Romania’s Ministry of National Defense said police were deployed near the border where the potential breach was detected. The statement said residents there received warning alerts that were lifted later in the night. Romania began building some air-raid shelters near the Ukraine border after finding the suspected war debris earlier this month.
Funding for Ukraine has become a key issue as the United States hurtles toward a government shutdown. House Republicans on Saturday were pushing for a vote on a short-term bill to fund the government and avert a shutdown that excludes any aid to Ukraine. It was not clear whether the bill would pass in the House, or whether the Senate would approve a measure without funding for Ukraine, but it raised the prospect of the United States being unable to supply Kyiv with billions of dollars.
The House GOP is seeking to shift blame for a potential shutdown to Democrats by creating a showdown over Ukraine; House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) said he would blame the shutdown on Biden and Democrats if they opposed the House bill. On the House floor Saturday afternoon, Democrats defended the need to support Ukraine while Republicans cast anyone voting against the bill as voting to shut the government down.
Russian President Vladimir Putin celebrated Saturday as the Day of Reunification, marking one year since Russia’s illegal annexation of four Ukrainian regions. In a speech, he claimed that Ukrainians had chosen to “be with their fatherland” and that the annexation had complied with international norms. The annexation violated international law and was rejected by world leaders and the United Nations as unlawful. Only two countries, North Korea and Syria, have recognized the annexation as legitimate, the U.K. Defense Ministry noted on X, saying, “The world has chosen to #StandWithUkraine.”
The European Union’s Josep Borrell Fontelles visited the Ukrainian city of Odessa in a show of support on the anniversary Saturday, condemning the annexation in a video recorded from a local cathedral. “A year has passed since Russia’s illegal annexation,” Borrell Fontelles, the body’s high representative for foreign affairs, said on X. “Ukraine has every right to defend itself against the Russian aggression and regain full control of its territory. The EU stands with Ukraine for as long as it takes.”
President Volodymyr Zelensky said Kyiv is negotiating with allies on joint weapons production in Ukraine, adding that this was a key outcome of his recent talks with President Biden in Washington. Zelensky made the comments at an international defense industry conference which Kyiv hosted — part of efforts to boost weapons production inside Ukraine and help reduce reliance on foreign deliveries as Western allies deplete their stocks.
Slovakia is holding an election Saturday that has the potential to complicate the Western response to Ukraine, The Post’s Loveday Morris and Ladka Bauerova report from Bratislava. The front-runner in polls by a whisper of a margin is Robert Fico, a populist former prime minister whose campaign has been laced with pro-Russian and anti-American discourse.
Norway will start banning Russian-registered passenger cars from entering the country as of next week, echoing sanctions imposed by E.U. nations. Norway, which has a long border with Russia, is a member of NATO but not the European Union. The Norwegian government said the ban will stop Russian-registered passenger cars with nine or fewer seats from entering, with some exceptions, while buses and minivans will still be able to enter at one border crossing.
Ukrainian intelligence recruited a Russian military service member and carried out a special operation to move him into territory under Ukrainian control after he switched sides, Ukrainian officials told a news conference. The Russian soldier has cooperated with Ukrainian forces and intelligence since June, according to Ukrainian state media.
Russian authorities in Kursk have reported strikes and shelling nearly every day over the past week. A Ukrainian drone strike on a substation in the Russian border region on Friday briefly left 5,000 people without electricity. Power was restored Friday evening, according to the regional governor. Russian regions in the country’s west have sought to bolster air defenses as Ukrainian forces grow more brazen, The Washington Post reports.
‘This is not just Putin’s war’: How Finland’s top diplomat sees Ukraine: Before Russia’s war in Ukraine, Finland was outside the umbrella of the NATO alliance and had been for generations, Ishaan Tharoor reports.
But the Nordic nation has formally joined the military bloc, spurred by the threat of Russian aggression and doubling NATO’s land border with Russia. On the sidelines of U.N. meetings in New York this month, Tharoor spoke with Finnish Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen on life in NATO and the prospects of the war. Read the conversation here.