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Ukraine war latest: Moscow launches deadly strikes on Kharkiv as US says it will cut aid to Kyiv

Three people have been killed in Ukraine's second-biggest city of Kharkiv as Russian forces continued overnight drone attacks on Tuesday into Wednesday. Meanwhile, the US defence secretary has said Washington will cut military aid to Ukraine. Listen to The World podcast as you scroll.

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Thanks for joining us, we'll be back soon with the latest updates from the war in Ukraine.

Before then, here's a rundown of what's happened over the last 24 hours...

Russian strikes kill three in Kharkiv

Overnight drone strikes on Ukraine's second-largest city of Kharkiv killed three people and injured dozens more, officials said.

Volodymyr ZelenAG百家乐在线官网y described the attack as "vile", calling on Ukraine's allies to exert more pressure on Moscow for its deadly strikes.

The southern port city of Odesa also came under attack, with drones hitting farm buildings, cars and civilian boats.

It follows successive days of heavy aerial bombardment from Moscow targeting regions across the country.

In other news:

  • Russia returned the bodies of 1,212 Ukrainian soldiers as part of a deal reached during peace talks in Turkey last week;
  • Ukraine also returned the bodies of 27 Russian soldiers;
  • A one-page draft of a joint declaration for the upcoming NATO summit reportedly omits Ukraine's membership aspirations;
  • US defence secretary Pete Hegseth says the upcoming defence budget will reduce military aid to Ukraine;
  • Moscow says its nuclear deterrence capabilities have not been significantly impacted by recent Ukrainian drone strikes on military airfields;
  • Finland's foreign ministry has summoned Russia's diplomat in Helsinki over a suspected violation of its airspace;
  • While Poland has charged one of its citizens with spying for Russia;
Russia's nuclear capabilities 'not significantly affected' by Ukrainian drone strikes

Russia says its nuclear deterrence capabilities have not been significantly impacted by recent Ukrainian drone strikes on military airfields.

Ukraine launched a coordinated drone attack, dubbed 'Operation Spider's Web', last week, targeting at least four major Russian air bases and reportedly damaging dozens of aircraft.

Russia's deputy foreign minister claimed that the extent of the damage from the attacks has been "greatly exaggerated" and that none of Moscow's strategic forces were weakened.

"Our nuclear deterrence potential against the US and any other potential adversary has not suffered significant damage," Sergei Ryabkov told Russian state media RIA Novosti.

Watch: Ukraine targets Russian military aircraft

House arrest order given for Russian opposition politician who called for end to war in Ukraine

A Russian opposition politician who described the war in Ukraine as a game of "bloody chess" has been placed under house arrest for two months.

A court in the Russian city of Pskov announced the decision to detain Lev Shlosberg earlier today, after a request from state prosecutors.

Shlosberg will also face other unspecified restrictions, the court said.

The liberal Yabloko party, of which Shlosberg is a senior member, said his arrest was linked to remarks he made about Russia's war in Ukraine.

He was first arrested on Tuesday and charged with discrediting the Russian army after describing the war in Ukraine as a game of "bloody chess", his party added. 

The 61-year-old made the comment in a video debate in January in which he urged an end to the war. 

His party said Shlosberg denies the charge against him.

Shlosberg, one of the relatively few opposition politicians remaining in Russia, faces up to five years in jail if convicted. 

NATO summit statement to omit Ukraine's membership bid - report

A one-page draft of a joint declaration for the upcoming NATO summit reportedly omits Ukraine's membership aspirations.

The brief document, seen by , also recognises Russia as a threat to NATO but not as an aggressor in Ukraine.

It signals that, for the first time since 2022, Russia's war in Ukraine will not be the chief focus of the annual NATO meeting, which takes place on 24-25 June in The Hague.

Last year's communique at the summit in Washington included a declaration that Ukraine's path to NATO is "irreversible" and promised more than $40bn (拢29bn) in additional military aid.

This year, the document will solely focus on defence spending, as Donald Trump pushes NATO partners to push the military expenditure benchmark from 2% to 5% of GDP.

Member states will also consider counting their contributions to Ukraine as part of the new defence spending targets, Bloomberg reported, adding the final version of the statement can still change.

Ukraine returns bodies of 27 Russian soldiers

Russia has confirmed it's handed over the bodies of 1,212 Ukrainian soldiers to Kyiv and says 27 dead Russian soldiers have been returned to Moscow.

Vladimir MedinAG百家乐在线官网, Russia's top peace negotiator, said on Telegram that both countries will begin exchanging seriously wounded prisoners of war tomorrow.

This, he added, was in accordance with the agreements made between Moscow and Kyiv during peace talks held in Istanbul last week.

In pictures: Aftermath of Kharkiv attack

Here are the latest images from Kharkiv, where emergency services are still working to clear debris from the site of Russia's drone strikes.

Ihor Terekhov, Kharkiv's mayor, says 103 residential buildings were damaged in the attack, as well as a cemetery and a playground. Almost 2,000 windows were broken across the city, he added.

Ex-CIA director calls Trump's Ukraine plan 'naive' and 'unsophisticated'

By Yalda Hakim, lead world news presenter

It is nearly 150 days since Donald Trump took office for the second time, promising peace in the Middle East and Ukraine.

For the latter, the war grinds on, with reports last week that Russia passed the grim milestone of one million deaths.

Ukraine continues to be bombarded, with Russia launching its biggest drone attack against the country since the start of the war. 

Most likely in retaliation to Ukraine's audacious 'Operation Spider's Web' at the beginning of the month, which saw remote controlled drones launched deep into Russia, blowing up billions of dollars' worth of military equipment. 

Russia saw this as a significant escalation, as Moscow's ambassador to the UK told me in a sit-down interview last week

Peace feels a long way off right now. But does President Trump have a plan? Ex-CIA director John Brennan does not think so.

On this week's The World podcast, he called Trump's understanding of both Ukraine and Vladimir Putin "naive" and "unsophisticated".

I asked him what he thinks the president may do and, in no uncertain terms, he told me: "I think that Donald Trump doesn't know what he will do."

It is no secret that the former director holds a low estimation of the president. For what it's worth, the feeling is mutual...

Watch: Russia launches deadly strike on Kharkiv

Footage from Kharkiv shows the destruction caused by Russia's overnight drone attack on the city.

Firefighters spent hours tackling the blazes caused by the attack, which officials said killed three people and injured dozens more.

Watch below as Ukrainian emergency services battled to keep fires under control and searched the rubble for survivors. 

Polish man, 28, charged with spying for Moscow

Poland has detained and charged one of its citizens with spying for Russian intelligence services.

Warsaw's state prosecutor's office says the suspect, a 28-year-old named as Wiktor Z, collected and distributed information concerning the functioning of facilities key to Poland's defence.

The prosecutor's statement says the suspect "acted out of ideological motives and pro-Russian beliefs" and could now face between eight years and life in prison.

Warsaw has accused Moscow of being behind a series of acts of sabotage in Poland, including a huge fire at a shopping centre last year. In response, Moscow has accused Poland of Russophobia.

Bodies of more than 1,000 soldiers returned to Ukraine

Russia has returned the bodies of 1,212 Ukrainian soldiers as part of a deal reached during peace talks in Istanbul, Kyiv officials have said.

The group responsible for coordinating the release on Ukraine's side said the identities of the bodies would be established as soon as possible.

It added the bodies of soldiers received today were killed in Ukraine's Kharkiv, Luhansk, Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions, as well as in Russia's Kursk region.

The return is part of a deal agreed between Russia and Ukraine during peace talks in Turkey last week. The agreement also included the exchange of prisoners, with handovers getting under way this week.

The Kremlin said yesterday that it had been waiting "several days" to return the bodies, which it said were in refrigerated trucks near the Ukraine border.

Volodymyr ZelenAG百家乐在线官网y has accused Moscow of "trying to play some kind of dirty political and information game" around the issue of the exchanges.

Russia has said it is ready to receive any bodies of Russian soldiers that Kyiv is able to return.