arpan Rai17 September 2025 08:43

Russia preparing two more heavy offensive campaigns, warns Zelensky

Russian forces are preparing to launch two more large-scale offensives on Ukraine after three failed campaigns this year, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky has warned.

“They are preparing for two more offensive operations in the fall,” Zelensky told Sky News.

He added: “There were already three of them, and ahead… there are two more heavy offensive campaigns.”

Just over the past two weeks, Zelensky said Russia has launched more than 3,500 drones, more than 2,500 powerful glide bombs and almost 200 missiles at targets inside Ukraine.

Volodymyr Zelensky speaks during an interview in Kyiv

Volodymyr Zelensky speaks during an interview in Kyiv (Sky News)

Arpan Rai17 September 2025 08:22

Poland kickstarts ‘Iron Defender’ military exercise

Poland has kickstarted its military exercise Iron Defender-25, just days after Russia violated its airspace with a drone incursion.

Deputy polish defence minister Cezary Tomczyk said Poland had been preparing for many months and was holding its own exercises.

More than 30,000 troops from Poland and allied nations will take part in drills across Orzysz, Ustka, Nowa Dęba, the Baltic Sea, airspace, and cyberspace.

Of these, about 5,000 troops will be on the border with Belarus, Tomczyk said in response to Reuters’ questions.

Lithuania has also said it is protecting its border because of the military exercise.

On 10 September, about 20 Russian drones flew into Poland’s airspace.

While Moscow denied targeting Poland and officials in Belarus alleged that the drones veered off course after being jammed by Ukraine, Polish prime minister Donald Tusk said it was a “provocation” that “brings us all closer to open conflict, closer than ever since the Second World War”.

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk, deputy prime minister and defence minister Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz and general commander of the Polish Armed Forces Marek Sokolowski attend the Iron Defender 2025 exercises at the training ground in Ustka

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk, deputy prime minister and defence minister Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz and general commander of the Polish Armed Forces Marek Sokolowski attend the Iron Defender 2025 exercises at the training ground in Ustka (Reuters)

Arpan Rai17 September 2025 07:58

Trump approves first Ukraine arms aid paid for by allies

The Trump administration has approved the first US weapons package for Ukraine funded by Nato countries, two sources aware of the situation told Reuters.

The sources declined to give an exact inventory of what has been approved for purchase by the Europeans for Ukraine, but said it included air defence systems, which Ukraine needs urgently given the huge increase in Russian drone and missile attacks.

They said the tranche of weapons could be shipped soon.

One of the sources said NATO’s new Prioritised Ukraine Requirements List was making its way through the process after clearing the Pentagon’s policy unit, reported Reuters.

“It’s the stuff they’ve been asking for. A lot of stuff,” said the source. “It’s the flow that’s allowed them to stabilise the lines thus far.”

This is the first time US is supplying Ukraine with a new method under Donald Trump with weapons from US stocks using funds from Nato countries.

So far, the Trump administration has only sold weapons to Ukraine or shipped donations which were authorised by former president Joe Biden who was ready to aid Kyiv with its battlefield requirements.

US president Donald Trump speaks to members of the press aboard Air Force One during the flight to the United Kingdom

US president Donald Trump speaks to members of the press aboard Air Force One during the flight to the United Kingdom (AFP/Getty)

Arpan Rai17 September 2025 07:45

What’s at stake as Starmer babysits Trump through state visit

Donald Trump has adopted Vladimir Putin’s arguments on Ukraine; and has (like Putin) threatened the sovereignty of his neighbours and allies.

On top of that, his administration has openly supported anti-democratic movements on Europe’s far right – notably in Germany, France, and Romania.

Trump has jeopardised the cornerstone alliances of Nato and the Five Eyes intelligence relationship that bind the West together as militaries and that links the Anglosphere into a web of trust.

His apparent devotion to Putin has further entrenched the belief among the intelligence communities of America’s allies that the US president is a liability.

He is a liability. He has been successfully manipulated by Russia and Putin for years.

So now it’s Britain’s turn, and as head of state, the star turn in Trump-charming is the King himself. He, no doubt, will play his part, writes Sam Kiley:

Arpan Rai17 September 2025 07:10

Fire at Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant extinguished – report

A fire that broke at the fuel storage facility of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant after a Ukrainian attack has been put out, a Russian representative of the plant said.

This comes a day after the International Atomic Energy Agency said its team at the plant heard shelling close to the site and observed black smoke rising from three nearby locations.

Russian forces seized the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, Europe’s largest with six reactors, in the first weeks after Moscow’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine.

Each side routinely accuses the other of undertaking actions that endanger nuclear safety at the plant.

Incidents of shelling occur frequently. The plant’s reactors are shut down, but the nuclear fuel inside them still needs to be cooled.

Ukraine has yet to comment on the fire overnight and the source of the shelling has not been confirmed.

Arpan Rai17 September 2025 06:45