Here are the key events on day 1,284 of Russia’s war on Ukraine.
A
resident stands near their home after it was destroyed in a Russian
attack in Zaporizhia, Ukraine, on Saturday [Kateryna Klochko/AP Photo]
Published On 31 Aug 202531 Aug 2025
Here is how things stand on Sunday, August 31:
Fighting
Russia launched “massive” strikes against Ukraine overnight on
Saturday, with a total of 14 regions hit, according to Ukrainian
officials.
At least one person was killed and 30 others wounded in Ukraine’s
Zaporizhia region, while residential buildings were hit and scores of
homes left without gas or electricity. The cities of Dnipro and
Pavlohrad in the central region of Dnipropetrovsk also came under attack
early on Saturday, causing fires.
Ukraine’s Air Force said it had downed 510 of 537 drones and 38 of 45 missiles launched by Russia in the overnight attack.
In Ukraine’s Kherson, a 74-year-old man was also killed when Russian forces shelled the city, according to officials.
The chief of Russia’s general staff, Valery Gerasimov, said that
Russian forces are waging a nonstop offensive along almost the entire
front line in Ukraine and have the “strategic initiative”.
In a speech to his deputies, Gerasimov also said that Russian forces
now control 99.7 percent of Ukraine’s Luhansk region, 79 percent of the
Donetsk region, 74 percent of the Zaporizhia region and 76 percent of
the Kherson region. He went on to claim that Russian troops have almost
completely blockaded the city of Kupiansk, in the Kharkiv region, and
control about half of its area.
But Ukrainian military spokesperson Viktor Trehubov said that Kyiv’s
forces had scored front-line successes, keeping Russian troops from
seizing targets in the Donetsk region and halting further advances into
the Dnipropetrovsk region. In one area, he said, Kyiv’s troops had
surrounded Russian units.
Ukraine’s military also claimed attacks in Russia, saying it had
struck the Krasnodar and Syzran oil refineries overnight on Saturday,
setting off fires at both facilities.
Russia’s TASS state news agency also said that Ukrainian shelling
left more than 17,000 people without power in the border town of Rylsk
in Russia’s Kursk region.
Kursk’s Acting Governor Alexander Khinshtein said that 201 bodies
have been found in the Russian region since January 1, following Ukraine’s invasion of the Russian region, and that 590 people are still missing.
Russia’s Ministry of Defence said that its forces shot down 233
Ukrainian drones, one guided bomb and four missiles in a 24-hour period,
according to TASS.
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who has been pushing for a
summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin, accused the Kremlin of
using “the time meant for preparing a leaders’-level [peace] meeting to
organise new massive attacks”, and called for more international
sanctions on Moscow and its backers.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke with Zelenskyy over the
phone and reaffirmed his support for a peaceful settlement in Ukraine,
saying that “India extends full support to all efforts” to restore peace
and stability, according to a statement from New Delhi.
The European Union’s top diplomat, Kaja Kallas, said the bloc will
examine how to use frozen Russian assets to fund Ukraine’s defence and
reconstruction after the war. But confiscating the assets – which are
worth 210 billion euros ($245.85bn) – now is not politically realistic,
she said.
Kallas’s comments come after some EU countries, including Estonia,
Lithuania and Poland, called for the assets to be seized now and be used
to support Kyiv. But EU heavyweights France and Germany – along with
Belgium, which holds most of the assets – have rebuffed the idea.
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz condemned Russia’s continuing
attacks on Ukraine, saying that diplomatic efforts in recent weeks had
been “answered with an even more aggressive approach by this regime in
Moscow against the population in Ukraine”.
“This will also not stop until we ensure together that Russia, at
least for economic reasons, and perhaps also for military reasons … can
no longer continue this war,” Merz added in comments at an event in the
German state of North Rhine-Westphalia.
United States President Donald Trump outlined how his policy on
Ukraine fits with his America First agenda, saying, “We’re not spending
any money in the war”, describing this as a “big difference” in
comparison with the “hundreds of billions of dollars” the US was
previously spending.
He also told The Daily Caller that the US will not send ground
troops to Ukraine and that the US now sells equipment to NATO. “We don’t
sell it to Ukraine. We sell it to NATO. They pay for the equipment,”
Trump said.
Weapons
Ukraine’s Defence Minister Denys Shmyhal announced that the US State
Department had approved the sale of Patriot air defence systems for
Ukraine for an estimated cost of $179.1m and satellite communications
services worth $150m.
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