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Here’s where things stand on Thursday, May 29:
Fighting
- Ukraine’s military has said it struck several Russian weapons production sites in or around Moscow during a major overnight drone attack, including the Angstrem microchip factory, the Kronstadt plant and the Raduga plant.
- Russia said its air defence units downed three Ukrainian drones targeting Moscow in the early hours of Thursday morning. One of the drones reportedly hit a dwelling south of the city, but caused no casualties or serious damage.
- Russian troops have taken control of the town of Kostiantynivka in Ukraine’s Sumy region as well as the village of Zelene Pole in the Donetsk region, the Defence Ministry in Moscow said.
- Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Russia has massed more than 50,000 troops near the northeastern Sumy region, but Kyiv has taken steps to prevent them from conducting a large-scale summer offensive as anticipated.
- Nearly 175,000 servicemen have signed Russian army contracts since the beginning of this year, Russia’s TASS state news agency reported.
Diplomacy
- United States President Donald Trump again expressed frustration with Russian President Vladimir Putin over the intensifying Ukraine conflict, a day after warning Putin that he was “playing with fire” by resisting ceasefire talks while escalating drone and missile attacks on Ukrainian cities.
- Trump said Putin may be intentionally delaying negotiations on a ceasefire and told reporters in the Oval Office, “We’re going to find out whether or not he’s tapping us along or not, and if he is, we’ll respond a little differently”.
- Trump also told reporters that he is not yet prepared to impose new sanctions on Russia because he did not want the penalties to scuttle a potential peace deal.
- The Kremlin, responding to Trump’s remarks, said national interests were paramount to the Russian leader.
- US Secretary of State Marco Rubio doubled down on Trump’s calls for a “good faith dialogue” between Ukraine and Russia as the only path to ending the war when he spoke with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.
- Russia has proposed holding the next round of direct talks with Ukraine on June 2 in Istanbul, Lavrov said.
- Ukraine’s defence minister, Rustem Umerov, recently held a call with the head of the Russian delegation in previous Istanbul talks to discuss the memorandum Moscow is currently working on, laying out its conditions for a peace accord.
- Ukraine has already handed over its version of the peace memorandum to Russia and urged Moscow to share its version before peace talks can take place.
- Turkiye’s foreign minister, Hakan Fidan, will travel to Kyiv for a two-day visit after discussing peace efforts in Moscow earlier this week.
- Ukraine has protested to the International Atomic Energy Agency about reports that Moscow is connecting the Ukrainian Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, which Russia occupies, to its own power grid.
Regional security
- NATO will ask Germany to provide seven more brigades, some 40,000 troops, for the alliance’s defence, the Reuters news agency reports, as it dramatically increases its military capability in light of Russia’s growing threat.
- German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, speaking during a visit of President Zelenskyy to Berlin, said his government will “intensify cooperation” with Kyiv and will not impose range limits on missiles jointly produced by the two countries.
- Germany also announced it would provide additional military support for Ukraine amounting to about 5 billion euros ($5.65bn).
- Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov said Germany’s plans to jointly develop long-range missiles with Ukraine, as well as supplies of German tanks to Kyiv, showed it was already a participant in the Russia-Ukraine war.
- German prosecutors have charged three people – a Ukrainian, a Russian and an Armenian – with foreign agent activity, on suspicion of spying on a Ukrainian man in Germany with the possible aim of killing him.
Russia says no Ukraine response on proposal for more Istanbul talks
Russia says it has yet to receive a response from Ukraine over its proposal to hold another round of ceasefire talks in Istanbul next week, as Turkiye’s president urged the warring sides not to “close the door” to dialogue.
Moscow said earlier this week it wanted to hold new talks with Ukraine in the Turkish city to present a memorandum that would outline what it referred to as the key elements for “overcoming the root causes” of the war.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Thursday that so far Moscow has not received a reply from Kyiv.
When asked to comment on Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha’s suggestion that Russia should immediately hand over the memorandum, Peskov dismissed the idea as “non-constructive”.
“Here, you have to either confirm your readiness to continue negotiations or do the opposite,” Peskov said.
Ukrainian Defence Minister Rustem Umerov said on Wednesday that Kyiv had already submitted its memorandum on a potential settlement and called on Russia to produce its version immediately, rather than waiting until next week.
Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry spokesman, Heorhii Tykhyi, said on X on Thursday that Russia’s hesitancy to share its plan suggests that it was “likely filled with unrealistic ultimatums”.
“They are afraid of revealing that they are stalling the peace process,” Tykhyi said.
Officials from both sides met in Istanbul on May 16, their first direct talks in more than three years, but the encounter failed to yield a breakthrough.
But Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said the recent momentum for talks was an opportunity to reach lasting peace.
The road to conflict resolution
“The road to a resolution goes through more dialogue, more diplomacy. We are using all our diplomatic power and potential for peace,” he told reporters on Thursady, according to his office.
“During the course of each of our meetings, we have reminded our interlocutors that they should not pass up this opportunity,” Erdogan said, adding that “extinguishing this huge fire in our region … is a humanitarian duty.”
In Ukraine, local authorities said at least five people were killed across the country after Russia fired 90 drones overnight.
Russia’s Ministry of Defence said its air defences had intercepted 48 Ukrainian drones overnight, including 30 over the Belgorod region.
The ministry added in separate comments that its army had captured the village of Stroivka in Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region as well as Gnativka and Shevchenko Pershe in the Donetsk region.
Ukraine submits ceasefire plan, but Russia responds with escalation
Ukraine and Russia exchanged 1,000 prisoners of war each on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, their largest exchange in the three-year war, following a Russian proposal made during talks in Istanbul on May 16.
But any confidence built by that gesture may have been dissipated by Russia’s launching of its largest long-range aerial attacks against Ukrainian civilians during the same three days.
Russia launched more than 900 kamikaze drones and 92 missiles, killing at least 16 civilians
Russia launched more than 900 kamikaze drones and 92 missiles, killing at least 16 civilians. Those attacks followed days of Ukrainian strikes on Russian military infrastructure in Russia’s Tula, Alabuga and Tatarstan regions, in which it used at least 800 drones.
German Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul said on Tuesday that Germany might supply Ukraine with the 1,000km- (620-mile)-range Taurus missiles it has asked for at any time, without warning Russia, strengthening Ukraine’s ability to devastate Russian military factories.
Chancellor Friedrich Merz said he would impose no range limits on the weapons supplied to Ukraine. And on Wednesday, as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visited Berlin, Merz announced that Germany would help Kyiv to develop long-range missiles of its own.
The Kremlin has reacted with alarm. Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said, “If such decisions are made, they will absolutely go against our aspirations to reach a political settlement.” Russia requested a UN Security Council meeting “in connection with the actions of European states trying to prevent a peaceful settlement of the Ukrainian crisis”.
Yet even before the announcements by Germany, the prospect of any “peaceful settlement” had been dealt a blow by the drone and missile exchanges between Moscow and Kyiv.
Unlike Ukraine’s, Russia’s drones landed in cities, lighting up the skyline with exploding apartment buildings.
Ukrainian defenders managed to down 82 percent of the drones, which is lower than their usual rate. Military intelligence sources told The Economist that Russia was flying its drones at an altitude of more than 2km (1.3 miles), out of the range of mobile heavy machinegun units, and had adapted the drones to use Ukraine’s own internet signal for navigation, immunising them from electronic interference.
Russia also pressed on with its ground assaults in eastern Ukraine, and claimed to have captured six settlements in the regions of Sumy, Kharkiv and Donetsk. Russia also expanded a salient near the town of Pokrovsk, its main target this year, in preparation for a wider ground offensive.
“There is currently no indication that they are seriously considering peace or diplomacy. On the contrary, there is ample evidence that they are preparing new offensive operations. Russia is counting on a prolonged war,” Zelenskyy said in his Monday evening address.
Donald Trump got angry with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin
United States President Donald Trump got angry with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, a man he openly admires.
“Something has happened to him,” Trump wrote on his social media platform, referring to Putin. “He has gone absolutely CRAZY!”
Trump told reporters, “We’re in the middle of talking and he’s shooting rockets into Kyiv and other cities.”
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov belittled the US president’s reaction, speaking of the “emotional overstrain of everyone”.

The next diplomatic steps
Ukraine has nonetheless stayed the diplomatic course, submitting a memorandum detailing its conditions for a ceasefire on May 27, fulfilling another Russian proposal.
A reciprocal memorandum that Russia is meant to submit had not yet been reported received in Kyiv or Washington by Thursday morning.
Pope Leo XIV had offered the Vatican as a venue for the next round of talks that are to follow this exchange of memorandums, but Lavrov thought it “somewhat inelegant when two Orthodox countries would use a Catholic venue to discuss the root causes of the crisis”, preferring to return to Istanbul.
Russia has insisted on a conditional ceasefire that addresses “the root causes underlying this conflict and how they must be excised like a malignant tumour”. Russia considers Ukraine’s break with the Moscow Patriarchate and the creation of an autocephalous church in Kyiv to be one of those “root causes” of the conflict.
Another is the use of the Russian language. Ukraine is a largely bilingual country, but in 2019, it passed a law obliging public servants to use Ukrainian. It did not ban Russian, but Russia calls that discriminatory.
“Ukraine, which lies beyond the constitutional borders of the Russian Federation, is home to millions of people who speak Russian. It is their native language,” Lavrov said at a news conference on May 23, speaking of Ukrainian territory that is outside the Kremlin’s control. “Leaving them to the junta [government in Kyiv], which has banned them from speaking it… would be a crime,” he said. “We cannot allow this to happen under any circumstances.”
Another “root cause”, according to the Kremlin, is the very existence of the Zelenskyy government.
Russia insists Zelenskyy is illegitimate because he has stayed in power beyond his constitutional term, even though the constitution allows him to do so in a time of national crisis, and the Ukrainian parliament has extended his presidency.
Zelenskyy himself offered to resign last February, if that meant Russia pulled back its troops and Ukraine were allowed to join NATO.
That offer was made to the US, not Russia, and Trump ruled out NATO membership for Ukraine in a peace plan he delivered to Kyiv on April 17.
Yet Piotr Lukasiewicz, Poland’s charge d’affaires in Ukraine, told the VOX Ukraine conference on May 24 that Poland supports Ukraine’s accession to NATO and the EU.
He said relations had evolved during the three-year war. “This transformation has led us to a firm conviction that for security reasons, due to economic and political interests, Ukraine should be in the European Union as our partner – political, economic, social. Ukraine should also join NATO. This is our strategic, political, historical and civilizational interest,” Lukasiewicz said.
Moscow’s ‘buffer zone
On May 20, during his first visit to Kursk since it was secured from a Ukrainian counter-invasion, Putin held a televised news conference with local officials. One asked him to create a buffer zone in Ukraine’s neighbouring Sumy region. “Sumy must be ours,” he told Putin.
The following day, Putin announced that a buffer zone would be created inside Ukraine, an idea he first floated in March last year.
A military expert told the Russian state-owned news agency TASS that Russian troops were advancing along a 15km- (9-mile-)wide front in Sumy to establish that buffer zone.
Days later, former president and deputy head of Russia’s National Security Council Dmitry Medvedev went further. “If military aid to the [Zelenskyy government] continues, the buffer zone could look like this,” he wrote on his Telegram channel, showing a map with almost all of Ukraine shaded.
More sanctions for Russia
When he lashed out against Putin on Sunday, Trump wrote that Russia “deserves full-scale pressure, everything that can be done to limit their military capability”.
But after speaking with Putin on the phone the next day, he refrained from actually attempting to limit that capability through further sanctions, even though the Sunday-to-Monday overnight attacks on Ukraine were bigger and deadlier than the attacks of the day before.
He now faces pressure to introduce sanctions if Putin doesn’t agree to a ceasefire. “If nothing shifts, Russia can expect decisive action from the US Senate. Our bill will isolate Russia and turn it into a trading island,” read a statement from Senators Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat from Connecticut, and Lindsey Graham, a Republican from South Carolina.
Meanwhile, Europe is preparing an 18th package of sanctions against Russia.
Germany’s Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul told public broadcaster ARD on Sunday that those sanctions would come as a response to Russia’s latest attacks on Ukraine’s cities.
The Reuters news agency exclusively reported last week that Ukraine has asked the EU to place secondary sanctions on those who purchased Russian oil, such as India and China, and Western companies that sell Russia high-tech products through third parties. Ukraine also reportedly asked the EU to take sanctions decisions by majority decision, to prevent Russophilic members from derailing them.
EU Energy Commissioner Dan Jorgensen has said even Moscow-leaning members of the bloc, such as Hungary and Slovakia, are adopting an EU roadmap to completely boycott Russian energy exports by 2027.
He recently gave members of the European parliament a progress report. “By 2022, half of the coal we imported into the EU was Russian. We’ve stopped importing it completely. Oil imports dropped from 27 percent to 3 percent. And gas – from 45 percent in 2022 to 13 percent today,” Jorgensen said on May 22, lamenting the fact that the EU still paid Russia 23 billion euros ($26bn) last year for energy.
On the day Jorgensen spoke, the European Parliament approved sanctions on Russian and Belarusian agricultural products, as well as a stiff tariff on fertiliser from the two countries that will rise to 430 euros ($484) a tonne over three years.