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Home » Ukraine-Russia war latest: Zelensky arrives in UK as Starmer government vows ‘not to forget war in Europe’ – UK Times
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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Zelensky arrives in UK as Starmer government vows ‘not to forget war in Europe’ – UK Times

By uk-times.com17 March 2026No Comments10 Mins Read
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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Zelensky arrives in UK as Starmer government vows ‘not to forget war in Europe’ – UK Times
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Russia’s launches devastating attack on Ukraine’s reserves in Zaporizhzhia region

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On The Ground

Volodymyr Zelensky will visit the UK on Wednesday, a minister has said as the government reaffirmed its support for Ukraine despite the ongoing US-Israeli war on Iran.

Speaking in the House of Commons on Monday, defence secretary John Healey said the world faces “two conflicts on two continents, supported by an axis of aggression with similar tactics and similar technologies”.

He said that over the last month, the UK had supplied Ukraine with 3,500 drones, 18,000 artillery rounds and three million rounds of small ammunition.

“I say this to the Ukrainian people on behalf of the UK: we will not forget the war in Europe and our total determination to stand with Ukraine remains steadfast, and we will welcome President Zelensky to this country tomorrow,” he said.

It follows reports that the peace process between Ukraine, the US and Russia is “fizzling out” with Donald Trump preoccupied by the crisis in the Middle East.

Zelensky said the US had proposed hosting the next meeting between American, Ukrainian and Russian negotiating teams, which include US envoys Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner, but Moscow had refused to send a delegation.

Adrift Russian tanker is ‘imminent and serious’ threat, say Mediterranean states

Italy, France and seven other nations told the European Commission that a Russian liquefied natural gas tanker currently adrift in the Mediterranean represents an ecological threat, and they urged swift action on the issue, a letter showed on Monday.

“The precarious condition of the vessel, combined with the nature of its specialised cargo, gives rise to an imminent and serious risk of a major ecological disaster in the heart of the Union’s maritime space,” the letter seen by Reuters said.

Russia’s transport ministry said the Arctic Metagaz, carrying LNG from the Arctic port of Murmansk, was attacked earlier this month by Ukrainian naval drones launched from the Libyan coast. Kyiv has not claimed responsibility for any such attack.

Arpan Rai17 March 2026 04:45

Russia claims capturing 12 settlements in Ukraine as part of general advances

Russia has taken control of a dozen settlements in Ukraine in ​the first two weeks of March as part of advances along the front line in eastern and ‌southern Ukraine, Russian state-run news agencies reported quoting top general Valery Gerasimov.

The claims have not been confirmed by Ukraine and come at a time Kyiv is making rapid adavances on the battlefield. President Volodymyr Zelensky said his country’s armed forces had disrupted Russian plans for an offensive, with Moscow failing to reinforce its troops.

Gerasimov, the chief of Russia’s General Staff, was speaking during a ​visit to the southern grouping of forces and pointed to gains around major Ukrainian cities in the more ​than four-year-old conflict, known in Russia as a special military operation.

“The offensive is being conducted ⁠in all directions,” the Russian defence ministry quoted him as saying on its Telegram channel.

“In two weeks in March, 12 ​settlements have been liberated by units and military formations of the United Group of troops,” it said.

Gerasimov said Russian forces were “actively ​moving towards Sloviansk,” a heavily defended town in eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk region long seen as one of Moscow’s major targets.

Zelensky, speaking in his nightly video address after meeting Ukraine’s top commander, Oleksandr Syrskyi, said Russian assaults had become less intense.

“Ukraine’s defence forces have disrupted Russia’s strategic offensive operation that the enemy had planned for March,” he said.

Arpan Rai17 March 2026 04:15

Oscar-winner Sean Penn skips ceremony, takes train to Ukraine

Hollywood actor Sean Penn stepped out of a train carriage in central Kyiv yesterday, thousands of miles away from the glitz of Hollywood’s Dolby Theatre where he had failed to turn up to receive his third acting Oscar hours earlier.

Penn, 65, won the Oscar for best supporting actor for his role in the political thriller “One Battle After Another”, but skipped Sunday’s ceremony to travel to meet Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky in the war-battered capital.

Ukraine’s state railway operator posted a short video clip of Penn getting out of the train in the morning, saying it had kept his trip a secret until the very last moment.

“Now we can say it officially: Sean Penn chose Ukraine over the Oscars!” it said on its Facebook page.

Zelensky posted a picture of him meeting the actor in the presidential office in Kyiv’s barricaded government quarters.

The photo showed the black-clad president talking to Penn who was wearing a t-shirt and jeans. There were no immediate details on their conversation.

“Sean, thanks to you, we know what a true friend of Ukraine is,” Zelensky wrote on the Telegram app.

“You have stood with Ukraine since the first day of the full-scale war. This is still true today,” Zelensky added.

Penn, a long-time advocate for Ukraine, has visited the country several times during the four-year war with Russia. He filmed a documentary about Russia’s invasion that premiered in February 2023.

Penn also lent Zelensky, a former comedian and actor, one of his other Oscars in 2022.

Arpan Rai17 March 2026 03:45

Russia downs 67 Ukrainian drones headed for Moscow, mayor says

Russian air defence units downed at least 67 Ukrainian drones headed for Moscow yesterday, according to data published by the city’s mayor Sergei Sobyanin.

On Monday morning, Sobyanin had listed 38 drones intercepted. In a long series of posts later, the mayor said a further 29 drones had been downed during the day, starting at about 8am (0500 GMT).

Sobyanin also said that air defence units had shot down around 250 Ukrainian drones approaching Moscow over the previous two days.

In its latest tally, the Russian defence ministry said air defence units had downed 59 Ukrainian drones from 4pm to 8pm over different parts of the country, including 13 targeting Moscow.

Arpan Rai17 March 2026 03:15

Pollution from Russian strike on Ukraine hydro plant cuts water to Moldovan city

A Russian attack on a hydroelectric plant in southern Ukraine triggered an oil spill and polluted water systems in neighbouring Moldova yesterday, with supplies cut completely in the country’s second-largest city, officials said.

President Maia Sandu, who wants to bring Moldova, one of Europe’s poorest countries, into the European Union by the end of the decade, said she held Russia responsible for the pollution in the Dniestr River.

Moldova’s environment ministry said the spill prompted the cutoff in Balti, a city of 90,000, and in three other towns and would remain in effect for at least a further 12 hours into Tuesday.

Schools were ordered closed and students told to work online.

Moldova declared a 15-day environmental alert on Sunday as the extent of the pollution became apparent.

“We declared environmental alert and are acting to protect our people,” Sandu said in a statement on social media, referring to the 7 March attack on the Novodnistrovsk hydro station. “Russia bears full responsibility.”

Arpan Rai17 March 2026 02:45

EU to impose sanctions on nine people for alleged war crimes in Ukraine

The European Union is set to impose sanctions on nine people accused of war crimes related to the Bucha killings in Ukraine, French foreign minister, Jean-Noel Barrot, said on Monday.

Mr Barrot announced the decision as he arrived at a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels.

Kyiv has said over 1,400 people were killed in Bucha, a suburb near the Ukrainian capital, during a 33-day occupation by Russian forces at the start of Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

The EU would also impose sanctions on Monday on several alleged Kremlin propagandists, including: the Franco-Russian Adrien Bocquet, whom Barrot described as “a key recruiter of foreign fighters in Ukraine, responsible for glorifying war crimes, and also responsible for disinformation campaigns in Europe and Africa.”

Alex Croft17 March 2026 02:15

Belgian PM calls for EU to normalise ties with Russia

Belgian prime minster Bart De Wever says Europe must negotiate with Russia to end the war with Ukraine and restore cheap energy access.

In an interview with local Belgian newspaper, L’Echo, Mr Wever said: “In private, European leaders agree with me, but no one dares to say it out loud. We must end the conflict in the interest of Europe, without being naïve towards Putin.”

He added: “At the same time, we must normalise relations with Russia and regain access to cheap energy. That is common sense.”

The European Union remains divided on the issue. French President Emmanuel Macron, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán have urged for direct talks with Moscow, while Poland and the three Baltic states are firmly opposed to the idea.

Belgian prime minster Bart De Wever says Europe must negotiate with Russia to end the war with Ukraine and restore cheap energy access
Belgian prime minster Bart De Wever says Europe must negotiate with Russia to end the war with Ukraine and restore cheap energy access (BELGA MAG/AFP via Getty Images)

Alex Croft17 March 2026 01:28

Kremlin dismisses reports of Ukraine peace process ‘fizzling out’

The Kremlin has dismissed a report by the Financial Times that suggested the peace negotiations with Ukraine were “fizzling out”, because US president Donald Trump has diverted his attention to Iran and was losing interest in Ukraine.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: “President Trump’s frequent references to Ukraine in his recent statements suggest the opposite.”

“Judging by his statements, President Trump has lost no interest whatsoever. Furthermore, he is strongly urging (Ukrainian President Volodymyr) Zelensky to strike a deal.”

Mr Peskov added that Russia was still interested in continuing discussions to bring the war to an end, but that a venue and date for the next round of negotiations remained unclear.

Mr Trump expressed frustration with Zelensky in an interview with Politico earlier this month, saying the Ukrainian president “has to get on the ball, and he has to get a deal done.”

Trump also rejected Zelensky’s offer to help the US with downing drones over the Gulf states, telling NBC’s Meet the Press that the “last person we need help from is Zelensky.”

Alex Croft17 March 2026 00:29

Analysis | Ukraine had brutal plan to bankrupt Putin with his own war dead – until Trump’s oil U-turn wrecked it

This is because Ukraine estimates that Vladimir Putin can only recruit somewhere between 35,000 and 37,000 troops a month, despite staggering sign-up bonuses, extravagant salaries, and a $165,000 (£124,000) compensation package provided to the families of Russian soldiers killed in action.

According to Ukrainian and Western sources, if Putin’s ministry paid for all the Russian dead the war is generating every month – also estimated at around 35,000 – the cost would be $5.775bn (£4.35bn).

Our world affairs editor Sam Kiley writes:

Alex Croft16 March 2026 23:32

What we know about Oscar-winning ‘Mr. Nobody against Putin’

Mr Nobody Against Putin, distributed by Apple TV, premiered at last year’s Sundance Film Festival and has now won an Oscar.

“In the name of our future, in the name of all of our children, stop all of these wars now,” the film’s protagonist and co-director Pavel Talankin said in Russian from the stage through a translator.

Its tone is light and almost mischievously comical at times, with Talankin at moments resembling his fellow Oscar winner Michael Moore.

Talankin was a teacher and activities director in a small-town school in Russia who captured his students’ lessons, chants and songs promoting the war in Ukraine on video.

He smuggled his hard drives out of the country to collaborate with American director David Borenstein, who lives and works in Copenhagen, Denmark.

It is the first Oscar for both Borenstein and Talankin.

The film won the British Academy Film Award during the Oscar run-up. But the win was still something of an upset over The Perfect Neighbor — director Geeta Gandbhir’s Netflix film built almost entirely from police body camera footage — which most media prognosticators picked as the winner.

Russian teacher Pavel Talankin hoists his Oscar for Best Documentary Feature Film for
Russian teacher Pavel Talankin hoists his Oscar for Best Documentary Feature Film for “Mr. Nobody Against Putin” (AFP via Getty Images)

Alex Croft16 March 2026 22:30

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