
Exclusives
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Belarus’s exiled opposition hands Ukraine a 30-page file on how Minsk is being readied for war. The dossier reached Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha’s desk and lays out eight ways the regime has rebuilt the country into a launch platform for Russia, the report states. |
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Ukraine has a million wounded veterans—and the funding to train forty as deminers. Maksym Dobrianskyi lost a leg to a Russian mine, then joined a small, donor-funded effort turning Ukraine’s war-wounded into the workforce its recovery needs. |
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Ukraine’s $50,000 drone just did what only $500,000 munitions could. Ukrainian drone-maker Fire Point has tweaked its iconic FP-1 drone to travel three times as far as before. |
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Dust and demining in Lviv Oblast—where the future of clearing the world’s most mined country meets the county fair. A day at the country’s flagship robot-demining showcase in Lviv Oblast, where clearing the most heavily mined country on earth looked a bit like a county fair with explosions. |
Military
Russia demands Donbas at table. DeepState says taking it would cost two years of fighting and colossal losses. Three independent assessments now pointed in the same direction.
What Ukrainian generals say about Kostiantynivka and what soldiers report are two different things: Russia is already infiltrating city. The city is not encircled, the soldiers said, but the situation is significantly more complex than Ukrainian command officially admits.
Moscow’s airports shut for hours as Ukrainian drones target the Russian capital. Russia’s Defense Ministry claimed 301 drones downed across the country, while the mayor put the count near Moscow at dozens.
The Voronezh factory feeds the Pantsir, the Iskander-K, and the Kh-101—and now it’s on fire. Smoke is raising over the VZPP-S that supplies transistor assemblies for the guidance and control units of Russia’s cruise missiles.
Intelligence and technology
Ukrainian veteran lost both hands and eye to Russian drone. So he built rifle he could shoot based on German machine gun. He helped design an adaptive rifle.
Ukraine just cleared new Gyurza-2 for front. It weighs 18 tonnes and survives mine blast. Ukraine’s Defense Ministry codified the modernized Gyurza-2 armored vehicle with Level 3a/3b mine protection, AI threat detection, and 1,200 km range.
Drones hunt anything that moves near front. Ukraine’s drone-proof network now grows 9 kilometers daily. The service has now installed more than 887 kilometers of anti-drone road protection in front-line oblasts since the start of 2026.
European company says it has built this engine entirely in-house. Now, it can help arm Ukraine at scale. The milestone arrives as the Netherlands prepares to fund approximately 700 Ruta missiles for Ukraine.
Ukraine gave its drone-killer system an “app store”—with one rule no add-on can break. Engineers can add almost anything, but nothing is allowed to fire a weapon by itself.
Humanitarian and social impact
Russia keeps striking Ukraine’s northern border: this week, it killed three generations of one family. The boy’s 31-year-old mother, his 10-year-old brother, and his 13-year-old sister survived the strike with injuries.
Russian drone kills an Egyptian cook on a civilian cargo ship in the Black Sea. The Turkish-owned bulk carrier Victress, bound for a Ukrainian port, caught fire after the overnight strike on 22 June. Another commercial ship sustained minor damage.
Ukraine registered nearly 69,000 new Russian war crimes over the past year—with only 97 convictions so far. The tally comes from the country’s chief prosecutor, who marked one year in office by posting the full scorecard and calling his own results “not enough.”
Read our earlier daily review here.



