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Video shows barrage of artillery strikes in Russia
We’ve wrapped up our live coverage for the day. You can read more about Russia’s war in Ukraine here, or scroll through the updates below.
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It's past midnight in Kyiv. Here's what you should know
From CNN staff
Russia is suffering “significant losses” during fighting around Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine, according to Ukrainian military commander Oleksandr Syrskyi, who said his forces will continue to fight for the territory.
His comments come a day after Wagner leader Yevgeny Prigozhin said that 99% of his troops had left Bakhmut after handing over their positions to soldiers from the Russian military.
Strikes on both sides of frontline Ukraine: At least 20 people were wounded, including children, in a Russian attack Saturday evening in the Dnipropetrovsk region, the regional military administration said. And Russian and Ukrainian officials reported a series of explosions in Russian-occupied cities of the southern Zaporizhzhia region Saturday. No casualties were reported by either side following those attacks.
NATO discussions: Finland’s?accession to NATO?highlights that Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine has been a “strategic failure,” according to US Ambassador to Poland Mark Brzezinski. Meanwhile, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told The Wall Street Journal in?an exclusive video interview that he understands Ukraine will?not be able to join NATO?while its war against Russia is ongoing, saying, “We do not want to be in NATO during the war. It’s too late now. We should have been there before.”
Ukrainian official: At least 20 people, including children, wounded in Russian attack near Dnipro
From CNN’s Mariya Knight
Rescuers work in the aftermath of a Russian attack in Pidhorodne on Saturday.
President Volodymyr Zelensky/Telegram
A Russian attack left at least 20 people wounded in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region Saturday, said Serhii Lysak, the head of the region’s military administration.?
Five children are among those injured, Lysak said on Telegram.
Lysak said the explosion rocked?Pidhorodne — a riverfront town outside Dnipro, the region’s administrative center and one of the largest cities in Ukraine. The blast hit a two-story residential building, trapping people under the rubble, according to the regional leader.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky also blamed Russian forces for hitting the buildings, saying via Telegram that people were still buried in the wreckage.
Ukrainian State Emergency Services said two buildings caught fire after they were hit, but one of the blazes was already extinguished.?
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Series of explosions rocks Russian-occupied cities in southern Ukraine, officials say
From CNN's Mariya Knight and Yulia Kesaieva?
Russian and Ukrainian officials have reported a series of explosions in Russian-occupied cities of the southern Zaporizhzhia region Saturday.??
No casualties were reported by either side following the attacks.
One of the region’s Russian-installed leaders, Vladimir Rogov, said Russian air defenses shot down six rockets over Berdiansk, a port city at the southeastern tip of the region.?He blamed Ukraine’s military for the attack.
The Russian-installed Berdiansk civil-military administration said even though the missiles were destroyed in the sky,?fragments fell?near a Catholic church and a bus station, damaging a car.?
An explosion near a bus station Berdiansk on Saturday.
Pravda_Gerashchenko/Telegram
The Russian-backed Rogov also reported a series of explosions in Melitopol, west of Berdiansk.
Saturday’s explosions mark the latest in a recent string of attacks on Russian-occupied territories in southern Ukraine.
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Wagner chief Prigozhin again criticizes Russian military and says his fighters may go to Belgorod
From CNN's Mariya Knight
The head of the Wagner private military company, Yevgeny Prigozhin, speaks in Yekaterinburg, Russia, on May 30.?
?Marina Moldavskaja/Kommersant/Sipa USA/AP
The head of the Wagner private military company, Yevgeny Prigozhin, claimed in a Telegram post Saturday that unidentified Kremlin factions “are destroying (the) Russian state” and trying to sow discord between him and Chechen leadership and its fighters.?
Prigozhin said a conflict with Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov arose — but has since been settled — because of the Wagner chief’s criticism toward Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov.
Prigozhin claimed that he criticizes the defense minister and the chief of the general staff because “they don’t do their job correctly.”
Prigozhin repeatedly berated Russian military leadership during the grinding battle in the eastern city of Bakhmut, accusing top brass of not providing enough ammunition. “They didn’t supply us with shells, and this is the reason why so many of my people got killed,” he said Saturday.
But Prigozhin said he never talked negatively about the Chechen leader or his “Akhmat” detachment.?He also said he is not interested in “stirring up ethnic conflicts.”?
On Belgorod: Prigozhin commented on developments in Belgorod, the region that borders Ukraine and has seen recent shelling and cross-border incursions, which he called “a clear attempt to capture that area.”?
He criticized the Russian Defense Ministry over the handling of the incursions, which Moscow blames on Ukraine. Ukrainian officials have insisted that the groups going across the border are anti-Putin Russian nationals acting independently.
“The Ministry of Defense is not in a state to do anything at all as it de-facto doesn’t exist — it is in chaos,” Prigozhin said.?
“If the Ministry of Defense doesn’t stop what is happening in the Belgorod region soon enough, don’t stop that chaos that is happening around capturing of Russian Federation territory, then we (Wagner units) will certainly come to the Belgorod region and we will protect our people,” Prigozhin said, adding, “we won’t wait on the invitation.”
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Russia continues to suffer "significant" losses near Bakhmut, Ukrainian commander says
From CNN’s Kostan Nechyporenko and Allegra Goodwin
Ukrainian troops fire artillery on the Bahkmut frontline in Ukraine, on May 28.
Muhammed Enes Yildirim/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Russia continues to suffer “significant losses” during fighting around Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine, the Commander of Ukraine’s Ground Forces Oleksandr Syrskyi said Saturday after visiting troops on the front line.
Syrskyi’s comments came a day after Yevgeny Prigozhin, the leader of the Russian private military company Wagner, said that 99% of his troops had left Bakhmut after handing over their positions to soldiers from the Russian military.
Bakhmut has been the site of one of the bloodiest battles between Russian and Ukrainian forces since the Kremlin launched its invasion last year. Prigozhin claimed victory and control of the city last month, though Ukraine says it continues to have a foothold on the southwestern edge of the city.
Reports suggest that front lines in and around the city have been largely static. In early May, while Wagner forces were pushing westward out from the center of Bakhmut, Ukrainian forces had been making limited territorial gains on higher ground to the northwest and southwest of the city.
The latest from the battlefield: In its daily operational update, Ukraine’s Armed Forces claimed on Saturday that Russia’s attempted offensive actions near Ivanivske, a small town around 5 miles west of Bakhmut, were unsuccessful. Kyiv said that Russian forces had carried out air strikes on nearby Bila Hora and Chasiv Yar, as well as a missile strike on the town of Druzhkivka, in the same part of the Donetsk region.?
CNN is unable to verify claims on battlefield developments.?
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Growing number of attacks bring the war to Russian territory
From CNN's Kostan Nechyporenko, Darya Tarasova and Andrew Carey
Residents stand in the street as smoke rises, following shelling in Belgorod, Russia, on June 2.
At least seven people have been killed by shelling in Russian border regions since Friday, according to Belgorod’s regional Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov.
Two men and a woman were killed in a barrage of 18 rockets fired on the village of Sobolevka, Gladkov said in a series of posts on his Telegram channel. A gas pipeline and a power line were also damaged in the strike.
Sobolevka, which is located in the Valuisky city district, is the easternmost location to have been struck over the past two weeks. A rail line runs through the village and enters Ukraine in Russian-occupied territory south of the attack, suggesting it may have been targeting Russia’s supply lines.
To the northwest along Russia’s border with Ukraine, two women were killed in the village of Maslova Pristan when their car was hit by fire, Gladkov said. Two other women were killed in separate shellings on nearby villages.
Anti-Kremlin Russian fighters: Two units responsible for recent assaults on the border regions – Freedom for Russia Legion and the Russian Volunteer Corps – are made up of Russian soldiers opposed to President Vladimir Putin. Though not officially part of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, they effectively fall under the command of Ukraine’s security forces.
While the cross-border attacks have a military impact, forcing Russia to consider redeploying resources to protect what have been shown to be weak borders, they also appear designed to have an impact on Russian morale.
Legion spokesperson Alexei Baranovksiy appeared on Ukrainian television Saturday and was asked about the aims of the incursions.?
It was not about trying to “die heroically,” he said.
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Ukraine is ready to launch counteroffensive, Zelensky says in Wall Street Journal interview
From CNN’s Yulia Kesaieva in Kyiv and Allegra Goodwin in London
Volodymyr Zelensky speaks during a press conference in Moldova on June 1.
Carl Court/PA Images/Getty Images
Ukraine is ready to launch its much-anticipated counteroffensive in the war against Russia, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in an exclusive video interview with The Wall Street Journal published Saturday.?
“I think that, as of today, we are ready to do it. We would like to have certain things, but we can’t wait for it for months,” Zelensky said of the long-awaited military maneuvers.
The president said he believes the counteroffensive will be successful, but he’s not sure how long it will take.?
According to the WSJ, Zelensky acknowledged Russia’s superiority in the skies, adding that a lack of protection against Russian air power means “a large number of soldiers will die” during the counteroffensive.?
On NATO: Zelensky also told the newspaper he understood Ukraine would not be able to join NATO while its war against Russia is ongoing, saying, “We do not want to be in NATO during the war. It’s too late now. We should have been there before.”
All NATO allies agree that “Ukraine will become a member of the alliance,” NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said Thursday ahead of the alliance’s next summit, which is set to take place in Vilnius, Lithuania, on July 11 and 12.?
Zelensky, who hopes to secure a pledge at the summit that Ukraine can join NATO after the war, told the WSJ, “If some countries do not see us in NATO and we do not get a signal in Vilnius, I think there is no point for Ukraine to be at this summit.”
Asked if he thought that signal would be given, Zelensky replied, “I don’t know. I’ll be honest with you, I don’t know.”??
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Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine has been a "strategic failure," US Polish ambassador says
US Ambassador to Poland Mark Brzezinski speaks in Warsaw, Poland, on February 21.
Mateusz Wlodarczyk/NurPhoto/Getty Images
Finland’s accession to NATO highlights that Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine has been a “strategic failure,” according to US Ambassador to Poland Mark Brzezinski.
“What’s changed in the last week?is that NATO has expanded in a?way that just emphasizes the?strategic failure of (Russian President Vladimir) Putin’s?decision to invade Ukraine,” he said in an interview with CNN’s Michael Smerconish on Saturday. ?
His remarks echo those of US Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who visited Finland on Friday. Blinken also called Russia’s war a “strategic failure,” saying it has diminished the country’s influence and interests “for years to come.”
Finland officially became the 31st NATO member in early April. The Russian invasion drove traditionally non-aligned Finland and Sweden to abandon their neutrality and seek to join the alliance.
When asked if any possible peace negotiations are ongoing, Brzezinski said:
“We’re committed to a path of?making sure a lasting peace?includes a complete?reconstruction of Ukraine and a?drawing into it — as it wants —?into the Western institutional?orbit.?And that’s the opportunity here:?to have a renaissance, emerge out?of this crime of a war in?central and eastern Europe,” he said.
Brzezinski also said he believes the majority of US lawmakers remain committed to providing assistance to and showing solidarity with Ukraine. He noted that he’s hosted over 150 members of Congress from both parties, including former House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi and current Speaker Kevin McCarthy.
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Here's where officials have reported recent attacks on Russian soil
From CNN staff
Smoke rises after shelling in Belgorod, Russia, on June 2.
Anatoliy Zhdanov/Kommersant/Sipa/AP
At least two people were killed and six others were injured by shelling in Russia’s Belgorod region Friday, according to the regional governor, marking the latest report of violence spilling over the Ukrainian border into Russian territory.
Belgorod is a common site of the attacks, and local authorities say they have started evacuating residents due to incoming fire. But it is not the only region where officials have reported recent drone attacks or shelling in western Russia.
An overnight Ukrainian drone attack on the Kursk region Friday damaged several buildings,?Gov. Roman Starovoyt claimed, while officials in the neighboring Bryansk region reported shelling. In Smolensk — which is located further north, near the border with Belarus —?two drones attacked energy and fuel facilities Friday, according to the regional governor.
This all comes after Russian fighters aligned with Ukraine crossed the border into Belgorod last week and seized a checkpoint, sowing confusion and anger in Moscow.
Ukraine’s silence: Ukraine has not commented on claims by Russian officials that it has sent any troops, fired artillery or flown?drones?into its neighbor’s territory.
While Kyiv remains coy, the attacks could be aimed more at destabilizing Russia than seizing any significant tactical advantage, CNN’s Sam Kiley writes. Read his full analysis here.
The map below shows some of the key regions that have faced recent attacks:
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At least 2 people killed and 6 injured by shelling in Russia's Belgorod region, governor says
From CNN's Mariya Knight and Josh Pennington
At least two people were killed and six others were injured in shelling in Russia’s Belgorod region on Friday, said Vyacheslav Gladkov, the regional governor.
The Belgorod region, which is located near the border with Ukraine, has seen intensified violence in the last several days.
Gladkov said in a Telegram post that the people killed were in the yards of their homes during the attack.
Two children hurt by shrapnel were among those hurt, Gladkov said — a 13-year-old boy who fractured his left shoulder and an 11-year-old girl who sustained shrapnel wounds to her left eye.
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Analysis: Why Ukraine's efforts to rattle Russia are working
Analysis from CNN's Sam Kiley
Ukraine has opened a new front in its battle to drive out the Russian invader — in Russia. But it is oddly coy about admitting that it has sent troops, fired artillery and flown?drones into its neighbor’s territory.
The operations of Russian citizens, carrying Ukrainian military ID, wearing Ukrainian uniforms and attacking from?Ukraine, remain officially opaque. It is Kyiv’s contribution to what’s become known as “hybrid warfare” in the “gray zone” of contemporary conflict.
The two terms provoked books and a tsunami of excited opinion from an army of pundits when Russia first invaded Ukraine in 2014.
Back then, so-called “Little Green Men” — donned in peculiar two-tone sport-hunting uniforms and Russian military fatigues – appeared in Crimea.
When it was suggested that maybe, just maybe, these men were actually Russian troops, Vladimir Putin quipped, “You can go to a store and buy any kind of uniform.”
Moscow’s official line was that the men who raised the Russian flag over Simferopol and stormed Crimea’s local parliament were “self defense units” of pro-Russian Ukrainians anxious to bring their territory under Moscow’s rule.
By the time Moscow admitted that its troops were actually in Ukraine, a large chunk of the former Soviet 14-year-old nation was under Putin’s control.
Now, on a small scale, Ukraine is adapting those same tactics to try to secure strategic effect.
The Russian Volunteer Corps and the Freedom for Russia Legion – which fall under Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence structure – have been conducting short?cross-border raids?into Russia.
The principal aim? Destabilization.
Read more about Ukraine’s destabilization efforts:
Ukraine has an "army of drones" helping it fight the Kremlin
From CNN's Vasco Cotovio,?Tim Lister,?Frederik Pleitgen,?William Bonnett?and?Daria Tarasova
Under the scorching summer sun at an undisclosed location in Ukraine, an almost invisible?drone?approaches in the distance. Difficult to spot, the remote-controlled aircraft is also nearly impossible to hear.
“It’s very stealthy,” drone maker Valeriy Borovyk says. “We call this one Vidsyich (Ukrainian word for ‘repel’).”
The Vidsyich is what Borovyk calls a combat drone, designed to attack Russian positions.
Borovyk is one of dozens of drone developers that have sprung up all over Ukraine. A first wave appeared when Russia first occupied Crimea and parts of the Donbas in 2014, and another eight years later when Moscow launched its full-scale invasion.
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) were first deployed to help artillery locate Russian targets and now, many believe they are being used to hit targets well?inside Russian territory.
Borovyk says his company is in the process of upscaling its production after signing a deal with a factory in Ukraine, which would increase production from 50 drones per month to over 1,000. And they have several models, of all shapes and sizes.
His operation is just one small part of an industry built on Ukrainian ingenuity and survival instinct, which the country’s government and military are keen to support.
Ukraine knows NATO membership has to wait, Zelensky says
From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva and Tim Lister
Zelensky?attends a press conference in Moldova on Thursday.
Vladislav Culiomza/Reuters/FILE
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said he understands that his country cannot become a member of NATO while it is still at war.
The alliance’s treaty includes Article 5, a collective defense provision that pledges members to come to the assistance of any state that is under attack.
“Give me an example of one NATO country which is in a state of war with Russia right now; or which NATO country has Russian troops on its territory,” Zelensky said.
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Zelensky orders nationwide inspection of bomb shelters after Kyiv deaths
From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva in Kyiv, Ukraine
Ukraine will be inspecting civilian bomb shelters across the country after three people, including a child, died in Kyiv earlier this week when they were unable to access a shelter during a Russian missile barrage.
President Volodymyr Zelensky said the deaths have caused an “obviously strong reaction” and orders are in place to check shelters in the capital and elsewhere.
Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said he’d been instructed to commence nationwide inspections and that the State Emergency Service of Ukraine and the National Police are already working.
“Any violations found must be properly recorded, and those responsible must be brought to justice,” he said on Facebook.
The numbers: After a month of regular night-time Russian attacks on Kyiv, the city’s authorities have disclosed that 92,000 people used the city’s metro stations as shelters in May. They said that 46 underground stations operate as shelters around the clock.?
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Ukrainian tennis player snubs handshake with Russian opponent, saying it's out of respect for soldiers at war
From CNN's David Close
Elina Svitolina of Ukraine is seen refusing to shake the hand of Anna Blinkova during the 2023 French Open in Paris.
Tim Clayton/Corbis/Getty Images
Ukrainian tennis player Elina Svitolina refused to shake hands with her Russian opponent after winning a match Friday, saying she did so out of respect for the men and women defending Ukraine from Moscow’s invasion.
After Friday’s victory, Svitolina avoided Blinkova while the two took turns shaking the hand of the chair umpire.
The Ukrainian said she would continue to snub any opponents from Russia or Belarus, the close Moscow ally.
“What the Russian government and Russian soldiers are doing on our land is really, really terrible,” the 28-year-old Svitolina said. “It touches many different areas. It touches sport. It touches acting. It touches all different areas. So, we are all united Ukrainians and this is our position.”
Svitolina said she would like to see Russian and Belarusian players speak out and call for their countries to end the war.
In her last media appearance Wednesday, the?Belarusian?had been repeatedly asked to comment on the war in Ukraine and Belarus’ role, but she repeatedly declined to do so. This continued until the moderator halted the line of questioning.
Sabalenka said she had not felt safe during the Wednesday news conference.
“For my own mental health and well-being, I have decided to take myself out of this situation today, and the tournament has supported me in this decision,” she said in an interview released by tournament organizers.
Top Russian player weighs in: Last month, Daria Kasatkina, Russia’s top-ranked women’s tennis player, expressed her sympathy for Ukrainian players who refuse to shake her hand after matches.
“Well, the saddest part is the war still going on,” Kasatkina said. “So, of course, players from Ukraine have got a lot of reasons to not shake our hands. I accept it and it is how it is. It’s a very sad situation and I understand.”
Ninth seed Kasatkina will face the unseeded Svitolina in the fourth round Sunday.
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Ukraine reports Russian attacks on the ground and missile barrages by sky. Here's what you need to know
It’s morning in Kyiv, if you’re just catching up on the day’s news, here’s the latest from the war in Ukraine:
Russian onslaught: Russia carried out at least 62 airstrikes and 15 missile strikes in a 24-hour period, according to the Ukrainian military, which said its forces also rebuffed more than a dozen ground assaults. The areas under fire included Kupiansk in the northeastern Kharkiv region and several areas further south in the eastern Luhansk and Donetsk regions.
Car bombing: A deadly car bombing targeted “Kremlin collaborators” in the Russian-occupied part of the Zaporizhzhia region on Friday, according to Ivan Fedorov, the Ukrainian mayor of Melitopol. A Russia-backed official in the region said a local businessman active in the “United Russia” party was killed in the blast.
Attacks on Russian soil: At least two people were killed and six others were injured in shelling in Russia’s Belgorod region Friday, the governor there said. The governor is one of a number of Russian officials to report attacks on their regions Friday as the?war spills over?from Ukraine’s borders into Russian territory.
Friday’s diplomatic updates: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken was on a diplomatic visit on Friday to Finland, which recently joined NATO, helping shore up the alliance’s border with Russia. Blinken declared Russia’s war in Ukraine?a “strategic failure” during a speech in Helsinki. Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky, meanwhile, acknowledged that Ukraine cannot follow Finland’s lead and join NATO while its war with Russia is still raging.
This map shows the latest state of control in Ukraine: