Hereâs where things stand on Tuesday, May 27:
Fighting:
- Ukraine says Russia launched a record number of drones overnight on Monday, with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy describing the attacks as a sign that Moscow is âacting with impunityâ.
- Ukrainian air defences downed most of the 355 drones, but several broke through defences, causing casualties, according to authorities. Two elderly women were killed in Ukraineâs northeastern Kharkiv region, the regional governor said.
- Russia, meanwhile, accused Ukraine of launching aerial attacks on its âsocial infrastructureâ. The Ministry of Defence said it shot down at least 48 Ukrainian drones on Monday, after shooting down 96 overnight.
- Russiaâs state TASS news agency, citing the Defence Ministry, reported that Russian forces have taken over the villages of Volodymyrivka and Belovody in the northeastern region of Sumy.
- The governor of Sumy said Russian forces had captured four other villages as part of an attempt to create a âbuffer zoneâ on Ukrainian territory. He identified them as Novenke, Basivka, Veselivka and Zhuravka, and said that residents had long been evacuated.
- The Ukrainian prosecutor generalâs office said Russian attacks have killed 630 Ukrainian children and wounded 1,960 since the beginning of the war.
- Russiaâs Ministry of Foreign Affairs special envoy Rodion Miroshnik has accused the Ukrainian military of causing more than 400 civilian casualties in April, including with âinhumane methods of warfareâ.
Military aid
- German Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced that Ukraineâs key Western allies are no longer limiting the range of weapons they supply, a move the Kremlin said would be âdangerousâ.
Ukraine says it has confirmed information that China is supplying a range of important products to Russian military plants, including tooling machines, special chemical products, gunpowder and components specifically to defence manufacturing industries.
Politics and diplomacy
- The Kremlin responded to United States President Donald Trumpâs remark that Putin has gone âabsolutely crazyâ over the scale of Russian air attacks, suggesting the US leader may be experiencing âemotional overloadâ.
- It also said that serious work on Russiaâs proposal for a possible peace deal for the war in Ukraine was ongoing and that a draft had not yet been submitted. âThis is a serious draft, a draft of a serious document that demands careful checks and preparation,â spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
- Zelenskyy said Russia launched more than 900 drones as well as missiles towards Ukraine over three nights, and again called for intensified pressure on Moscow. âThere is no military sense in this, but it is an obvious political choice â a choice by Putin, a choice by Russia â a choice to continue the war and destroy lives,â the Ukrainian leader said in his nightly video address.
- French President Emmanuel Macron said he believes Trump is beginning to see that Putin âliedâ to him about the war in Ukraine. He also called for the imposition of a deadline for Moscow to agree to a ceasefire, backed up by the threat of âmassive sanctionsâ./li>
- Danish Prime Minister Mette Fredericton also said that Russiaâs attacks on Ukraine over the weekend proved that Moscow is not interested in peace.
- Finland summoned Russiaâs Helsinki ambassador to ask for an explanation regarding a suspected violation of Finnish airspace which took place last week. The NATO member said on Friday that it believed two Russian military aircraft entered its airspace off the coast of Porvoo in the southern part of the country.







