US president Donald Trump has doubled down on Washington’s threats to abandon talks aimed at brokering a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine if there are no signs of immediate progress.
“Now if for some reason one of the two parties makes it very difficult, we’re just going to say, ‘you’re foolish, you’re fools, you’re horrible people, and we’re going to just take a pass,” Mr Trump told reporters at the White House on Friday.
“But hopefully we won’t have to do that,” he added.
US secretary of state Marco Rubio also warned on Friday that the White House may move on unless there are signs of progress.
Their comments came hours after Ukraine announced it had signed a preliminary agreement on a minerals deal with the US and that a final accord could be reached by the end of next week.
Meanwhile, Russia launched eight missiles and 87 drones in an overnight attack on Ukraine on Saturday, causing damage in five regions across the country, the Ukrainian air force said.
On Friday, another attack launched by Russia on Ukraine killed one person and wounded more than 100 others, including six children, in Kharkiv, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said.
Mr Zelensky also claimed that China is supplying weapons, including gunpowder and artillery, to Russia – accusations that China has dismissed.
Full story: US threatens to walk away from Russia-Ukraine peace talks ‘within days’
Mr Rubio’s threats came at the start of the Easter weekend, after Russia’s latest attack on Ukraine left one person dead and 98 injured in Kharkiv on Friday morning. US officials said last month that the US president hoped to secure a ceasefire agreement by 20 April, a symbolic date on which Western and Orthodox celebrations of Easter will overlap this year – and one that is fast approaching, with no deal currently in close sight.
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Tara Cobham19 April 2025 12:00
Russian forces capture village in eastern Ukraine, defence ministry says
Russia’s Defence Ministry said on Saturday that its troops had taken control of the village of Shevchenko in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region.
The battlefield report could not be independently verified.
Tara Cobham19 April 2025 11:30
Trump backs far away from promising to end Russia-Ukraine war in 24 hours
During his campaign, Donald Trump said repeatedly that he would be able to end the war between Russia and Ukraine “in 24 hours” upon taking office. He has changed his tone since becoming president again.
As various US emissaries have held talks looking for an end to the war, both Trump and his top officials have become more reserved about the prospects of a peace deal. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Friday suggested the US might soon back away from negotiations altogether without more progress, adding a comment that sounded like a repudiation of the president’s old comments.
“No one’s saying this can be done in 12 hours,” he told reporters.
The promises made by presidential candidates are often felled by the realities of governing. But Mr Trump’s shift is noteworthy given his prior term as president and his long histories with both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
Tara Cobham19 April 2025 11:00
Russian forces retake village from Ukraine in Kursk region, state news agency reports
Russian troops recaptured the village of Oleshnya in Russia’s western Kursk region from Ukrainian forces, the RIA state news agency cited the Russian defence ministry as saying on Saturday.
The battlefield report could not be independently verified.
Russia has been fighting to eject Ukrainian troops from Kursk since Kyiv sent its forces across the border in a lightning incursion in August 2024.
Tara Cobham19 April 2025 10:30
Watch: Trump insists he’s not being ‘played by Russia’ as Ukraine peace talks stall
Tara Cobham19 April 2025 10:01
Editorial: The abject failure of Donald Trump’s peace initiative is now plain for all to see
Painful as it is to recall at this juncture, it was not so very long ago that Donald Trump – as candidate and then as president-elect – bragged that he could end the war in Ukraine “in a day” – or, just to emphasise the spurious precision and seriousness of his outlandish claim, “within 24 hours”. Perhaps the president was speaking figuratively, after all.
Since he took power almost 100 days ago, it is fair to say that progress has been slow, and that what little has been achieved by the various rounds of peace talks – often with Ukraine cruelly absent – has not been sustained.
Even Mr Trump has declared himself “very angry” and “pissed off” at the delays, which have usually been caused by Russia playing for time in a fairly blatant manner. Yet that was a month ago, and even a threat (which turned out to be empty) to sanction Russia’s oil export trade failed to push Moscow along the path towards peace.
Tara Cobham19 April 2025 09:28
Russia launches barrage of missiles and drones on Ukraine overnight
Russia launched 8 missiles and nearly 90 drones, damaging infrastructure in five regions across Ukraine on Friday night.
More than a third of the drones were shot down, and another 36 were redirected by electronic warfare, the Ukrainian air force said.
It remains unclear how many people were injured in the attack.
“During the night of April 19, 2025 (from 9:00 p.m. Kyiv time on April 18), the Russian occupiers carried out a strike on Ukraine with ground- and air-launched missiles and attack UAVs,” the air force said in a statement.
Damage has been recorded in five of Ukraine’s regions in the south, northeast and east, it said.
However, the air force did not reveal details regarding the fate of the missiles.
The statement noted that the eight missiles included three Iskander ballistic missiles as well as anti-ship missiles suspected to be launched from the Crimean region.
Vishwam Sankaran19 April 2025 09:00
Russia jails teen for quoting Ukrainian poet
A St. Petersburg court sentenced a 19-year-old Russian activist for nearly three months on Friday after she affixed a quote from a Ukrainian poem onto a monument.
Darya Kozyreva was sentenced to two years and eight months in a penal colony for “discrediting” the Russian army after she affixed a verse from a Ukrainian poet. Taras Shevchenko’s “My Testament” to his statue in St Petersburg.
The quote she pasted reads: “Oh bury me, then rise ye up. And break your heavy chains. And water with the tyrants’ blood. The freedom you have gained” (translation by John Weir).
She was arrested in February 2024 and has spent over a year in pre-trial detention, according to local news sources.
In her defiant final statement at the court, Ms Kozyreva said: “I still dream that Ukraine will reclaim every inch of its territory: Donbas, Crimea, all of it. And I believe that one day, it will. History will judge, and judge fairly. But Ukraine has already won. It has won. That’s all.”
Vishwam Sankaran19 April 2025 08:44
Ceasefire on energy infrastructure strikes has ended, Kremlin says
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Friday that the temporary ceasefire agreement on the use of long-range missiles targeting energy infrastructure had ended.
It remains unclear whether there will be an intensification of long-range missile strikes, as the terms of the ceasefire were never made public.
Peskov added that the Russian president has not issued any further instructions.
On Thursday, the Ukrainian president warned energy workers that Russia may escalate strikes on Ukraine around Easter.
Vishwam Sankaran19 April 2025 08:22
Australia pledges support for Melbourne man charged by Russia over fighting in Ukraine
Australia says it would use “whatever avenues” it can to help release Melbourne man Oscar Jenkins, facing a 15-year jail term in Russia for fighting on Ukraine’s side.
Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese said his administration would “continue to make representations to the reprehensible regime of Vladimir Putin” for Jenkins’ release.
The 33-year-old former teacher reportedly arrived in Ukraine to participate as a mercenary in the war and was paid up to $15,000 a month to fight on Ukraine’s side.
The Australian prime minister said his government would “stand up and use whatever avenues we have at our disposal to continue to make those representations”.
Vishwam Sankaran19 April 2025 08:10