Thursday, May 29, 2025

Ukraine scrambles to set up 'drone wall' as it braces for Russian summer offensiveNew Foto - Ukraine scrambles to set up 'drone wall' as it braces for Russian summer offensive

Russiadramatically intensified missile and drone attacks across Ukraine this month in an effort to sap Ukrainians' morale – but it is also stepping up ground attacks in many areas along the long frontline, according to Ukrainian officials and analysts. Some of those attacks have succeeded, withUkrainianunits in Donetsk and the north falling back from some positions, while some rural areas in the south have also been lost. But Ukraine's own enhanced use of drones, deployed in several layers on the battlefield, has helped Kyiv inflict heavy losses on the opposing forces with minimal casualties among its own troops. They may become even more critical in the months to come. The Ukrainians are trying to expand their own drone industry to create defensive corridors along key sections of the front line, often dubbed the "drone wall." Meanwhile, ignoring US President Donald Trump's efforts to secure a ceasefire, the Kremlin is pursuing a two-pronged strategy aimed at forcing Ukraine to admit defeat – destroying its cities from the sky and whittling away its defensive lines on the ground. Russia has sharply expanded its own drone and missile production in the past year, allowing for mass attacks using several hundred projectiles at once. The Russian strategy seeks to overwhelm Ukraine's air defenses with scores of low-cost drones so that simultaneous missile strikes can succeed. On the ground, Russian forces are probing Ukrainian defenses along many parts of the frontline simultaneously, from Zaporizhzhia in the south to Sumy in the north, advancing into abandoned villages and across open countryside in small numbers. The Russians are not rolling through Ukrainian defenses butgnawing away at them, using cars and motorbikes and scattered infantry platoons. Russian forces have advanced an average of roughly 14 square kilometers (5.4 square miles) per day so far this year, according to the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) in Washington. This rate implies they'd need nearly four more years to complete the occupation of the four regions illegally annexed by Moscow: Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson. Those are the Kremlin's oft-stated goals, but it is also trying to instil a sense among Kyiv's allies of Russian superiority over Ukrainian forces. Much of the fighting is in Donetsk, with the Russians still determined to seize the entire region – unless it is handed over in peace negotiations, which is a non-starter for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. The Russian Defense Ministry claimed Tuesday that a village south of the key town of Kostiantynivka had been taken. ISW assesses that Russian forces seized roughly 65 square kms of territory - but remain incapable of intensifying offensive operations in several different directions simultaneously. "The main Russian effort into the summer will once again be against the key towns of Kostyantynivka and Pokrovsk" in Donetsk, according to Jack Watling, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) in London. Hundreds of miles to the north, Russian units have edged a few kilometers into the Sumy region. Zelensky told journalists Tuesday that the Russians are "now amassing troops in the Sumy direction. More than 50,000. We understand that. But we are making progress there." Zelensky said the Russians wanted "to build this buffer zone, as they call it, 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) deep into Ukraine," but lacked the capability. The Russians are supporting these operations with missile and air-launched guided-bomb attacks. The attacks into Sumy follow a Kremlin directive on May 21 that the military create buffer zones inside northern Ukraine – in Sumy and Kharkiv regions. That came when President Vladimir Putin visited Russia's Kursk region across the border, part of which had been seized by a Ukrainian incursion launched from Sumy last summer. Capturing Sumy's regional capital is probably beyond the Russians – the terrain is thickly forested. But through their attacks, the Russian military can prevent the Ukrainians from redeploying units to Donetsk. Further east there's also been an uptick in fighting around Vovchansk in Kharkiv region in recent days. Across the 1,000-kilometer (621-mile) frontline, according to analysts, the Ukrainian military has to decide which areas are under greatest threat, where to withdraw, how to redeploy – even as many brigades are seriously under-strength more than three years after the Russian invasion. The manpower balance is still very much in Russia's favor, despite its heavy losses. Putin recently claimed that 60,000 volunteers are being recruited every month. Observers believe this is likely exaggerated but signing-up bonuses that dwarf civilian wages in Russia make military service an attractive option. Ukraine's military chief, Oleksandr Syrskyi, said earlier this month that Kyiv faced "a combined enemy grouping of up to 640,000 personnel," higher than at the outset of the invasion. Zelensky said in January that Ukraine had 880,000 soldiers, "but 880,000 are defending the entire territory. Russian forces are concentrated in certain directions." Russian recruitment "has exceeded Kremlin targets for every month of 2025," according to the RUSI analyst Watling. "Having shuffled commanders and built-up reserves of equipment, Russia is now set to increase the tempo and scale of attacks." But for every square kilometer of Ukrainian land that Russia captures, Moscow is probably losing about 100 men, according to Western assessments. Above and behind the frontlines as well as in the air campaign being waged by Moscow, the development and deployment of drones will continue to be critical. The recent Russian advances in Donetsk, while incremental, were enabled by the tactic of isolating the battlefield – cutting Ukrainian units from supplies throughdrone strikeson supply vehicles up to 30 kilometers (18.6 miles) from the front lines. Ukrainian defenses are heavily reliant on layers of drones. The Ukrainians are developing a concept sometimes dubbed the "drone wall," designed to "provide a continuous defensive corridor of drones along Ukraine's most vulnerable frontiers to inflict significant casualties on Russian forces," according to Mick Ryan, author of the blog Futura Doctrina. Konrad Muzyka, a defense analyst at Rochan Consulting,says that"Ukrainian forces are increasingly lethal with drone-artillery coordination. Russian assaults — motorcycle-based and armored — were defeated across several fronts with minimal Ukrainian losses" in April. But Ryan points out that an effective drone wall will require integration "and probably AI-assisted decision-making and analysis," as well as integration with electronic warfare. And it's a two-way street. Ukrainian drones are "guided by small radar, and Russia is now systematically working to locate and target these radar stations,"Watling writes. Zelensky said Tuesday that Russia plans to ramp up production of Shahed attack drones to between 300 and 350 per day. Asked whether there may come a time when Russia fires 1,000 drones in one day, he replied: "I cannot say that this will not happen." Sending drones in their hundreds saturates air defenses, as they accumulate over a target area. Russia has also developed drones that can evade Ukrainian jamming and can fly higher and faster than earlier models. Ukrainian analyst Oleksandr Kovalenko said last week that one Shahed had been observed at a record altitude of 4,900 meters. According to Zelensky, Ukraine is now deploying F-16 and Mirage fighter jets to supplement air defenses. "We are also moving towards drone-to-drone interceptors," he said Tuesday. Ukraine's former military chief, ValeriiZaluzhnyi, says Ukraine must wage a "high-tech war of survival" in which drones play a critical role, to "make the economic burden of the war unbearable for Russia." Speaking to a Kyiv forumlast week, Zaluzhnyi – now Ukraine's ambassador to London - said that his country had failed to exploit innovations "where yesterday we were ahead of the enemy. The enemy has already outpaced us." Analysts cite Russia's growing use of short-range fiber-optic drones that can't be jammed as one example of the technological race. Ukraine is yet to scale up the use of such drones, which rely on millimeters-thick, but miles-long, optical fibers. Zelensky denied Ukraine was losing the drone war. "We will have the same number of drones as the Russians, 300-500 per day - we are very close to it," he said. The issue was not production, Zelensky said – it was financial. As Ukraine seeks to produce more of its own weapons – often in association with Western manufacturers, Zelensky added: "I would like to see us receive $30 billion to launch Ukrainian production at full capacity." But that is a long-term goal. Watling, from RUSI, envisages a tough few months for Ukraine that "will place a premium on the efficiency of Ukrainian drone and artillery operations, the ability of Ukrainian commanders to preserve their troops, and the continuity of supplies flowing from Ukraine's international partners." The continuation of US supplies is unsure as Trump blows hot and cold about whether Washington should continue helping Ukraine defend itself. Putin is "desperately seeking to prevent the future supply of Western military aid to Ukraine," according to ISW, "as well-resourced Ukrainian forces have consistently demonstrated their ability to inflict unsustainable losses on Russian forces." Innovation and tactical agility will be as influential as brute force as the war enters its fourth summer. CNN's Kosta Gak and Victoria Butenko contributed reporting. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

Ukraine scrambles to set up ‘drone wall’ as it braces for Russian summer offensive

Ukraine scrambles to set up 'drone wall' as it braces for Russian summer offensive Russiadramatically intensified missile and drone ...
Israel announces new West Bank settlements despite sanctions threatNew Foto - Israel announces new West Bank settlements despite sanctions threat

(Reuters) - Israel's government has approved 22 new Jewish settlements in the occupied-West Bank, Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said on Thursday, a move that could deepen divisions with some allies, who have threatened sanctions over further expansion. Far-right Smotrich, an advocate for Israeli sovereignty over the West Bank, wrote on X that the new settlements would be located in the northern area of the West Bank, without specifying where. Israeli media cited the Defense Ministry as saying that among the new Jewish settlements, existing "outposts" would be legalised and new settlements would also be built. Around 700,000 Israeli settlers live among 2.7 million Palestinians in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, territories Israel captured from Jordan in the 1967 war. Israel later annexed East Jerusalem, a move not recognized by most countries, but has not formally extended sovereignty over the West Bank. Palestinians see expansion of the settlements as a hindrance to their aspirations to establish an independent Palestinian state in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including occupied East Jerusalem. There is a growing list of European countries demanding that Israel end the war in Gaza, while Britain, France and Canada this month warned Israel it could impose targeted sanctions if Israel continued to expand settlements in the West Bank. Most of the international community considers the Jewish settlements illegal. The Israeli government deems settlements legal under its own laws, while some so-called "outposts" are illegal but often tolerated and sometimes later legalised. Settlement activity in the West Bank has accelerated sharply since the war in Gaza, now in its 20th month, adding to escalating Israeli military operations against Palestinian militants and increasing numbers of settler attacks targeting Palestinian residents. Nabil Abu Rudeineh, a spokesperson for Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, called Israel's decision a "dangerous escalation", accusing the government of continuing to drag the region into a "cycle of violence and instability". "This extremist Israeli government is trying by all means to prevent the establishment of an independent Palestinian state," he told Reuters, urging U.S. President Donald Trump's administration to intervene. Hamas official Sami Abu Zuhri condemned the announcement and called on the United States and the European Union to take action. "The announcement of the building of 22 new settlements in the West Bank is part of the war led by Netanyahu against the Palestinian people," Abu Zuhri told Reuters. (Reporting by Alexander Cornwell, Ali Sawafta, Nidal Al-Mughrabi; Editing by Sharon Singleton)

Israel announces new West Bank settlements despite sanctions threat

Israel announces new West Bank settlements despite sanctions threat (Reuters) - Israel's government has approved 22 new Jewish settlemen...
Philippine president's Cabinet revamp retains defense chief, a vocal critic of China's aggressionNew Foto - Philippine president's Cabinet revamp retains defense chief, a vocal critic of China's aggression

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. will retain Defense SecretaryGilberto Teodoro Jr., who is among the most vocal critics of China in Asia, as Marcos presses on with amidterm overhaulof his Cabinet, a senior official said Thursday. Teodoro, who has strongly echoed Marcos' criticisms of China'sincreasingly assertive actionsin the South China Sea, will remain in his post, Executive Secretary Lucas Bersamin told a news conference. Maj. Gen. Nicolas Torre III will be the next chief of the 232,000-member national police. Torre led the arrest of former PresidentRodrigo Dutertein March and his turnover to International Criminal Court detention in The Netherlands for his deadly anti-drug crackdowns, Bersamin said. Last year, Torre oversaw the arrest of Philippine religious leaderApollo Quiboloy, a key Duterte supporter who was placed on the FBI's most-wanted list after being indicted for sexual abuses and trafficking in the U.S. Torre would take over his retiring predecessor, Gen. Rommel Marbil. Marcos asked all of his Cabinet secretaries last week to submit resignations in what the government said was a "bold reset" of his administration following the May 12 midterm elections, which saw more opposition candidates win crucial Senate seats. Marcos, the 67-year-old son of a late Philippine dictator overthrown in 1986, won the presidency in the deeply divided Southeast Asian country by a landslide in 2022 in a stunning political comeback as he made a steadfast call for national unity. But his equally popular vice-presidential running mate, Sara Duterte, later had a falling out with him that has sparked intense political discord. With support from friendly countries including the U.S., a treaty ally, Marcos emerged as themost vocal criticof China's actions in the disputed South China Sea while contending with an array of longstanding domestic issues including inflation, delayed fulfillment of a campaign promise to bring down the price of rice and many reports of kidnappings and other crimes. Teodoro told The Associated Press in March that China'saggressive policiesin the disputed waters were now considered the greatest threat to the Philippines' national security and should also be regarded as a global threat because it could choke a trade route that is crucial for global supply chains. "The greatest external threat actually is Chinese aggression, Chinese expansionism and the attempt by China to change the international law through the use of force or acquiescence … or its attempt to reshape the world order to one that it controls," Teodoro told the AP. Bersamin, who serves as executive secretary to Marcos and the Cabinet, has not specified the reasons for each Cabinet change but said "the president has no patience for under performance." Bersamin said last week that Marcos decided to replace Foreign Secretary Enrique Manalo with Foreign Undersecretary Theresa Lazaro, who has relayed Philippine protests and led talks with Chinese officials concerning an alarming spike of confrontations between Chinese and Philippine coast guard and naval forces in recent years. China claims virtually the entire South China Sea, a key global trade and security route despite a 2016 international arbitration ruling initiated by the Philippines that invalidated those expansive claims based on the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. Vietnam, Malaysia, Brunei and Taiwan also are involved in the long-seething territorial standoffs regarded as a flashpoint in Asia.

Philippine president's Cabinet revamp retains defense chief, a vocal critic of China's aggression

Philippine president's Cabinet revamp retains defense chief, a vocal critic of China's aggression MANILA, Philippines (AP) — Philipp...
China thought it had a truce with the US. Then Trump dropped two bombshellsNew Foto - China thought it had a truce with the US. Then Trump dropped two bombshells

A one-two punch from the United States risks shattering the already fragile trade war truce between Washington and Beijing, with Chinese tech companies and students both dealt shock blows by the Trump administration Wednesday night. Viewed from withinChina, things had been looking up after the world's two largest economies agreed todramatically roll back steep tariffs– a conciliatory step in a trade war that had threatened theentire global trading system. Factories began whirring again. Long-delayed shipping containers began leaving Chinese ports, destined for the US. Chinese media celebrated the agreement as a national victory, while top officials adopted an upbeat tone in describing cooperation between the two superpower rivals. But the two jabs from Washington on Wednesday will have far-reaching effects across China, angering families and authorities alike. They also throw into question the future of US-China trade talks;the temporary truceonly lasts 90 days, and the clock is ticking to reach a longer-term agreement. The first hit came in a Financial Times report on Wednesday that said moves by US President Donald Trump had effectively cut off some American companies fromselling software used to design semiconductors to China. These small chips - which power our smartphones, computers, automobiles and home appliances - have been at the fore of the US-China tech battle in recent years. The Biden administration had blocked China from accessing US-made semiconductors, and earlier this month, Washington warned companies against using AI chips made by Chinese tech giant Huawei. The obstacles were infuriating for Beijing, especially since it has poured tens of billions of dollars into its semiconductor industry, aiming to boost production at home and become less reliant on the US and other countries. Liu Pengyu, a spokesperson for the Chinese Embassy in the US, declined to comment on the reported chip software move but accused the US of "overstretching the concept of national security, abusing export controls, and maliciously blocking and suppressing China" in a statement to CNN. But it was the second blow from the White House that landed right in the living rooms of Chinese families, with US State Secretary Marco Rubio saying the US will"aggressively revoke visas for Chinese students"– especially those in critical fields or with connections to the Chinese Communist Party. It's hard to overstate the impact. There were more than 270,000 Chinese students in the US in 2024, and even more before the pandemic. While some hail from China's political and business elites, many also come from middle-class families. The path to the US is attractive, but arduous. Chinese families save for years and spend exorbitant amounts of money to send their kids abroad, with students attending cram schools or hiring tutors to polish their applications. Rubio's announcement jeopardizes all of that – with students now facing potential deportation in the middle of their hard-won education. Given China is a one-party state that reaches deep into nearly every aspect of society, it can be difficult or impossible for many students to disprove any claims that they're connected to the Communist Party – especially if the State Department defines that term loosely. A spokesperson for China's foreign ministry said on Thursday it "strongly opposes" the move, accusing the US of "unjustly" revoking visas "under the pretext of ideology and national security." Candy, a statistics student at the University of Michigan, who did not want to give her full name, said she feared her visa would be canceled before she graduates. "Ending up with only a high school diploma is something I dread," she said from China, where she's visiting family. "I pray to make it through my undergraduate study safely and smoothly." "When I first heard the news, I wanted to curse Trump." While the visa threat comes as a shock, some argue the targeting of students may in fact be a boon to China in the end. The number of Chinese students in the US had been declining in recent years, partly because ofsignificant shiftsin both policy and public perception.Experts saymany Chinese students and families now worry about safety, racism and discrimination, and immigration difficulties in the US – especially as more competitive higher education options open in other countries, including in China itself. Trump's crackdown could see more Chinese scholars, including some of the brightest minds in their fields, return to their home country – or choose to stay in the first place, rejecting a US education for a Chinese degree instead. And these researchers – including key leaders in technological fields – could be the key to China catching up with, or surpassing the US – the very thing many Trump officials are trying to prevent. Wednesday did bring one bit of good news for China;a federal court blocked Trumpfrom imposing most of his global tariffs, including the current 30% tariffs on China. But the administration immediately appealed the decision, leaving the status of those tariffs – and the trade war – up in the air. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

China thought it had a truce with the US. Then Trump dropped two bombshells

China thought it had a truce with the US. Then Trump dropped two bombshells A one-two punch from the United States risks shattering the alre...
Slovakia's central bank chief convicted of bribery and fined $225,000New Foto - Slovakia's central bank chief convicted of bribery and fined $225,000

BRATISLAVA, Slovakia (AP) — Slovakia's central bank chief, who is a member of theEuropean Central Bankcommittee that decides monetary policy for 20 countries, was convicted of bribery and fined 200,000 euros ($225,000) on Thursday. The verdict against central bank Gov. Peter Kažimír was issued by Judge Milan Cisarik at the country's Special Criminal Court in Pezinok. Kažimír's attorneys argued that he should have been acquitted because of the recent changes in Slovakia's penal code, which reduced punishment for corruption and that recently ended a number of corruption cases and trials. Kažimír wasn't present at the court. He said in a statement that he would appeal. His six-year term in office expires on Sunday. Kažimír was accused of paying a bribe of 48,000 euros ($54,000) at the turn of the year in 2017-18 to the head of the country's tax office in connection with a tax audit of several private companies. At the time, Kažimír was acquiring a luxury villa located in an upscale neighborhood of Bratislava, the capital, from the owner of the companies. Kažimír, who pleaded not guilty, had previously said that he considered the charges to be illegal and fabricated. The case dates to when Kažimír served as finance minister in the leftist government of populist Prime MinisterRobert Ficofrom 2012 to 2019. He was a member of Fico's Smer, or Direction, party before taking the central bank job. Smer lost the 2020 general election and was replaced by a coalition government whose parties campaigned on an anti-corruption ticket. Since that government took power, a number of people linked to Fico's party faced prosecution in corruption scandals. Kažimír was the first minister of Fico's government to stand trial. Slovakia is one of 20 countries that use the euro currency, and Kažimír is a member of the ECB's governing council, its main decision-making body. A number of people linked to the prime minister's party faced prosecution in corruption scandals. Fico returned to power for the fourth time in 2023 after his leftist party Smer won theSept. 30 parliamentary electionon apro-Russia and anti-American platform. In February 2024, lawmakers loyal to Fico's new coalition government approvedchanges to the penal codeand eliminated the office of the special prosecutor that deals with major crime and corruption. The legislation faced sharp criticism at home and abroad while thousands of Slovaks repeatedlytook to the streetsto protest. The changes include a reduction in punishments for corruption and some other crimes, including the possibility of suspended sentences, and a significant shortening of the statute of limitations.

Slovakia’s central bank chief convicted of bribery and fined $225,000

Slovakia's central bank chief convicted of bribery and fined $225,000 BRATISLAVA, Slovakia (AP) — Slovakia's central bank chief, who...

 

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