Russia-Ukraine war live: Putin says west trying to ‘destroy us’ in major address to Russian parliament | Ukraine

Putin warns Nato of risk of nuclear war in major speech to Russian parliament

Putin also said Russia will fight back and “defeat” Nato on their own territory against the threat of expansion, which he warned could trigger a nuclear war.

He said:

They are preparing to strike our territory and using the best possible forces most effective forces to do so.

But we remember the fate of those who tried to invade our territory and of course their fate will be much more tragic than anything that we could face.

They have to understand that we also have weapons. Weapons that can defeat them on their own territory and of course all this is very dangerous because it could actually trigger the use of nuclear weapons. Do they not understand that?

These people are people who have not been through arduous experiences. They’ve forgotten about it, but we did through the Caucasian war, for example, and now in the conflict in Ukraine.

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Key events

Ukraine’s first lady, Olena Zelenska, met some well-known British faces during her visit to the UK.

Rishi Sunak’s wife Akshata Murty welcomes the first lady of Ukraine, Olena Zelenska, to Downing Street in London during her visit to the UK. Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA
Queen Camilla during a meeting with the first lady of Ukraine, Olena Zelenska, at Clarence House in London. Photograph: Yui Mok/PA
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The Polish prime minister said the country won’t rule out introducing a ban on agricultural products from Russia during a visit to Warsaw.

Like much of Europe, Poland has been gripped by protests in recent weeks as farmers demonstrate against EU environmental regulations and what they say is unfair competition from Ukraine since the bloc waived duties on imports in 2022.

However, Polish prime minister Donald Tusk said agricultural products from Russia and Belarus were also causing market distortions.

Tusk told a news conference:

Latvia decided to implement an embargo on the import of [agricultural] products from Russia.

We will analyse the case of Latvia, and I do not rule out that Poland will take an appropriate initiative.

Tusk said the EU needed to “seriously focus on better regulations when it comes to the import of cereals and food products from the east”.

Tusk is due to meet the farmers’ leaders later on Thursday.

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Ukraine says it shot down three Russian planes

Ukraine’s military said on Thursday it had shot down three more Russian Su-34 fighter-bombers, the latest successes it has reported against Moscow’s air force.

On Telegram, army chief Oleksandr Syrskyi said:

After successful combat operations against an enemy aircraft in the night on Feb. 29, two more Russian aircraft were destroyed: Su-34 fighter-bombers in the Avdiivka and Mariupol sectors.

Russia, which began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine two years ago, did not immediately comment on Syrskyi’s remarks. Reuters could not immediately verify his comments.

Avdiivka in eastern Ukraine fell to Russian forces this month after a long battle. Russia took full control of the south-eastern port city of Mariupol in May 2022.

The Ukrainian military said last week that Russia had lost six warplanes in three days, Reuters reports.

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Russian business people should invest in Russia and their assets and property rights should be protected, president Vladimir Putin said on Thursday during his annual address.

He said that taxes for small and medium-sized businesses in Russia should be reduced, Reuters reports.

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A Russian court on Thursday rejected an appeal by a Russian-American woman against her detention on a treason charge.

The FSB Security Service said last week that Ksenia Karelina had been detained on suspicion of raising funds for Ukraine’s armed forces. The Los Angeles resident had been collecting funds for a Ukrainian organisation whose ultimate beneficiary was the Ukrainian army, the FSB said.

A Russian lawyers’ group said she had donated just over $50 to a charity that sends aid to Ukraine.

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Sri Lanka has decided to stop issuing free long-term visas to Russian and Ukrainian nationals who have lived in the Indian Ocean island nation for the past two years, a government official said on Thursday.

Since Moscow invaded Ukraine in February 2022, Sri Lanka has allowed Russians and Ukrainians to stay in the country without paying for visas, but they will now have to pay the charges.

The rate is about $50 for a 30-day visa, if they wish to stay in Sri Lanka, public security minister Tiran Alles told Reuters.

“Whoever wants to stay back can apply for new visas,” Alles added. “They can immediately renew their visas and remain here.”

Last week immigration authorities said they were ending the free long-term visa scheme for Russian and Ukraine nationals, setting a 7 March deadline for the departure of those without new visas in a notice that sparked comment on social media.

About 300 to 400 Russians and Ukrainians are estimated to have been staying in Sri Lanka since February 2022, said Priantha Fernando, the chairman of the island’s tourism body.

“This has nothing to do with normal tourists,” Fernando said. “We are more than welcoming them … there is no issue.”

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Here are some images from the news wires of Putin during his state of the nation address:

Russian president Vladimir Putin speaks during his annual state of the nation address, on 29 February 2024, in Moscow, Russia. Photograph: Getty Images
Putin walks on stage before his annual state of the nation address. Photograph: Getty Images
Putin spoke about Russia’s nuclear capabilities and the war in Ukraine during the speech. Photograph: Getty Images
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Russian president Vladimir Putin said he believes it is important for Russia to strengthen ties with Arab countries and Latin American countries during his annual address to the nation.

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Here is some more background about Putin’s state-of-the-nation address:

It comes two weeks ahead of a presidential election, in which Putin is expected to win another six-year term in a landslide.

It was delivered to members of both Houses of Parliament, state officials, military commanders and soldiers.

He covered the war in Ukraine, threat of Nato expansion, Russian nuclear capabilities, the declining birthrate and support for large families.

More from the speech to come …

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Putin warns Nato of risk of nuclear war in major speech to Russian parliament

Putin also said Russia will fight back and “defeat” Nato on their own territory against the threat of expansion, which he warned could trigger a nuclear war.

He said:

They are preparing to strike our territory and using the best possible forces most effective forces to do so.

But we remember the fate of those who tried to invade our territory and of course their fate will be much more tragic than anything that we could face.

They have to understand that we also have weapons. Weapons that can defeat them on their own territory and of course all this is very dangerous because it could actually trigger the use of nuclear weapons. Do they not understand that?

These people are people who have not been through arduous experiences. They’ve forgotten about it, but we did through the Caucasian war, for example, and now in the conflict in Ukraine.

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The Russian president, Vladimir Putin, has said the west are attempting to “destroy us” and to “contain our development” in his annual address to parliament.

He said:

The so called West with its so colonialist tendencies is striving not only to contain our development but they are intent on destroying us and using our space for whatever their purposes are including Ukraine.

They are absolutely determined to introduce division among us and weaken us …

Citizens of Russia will defend our freedom and independence. It is only down to you that our way will be determined for the future.

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Ukrainian forces have pushed back Russian troops from the village of Orlivka, west of Avdiivka, but the situation on the eastern front remains difficult, Ukrainian army chief Oleksandr Syrskyi said on Thursday.

Orlivka is less than 2 kilometres northwest of Lastochkyne, which was recently occupied by Russian forces.

Russian forces last week captured the strategic eastern Ukrainian city of Avdiivka after a months-long assault and are pressing on several other areas along the frontline, Ukrainian authorities say.

Ukraine’s military said this week it had withdrawn from two more villages near Avdiivka, losing more territory as support from its western allies runs short.

On Telegram, Syrskyi said:

The enemy continues active offensive actions in many areas of the frontline. The situation is particularly tense in the Avdiivka and Zaporizhzhia sectors.

He said Russian assault units were trying to break through the Ukrainian defences and capture the settlements of Tonenke, Orlivka, Semenivka, Berdychi and Krasnohorivka.

Syrskyi, who visited troops on the eastern front, said some commanders had revealed certain shortcomings in their “situational awareness and assessment of the enemy”, which directly affected the sustainability of defence in certain areas.

I took all measures to remedy the situation on the ground, with the allocation of additional ammunition and material resources, as well as the necessary reserves.

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Ukraine plans to export a high volume of electricity on Thursday, taking advantage of lower domestic consumption during a spell of mild weather, the energy ministry said.

The country’s electricity exports, which began shortly before it was invaded by Russian troops in 2022, were halted after numerous Russian attacks on power infrastructure and the seizure of the largest nuclear power plant at Zaporizhzhia.

However, Ukraine has exported significant volumes of power to eastern Europe this month.

A ministry statement said:

For the current day, electricity imports are forecast to total 2,497 megawatt hours (MWh) while exports are expected to reach 4,797 MWh.

Ukraine has been experiencing a surplus of electricity for three days and the surplus was transferred to Poland.

Energy minister German Galushchenko last month told Reuters that Ukraine could resume substantial energy exports as early as this spring because of lower domestic consumption.

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Opening Summary

Hello and welcome back to the Guardian’s live coverage of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine. It has just passed 10am in Kyiv. Here are the latest developments:

  • Several members of Ukrainian special forces have died in an assault on the Tendra Spit in Kherson oblast, according to reports. Ukraine’s special operations forces confirmed the deaths, suggesting those who died had stayed behind to ensure the main contingent escaped.

  • Russia claimed on Thursday that its forces had re-entered the village of Robotyne, which Ukraine retook from the occupiers in August 2023. Russia’s state-run Interfax news agency cited the defence ministry saying troops had taken over some buildings but it was unclear whether Ukrainian troops had completely withdrawn. There was no confirmation from reliable sources. Robotyne lies between Avdiivka and Kherson, and south-east of Zaporizhzhia, on the frontline in Zaporizhzhia oblast.

  • Ukraine’s forces shot down 10 Russian aircraft in as many days with the latest being two Russian Su-34 fighter-bombers on 27 February, according to the Ukrainian general staff.

  • The UK government said on Wednesday that how Ukraine uses donated cruise missiles is “the business of the armed forces of Ukraine” after comments by Germany’s chancellor, Olaf Scholz, about possible UK and French involvement in targeting, and how Germany would not get involved in similar activity by sending its Taurus missiles.

  • The Russian defence ministry claimed through state media on Wednesday that its forces had captured Petrovske, formerly renamed by Ukraine as Stepove, in eastern Ukraine.

  • Ukraine’s foreign ministry on Wednesday cautioned against any meddling from Russia in Moldova’s neighbouring breakaway region of Transnistria, whose separatist leaders have supposedly appealed to Moscow for “protection” – a ploy that has previously been instigated by Russia to justify invading other countries.

  • Moldova’s government has called the Transnistrian separatists’ request a propaganda event. Transnistria is a primarily Russian-speaking region that is legally part of Moldova. In February 2022 leading up to the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Russian-backed militants in Ukraine also asked for Moscow’s “protection”.

  • Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, has promoted the idea of joint arms production at a summit of south-eastern European countries in the Albanian capital, Tirana. Zelenskiy proposed a Ukrainian-Balkans defence forum in Kyiv or a Balkan capital, similar to initiatives held last year with British and US weapons companies. A joint declaration signed by 10 countries at the summit said their leaders were ready to take part in a Ukrainian-led peace summit in Switzerland this spring to discuss Zelenskiy’s vision of peace.

  • Albania, Bulgaria, North Macedonia, Montenegro and Romania are Nato members, have joined western sanctions against Russia, and sent arms and equipment to Ukraine. There are significant arms industries in parts of the Balkans left over from the former Yugoslavia. Serbia has not imposed sanctions on Russia, and neither Belgrade nor Kyiv recognise the independence of Kosovo, an Albanian enclave that claims independence, backs Ukraine and seeks EU and Nato membership.

  • The EU should consider using profits from frozen Russian assets to buy military supplies for Ukraine, the European Commission president, Ursula von der Leyen, said on Wednesday. Japan has backed the idea, saying the EU proposals appear to have a basis in international law.

  • Poland’s prime minister, Donald Tusk, said his government was considering a “temporary” closure of the border with Ukraine for goods, amid tensions over low-priced Ukrainian grain. “We are talking with the Ukrainian side about a temporary closure of the border, the cessation in general of trade.” However, Oleksandr Kubrakov, Ukrainian deputy PM, said: “Ukraine is not going to close its borders with Poland. No one from the Ukrainian side is negotiating about this. Our people are fighting for their existence in a war with the Russian aggressor. For us, a stable border is a matter of survival.”

  • Ensuring Ukraine’s success against Russia is “the biggest test of our generation”, UK Foreign Office minister Andrew Mitchell said on Wednesday. He added: “At the G20 foreign ministers meeting it was clear there are few illusions about what Russia is doing and that the UN and Britain underlined how dangerous Putin’s actions are for the entire world.”

  • Russian forces struck 11 communities along the Sumy oblast border in 42 separate attacks on Wednesday, the regional military administration reported according to the Kyiv Independent. No casualties or damage to local infrastructure were reported.

  • Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov will attend a diplomacy forum in Turkey from Friday, the countries’ governments said. Russian foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said Lavrov would meet Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan.

  • A court in southern Russia jailed a Ukrainian man for 11 years and six months after convicting him of espionage for trying to procure secret missile components for Ukraine, Russian news agencies reported on Wednesday.

  • China’s Eurasia envoy, Li Hui, will visit Russia, Ukraine and the headquarters of the EU this week for talks. The trip will represent “the second round of shuttle diplomacy on seeking a political settlement of the Ukraine crisis”, China’s foreign ministry said in a statement, adding Li would also go to France, Germany and Poland.

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