
By Stefan J. Bos, Worthy News Europe Bureau Chief
MINSK/BUDAPEST (Worthy News) – As battles raged, Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday that Russia is still willing to hold a new round of peace talks with Ukraine, which Moscow invaded nearly 3.5 years ago.
His remarks at a news conference in Minsk, Belarus, came while Ukraine’s military said it struck four warplanes in counterattacks at an airbase in central Russia’s Volgograd region as part of a drive to hit Russian war assets.
On social media, it was reported that the strike hit the four SU-34 aircraft at the Marinovka base, located outside the city of Volgograd, approximately 900 kilometers (550 miles) from the Ukrainian border.
Ukrainian officials stated that the operation was conducted by the military’s special operations branch, Ukraine’s SBU security service, and other military units.
“According to preliminary information, four aircraft were hit, specifically SU-34 planes, as well as technical-operational facilities where different warplanes are serviced and repaired,” the military said.
There was no immediate comment from Russia.
Yet Ukraine suffered setbacks too, with a Russian missile reportedly killing at least five people and wounding 25 in the industrial city of Samar in Ukraine’s south-east on Friday.
SECOND STRIKE
It was the second strike on the city in three days, according to witnesses. At least four of the wounded were in “severe condition and taken to the hospital,” regional governor Serhiy Lysak noted on the social media platform Telegram.
Officials gave no immediate details on damage in the city, where an attack on an infrastructure facility on Tuesday reportedly killed two people.
In the Kherson region to the south, authorities urged residents on Friday to prepare for extended periods “without power” after “a Russian attack” hit a key energy facility.
Governor Oleksandr Prokudin stated that the attack resulted in power outages in some regional settlements near the Russian forces’ front lines.
Russia also said its troops had captured the village of Nova Kruhlyakivka in Ukraine’s eastern Kharkiv region. The report from the Russian state news agency TASS, citing the Defense Ministry, could not be independently verified on Friday.
However, with retaliatory strikes from Ukraine ongoing and the NATO military alliance still supporting Kyiv, Putin also seemed open to a new round of peace talks, likely to be held in Istanbul, Turkey.
He acknowledged that Russian and Ukrainian views on the path to peace are “diametrically opposed.” Still, he added that “negotiations are organized and conducted precisely with the aim of finding common ground.”
3,000 BODIES
Russia also wants to hand over “another 3,000 bodies of Ukrainians killed in action,” Putin said.
Both sides had already agreed upon the exchange of 6,000 dead.
Negotiations between Ukraine and Russia began shortly after the fighting began in early 2022, but ended without a breakthrough. In May this year, the first direct consultations between Ukrainian and Russian delegations since 2022 began.
Delegates agreed on one of the largest prisoner exchanges of the war, at least 1,200 people on each side, as well as thousands of war dead.
Yet, Putin said he regretted that two rounds of peace talks had failed to bring a ceasefire. Russian and Ukrainian negotiators exchanged “memorandums” on how to end the war at talks in Istanbul this month. The Russian president confirmed Friday in Minsk: “As for the memorandums, as expected, nothing surprising happened … these are two absolutely contradictory memorandums.”
He also condemned NATO military alliance members’ “aggressive” pledge to increase their defence spending to 5% of the Gross Domestic Product.
U.S. President Donald J. Trump called NATO’s decision a “big win” for Western civilisation. Putin stressed Friday that despite his frustration over these developments, Russia was ready to hold a new round of peace talks with Ukraine, potentially in Istanbul. However, he cautioned that the venue and date had not yet been agreed upon.
More than a million people are believed to have been killed and injured in Europe’s bloodiest conflict since World War II.
Copyright 1999-2025 Worthy News. This article was originally published on Worthy News and was reproduced with permission.
More Worthy News
A government ban on major social media platforms that enraged young Nepalis has spiraled into the country’s deadliest political violence in decades, with authorities saying Sunday that at least 72 people have been killed and hundreds more injured during protests reflecting years of frustration over corruption, inequality, and “curbs on freedoms.”
Throughout the Hill Country, crosses, words of Jesus, prayers and messages of hope are written on memorials honoring nearly 150 killed from the catastrophic July 4 flash flood.
The NATO military alliance has begun rolling out its defensive posture on its eastern flank bordering Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine. NATO leaders said the new equipment is aimed at deterring potential Russian aggression after at least 19 Russian drones entered Polish territory and Romania also reported a violation of its airspace.
Israel’s surprise strike on Hamas political leaders in Qatar showcased its growing arsenal of advanced ballistic missiles and its ability to deploy them at long range with precision, according to an exclusive report by the Wall Street Journal.
More than 100,000 people packed into central London on Saturday for what organizers billed as the largest free speech rally in British history. The “Unite the Kingdom” march, spearheaded by activist Tommy Robinson, featured a live video appearance by billionaire Elon Musk and a tribute to slain U.S. conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
Christians in Pakistan’s flood-hit Punjab province were among those struggling to survive Thursday, while in Indonesia, at least 19 people were confirmed dead after flash floods struck the tourist island of Bali and other regions as deadly monsoon waters swept across parts of South Asia.
Much of the world is mourning after the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the born-again Christian conservative leader, who inspired his generation and whose widow praised him as a loving husband with a deep faith in Jesus Christ.