LIVE UPDATES
This is CNBC’s live blog tracking developments on the war in Ukraine. See below for the latest updates.
Russia launched its fifth air attack on the Ukrainian capital Kyiv this month, Ukrainian officials reported Wednesday, saying that Ukraine’s air defenses intercepted 18 of the 19 Russian drones launched at the city as well as Odesa, Kherson and other regions.
The development comes as Kyiv struggles to obtain approval for aid packages from the U.S. and EU and as its troops continue to face heavy fighting amid a bitterly cold winter.
In comments to journalists Wednesday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said there was currently no basis for peace talks between Russia and Ukraine, and described Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy’s 10-point peace plan as “absurd.” The plan includes requirements for the re-establishment of all Ukraine’s internationally-recognized borders and the withdrawal of all Russian troops.
Peskov also accused the United Kingdom of pressuring Kyiv to refuse a draft peace deal shortly after Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.
Russia warns Germany-Lithuania brigade plans may lead to escalation
Plans to deploy a permanent German brigade to Lithuania from 2027 would result in an “escalation of military tensions” between Russia and the NATO military coalition, Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said, according to Reuters.
Germany and Lithuania on Tuesday agreed that roughly 4,800 German soldiers posted in Lithuania will be combat-ready in 2027.
Russia has been repeatedly warning the NATO military alliance not to post personnel in nearby territories or the vicinity of its borders, in gestures that it considers threats to its own national security. It has previously cited Ukraine’s bid to accede to NATO and the perceived security dangers thereof as the reason behind Moscow’s invasion of February 2022.
Both Germany and Lithuania are fully-fledged NATO members.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Ukraine’s Kyivstar resumes telecommunication services
Ukraine’s largest mobile operator Kyivstar said it has restored services, following a cyberattack suffered last week.
“The Kyivstar network is completing stabilization after the largest hacker attack. Soon we will inform you about the accrual of bonuses and compensations to subscribers – stay tuned! Thank you for your understanding and support,” the company said on social media, according to a Google translation.
The firm said it has also surmounted communication difficulties that were sparked earlier this morning in a number of cities in western and southern Ukraine, with international roaming now also available.
Telecommunications services are frequently disrupted during wartime by damage to infrastructure and to electricity supply lines.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Ukraine cuts estimate for external financing needs in 2024
The estimate for Ukraine’s needs for external financing next year has been reduced from $41 billion to $37.3 billion, the country’s ministry of economy said Wednesday, citing minister Minister of Finance Sergii Marchenko.
The revision was announced during a meeting of the G7 bloc on Dec. 19. It factors in measures to maximize state budget revenues and activate the domestic debt market, alongside cuts in capital state budgetary expenses.
“In 2023, thanks to the coherent cooperation with international partners, the Ministry of Finance of Ukraine attracted more than USD 39 billion of external financing. By the end of this year, donor assistance will reach about USD 42.3 billion,” Marchenko said.
Ukraine’s GDP growth is projected at up to 5% in 2023, with inflation slipping from 26.6% last year to 5.1% this November, the ministry said.
Ukraine heavily depends on outside funding and aid package to support its lingering civilian population and its war efforts, amid widespread damage sustained from invading Russian forces.
— Ruxandra Iordache
EU court upholds sanctions against Russian billionaire Abramovich
In a ruling on a legal challenge to EU sanctions, the EU’s General Court said Roman Abramovich was the majority shareholder in Evraz, a major steel and mining group that provides a “substantial source of revenue” to the Russian government.
Abramovich was targeted by the EU as it imposed sweeping sanctions on Russian officials and business people, along with products and commodities, after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine in March 2022.
Read the full story here.
-Jenni Reid
Ukraine proceeds with producing further FPV drones
Ukraine has already produced more than 50,000 First-Person View (FPV) drones in December, as part of head of state Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s pledge during a press conference Wednesday to up production to 1 million such units in 2024.
In addition to FPV drones, Ukrainian Minister of Strategic Industry Oleksandr Kamyshin said in a Google-translated Telegram post, Ukraine is already able to produce more than 10,000 mid-range strike drones and over a thousand drones with a 1,000-kilometer range next year.
During a meeting of the board of Russia’s defense ministry, Russian President Vladimir Putin acknowledged that his country’s forces had encountered challenges in responding to small drones throughout their activity to date.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Russian court fines Google
A Russian court has slapped a third fine on tech giant Google to the tune of 4.6 billion Russian rubles ($50.81 million) for allegedly failing to remove inaccurate information about Moscow’s war in Ukraine, according to a Google-translated update from Russian state news agency Tass.
Google did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment on the fine.
Russia has repeatedly accused an unfair and partisan representation of its invasion of Ukraine, which it dubs its “special military operation,” across Western media. Moscow maintains strict criminalized censorship laws over reporting of the war in Ukraine and has taken action against several journalists, including Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Peace talks without Russia’s participation would be ‘absurd,’ Kremlin says
There is currently no basis for negotiations with Ukraine and attempting a peace formula without Russia’s participation would be an “absurd process,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday.
“There are currently no prerequisites for peaceful negotiations on Ukraine,” he said, according to Google-translated comments carried by state news agency Tass on Telegram.
On Tuesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin reiterated his country’s position that Moscow would be prepared to talk to Kyiv, the U.S. and Europe about the future of Ukraine, while stressing that Russia would seek to defend its national interests, according to Reuters.
Ukraine has repeatedly said that negotiations cannot begin until Russian forces have withdrawn from its territory.
— Ruxandra Iordache
China touts Russia relationship as ‘strategic choice’
Chinese President Xi Jinping touted the Beijing-Moscow relationship as a “strategic choice” that is “based on the fundamental interests of the two peoples,” according to Chinese state news outlet Xinhua.
He made his comments during a Beijing meeting with visiting Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin.
China and Russia have tightened relations over the years and are allied in the BRICS coalition of emerging markets. China is one of the largest consumers of Russian oil, which is sanctioned in G7 countries and the EU. The two nations share largely anti-U.S. policies.
Earlier this year, on the one-year anniversary of Moscow’s invasion in February, China released a 12-point peace plan for Ukraine that has nevertheless yet to gain traction.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Maduro to visit Russia by end of year: Kremlin
The visit of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to Russia will not take place until the end of the year, with an exact date still in talks, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Wednesday, according to Google-translated comments reported by Russian state news agency Tass.
The Maduro and Putin administrations have flourishing ties and share interests as producers in the influential OPEC+ oil alliance and in their largely anti-U.S. policies. Russia has historically recognized Maduro’s claim over that of opposition politician Juan Guaido in the presidential crisis of Caracas, with Maduro reassuring Putin of his country’s strong support after Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.
Sanctioned by Washington, Venezuela saw a fleeting thawing of its relations with the U.S. earlier this year, before the White House threw its weight behind Guyana amid soaring tensions over the two South American countries’ border dispute.
— Ruxandra Iordache
Russia launches fifth air attack on Kyiv this month, Ukrainian officials say
Russia on Tuesday launched its fifth air attack on Kyiv this month, Ukrainian officials said.
Ukraine’s air force reported that its air defense systems intercepted 18 out of 19 drones that attacked Kyiv as well as the southern port city of Odesa, the southern region of Kherson and other areas.
“According to preliminary information, there were no casualties or destruction in the capital,” the head of Kyiv’s military administration, Serhiy Popko, wrote in a post on Telegram.
Officials said nine people in Kherson were injured in an overnight attack by Russian drones, and that four of them were children. Additionally, two Russian surface-to-air missiles were launched at the eastern Kharkiv region, but there were no casualties from that strike, Ukrainian authorities said.
— Natasha Turak
Foreign aid approval to Kyiv appears uncertain as EU and U.S. see increasing opposition
The U.S. and EU both failed to approve their latest military aid packages to Kyiv, sparking concern among many supporters of Ukraine and prompting Zelenskyy to travel to Washington to lobby lawmakers himself.
Several Republican lawmakers are refusing to back any funding package that does not also include what they deem as sufficient funding for U.S. border security.
Senate leaders said a deal was not likely to happen soon. Senator Dick Durbin, the second-highest ranking Democrat in the Senate, said any progress may have to wait till January.
“I hope that they’re going to prepare the text and sit down and roll up their sleeves and finish up as soon as we get back in January,” Durbin told press.
“I am certain, U.S. and European financial support will continue,” Zelenskyy said during a wide-ranging press conference Tuesday. “I’m confident the United States won’t betray us.”
— Natasha Turak
Ukrainian military is asking for up to 500,000 more people to be mobilized, Zelenskyy says
Ukraine’s military is asking for between 450,000 and 500,000 more people to be mobilized, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said during a news conference, but he added that a final decision has not been made.
Senior military and government officials still needed to discuss “this very sensitive issue of mobilization,” and then the country’s parliament would have to vote on it, Zelenskyy said.
The development comes as the president once again asks Western allies for more aid funding, and as troops continue heavy fighting in Ukraine’s east amid a bitterly cold winter.
— Natasha Turak
Zelenskyy ‘confident’ US and EU funding will come through
Ukrainian President Volodymyr said he was confident the United States and European Union would agree to provide funding packages that are currently stuck in limbo due to political opposition.
Zelenskyy gave a wide-ranging press conference Tuesday afternoon in which he took a host of questions from reporters for more than an hour.
“I am confident the United States will not let us down and what we have agreed will be agreed in full,” he said, according to a live BBC translation. “As for the European Union, the stakes were very high, we have acquired one victory as to the EU, as for the 50 billion [euro financing package] I am confident we can achieve all of that.”
Zelenskyy separately said military leaders had asked for an additional 450,000 to 500,000 people to be mobilized into the army, but stressed that he required more arguments and a “comprehensive” plan before approving the costly move.
In response to a question about the difficulties faced by Ukraine this year, he stressed that Russia had failed to achieve its aims.
He said Ukraine had seen a “big victory on the Black Sea” where it was able to trade again and Russian vessels had been withdrawn.
Asked whether Ukraine was beginning to lose the war, he replied: “No.”
However, he did discuss the shortage of items including artillery shells, ammunition for air defense and anti-tank grenades.
— Jenni Reid
UK’s Cameron pledges Ukraine support for ‘as long as it takes’
The United Kingdom will continue supporting Ukraine for “as long as it takes,” Foreign Secretary David Cameron said during a press conference with his Italian counterpart Antonio Tajani on Tuesday.
Cameron said the conflict had so far seen three “acts” — the first, Russia’s full-scale invasion and failure to take Kyiv; and the second, the efforts of Ukrainians to take back half the land Russia had captured.
“I accept that act three has been more of a stalemate on land, but it has been a huge success on the Black Sea where Russia has been pushed back. Act four is still to be written, and it’s up to us to write it,” he said.
Ukraine’s land-based counteroffensive operation, launched in June along a long frontline across the east and to the south, made much slower than expected progress ahead of the harsh winter.
The U.K. has been the second largest provider of military assistance to Ukraine during the war, pledging around £4.6 billion ($5.85 billion), government-provided figures show. The United States has provided some $46.3 billion, according to the Council of Foreign Relations.
Cameron added that Ukraine’s allies, including the U.K., Italy, Germany, France and the U.S., outranked Russia 25 to one. “We just need to make that economic strength pay and we can make sure Putin loses, and it’s essential that he does,” he said.
Italy’s cabinet on Tuesday passed a decree allowing the continued supply of “means, materials and equipment” to Ukraine in its war effort, Reuters reported. The decision now goes to parliament.
While U.S. aid now hangs in the balance, Ukraine also received a blow last week when Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban blocked the approval of a 50 billion-euro ($54 billion) EU package in financial aid for the country.
— Jenni Reid