Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,040
Here are the key developments on the 1,040th day of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
A
protester wearing a Christmas wreath has her mouth taped with a slogan
reading "Shout" during a rally calling for the exchange of Ukrainian
prisoners of war with Russian counterparts at St Sophia Square in Kyiv
on December 29, 2024 [Sergei Supinsky/AFP]
Here is the situation on Monday, December 30:
Fighting:
Politics and diplomacy:
- The United States announced a $2.5 billion security assistance
package for Ukraine on Monday, seen as part of Washington’s efforts to
provide aid to Kyiv before President-elect Donald Trump takes office.
The aid includes a $1.25 billion military “drawdown package”, which
allows the Pentagon to take weapons from US stocks and send them quickly
to the battlefield.
-
Syria’s de facto ruler Ahmed al-Sharaa met with a senior
Ukrainian delegation led by Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha on
Monday, the Syrian state news agency (SANA) reported. For decades under
deposed President Bashar al-Assad, Syria was a close ally of Russia.
- Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Sunday
that the country would scrap a moratorium on the deployment of
intermediate and shorter-range nuclear missiles because the United
States had “arrogantly ignored the warnings of Russia and China” and
deployed “weapons of this class” in various parts of the world. Russia’s
move will kill off all that remains of the New START treaty on nuclear
weapons reduction, amid fears of a new arms race.
- Russian state media outlets were seemingly blocked on
social media platform Telegram in several European Union countries. The
channels of RIA Novosti news agency, Russia-1, Channel One Russia and
NTV television, and Izvestia and Rossiyskaya Gazeta newspapers were not
accessible across the bloc on Sunday. Neither Telegram nor EU sources
have yet commented on the disruption. Moscow called the move “an act of
censorship”.
Regional security:
- Moldova’s separatist Transdniestria region cut off gas
supplies to several state institutions – including a medical facility
and a police station – on Sunday, two days before a deal allowing
Russian gas to transit through Ukraine runs out following the latter’s
refusal to extend it in wartime. The move prompted fears of mass New
Year power cuts in the ex-Soviet state.
- Finnish police said on Sunday they had found tracks
dragging on for dozens of kilometres along the bottom of the Baltic Sea
where a Cook Islands-registered tanker carrying Russian oil is suspected
of breaking a power line and four telecoms cables with its anchor. Baltic Sea nations
have been on high alert after a string of outages of power cables,
telecom links and gas pipelines since the start of the war in Ukraine.
- Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said he wanted Russia to accept it downed an Azerbaijan Airlines plane last
week, saying he witnessed “clear attempts to cover up the
matter”. Russian President Vladimir Putin had apologised on Saturday to
Aliyev for the “tragic incident” in Russian airspace after Russian air
defences engaged Ukrainian attack drones, but a Kremlin statement
stopped short of saying Russia had shot down the plane, only noting that
a criminal case had been opened.