May 19, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news

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'A homegrown defense': How Ukrainian volunteers beat back Russian progression
03:57 - Source: CNN

What we covered

  • Russia’s defense ministry said more than 1,700 Ukrainian soldiers have surrendered at the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol since May 16. Several hundred more are reportedly still inside. 
  • A Ukrainian military official said the evacuation of the plant continues, and he believes Russia will uphold its word to treat soldiers according to international law. The Red Cross said it has registered hundreds of Ukrainian prisoners of war who have left the plant.
  • The town of Bakhmut in the Donetsk region, an important hub for the Ukrainian military, is coming under increasing attack from Russia, according to Ukrainian officials.
  • A Russian soldier accused of killing an unarmed man in Ukraine pleaded guilty to war crimes at a trial in Kyiv — the first such trial since the invasion began — and told the man’s widow he was “sorry” for killing her husband.
  • A failure to open closed ports in Ukraine to ship grain out will bring millions of people to the brink of starvation, according to the World Food Programme.
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Kharkiv resident returns home and reunites with father months after fleeing shelling

Anastasia Paraskevova

Anastasia Paraskevova recently returned to her home in Kharkiv for the first time since fleeing the city two months ago due to the war.

Paraskevova, who returned with her mother, said she was nervous about going back. Kharkiv, close to the Russian border in northeastern Ukraine, was one of the first cities to come under attack when Russia invaded in February.

It had been subjected to near-constant shelling until Russian forces began retreated in the region.

Paraskevova said overall the experience was good. “The city was much more alive. People were walking the streets. And some shops were working. It felt like some life was back, much better than it was when I was here in March.”

Paraskevova’s father had left with the family but returned to Kharkiv before them. Video shows the family reuniting, with hugs and relieved smiles.

Although her home was spared from the shelling, Paraskevova said seeing her apartment for the first time was not the “feel-good moment” she expected.

Russian forces blocking more than 1,000 cars from evacuating to Zaporizhzhia, regional administration says

More than 1,000 cars carrying Ukrainians have been prevented from crossing into Ukrainian-held territory in Zaporizhzhia, according to the regional military administration there.

The administration said on Friday that cars full of people trying to evacuate were stuck at a Russian checkpoint in the city of Vasylivka.

Several cars managed to break through to the city of Zaporizhzhia, in southeastern Ukraine, on Thursday.

“Business owners of Berdyansk are forced to buy goods from Crimea, and it is necessary to sign up for an escort convoy. Such registration helps local collaborators to collect information about who returns with the goods and from whom you can later collect ‘tribute’,” the regional administration said.

A video posted to Telegram by the Ukrainian government’s Center for Strategic Communications and Information Security shows a long line of cars on the side of a road.

"Many dead" following missile strike in a village in the Chernihiv region, Zelensky says in nightly address

A uniformed soldier stands near a crater in the middle of a courtyard in Desna, Chernihiv, on Tuesday, May 17.

In the Chernihiv region north of Kyiv, the village of Desna was hit with Russian missiles Thursday left many dead, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his nightly address on Thursday. Desna is 40 forty miles from the border with Belarus.  

There are “constant strikes on the Odesa region, on the cities of central Ukraine, the Donbas is completely destroyed — all this has no and cannot have any military explanation for Russia,” he continued.  

“This is a deliberate and criminal attempt to kill as many Ukrainians as possible,” he said. 

The Armed Forces of Ukraine continue to advance in the liberation of the Kharkiv region, Zelensky said. 

“In the Donbas, the occupiers are trying to increase pressure. There’s hell, and that’s no exaggeration. The brutal and absolutely senseless bombing of Severodonetsk … There were 12 dead and dozens wounded in just one day,” he continued. 

“The bombing and shelling of other cities, the air and missile strikes of the Russian army — all this is not just fighting during the war.” 

“This is a deliberate and criminal attempt to kill as many Ukrainians as possible. Destroy as many houses, social facilities and enterprises as possible. This is what will qualify the genocide of the Ukrainian people and for which the occupiers will definitely be brought to justice,” he added. 

 “The first trial in Ukraine against a Russian war criminal has already begun. And it will end with the full restoration of justice within the international tribunal. I’m sure of it. We will find and bring to justice all those who give and carry out criminal orders,” he concluded. 

The US Ukraine aid bill will be flown to Korea where Biden will sign it into law 

US President Joe Biden will sign the $40 billion aid package to Ukraine while he is in South Korea, an official says.

The bill has to be flown to Korea for the President’s signature.

Biden embarked on his trip to Seoul, South Korea on Thursday afternoon.

Ukraine's top military commander shares upbeat assessment about course of conflict with Russia

Ukraine’s most senior military figure has met with his NATO counterparts and given an upbeat assessment of the conflict.

“Today, we are not just defending ourselves. We have conducted a series of successful counter-attacks,” General Valeriy Zaluzhny, commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian General Staff, said he had told the NATO Military Committee.

Ukrainian forces had unblocked sieges of Kharkiv and Mykolaiv, and were fighting in the Kherson direction, he said.

Zaluzhny said he had stressed that Ukrainians are paying an extremely high price for freedom and European choice, and Europe is experiencing the greatest security crisis since the Second World War. 

Ever since 2014, “we were aware that the full-scale aggression would eventually begin, and we were getting ready for it,” he added.

Ukraine’s military had “acknowledged that the first month would be the turning point. We managed to take away the enemy’s strategic initiative, cause critical losses, and force them to abandon the main objective — the capture of the city of Kyiv,” he continued.

However, despite Ukrainian successes, he said, “the Russians are maintaining missile fire of high intensity, on average 10-14 ballistic and cruise missiles per day. This is a threat not only to Ukraine, but also to NATO member states,” and it was crucial to strengthen missile defenses.

US Defense chief thanks Spain for supporting Ukraine following a bilateral meeting

Lloyd Austin, US Secretary of State, speaks during a meeting with Spanish Defense Minister Margarita Robles at the Pentagon on Thursday.

US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin thanked Spain for supporting Ukraine as Russia’s invasion of the country continues, noting their “important military contributions to deterrence along NATO’s eastern flank” and “direct security assistance and humanitarian assistance to Ukraine,” during opening remarks ahead of a bilateral meeting with Spanish Defense Minister Margarita Robles at the Pentagon on Thursday.

Austin also said he is looking forward to the NATO summit Spain is hosting in Madrid next month. The summit will be a “turning point for the alliance” as NATO leaders “endorse a new strategic concept, one that must look both east and south,” Austin said.

Robles spoke first in English and then in Spanish. She thanked Austin for hosting her at the Pentagon, calling it “the best expression of our close relationship between United States and Spain.” 

In Spanish, Robles said that Putin’s attack on Ukraine is not only an attack on Ukraine itself, but an attack on the entire democratic community and democratic values. 

Biden administration announces $100 million security package for Ukraine

The Biden administration announced another $100 million security package for Ukraine Thursday as the President is set to sign a bill authorizing billions more in assistance. 

The additional security assistance that will “provide additional artillery, radars, and other equipment to Ukraine, which they are already using so effectively on the battlefield,” Biden said in a statement. “These weapons and equipment will go directly to the front lines of freedom in Ukraine, and reiterate our strong support for the brave people of Ukraine as they defend their country against Russia’s ongoing aggression.”

Secretary of State Antony Blinken also released a statement.

“I am authorizing our tenth drawdown of additional arms and equipment for Ukraine’s defense from US Department of Defense inventories, valued at up to $100 million,” he said in a statement.

The latest package brings the total US military assistance to Ukraine to approximately $3.9 billion in arms and equipment since the beginning of the Russian invasion. 

“The United States, as well as more than 40 Allies and partner countries, are working around the clock to expedite shipments of arms and equipment essential to Ukraine’s defense,” Blinken said. 

It comes as the White House warned any further delay in authorizing additional funding to Ukraine could lead to interruptions in the shipments of weapons and equipment. 

The Biden administration has made it a top priority to get shipments into Ukraine as quickly as possible, cutting down the approval and delivery process from weeks to days. But officials had warned that money was running out from the last supplemental funding package and that Congress had to act quickly to keep the critical weapons shipments flowing.

The announcement of the latest security package comes as Biden is set to sign a new $40 billion aid bill into law. It includes $11 billion in presidential drawdown authority in which the US pulls directly from American inventories to send weapons to Ukraine, as well as another $6 billion for the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative, where the Pentagon contracts with weapons manufacturers for Ukraine.

Ukrainian foreign minister discusses ways to "unblock" its food exports with UK counterpart 

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba speaks to the press in Brussels, on May 16.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said he discussed ways to “unblock” Ukrainian food exports with his UK counterpart, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss.

In a tweet Thursday, Kuleba said he spoke with Truss about “ways to hold Russia accountable for its aggression and unblock Ukraine’s food exports.”

“Russia bears full responsibility not only for killing, torturing, and raping Ukrainians, but also for starving people across the world, including in Africa,” Kuleba continued. 

The blockade on Ukrainian exports was also discussed by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson during a call Thursday. 

In a tweet, Zelensky said the two leaders had discussed “ways to export agricultural products from Ukraine and import fuel to Ukraine.”

Earlier on Thursday, World Food Programme (WFP) chief David Beasley said the failure to open ports in Ukraine would “be a declaration of war on global food security, resulting in famine destabilization of nations, as well as mass migration by necessity.” 

Beasley called it “absolutely essential” that ports are allowed open, stressing “this is not just about Ukraine” but also “about the poorest of the poor around the world who are on the brink of starvation as we speak.” 

Ukraine's traditional shirt takes center stage on Vyshyvanka Day, as messages of solidarity pour in

Volunteers wearing vyshyvankas invite people to embroider Ukrainian attire during celebration of the Vyshyvanka Day in Odesa, Ukraine, on May 19.

Ukraine’s traditional white embroidered shirt, called a vyshyvanka, is a symbol of solidarity with Ukraine and Ukrainian culture — even more so since Russia invaded the country on Feb. 24. 

On Vyshyvanka Day this year, the Ukrainian traditional shirt has taken center stage online once again, as messages and pictures of solidarity are pouring in, from humans and animals alike. 

“Today, on #VyshyvankaDay, I join Ukrainians around the world in their tradition to wear a #vyshyvanka. Ukrainians’ fight for freedom is our fight too,” said European Parliament President Roberta Metsola on her official Twitter feed as well. 

UNICEF Ukraine, along with a picture showing two Ukrainian newborn twins, also marked the day, writing “Happy #VyshyvankaDay from these two cuties born in #Kharkiv 💙#ForEveryChild, a peaceful and healthy life.”

Professional boxer Wladimir Klitschko and his brother, Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko, posed on social media wearing their vyshyvankas.

“Happy Vyshyvanka Day, friends!” said Wladimir. “Today an embroidered shirt is one of the symbols of our people heroic fight for freedom. It’s also an element of recognition of the Ukrainians in the world. I’m always proud to be Ukrainian! And especially today. Glory to Ukraine! Glory to its heroes!”

The Ukrainian Emergency Services featured a picture of one of its most dedicated staffers, the dog Patron, wearing a vyshyvanka too. 

“Maintaining traditions, today our Patron changed his ‘armor’ to an embroidered shirt! Looks cool, what do you think?” the service said on its official Twitter account Thursday.

US Senate overwhelmingly approves $40 billion in aid to Ukraine 

Members speak on the Senate floor on May 19, in Washington, DC. 

The United States Senate just approved a roughly $40 billion package to send emergency aid to Ukraine by a wide bipartisan majority.

The final vote was 86-11. The bill will now go to President Biden for his signature. 

All Democrats supported the legislation. Eleven Republican senators voted against it: Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, John Boozman of Arkansas, Mike Braun of Indiana, Mike Crapo of Idaho, Bill Hagerty of Tennessee, Josh Hawley of Missouri, Mike Lee of Utah, Cynthia Lummis of Wyoming, Roger Marshall of Kansas, Rand Paul of Kentucky and Tommy Tuberville of Alabama.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky welcomed the US Senate’s passage of further economic assistance, tweeting that it is “significant.”

Prior to the vote, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said that the Senate “will keep its promise to stand with the people of Ukraine.” He added that the $40 billion in military, economic and humanitarian aid is “large” and “it will meet the large needs of the Ukrainian people as they fight for their survival.”

Schumer noted that given how important it is to back Ukraine in its fight against Russia, “I wish I could say this vote will be totally unanimous.” Every Democrat in the House supported the emergency aid package, and all Democrats in the Senate are expected to as well.

He added: “Around the world, our enemies are watching what we do right now. What do you think they’re going to conclude if they start seeing more and more US senators oppose aid to democracies under attack by authoritarianism? Our adversaries might conclude that we’re divided America is divided; they might conclude that we lack purpose.”

Read more:

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy welcomes Senator John Cornyn (R-TX), U.S. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), Senator Susan Collins (R-ME) and Senator John Barrasso (R-WY) before a meeting, as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues, in Kyiv, Ukraine May 14, 2022.  Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Handout via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. MANDATORY CREDIT

Related article Senate to vote on $40 billion Ukraine aid package

Top US general speaks with Russian counterpart for first time since Russian invasion of Ukraine started

Gen. Mark Milley attends a hearing on May 11, in Washington, DC. 

Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley spoke with his Russian counterpart, General Staff Gen. Valery Gerasimov, by phone on Thursday, a readout of the conversation from Joint Staff spokesperson Col. Dave Butler said.

This is the first conversation between the two leaders since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began on Feb. 24.

“The military leaders discussed several security-related issues of concern and agreed to keep the lines of communication open,” the readout of the conversation said.

Milley’s conversation with Gerasimov comes six days after US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin spoke with his Russian counterpart, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, for the first time since the Russian invasion of Ukraine began.

The conversation between Austin and Shoigu lasted approximately an hour. Austin used the call to urge Shoigu to implement an “immediate ceasefire” in Ukraine, according to a brief readout of the call. The last time the two had spoken was Feb. 18, before Russia began their invasion of Ukraine.

A Ukrainian commander still inside the Azovstal plant vows that the "fight continues"

The Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, Ukraine, on May 15.

While hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers have left the Azovstal plant this week, there are likely still hundreds inside the besieged complex on the edge of Mariupol — and they appear to include some senior commanders.

One of them is Maj. Bohdan Krotevych, chief of staff of the Azov Regiment. Over the past few days, he has posted on his social media accounts frequently, talking about military tactics and the fight ahead for Ukraine, but not about what might happen to him.

In a post Wednesday, he suggested that he would not be surrendering, saying that “the fight continues.”

Russia’s defense ministry said over 1,700 Ukrainian soldiers have surrendered at the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol since May 16. Meanwhile, a Ukrainian military official said the evacuation of the plant continues, and he believes Russia will uphold its word to treat soldiers according to international law. The International Committee of the Red Cross said it has registered hundreds of Ukrainian prisoners of war who have left the plant.

Krotevych said that “Russia, like the United States, was accustomed to fighting against much weaker countries, and every problem was solved by massive artillery shelling or air raids. We are weaker in military potential, but the self-confidence of the enemy is our trump card.”

Another one of the Azov Regiment officers still in the steel plant issued a short video statement Thursday evening.

Sviatoslav Palamar, Azov’s deputy commander, said: “My command and I are on the territory of the Azovstal plant. An operation is underway. I will not give any details. I’m grateful to the whole world and to Ukraine for support. I will be seeing you!”

Palamar provided no further indication of what the operation might be.

Some Russian politicians have proposed that Azov commanders be tried as war criminals if they are detained. Russian state media frequently refers to them as “neo-Nazis” and militant nationalists.

Kostan Nechyporenko contributed reporting to this post.

Here's what you need to know about the meeting between the US, Sweden and Finland

Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson, US President Joe Biden and Finnish President Sauli Niinistö depart the Rose Garden of the White House after speaking on May 19.

On Thursday, leaders of Sweden and Finland met with US President Joe Biden at the White House after they submitted their NATO membership applications on Wednesday.

Here’s what you need to know about what the leaders said at the press conference in the Rose Garden after their meeting in the Cabinet Room.

Biden offers “strong support” for Finland and Sweden’s NATO bids

“Finnish and Swedish troops, they have already served shoulder to shoulder with US and NATO forces in Kosovo, in Afghanistan and in Iraq. And both Finland and Sweden are already working in coordination with the United States and our other allies and partners to support the brave people of Ukraine,” Biden said, adding that the countries already meet all of NATO requirements, “and then some.

The Biden administration will submit reports to the US Congress on this NATO accession for both countries

This is “so the Senate can efficiently and quickly move on advising and consenting to the treaty,” Biden announced Thursday. Within the US, at least two-third of the Senate must vote to approve new member states in the defensive alliance. Similarly, the legislatures of all 30 current members must approve new NATO applicants.

Leaders of Finland and Sweden expressed their hopes for a quick ratification

“Russia’s war in Ukraine has changed Europe and our security environment. Finland takes the step of NATO membership in order to strengthen not only its own security, but also in order to strengthen wider transatlantic security,” Finnish President Sauli Niinistö said.

Finland shares an 800-mile-long border with Russia.

Sweden’s government “has come to the conclusion that the security of the Swedish people will be best protected within the NATO alliance, and this is backed by very broad support in the Swedish parliament,” Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson said.

Turkey was also mentioned by every leader

As Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan reiterated earlier on Thursday that his country “will say no to Sweden’s and Finland’s entry into NATO.”

In explanation he has cited national security concerns. Earlier this week, Erdogan accused both countries of housing Kurdish “terrorist organizations.”

He was mainly referencing the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) which seeks an independent state in Turkey. The group has been in an armed struggle with Ankara for decades and has been designated a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.

12 civilians killed in Luhansk region as Russian bombardment intensifies, military administration says

Twelve civilians have been killed and more than 40 wounded in a day of heavy shelling by Russian forces, the military administration in the Luhansk region said.

Luhansk administration head Serhiy Haidai said all the casualties occurred in the city of Severodonetsk.

Haidai described the shelling as chaotic, adding that “mostly the Russians targeted hits on residential buildings.”

He said the number of casualties was not final, “as it is impossible to inspect the area under fire.”

The US is not planning to send military security to Kyiv embassy, senior defense official says

Employees raise a flag outside the US embassy in Kyiv, Ukraine, on May 18, as the embassy reopens after being closed for three months due to the Russian invasion.

The US military is not currently planning to send any troops to the US embassy in Kyiv that reopened on Wednesday, according to a senior US defense official, though that doesn’t mean US troops won’t be deployed there in the future.

The defense officials told reporters that the Pentagon would defer to the State Department on embassy security needs, noting that moving US troops to the US embassy in Ukraine has not been ruled out in the future.

“Right now, there’s no US military security component to their embassy security needs. But that is not to say that that couldn’t change over time,” the official said.

US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has not yet made a decision one way or the other about whether the US military should be at the embassy, which had closed ahead of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February, the official added. 

“There has not been a specific decision by the secretary one way or the other on this,” the official said. “And he certainly has not expressed an opinion that he does not or never will want to provide any military assistance should it be needed by the State Department.”

Former German chancellor loses office over Russia ties 

Former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröeder speaks during an interview in Berlin, Germany, on September 14.

Former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, who has come under fire for not severing his Russian business ties following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, will have to give up his office at the German Parliament (Bundestag), a parliamentary budget committee ruled Thursday.   

Germany’s governing coalition — led by the Social Democrat Party (SPD) of which Schröder is still a member of and the party he once led — decided to cut back Schröder’s special rights as a former chancellor, following his ongoing business ties to Russia, a statement posted on the website of the Bundestag said. The former chancellor will however still continue to receive a pension and personal protection, the statement added.  

Schröder, 78, led Germany as chancellor from 1998 until 2005 and is known for his long time personal relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin.  

Schröder also faced calls from the European Parliament on Thursday to be sanctioned due to his ongoing business and political links to Russia. A resolution by the EU Parliament said that EU sanctions following the invasion of Ukraine should be extended “to the European members of the boards of major Russian companies and to politicians who continue to receive Russian money.”  

The resolution named former Austrian chancellor Wolfgang Schüssel and former French prime minister François Fillon as two examples who recently resigned from their positions in Russian companies — and ”strongly demands that others, such as Karin Kneissl (a former Austrian foreign minister) and Gerhard Schröder, do the same.”  

Schröder currently holds leading positions with Russian energy companies Nord Stream 1 and 2 and the oil company Rosneft, where he is chairman of the supervisory board. Schröder is also slated to take on a supervisory board post for Kremlin-controlled Gazprom.   

In March, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz asked Schröder to resign from his multiple positions at Russian state-owned companies, saying that Schröder’s Russia connections are in the public interest. Politicians across Germany rebuked the former chancellor for months for not cutting business ties with Russia. In early March, Schröder’s own team at the Bundestag resigned in protest having failed to persuade him to severe his business links to Russia.  

"Swedish people will be best protected within the NATO alliance," prime minister says

Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson speaks at the White House on May 19.

Russia’s “full-scale aggression” against Ukraine led to the “watershed moment” for Sweden to decide to apply for a NATO membership, Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson said Thursday at the Rose Garden.

“My government has come to the conclusion that the security of the Swedish people will be best protected within the NATO alliance, and this is backed by very broad support in the Swedish parliament,” she said as she stood with US President Joe Biden and Finnish President Sauli Niinistö.

She emphasized that NATO will also be stronger with Sweden and Finland as members.

“We are security providers with sophisticated defense capabilities. And we are champions of freedom, democracy, and human rights. We have a long tradition of extensive military cooperation with NATO, including all missions. And we are right now ramping up our defense spending and we will reach 2% of GDP as soon as practically possible,” she added.

Andersson called US support for Sweden’s NATO membership of “fundamental importance,” but said she’s looking forward to a dialogue with Turkey to address its concerns.

Sweden looks forward to “a swift ratification process,” she added, saying it is “prepared to shoulder its responsibility as an ally in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.”

Finnish president vows to be "strong NATO ally" and condemns terrorism after Turkey outlines concerns

Finnish President Sauli Niinistö speaks in the Rose Garden on May 19, in Washington, DC.

In remarks at the White House, Finnish President Sauli Niinistö said that “Finland will become a strong NATO ally” after meeting with US President Joe Biden along with Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson.

He said he hoped there would be “swift ratification” of Finland’s NATO application.

Niinistö also addressed Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan saying he will refuse both Finland and Sweden’s entry into NATO.

Earlier this week, Erdogan accused both countries of housing Kurdish “terrorist organizations.” He was mainly referencing the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which seeks an independent state in Turkey. The group has been in an armed struggle with Ankara for decades and has been designated a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.

The legislatures of all 30 current NATO members must approve new applicants.

Niinistö also spoke about how Russia’s invasion of Ukraine prompted his country to seek NATO membership.

“[On] 24th February, I said that that the masks have fallen and we see only the cold faces of war. Russia’s war in Ukraine has changed Europe and our security environment. Finland takes the step of NATO membership in order to strengthen not only its own security, but also in order to strengthen wider transatlantic security. This is not away from anybody. Like you, Mr. President [Biden] said, NATO is protective, defensive, not a threat to anybody,” he said.

Finland shares an 800-mile-long border with Russia.

Biden says his administration is submitting reports to Congress on NATO accession for Sweden and Finland

US President Joe Biden speaks alongside Finnish President Sauli Niinistö and Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson on May 19, in Washington, DC.

After US President Joe Biden announced the United States’ full support for Sweden and Finland’s applications for NATO membership, he said his administration will submit reports to the US Congress on this NATO accession for both countries.

“Today, my administration is submitting to the United States Congress reports on NATO accession for both countries so the Senate can efficiently and quickly move on advising and consenting to the treaty,” he said Thursday at the Rose Garden.

He urged Senate leadership to move this approval “as quickly as possible, once perspective of all allies are addressed and NATO adopts the accession protocol.”

Remember: Within the US, at least two-third of the Senate must vote to approve new member states in the defensive alliance. Similarly, the legislatures of all 30 current members must approve new NATO applicants.

Biden offers "strong support" for Finland and Sweden's NATO bids after meeting with leaders at White House

US President Joe Biden delivers remarks in the Rose Garden of the White House on May 19.

US President Joe Biden expressed support for the NATO bids of Sweden and Finland, calling it “a momentous day” after meeting with the countries’ leaders at the White House.

“Today I am proud to welcome and offer the strong support of the United States for the applications of two great democracies and two close, highly capable partners, to join the strongest, most powerful defensive alliance in the history of the world. Two proud independent countries exercising their sovereign rights all states possess to decide their own security,” Biden said in the Rose Garden, flanked by Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson and Finnish President Sauli Niinistö.

“Sweden and Finland are already among our closest partners on a range of issues,” he said.

“Finnish and Swedish troops, they have already served shoulder to shoulder with US and NATO forces in Kosovo, in Afghanistan and in Iraq. And both Finland and Sweden are already working in coordination with the United States and our other allies and partners to support the brave people of Ukraine as they defend their freedom against Russia’s invasion,” Biden added.

Biden said the countries already meet all of NATO requirements, “and then some.”

NOW: Biden delivers remarks with Swedish and Finnish leaders

US President Joe Biden, Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson and Finnish President Sauli Niinistö are delivering remarks in the Rose Garden after they met in the Cabinet Room of the White House on Thursday.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters on Wednesday that the meeting will allow the three nations “to coordinate on the path forward” and “compare notes” on their NATO membership applications.

Sweden and Finland’s bids to join NATO come in response to Russia’s war on Ukraine, which sparked security concerns across the region. Their bids to join the alliance mark a dramatic evolution in European security and geopolitics.

NATO addressing Turkey's concerns over Sweden and Finland's NATO bid, Stoltenberg says

NATO is addressing Turkey’s “concerns” over Sweden and Finland’s NATO bid, the alliance’s Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said Thursday.

It comes after Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that Turkey “will say no to Sweden’s and Finland’s entry into NATO,” reiterating the same stance he took last week. Earlier this week Erdogan accused both countries of housing Kurdish “terrorist organizations.”

“We are in close contact with Finland and Sweden and Turkey and also with other allies,” Stoltenberg said speaking alongside Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen in Copenhagen.

“Of course, we are addressing the concerns that Turkey has expressed” to find “an agreement on how to move forward,” Stoltenberg said.

Cybersecurity firm says pro-Russia online operatives falsely claimed Zelensky committed suicide

Pro-Russia online operatives falsely claimed weeks into Moscow’s war against Ukraine that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky had committed suicide, as part of an aggressive effort to dent public morale and undermine the Ukrainian government, US cybersecurity firm Mandiant said Thursday.

The false Zelensky suicide claim is just one of several information operations tracked by Mandiant from suspected Russian and Belarusian actors that were aimed at deceiving audiences in Ukraine, Russia and elsewhere in Europe – or at least muddling the truth about the brutal war.

The influence campaigns, analysts say, underscore how the Kremlin is committed as ever to information warfare and efforts to shape perceptions of the conflict even as its soldiers suffer heavy losses on the battlefield.

In another case, Belarus-linked operatives falsely asserted that a Polish crime ring was harvesting the organs of Ukrainian refugees, with the complicity of Polish officials.

Mandiant did not directly point the finger at the Russian government for the fake Zelenksy suicide narrative but described the activity as a “suspected Russian influence campaign.” For decades and dating back to Soviet times, disinformation and other so-called “active measures” have been a key part of Russia’s foreign policy strategy, according to scholars.

CNN has requested comment from the Russian Embassy in Washington and the Belarusian Foreign Ministry on the Mandiant research.

Read the full story here:

20181217-russia-social-media

Related article Pro-Russia online operatives falsely claimed Zelensky committed suicide in an effort to sway public opinion, cybersecurity firm says

Ukrainian court grants permission for arrest of former President Yanukovych for fleeing to Russia in 2014

The Pechersk District Court of Kyiv has granted permission for the arrest of former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, according to a statement published by the Ukrainian Prosecutor General’s Office on Telegram on Thursday.

The court chose a measure of restraint in the form of detention of the former president, who is suspected of organizing illegal smuggling of people across the state border of Ukraine, according to the statement.

It is not clear where Yanukovych currently resides. The prosecutor’s office said Thursday he had fled to the Russian city of Anapa. In March, Ukrainian state news agency Ukrinform quoted media reports that claimed Yanukovych was in Minsk, Belarus. 

Yanukovych served as president of Ukraine from 2010 until 2014, when he was removed from office during the Maidan protests. The protests erupted after Yanukovych rejected the Ukrainian-European Association Agreement, which would bring Ukraine closer to the European Union and further away from Russia. 

UK prime minister and Ukrainian president discuss military support and food security 

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks as he takes questions at the House of Commons, in London, England, on May 18.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky spoke Thursday, discussing military support and global food security, a Downing Street spokesperson said in a statement. 

“The leaders discussed progress in negotiations and agreed to step up work with allies, including the US, France and Germany, to define the longer-term security architecture for Ukraine,” the spokesperson said. 

In the call with Zelensky, Johnson raised concerns “about the growing global fallout from Russia’s illegal invasion and President Putin’s craven and reckless blockade of Ukraine’s Black Sea ports, including rising food prices in developing countries,” according to the statement. 

Earlier Thursday, the World Food Programme Executive Director David Beasley said that a “failure to open the ports will be a declaration of war on global food security,” bringing millions of people to the brink of starvation.

Johnson “set out the support flowing to Ukraine’s defence, including long-range artillery, shore-to-ship missiles and unmanned drones,” following the UK’s decision to provide an additional 1.3 billion euros in military support to Ukraine earlier this month. 

Ukrainian military official says Azovstal evacuation continues

A senior military official in Ukraine said that “measures to evacuate the Ukrainian military from Mariupol continue,” as Russia claimed more than 1,700 Ukrainian soldiers have surrendered from the Azovstal plant since Monday.

Addressing the media in Kyiv, Brigadier General Oleksii Gromov said that “in the Mariupol direction, the intensity of hostilities has been reduced. At this time, measures are continuing to evacuate our heroes” from the Azovstal plant. Several hundred soldiers are still thought to be inside the plant.

Buses wait for Ukrainian servicemen to transport them from Mariupol to a prison in Olyonivka, Ukraine, on May 18.

The Ukrainian government has said little about the evacuation process since it began on Monday.

Gromov addressed whether the lives of those soldiers who had been evacuated to Russian-controlled territory were at risk.

Russia has said that the prisoners will be treated in accordance with international law, but the government’s investigative committee has said that its staff “as part of the investigation of criminal cases by the Ukrainian regime against the civilian population of Donbas, will interrogate the surrendered militants who were hiding at the Azovstal plant in Mariupol.”

CNN is unable to confirm the Russian tally of those it said had surrendered.

Ukraine said earlier this week that the “combat mission” had ended at the complex, which was for weeks the last major holdout in a city otherwise occupied by Russian troops.

Biden meets with Swedish and Finnish leaders at White House

US President Joe Biden, center, welcomes Finnish President Sauli Niinisto, left, and Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson, right, to the White House in Washington, DC, on May 19.

US President Joe Biden welcomed Finnish President Sauli Niinistö and Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson to the White House on Thursday, after the leaders of both Nordic nations submitted NATO applications.

Sweden and Finland’s bids to join NATO come in response to Russia’s war on Ukraine, which sparked security concerns across the region. Their moves to join the alliance mark a dramatic evolution in European security and geopolitics.

The leaders are scheduled to hold a meeting in the Cabinet Room of the White House and will later deliver remarks from the Rose Garden

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters on Wednesday that the meeting with the leaders in Washington will allow the three nations “to coordinate on the path forward” and “compare notes” on the move.

Sullivan called Finland and Sweden’s applications to join the alliance “a watershed moment in European security.”

CNN’s Meagan Vazquez contributed reporting to this post.

Trial of Russian soldier in Kyiv adjourned until Friday

Russian serviceman Vadim Shishimarin sits in the dock on the second day of his war crimes trial in the Solomyansky district court in Kyiv, Ukraine, on May 19.

The trial of a Russian soldier accused of killing an unarmed man in Ukraine — the first such trial since the Russian invasion began — has adjourned until Friday 11 a.m. local time.

The judges adjourned the trial saying that the soldier, Vadim Shishimarin, was not “ready” for a court “debate.”

The 21-year-old soldier pleaded guilty Wednesday to shooting an unarmed 62-year-old civilian in Ukraine’s Sumy region on the fourth day of the war. 

The prosecution team earlier asked for a life sentence for the soldier.

Ukrainian officials describe growing incidents of sabotage in Russian-occupied areas

Ukrainian officials have spoken about a rising incidence of armed resistance in Russian-occupied parts of southern Ukraine.

On Thursday, Oleksiy Arestovych, an adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky, said that sabotage by the Resistance Movement in Melitopol had resulted in the derailing of a Russian armored train. Melitopol has been occupied by the Russians since early March. 

Arestovych claimed that railroad cars carrying personnel and ammunition overturned, detonating the ammunition.

Ivan Fedorov, the elected mayor of Melitopol, gave a similar account on Thursday. Fedorov is currently not in Melitopol. According to unofficial accounts from the area, the train consisted of 10 wagons, and railway tracks were damaged, the armored train was stopped, and a locomotive with 10 fuel tanks that was following the armored train was also stopped.

Separately, the Zaporizhzhia regional administration noted Thursday that “the Russian military does not allow railroad workers to be involved in track maintenance but continues heavy use of the railway. Such negligence plus actions of the Resistance Movement in Melitopol resulted a Russian armored train being derailed.”

Arestovych indicated that the sabotage was not an isolated incident. “According to the available information, two high ranked Russian officers were eliminated,” he said. 

On Wednesday, the Zaporizhzhia military administration also said the guerrilla movement in Melitopol had “eliminated two Russian military servicemen of high rank. The occupiers are trying to conceal this situation. But today the occupiers have been searching private transport especially thoroughly, apparently looking for partisans.”

CNN cannot independently confirm the attacks on the train or the Russian officers.

Arestovych also said that “leaflets are being disseminated all over” in occupied areas, 

In recent days, graphic posters depicting Russian soldiers being killed by partisans have begun to appear in occupied parts of Zaporizhzhia and Kherson. It’s unclear how widespread they are.

Turkish president tells allies it will not accept Sweden and Finland's entry into NATO

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan meets with youth on the occasion of May 19 Commemoration of Ataturk, Youth and Sports Day at the Presidential Library in Ankara, Turkey, on May 19.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Thursday his country “will say no to Sweden’s and Finland’s entry into NATO,” reiterating the same stance he took last week. 

“NATO is a security organization and we cannot accept the presence of terrorists organizations in there,” he said. Earlier this week Erdogan accused both countries of housing Kurdish “terrorist organizations.”

Erdogan was mainly referencing the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) which seeks an independent state in Turkey. The group has been in an armed struggle with Ankara for decades and has been designated a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.

Finland and Sweden have a Kurdish community, although Erdogan provided no detail as to whom he was referring.

Both Nordic countries formally applied to join NATO on Wednesday, a decision prompted by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Future of Russian-occupied regions in Ukraine depends on "will" of people living there, Kremlin says

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Thursday that the future of the regions in Ukraine occupied by Russia will depend on the “will” of the people living there.

“All actions have their forerunner, the forerunner of any action can only be the expression of the will of the inhabitants of these regions,” Peskov said during his daily call with reporters.

“Nothing can be done without expressing the will of the inhabitants of these areas, without them deciding how to go on and with whom they want to live,” he added.

Peskov said that humanitarian reasons also dictate the control of the Ukrainian territories occupied by the Russian army.

“Many areas are now without electricity, sewerage and water. And this needs to be taken care of. The need for these priority measures is dictated solely by concern for people,” he said.

Ukrainians displaced from frontline areas arrive at a train station for onward travel to western Ukraine on May 3, in Kryvyi Rih, Ukraine.

Some background: Last week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukraine had retaken six settlements from Russian forces on Friday, and 1,015 overall since the start of the conflict in February.

“We return electricity, water supply, communications, transport, social services there,” he said.

In the Russian-occupied region of Kherson, in southern Ukraine, hundreds – sometimes thousands – of people have been trying to flee every day.

They are leaving for many reasons: To avoid being detained or to escape the heavy-handed actions of Russian forces, or because of the chronic shortages of medicine and other basics in Kherson, which fell under Russian control soon after the invasion. 

WHO chief says he spoke to Russian foreign minister about safe aid access to besieged areas in Ukraine

World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Thursday that he spoke to Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov about safe access to besieged areas in Ukraine.  

“Spoke with Foreign Minister Lavrov about Russia’s participation in global health matters, work with the WHO and the health situation in Ukraine,” Tedros said on Twitter.

“I requested safe access to Mariupol, Kherson, Southern Zaporizhzhia and other besieged areas to deliver health aid,” he added. 

As of May 10, WHO has verified 200 attacks on healthcare facilities in Ukraine since the start of the war, Tedros said, urging Russia “to stop this war.”

Speaking from Kyiv on May 10 after spending two days in Ukraine, Tedros said he had been “deeply moved” by what he has seen and heard. 

Famous internet cat from Kharkiv helps raise money for Ukrainian animal shelters 

A cat from Kharkiv who has raised thousands of dollars through his Instagram account for Ukrainian animal shelters has received an international award.

Stepan, who now has 1.3 million followers, received the World Influencers and Bloggers Awards in France.

Stepan and his owner Anna are from Kharkiv. One week after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, they were evacuated from the Saltivka area, which was heavily bombarded.

They are currently in France, but the tabby cat is still raising funds to support Ukraine’s animal shelters and zoos. 

Stepan first went viral for images and videos of him sitting with his arm resting on a table next to a glass of wine or cocktail with disco lights in the background — and he looked wholly unimpressed in every situation.

UK sanctions Russian airlines to prevent them from selling landing slots

A sign above an Aeroflot PJSC office building in Moscow, Russia, on February 28.

The UK government will introduce new sanctions against Russian airlines to prevent them from cashing in on their unused landing slots at British airports.

“State-owned Aeroflot, Russia’s largest airline, Ural Airlines and Rossiya Airlines will now be unable to sell their unused, lucrative landing slots at UK airports – preventing Russia from cashing in on an estimated £50 million (about $61 million),” the UK Foreign Office said Thursday in a press release. 

“We’ve already closed our airspace to Russian airlines. Today we’re making sure they can’t cash in their lucrative landing slots at our airports,” UK Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said. 

“Every economic sanction reinforces our clear message to Putin – we will not stop until Ukraine prevails,” she added. 

Last week, Truss called for international allies to impose more sanctions against Russia until it completely withdraws from Ukraine and agrees to peace.

She urged sanctions on Russia not be lifted until those demands are met.

Russian soldier on trial in Ukraine tells a woman he is "sorry" for killing her husband

The first Russian soldier on trial for war crimes in Ukraine, Vadim Shishimarin, told a widow at a Kyiv court on Thursday that he is “sorry” for killing her husband during the war.

“Yes I acknowledge my fault. I understand that you will not be able to forgive me, but I am sorry,” Shishimarin said.

When asked if Shishimarin repented for what he did, he replied: “Yes, I acknowledge my fault.”

He also said he felt “shame.”

The woman questioned the Russian soldier as to why he came to Ukraine, asking rhetorically: “Did you come to defend us? From whom? Did you defend me from my husband you killed?”

“We were ordered to come with the column, what will follow I did not know,” Shishimarin said.

Some background: This is the first Ukrainian war crimes trial held since Russia invaded the country on February 24.

The 21-year-old soldier pleaded guilty Wednesday to shooting an unarmed 62-year-old civilian in Ukraine’s Sumy region on the fourth day of the war and is facing a life sentence.

The trial was adjourned on Wednesday because too many members of the media were crowding the courtroom. The trial has been moved to a larger Kyiv court.

Switzerland to reopen its embassy in Kyiv

Switzerland is reopening its embassy in Kyiv after two and a half months of temporary closure, a statement from the Swiss department of foreign affairs said Thursday.

The statement said the decision was made jointly by the President of the Swiss Confederation, Ignazio Cassis, and the head of the Federal Department of Foreign Affairs (FDFA) and is based off an “in-depth analysis of the security situation” in Kyiv.

Five FDFA staff will be returning to Kyiv over the “next few days,” the statement added.

The embassy has been closed since February 28 – four days after Russia began its invasion of Ukraine.

“During the first phase, Ambassador Claude Wild will return with a team of four transferable staff,” the statement said.

“The Swiss embassy will continue to employ the local Ukrainian staff.”

The statement added that if the situation deteriorates and an emergency arises, the team must be able to leave the country at short notice.

On Wednesday, the US flag was raised over the United States Embassy in Kyiv to mark the official resumption of US Embassy operations in the Ukrainian capital.

George W. Bush gaffe mixes up "wholly unjustified and brutal" Russian invasion with 2003 Iraq War

Former US President George W. Bush appeared to get his 21st century wars mixed up on Wednesday, accidentally calling the 2003 US invasion of Iraq “wholly unjustified and brutal,” before saying he actually meant the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Bush was speaking at an event at the George W. Bush Institute in Dallas, Texas.

“Russian elections are rigged. Political opponents are imprisoned or otherwise eliminated from participating in the electoral process.

“The result is an absence of checks and balances in Russia. And the decision of one man to launch a wholly unjustified and brutal invasion of Iraq, I mean of Ukraine,” Bush said.

“Iraq, too,” he added under his breath, chuckling.

“Anyway, I’m 75,” he said as the audience laughed.

Bush also called Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky a “cool little guy” and “the Churchill of the 21st century” during his speech.

“He was empowered by electoral legitimacy,” Bush added.

“And now he’s leading his nation heroically against Russian invading forces, and defending his country.”

See the moment:

35020957-5bf3-483a-8f2e-0a7ebcb85eb9.mp4
01:37 - Source: cnn

Crimean Tatars mark Stalin's deportation, despite warnings from Russian authorities

About seventy people in the Crimean capital have defied official warnings to commemorate the victims of Stalin’s mass deportation of the Tatar people in 1944.

About 70 people in the Crimean capital have defied official warnings to commemorate the victims of Stalin’s mass deportation of the Tatar people in 1944.

They braved heavy rain and the risk of retribution to attend a memorial event at a plaque near the railway station in Simferopol, carrying flags and, in some cases, the Ukrainian colors in the shape of a bracelet or lapel pin.

Half the Crimean Tatar, a Sunni Muslim people, are thought to have died during their forced removal to remote parts of the Soviet Union; their descendants speak of the deportation as genocide.

But for the past eight years, since Russia annexed Crimea, they have been refused permission to commemorate the horror.

The Kharkiv Human Rights Group, which investigates abuses throughout Ukraine, says that this year Tatar activists received warnings from Russian officials in Crimea about “the inadmissibility of extremist activities.”

But the event went ahead, with the elderly making up the majority of attendees.

One young man who attended said that, before the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014, as many as 50,000 people would converge on the main square in Simferopol to mark the anniversary.

Many of them had returned to their homeland after the fall of the Soviet Union and the Tatar community had flourished again.

CNN is not naming the man for his own safety.

“It was prohibited to make such demonstrations in recent years,” he told CNN, and gradually the numbers turning out had fallen.

“People are going in small groups to the mosques, cemeteries, and memorials,” he said.

But he had wanted to come to the event in Simferopol, to “get together in a crowd with our flags, pray together and commemorate this tragedy, because it moves the soul.”

About 200 Tatars gathered in Büyük Onlar (named by the Soviets as Oktyabrskoe) where a prayer was said in the rain and children read poems.  

A man reads from a book in the Crimean capital to commemorate the victims of Stalin’s mass deportation of the Tatar people in 1944.

The anniversary was also marked by the Ukrainian government, which drew parallels with Russia’s ongoing invasion.

President Volodymyr Zelensky signed legislation “for the protection of all ordinary peaceful, civilian people who were repressed by the occupiers and who were taken prisoner by them.”

Tamila Tasheva, Zelensky’s representative to Crimea, said: “We cannot help but draw parallels to 1944. Current crimes have a long history … Crimean Tatars are no longer put in freight cars and taken out by force, but [the Russians] create conditions for us to leave our historical homeland.”

Those Tatars who do protest or promote the Crimean identity often find themselves in court.

According to the human rights group Crimea SOS, nearly 100 Tatars are victims of politically-motivated criminal prosecution; many of them are serving long jail sentences.

Eskender Bariiev, a leading Crimean Tatar activist, says the historical parallels of 1944 with today are unmistakable.

“The Crimean Tatar people were accused of collaborating with the Nazis and [Stalin] conducted a special operation, thus deporting Crimean Tatars from Crimea,” Bariiev said this week.

“Now under the slogans of denazification and demilitarization, the occupiers launched a so-called special operation, and in fact the genocide of the Ukrainian people.”

Bariiev said that, just as the Crimean Tatars had been deported, so too the Russians were now forcibly deporting hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians, mostly to remote parts of Russia. 

It's 2 p.m. in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know

Pro-Russian troops stand next to buses carrying members of the Ukrainian forces from the Azovstal steel works to a detention facility in Olenivka in the Donetsk Region, Ukraine, on May 17.

Russia’s says 1,730 Ukrainian soldiers have surrendered at the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol since Monday, and the World Food Programme has called on Russian President Vladimir Putin to allow grain shipments to leave Ukrainian ports or risk widespread hunger.

Here’s the latest on the war in Ukraine:

Almost 2,000 Ukrainian soldiers surrender: The Russian Defense Ministry said Thursday that 771 Ukrainian soldiers have surrendered at the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol in the last 24 hours, taking the total to 1,730 since Monday.

Calls for Ukrainian grain shipments: A failure to open closed ports in Ukraine to ship grains out will bring millions of people to the brink of starvation, said the executive director of the World Food Programme.

Civilian infrastructure damaged in Russian strikes: The town of Bakhmut in the Donetsk region, an important hub for the Ukrainian military, is coming under increasing attack from Russian missiles and artillery, according to Ukrainian officials, and civilian infrastructure has been damaged.

Russian offensive fails: The Ukrainian military reported that Russian forces trying to break through to Sloviansk, in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region, had suffered losses and retreated. Despite artillery and missile attacks by Russian forces on a wide front over the past 24 hours, there are no signs they have taken new territory.  

Russian civilian killed: One civilian was killed and several people were wounded as a result of Ukrainian strikes in Russia’s western region of Kursk at dawn on Thursday, according to regional governor Roman Starovoit.

Scholz proposes solidarity fund: The European Union must start preparations for rebuilding Ukraine by setting up a solidarity fund to aid Kyiv in covering the billions of euros reconstruction will cost, according to German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

Biden to meet Finnish and Swedish leaders: US President Joe Biden is scheduled to meet with the leaders of Finland and Sweden on Thursday as part of a show of support by the United States after the two nations submitted their formal applications to become NATO members.

New Russian attacks on Donetsk town hit civilian infrastructure, Ukraine says

Rescuers remove the body of a civilian at the site of an apartment building destroyed by Russian shelling in Bakhmut, Donetsk region, Ukraine, on May 18.

The town of Bakhmut in the Donetsk region, an important hub for the Ukrainian military, is coming under increasing attack from Russian missiles and artillery, according to Ukrainian officials.

Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of Donetsk regional military administration, said Thursday there had been another airstrike on the town, where some 20,000 people still live.

Kyrylenko said a five-story residential building and an office building had been hit and that so far six people have been rescued from the rubble.

“The Russians continue to fire at civilians, but timely evacuation allows us to save hundreds of lives,” Kyrylenko said.

“Out of the 73,000 inhabitants of Bakhmut, just over 20,000 now remain in the city, thanks to which we are able to avoid the number of casualties that the enemy expects.

In recent days, Russian fire has intensified on places beyond the front lines in Donetsk, but Kyrylenko said Ukrainian units were resisting any advances on the ground.

“The enemy tried to make a breakthrough in the direction of Avdiyivka and Maryinka, on the route between Bakhmut and Lysychansk,” but had been repelled and “retreated to previous positions,” he said.

Some background: The Ukrainian military reported on Thursday that Russian forces trying to break through to Sloviansk, in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region, had suffered losses and retreated. 

Despite artillery and missile attacks by Russian forces on a wide front over the past 24 hours, there are no signs they have taken new territory.

Red Cross says it is registering hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers leaving the Azovstal steel plant

Red Cross staff observe the evacuation of Ukrainian servicemen from the Azovstal steel plant, in Mariupol, Ukraine, on May 18.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) says it has registered hundreds of Ukrainian prisoners of war who have left the Azovstal steel works in Mariupol this week. 

On Tuesday the ICRC started “to register combatants leaving the Azovstal plant, including the wounded, at the request of the parties,” it said in a statement from its headquarters in Geneva.

“The operation continued Wednesday and was still ongoing Thursday,” it added.

Russia has said that some 1,700 Ukrainian soldiers have left the plant – but several hundred more are reportedly still inside. 

“This information allows the ICRC to track those who have been captured and help them keep in touch with their families,” it added.

“In accordance with the mandate given to the ICRC by States under the 1949 Geneva Conventions, the ICRC must have immediate access to all POWs in all places where they are held,” continued the statement.

“The ICRC must be allowed to interview prisoners of war without witnesses, and the duration and frequency of these visits should not be unduly restricted,” said the organization. “Whenever circumstances permit, each party to the conflict must take all possible measures to search for and collect the dead.” 

A Russian soldier’s war crimes trial has resumed

A Russian soldier is back in a larger Kyiv court on Thursday after proceedings were adjourned Wednesday because the courtroom was too small to accommodate the 150 journalists who turned up.

The trial of Vadim Shishimarin is the first Ukrainian war crimes trial since the Russian invasion started.

The 21-year-old soldier pleaded “fully” guilty Wednesday to shooting an unarmed 62-year-old civilian in Ukraine’s Sumy region on the fourth day of the war and is facing a life sentence.

Captured Russian soldier, Sgt. Vadim Shishimarin, 21, attends a court hearing on May 18, in Kyiv, Ukraine

On Thursday, three judges will hear testimony from Shishimarin, as well as from the victim’s widow.

Two other witnesses will be called by the prosecution, including a second Russian soldier who was in the same car as Shishimarin when he allegedly fired his Kalashnikov.

Shishimarin’s lawyer, Volodymyr Ovsyannikov, told CNN he would be raising the question of whether the prisoner of war being called as a witness is providing his testimony voluntarily.

Ovsyannikov said he welcomed the opportunity to provide a fuller picture of the precise events of February 28. 

The Kremlin said Wednesday that it had no information about the case.

Failure to open ports in Ukraine a "declaration of war" on global food security, says WFP chief

A farmer wears a bulletproof vest during crop sowing which takes place 30 km from the front line in the Zaporizhzhia Region, southeastern Ukraine, on April 8.

A failure to open closed ports in Ukraine to ship grains out will bring millions of people to the brink of starvation, said the executive director of the World Food Programme (WFP).

“Failure to open the ports will be a declaration of war on global food security, resulting in famine destabilization of nations, as well as mass migration by necessity,” said David Beasley on Wednesday, addressing a food security meeting at the United Nations hosted by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken. 

The US is working closely with European allies to try to develop routes to get Ukrainian wheat and corn out of the country after Russia blocked Ukrainian ships from departing with grain that is vital for food supplies around the world, particularly in Africa and the Middle East.

“It is absolutely essential that we allow these ports to open because this is not just about Ukraine. This is about the poorest of the poor around the world who are on the brink of starvation as we speak,” Beasley added. 

“So I ask President Putin, if you have any heart at all, please open these ports. Please assure everyone concerned that the passageways will be clear so that we can feed the poorest of the poor and avert famine, as we’ve done in the past, when nations in this room have stepped up together,” the WFP chief said. 

He noted that Ukraine is a nation that grows enough grain to feed 400 million people and that is now out of production.

It is “critical” that these farms get back in operation, that trucks, trains and ships can move again, he added, stressing that “time is running out.”

On Wednesday, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres also addressed how the war in Ukraine, on top of other global crises, “threatens tens of millions of people with food insecurity, malnutrition, mass hunger and famine.” 

“There is enough food in our world for everyone, but we must act together, urgently and with solidarity,” Guterres said.

Japan doubles its financial aid to Ukraine to $600 million

Japan will increase its financial aid for Ukraine to $600 million, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida announced Thursday, doubling the country’s previous $300 million given in financial support.

Kishida said the decision was made after Ukraine expressed its need for assistance due to the worsening financial situation caused by Russia’s invasion.

“Japan will continue to strongly support Ukraine in cooperation with the G7 and the international community,” Kishida told reporters.

The move comes shortly after the US and European Union announced new assistance to Ukraine and ahead of a visit by US President Joe Biden to the region, where he is expected to visit South Korea and Japan.

Kishida said Thursday he would discuss Japan’s position on the conflict during next week’s talks.

Germany's Scholz proposes EU solidarity fund to rebuild Ukraine

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, left, delivers a speech ahead of the next EU summit during a session at the Bundestag in Berlin, Germany, on May 19.

The European Union must start preparations for rebuilding Ukraine by setting up a solidarity fund to aid Kyiv in covering the billions of euros reconstruction will cost, according to German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

“Rebuilding destroyed infrastructure and revitalizing the Ukrainian economy will cost billions,” Scholz told German lawmakers Thursday at the lower house of parliament.

“We as the EU must start laying the ground for a solidarity fund financed by contributions from the EU and its partners,” he added, speaking ahead of a major EU summit at the end of this month.  

Scholz also said that Ukraine’s bid to join the EU cannot be sped up despite the Russian invasion. 

“There are no shortcuts on the way to the EU,” Scholz said, adding that the bloc must therefore find a “fast and pragmatic” way to aid Kyiv.  

An exception for Ukraine would be unfair to the six Western Balkan countries – Montenegro, Serbia, Albania, North Macedonia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo – also seeking membership in the bloc, said the German Chancellor.

Their integration into the EU is also of “strategic interest,” referencing the influence of “external powers” in the region, including Russia, he added.  

Russia says 771 Ukrainian soldiers from Azovstal surrendered in last 24 hours, taking total to 1,730

Pro-Russian troops stand next to buses carrying members of the Ukrainian forces from the Azovstal steel works recently arrived at a detention facility in the settlement of Olenivka in the Donetsk Region, Ukraine, on May 17.

The Russian Defense Ministry said Thursday that 771 Ukrainian soldiers have surrendered at the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol in the last 24 hours, taking the total to 1,730 since Monday.

The ministry said 80 of those were wounded, and all those in need of any medical attention are receiving treatment in hospitals in Novoazovsk and Donetsk.

CNN is unable to confirm the Russian tally.

The Ukrainian side has not given an update on the number who have left Azovstal nor on the status of negotiations for their exchange for Russian prisoners.

Some background: On Wednesday, the Russian Defense Ministry said nearly 1,000 Ukrainian soldiers had surrendered, meaning Thursday’s new total marks a significant increase.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Tuesday the negotiation process on evacuating the last soldiers from the Azovstal steel plant continues with Russia.

It follows the end of Ukrainian forces’ “combat mission” at the complex, which was for weeks the last major holdout in a city otherwise occupied by Russian troops.

Ukraine said it expects to carry out an exchange of Russian prisoners of war for the severely injured soldiers.

One killed by Ukrainian strikes in Russia's Kursk, regional governor says

One civilian was killed and several people were wounded as a result of Ukrainian strikes in Russia’s western region of Kursk at dawn on Thursday, according to regional governor Roman Starovoit.

The strikes hit an ethanol factory in the village of Tyotkino and several homes were affected, Starovoit said on Telegram. 

Tyotkino is located 1.5 miles (2.4 kilometers) from the Ukraine-Russia border. Both sides of the border between Kursk and Ukraine have seen intermittent artillery attacks this month.

Russians "suffer losses" in efforts to advance on Sloviansk, Ukrainian military says

The Ukrainian military reported on Thursday that Russian forces trying to break through to Sloviansk, in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region, had suffered losses and retreated. 

Despite artillery and missile attacks by Russian forces on a wide front over the past 24 hours, there are no signs they have taken new territory.  

There has been fighting in the Velyka Komyshuvakha area since late April — since the Russians took control of Izium and tried to push toward Sloviansk — but the front lines have changed little. 

In Luhansk: On the other main front, in the parts of Luhansk region the Ukrainians still hold, Russian aircraft have attacked several villages, according to the General Staff.

A Ukrainian main battle tank drives on a street during mortar shelling in Severodonetsk, eastern Ukraine, on May 18.

Ukrainian defenses were holding around the industrial city of Severodonetsk, and Russian assault operations in the Zolote area had been unsuccessful, it said.

Serhii Hayday, head of the Luhansk military administration, said Severodonetsk had suffered the most in the latest attacks and confirmed that four civilians were killed on Wednesday.

Elsewhere: Other regions also reported Russian artillery and missile strikes overnight. In the Dnipropetrovsk region in the south, the city military administration in Kryvih Rih said “there was enemy shelling along the entire line of contact during the night.”

It said there had been heavy shelling of residential areas of Velyka Kostromka, a town that lies some 20 miles south of Kryvih Rih that has been on the front lines for more than a month.

Biden to meet with Swedish and Finnish leaders after their nations apply to join NATO

President Joe Biden is scheduled to meet with the leaders of Finland and Sweden on Thursday as part of a show of support by the United States after the two nations submitted their formal applications to become NATO members.

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters on Wednesday that the meeting with Finnish President Sauli Niinistö and Swedish Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson in Washington will allow the three nations “to coordinate on the path forward” and “compare notes” on the move.

Sweden and Finland’s bids to join NATO come in response to Russia’s war on Ukraine, which sparked security concerns across the region. Their bids to join the alliance mark a dramatic evolution in European security and geopolitics.

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US President Joe Biden, flanked by Swedens Prime Minister Magdalena Andersson and Finlands President Sauli Niinistö, speaks in the Rose Garden following a meeting at the White House in Washington, DC, on May 19, 2022. - The US on May 18 gave its full support for Sweden and Finland's bids to join NATO, promising to stand by them if threatened by Russia and pressing Turkey to not block their membership.

Related article Biden to meet with Swedish and Finnish leaders after their nations apply to join NATO

Russia says more than 900 Ukrainian soldiers from Azovstal sent to pretrial detention center 

Buses wait for Ukrainian servicemen to transport them from Mariupol, Ukraine, to a prison in Olenivka after they left the besieged Azovstal steel plant, on May 18.

The Russian Foreign Ministry said more than 900 Ukrainian soldiers who surrendered at the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol since May 16 have been sent to a pretrial detention center.

Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said on Wednesday that a total of 959 Ukrainian soldiers, including 51 with severe wounds, had surrendered over the course of two days.

She reaffirmed the injured are receiving treatment at the hospital at Novoazovsk in the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR), while the others were sent to a pretrial detention center in Olenivka, a town near the front lines but in territory controlled by the DPR.

CNN is unable to confirm the Russian tally.

The Ukrainian side has not given an update on the number who have left Azovstal nor on the status of negotiations for their exchange for Russian prisoners.

Amnesty International has said Ukrainian soldiers who surrendered at the steel plant must not be ill-treated and should receive immediate access to the International Red Cross. 

Biden turns his attention back to Asia after months focused on Russia’s war in Ukraine

President Joe Biden delivers remarks while hosting a reception to celebrate Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month in the Rose Garden of the White House on May 17.

President Joe Biden departs Thursday on an alliance-boosting visit to Asia, a belated first trip to a region that remains central to his foreign policy goals even as his focus has been drawn away.

Biden’s stops in two staunch US allies — South Korea and Japan — are meant to bolster partnerships at a moment of global instability. While Biden and his team have spent much of their time and resources on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, provocations from North Korea have intensified and China continues to flex its economic and military might.

Realigning US foreign policy: After months of all-consuming attention on Russia’s war in Ukraine — a conflict that has summoned Cold War comparisons and revitalized alliances built last century — Biden’s debut visit to Asia is an opportunity to renew what he views as this century’s challenge: Confronting a rising China through a system of renewed economic and military partnerships.

And even as Russia’s war grinds on, tensions have been building elsewhere.

North Korea, which Biden identified as his greatest foreign policy challenge early in his presidency, resumed provocative weapons tests ahead of South Korean President-elect Yoon Seok-youl’s inauguration. 

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President Joe Biden speaks at the National Peace Officers' Memorial Service on the West Front of the Capitol in Washington, Sunday, May 15, 2022, honoring the law enforcement officers who lost their lives in the line of duty in 2021. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

Related article Biden turns his attention back to Asia after months focused on Russia's war in Ukraine

Analysis: The most striking aspect of Sweden and Finland's application to join NATO

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg poses with application documents presented by Finland and Sweden's Ambassadors to NATO during a ceremony in Brussels, on May 18.

The most striking aspect of Sweden and Finland’s application to join NATO is how little debate there is about whether it’s a wise idea.

The entry of the two Nordic nations would be the most significant geopolitical outcome of the Ukraine war, transforming the strategic security picture in northeastern Europe and adding hundreds of miles of direct NATO borders with Russia.

But expanding NATO could also trigger serious reverberations.

Doubling the security alliance’s direct frontier with Russia would be a personal blow for Vladimir Putin, who has focused on undermining the Western alliance since he first became Russia’s President, more than 20 years ago. 

And if Putin felt Russia was already being hemmed in on its western flank, could adding two more NATO members during the worst tension between the West and Moscow in decades exacerbate the Russian leader’s paranoia? 

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US soldiers prepare armoured combat vehicles before deploying to Romania on February 09, 2022 in Vilseck, Germany -- part of a coordinated deployment of NATO forces across eastern Europe.

Related article The most striking aspect of Sweden and Finland's application to join NATO

It's 7 a.m. in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know

NATO doesn’t expect significant gains for either side on the battlefield in Ukraine in the coming weeks. “I think we’ll be in a standstill for a while,” a NATO military official with knowledge of the intelligence said.

Here’s the latest on the war in Ukraine:

  • Turkey could hold up NATO bids: Turkey’s foreign minister said it is “unacceptable” for countries that want to become NATO members to impose defense export restrictions and support organizations that threaten Turkey. Ankara has said it would not support Finland and Sweden’s bids to become NATO members if they sanction Turkey. The Nordic nations’ leaders are set to meet US President Joe Biden on Thursday. Biden’s national security adviser Jake Sullivan called their NATO application a “watershed moment in European security.”
  • Shift in Ukraine: A NATO military official with knowledge of the intelligence said the military alliance is seeing momentum in the war is shifting significantly in favor of Ukraine. The debate within NATO circles, the official said, is now over whether it is possible for Kyiv to retake Crimea and the Donbas territories. Meanwhile, the Ukrainian armed forces say they have recaptured another settlement in the Kharkiv region, as troops continue their counterattacks in the area.
  • US confirms ambassador: The US Senate has confirmed career foreign service officer Bridget Brink as US ambassador to Ukraine. The embassy has been without a confirmed ambassador since Marie Yovanovitch was recalled in May 2019 by then-President Donald Trump.
  • Emergency food assistance: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the US would give an additional $215 million in new emergency food assistance for Ukraine and called on other countries to swiftly aid the growing global food crisis due to Russia’s invasion. Blinken also said it is “false” that the sanctions imposed on Russia by the US and its allies have deepened the food crisis.
  • War crimes trial: A 21-year-old captured Russian soldier plead “fully” guilty to war crimes at a trial in Kyiv. Vadim Shishimarin is accused of killing a 62-year-old man in the Sumy region. It is the first war crimes trial held since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24.
  • Mariupol evacuations: Russia’s Defense Ministry said on Wednesday that a total of 959 Ukrainian soldiers, including 80 wounded, had laid down their arms and surrendered at the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol since May 16. The Ukrainian President said on Tuesday the negotiation process on evacuating the last soldiers from the complex continues with Russia.

Former Russian colonel contradicts earlier statements criticizing Russia's military operations in Ukraine

Retired Russian colonel Mikhail Khodarenok speaks on Russian state TV on Wednesday.

Retired Russian colonel Mikhail Khodarenok said any talk about Ukraine being able to counterattack is a “big exaggeration,” just a day after he criticized Russia’s military operations in Ukraine saying the situation for Russia could “get worse.”

He also said it would be impossible for the Ukrainian armed forces to gain aerial supremacy in the next few months, and in terms of gaining naval supremacy, he said, “while our Black Sea Fleet is in the Black Sea, Ukraine’s Black Sea Fleet having supremacy is out of the question.”

On Tuesday however, Khodarenok said information being spread about a “moral or psychological breakdown” of Ukrainian armed forces is not even “close to reality.” He also said Ukraine could arm 1 million people, and that Russia needs to consider that in its operational and strategic calculations.

“The situation for us, will frankly get worse,” he said on Tuesday. He also criticized Russia’s geopolitical isolation from the world, and prior to the invasion he warned that it would be more difficult than many anticipated to wage war in Ukraine.

Earlier reporting from CNN’s Tim Lister, Anastasia Graham Yooll and Taras Zadorozhnyy.

Setbacks in Ukraine trigger rare criticism of Russia's war effort by Russian bloggers

 A local resident looks at a destroyed Russian tank next to a house in the village of Mala Rogan, east of Kharkiv, on May 15.

The Russian army’s performance in Ukraine has been less than impressive according to Western intelligence assessments — and that viewpoint is gaining ground among some in Russia itself.

Three Russian military bloggers have suddenly launched into damning criticism of the operation, and especially the debacle of a failed crossing of the Siverskyi Donets river last week. The three bloggers combined have more than 3 million subscribers on Telegram.

A prominent former officer who regularly appears on state television also weighed in with a gloomy view of Russia’s military prospects in Ukraine.

Such public criticism of the military operation in Ukraine is very rare. The Kremlin insists the campaign is on schedule.

The carping appears to have been triggered by a catalog of setbacks, the worst being the disastrous attempts to cross the Siverskyi Donets crossing last week. Satellite imagery shows at least 70 Russian armored vehicles and tanks were destroyed and hundreds of soldiers may have been killed.

On the evening of May 12, prominent Russian military correspondent Yuri Kotenok reposted accounts and images of the failed crossing, including one from a Ukrainian source.

Kotenok, who has nearly 300,000 subscribers to his Telegram channel, reposted one account that castigated the Russian officer responsible and blamed him for crowding so many vehicles in a small area by the river.

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Service members of pro-Russian troops drive armoured vehicles during Ukraine-Russia conflict near Novoazovsk in the Donetsk Region, Ukraine May 6, 2022. REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko

Related article Setbacks in Ukraine trigger rare criticism of Russia's war effort by Russian bloggers

No major battlefield gains expected for either side in the coming weeks, NATO military official says

A Russian serviceman patrols the destroyed part of the Ilyich Iron and Steel Works in Mariupol on May 18.

The NATO alliance doesn’t expect significant gains for either side of the battlefield in Ukraine in coming weeks, a NATO military official with knowledge of the intelligence told CNN on Wednesday. 

According to the official, the current NATO discussion is that the momentum has shifted significantly in favor of Ukraine and the debate within NATO circles is now over whether it is possible for Kyiv to retake Crimea and the Donbas territories seized by Russia and Russian-backed separatists, respectively, in 2014. 

Analysis: Why is Turkey causing problems for Finland and Sweden's plans to join NATO?

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan delivers a speech at the Turkish Grand National Assembly in Ankara, Turkey on Wednesday.

Just when it seemed like Finland and Sweden’s accession into NATO was imminent, Turkey has taken its allies by surprise by throwing a wrench into the works.

Finland and Sweden formally applied to join NATO on Wednesday at Allied headquarters in Brussels, driven by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The decision represents a setback for Moscow, with the war in Ukraine triggering the kind of enlargement of the alliance that it invaded Ukraine to prevent.

Accession of new states however requires consensus among existing members, and that’s where Ankara comes in.

Turkey, which joined the alliance three years after it was established in 1949 and has the group’s second largest army, has said it won’t support the bids unless its demands are met.

Erdogan accused the two countries of harboring members of the separatist militant Kurdistan’s Workers Party, also known as PKK. The PKK, which seeks an independent state in Turkey, has been in an armed struggle with that country for decades and has been designated a terrorist organization by Turkey, the United States and the European Union.

The crisis has brought to the fore longstanding Turkish grievances against Western nations and NATO allies, while it has given Ankara an opportunity to use its position in the alliance to extract concessions.

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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan arrives for a welcoming ceremony for his Algerian counterpart, Abdelmadjid Tebboune, in Ankara, Turkey, Monday, May 16.

Related article Why is Turkey causing problems for Finland and Sweden's plans to join NATO?

Go Deeper

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Go Deeper

US Treasury says it could block Russian debt payments starting next week
Europe plans to spend $221 billion to ditch Russia’s energy
Setbacks in Ukraine trigger rare criticism of Russia’s war effort by Russian bloggers
World’s largest aircraft owner lost 113 planes to Russia due to sanctions