President Volodymyr Zelenskyy dismissed Andrii Melnyk from the post of Ambassador of Ukraine to Germany. Melnyk is expected to take up another role within the Foreign Ministry in Kyiv. Follow DW for the latest.
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Zelenskyy dismisses Ukraine's Ambassador to Germany
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy dismissed Andrii Melnyk from the post of Ambassador of Ukraine to Germany.
On Tuesday, German newspapers Bild and Süddeutsche Zeitung reported that Melnyk is set to leave the embassy in Berlin to take up another role within the Foreign Ministry in Kyiv.
Melnyk has been a prominent voice in the German media debate since the outbreak of the conflict late in February. His impassioned appeals for more assistance, particularly in the form of weapons exports from Germany, repeatedly grabbed the headlines.
Russian military claims it destroyed Western weapons in Ukraine
Russia's Defense Ministry claimed its troops destroyed Western weapons amid intense fighting in eastern Ukraine.
A hangar containing US-supplied M777 howitzers was destroyed near the village of Chasiv Yar in the Donetsk region, ministry spokesperson Igor Konashenkov said.
Numerous Ukrainian soldiers were also killed there, the spokesperson added.
The information could not be independently verified.
Russia assembling reserve forces near Ukraine — UK defense intelligence
The UK's Ministry of Defense said in its intelligence update on Saturday that Russia is "moving reserve forces from across the country and assembling them near Ukraine for future offensive operations."
The update also claimed that a large proportion of the new infantry units are deploying with MT-LB armored vehicles taken from long-term storage as their primary transport.
According to the update, Russia has long considered MT-LB unsuitable for most front-line infantry transport roles, as it has very limited armor, and only mounts a machine gun for protection.
"Despite President Putin's claim on 07 July 2022 that the Russian military has 'not even started' its efforts in Ukraine, many of its reinforcements are ad hoc groupings, deploying with obsolete or inappropriate equipment," the UK ministry said.
Russian threats of further escalation unfounded, German lawmaker says
Bundestag lawmaker Roderich Kiesewetter told German public broadcaster Deutschlandfunk on Saturday that Moscow cannot afford a further escalation of its conflict in Ukraine, rejecting claims by Putin that Russia's offensive is just getting started.
He said Russian forces have suffered "tremendous" losses and that their military arsenal is being depleted.He called on Germany to keep supporting Ukraine, predicting that Russia would be forced to the negotiating table in one to two years.
The UK's Ministry of Defence also suggested that Russian forces were running out of suitable equipment.
The daily intelligence update on Saturday said that Russia was mobilizing reserve forces, but in spite of Russian President Vladimir Putin's claims "that the Russian military has 'not even started' its efforts in Ukraine, many of its reinforcements are ad hoc groupings, deploying with obsolete or inappropriate equipment."
UK begins training Ukrainian military recruits
Some 10,000 inexperienced Ukrainian recruits have begun training in sites across Britain, the UK's Ministry of Defence announced on Saturday.
The volunteers, with little or no military experience, are being trained by 1,050 UK service personnel.
They are being given standard basic training that includes weapons handling, battlefield first aid and laws around armed conflict.
The UK previously trained some 22,000 Ukrainian soldiers between 2015 and 2022 following the Russian invasion of Crimea in 2014.
US Secretary of State Blinken discusses Ukraine with Chinese counterpart
Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on the Indonesian island of Bali on Saturday, following the G20 summit on Friday.
The two discussed several issues during their five-hour-long talks — the first to take place in person since October — including Beijing's stance on the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
"I shared again with the state councilor that we are concerned about the PRC's [People's Republic of China] alignment with Russia," Blinken said afterward.
Beijing and Moscow announced a "no limits" partnership shortly before the invasion began. China has not condemned the aggression, but has also not sought a workaround for western sanctions, nor has it send Russian military support.
Blinken also said he believed that Russia would have felt isolated at the G20 summit as many participants voiced disapproval of the war. He noted that his counterpart Sergey Lavrov had left the meeting early.
US to send $400 million in military aid to Ukraine
The United States will send another $400 million (€393 million) in military equipment to Ukraine, including four more HIMARS advanced rocket systems, a senior defense official said.
The package will also include 1,000 rounds of a new kind of 155 mm ammunition for artillery supplied by Ukraine's Western allies.
A senior defense official said the new artillery rounds were both longer range and more precise than what the Pentagon has provided previously.
Since the first HIMARS launchers were provided to Ukraine last month, analysts believe Ukrainian forces may have successfully destroyed a dozen or more Russian ammunition depots far behind the front lines.
Friday's events in Russia's war against Ukraine
Russian President Vladimir Putin warned of possible "catastrophic consequences" of Western sanctions on the global energy market.
Speaking at a closed-door G20 meeting in Bali, Indonesia, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken addressed Russia's top diplomat, Sergey Lavrov, and demanded that Moscow allow grain exports from Ukraine. But diplomats said that Lavrov had walked out before Blinken's remarks.
Russian forces in Ukraine's Donetsk region have cleared the way for the execution of three foreigners sentenced to death. Russia accuses the three of being mercenaries whereas Ukraine asserts they were regular soldiers and should be protected by the Geneva Convention.
The region has lifted a moratorium on the death penalty that should have lasted until 2025.
Russia warned Lithuania and the EU that it could adopt "harsh measures" against them if the transit of some goods to and from the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad did not resume.
In June, the Lithuanian authorities imposed a transit ban through their territory to Kaliningrad. The ban applied only to goods subject to EU sanctions, imposed after the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Ukraine has seized assets worth over 2.1 billion hryvnias (€70 million) owned by Russian state oil company Rosneft, gas firm Gazprom and nuclear energy corporation Rosatom, Ukraine's state security service SBU said.
Canada introduced another package of sanctions against Russia. It includes 30 "disinformation agents," mostly Russian propagandists, but also Patriarch Kirill, Primate of the Russian Orthodox Church.













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