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Ukraine News Weekly

Ukraine News Weekly

Written by: UNITED24 Media
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A weekly, clear-cut briefing on what’s happening in Ukraine—from major frontline updates to political, economic, and global developments that shape the war. Each episode explains the key events, why they matter, and how they fit into the bigger picture. Expect verified reporting, sharp context, and insights you won’t find in headlines—brought to you by UNITED24 Media, the newsroom covering Ukraine every day.UNITED24 Media Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Putin's Planes Are Failing, UEFA's Playing for Russia, and Christmas in Cities That No Longer Exist
    Dec 30 2025

    This week in Ukraine news:

    Sanctions don't cause instant collapse—they cause slow, systematic failure. This week, we open with an exclusive investigation: leaked documents from Russia's presidential flight unit reveal 319 technical failures in just three months, with 55 occurring mid-flight. Navigation systems, weather radars, satellite communications—all dependent on Western components Russia can no longer access or repair.

    These aren't ordinary aircraft. The Special Flight Detachment "Russia" transports Putin, government officials, and foreign delegations—the country's equivalent of Air Force One. If the Kremlin can't keep its most privileged fleet safe, what does that tell us about military aviation and the broader defense industry? The documents show a clear chain: imported systems fail, repair is impossible, domestic alternatives don't work, and reliability collapses. Quietly, systematically, irreversibly.

    Then we turn to a story that sounds absurd until you see the evidence. UEFA fined Ukraine €15,000 for fans displaying a banner reading "Russia is a terrorist state"—the exact language used by NATO and the European Parliament. But that's just the surface.

    Our investigation into how UEFA ended up on Putin's team reveals that European football's governing body has transferred over €10.8 million to Russian clubs since the full-scale invasion began. Russian teams don't play, but they still collect "solidarity payments." They don't compete, but UEFA keeps awarding them coefficient points for future tournament slots. And while five Ukrainian clubs from war zones can't access their payments due to banking obstacles, Moscow's money flows uninterrupted.

    It gets worse. Ten Russian officials remain on UEFA committees, including Alexander Dyukov—head of the Russian Football Union and chairman of Gazprom Neft, the oil company with its own private military unit that fought in Bakhmut. In 2023, UEFA tried to bring Russian youth teams back until Ukraine and eleven other nations threatened a boycott. And despite the supposed sponsorship ban, Gazprom's logo appeared on Red Star Belgrade jerseys in the Champions League. Some boycott.

    From institutions failing Ukraine, we move to people refusing to surrender. In Kherson region, a small pig farm keeps operating despite three drone and missile strikes in December alone. Owner Sergiy Kasyanov calls it "a game of Battleships"—some buildings hold animals, some are empty, and every Russian strike is a gamble.

    KSG Agro is among the 13% of Ukrainian businesses that never stopped working. But the cost is brutal. One employee was killed in a drone attack on her car. Her husband was critically wounded. They have two children. The team has shrunk from 90 workers to 20. Power cuts last 15+ hours daily. Russian FPV drones hunt civilians in what locals call a "human safari."

    Yet Kasyanov's farm keeps feeding Ukraine and exporting grain to Africa and Asia—regions no one else can supply at scale. "If the war stops, in Kherson, we'll immediately have a different life," he says. "We are dreaming and believing in a time when it will stop."

    Our next story comes from inside a Ukrainian POW facility. Arash Darbandi is a 34-year-old photographer from Iran who came to Russia to take tourist photos and ended up forced into combat.

    After an altercation with police in St. Petersburg, Darbandi was given a choice: three to five years in prison, or one year at war. He tried to escape by deliberately breaking his own arm during training. It didn't matter—they sent him anyway. His account reveals how Russia treats foreign conscripts: housed separately from Russians, given almost no training, pushed to the front first. Before deployment, officers told them "dead people don't need food."

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    41 mins
  • Donetsk Fortresses and the Tech Defining 2026 Warfare
    Dec 15 2025

    Why does Putin keep demanding the Donetsk region in every ceasefire proposal? Because Ukraine has transformed it into a fortress belt—and capturing it would cost Russia hundreds of thousands more lives. This week on Ukraine News Weekly, we break down the strategic reality behind the negotiations and explain why Ukraine won't hand over these heavily fortified cities.

    Russia has already lost 392,000 troops in 2025 alone. Cities like Kramatorsk, Sloviansk, and Pokrovsk have become layered defensive positions that would take years to siege. Moscow wants these fortifications handed over for free—a demand Ukraine refuses. We analyze the maps, the casualty numbers, and why conceding territory only feeds the appetite of an aggressor.

    In our exclusive defense tech segment, we speak with insiders shaping Ukraine's military future. What technologies will define warfare in 2026? The answers: AI-driven autonomous drones, ground combat robots already clearing trenches, interceptor drones taking down Russian glide bombs, and laser-based counter-UAS systems. With over 200 companies developing AI solutions through Brave1, Ukraine is racing to stay ahead of Russia's own technological advances.

    We also cover a devastating report that demands global attention. The Memorial Human Rights Centre has documented systematic torture of Ukrainian POWs in Russian detention centers. Survivors describe what guards cynically call the "Gentleman's Kit"—electroshock devices, suffocation bags, and instruments of sexual violence. From Olenivka to Siberian penal colonies, the testimony reveals a coordinated system of abuse that violates every international convention. This is the evidence the world needs to see.

    Beyond Ukraine's borders, Russia is expanding its influence through a different kind of power—nuclear energy. We examine Moscow's nuclear push into Africa, where it's signing deals with military juntas in Niger, Burkina Faso, Mali, and a $30 billion agreement with Ethiopia. These aren't just energy projects—they're tools of dependence that give Russia access to uranium, gold, and long-term geopolitical leverage.

    Finally, we bring you an exclusive portrait of Vladyslav Krasnoshchok—a Kharkiv surgeon who became one of Ukraine's most provocative war photographers. A member of the legendary Kharkiv School of Photography, his raw, unsettling images have been exhibited at the Centre Pompidou in Paris. He photographs the frontlines with film cameras around his neck, survives shelling, then returns to his darkroom. His work forces us to pause—and think harder about what we're seeing.

    For more Ukraine news: united24media.com

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    43 mins
  • Military drones explained: From FPV kamikazes to Shahed swarms, discover how UAVs are transforming warfare in Ukraine. Real combat stories, drone types, and what's next.
    Dec 11 2025
    🎙️ THE ULTIMATE MILITARY DRONE GUIDE: How UAVs Are Shaping Modern WarfareFrom a 1930s British biplane called the "Queen Bee" to AI-powered swarms striking Russian oil refineries 1,800km away—this episode explores how drones became the defining weapon of 21st-century warfare.📍 What You'll Learn: What is a UAV? The difference between drones, UAVs, and missilesTypes of military drones: FPV, UCAVs, ISR platforms, loitering munitions & cargo UAVsKey players: How the US, Israel, Turkey, Iran, Ukraine, Russia & China are shaping drone warfareUkraine: The world's first drone war—real combat examples and innovationsCounter-drone defenses: Electronic warfare, AI systems, and interceptor dronesThe future: Autonomous swarms, fiber-optic guidance, and 3,000km strike ranges🇺🇦 Featured Ukraine Combat Examples: $500 FPV drone destroys $300,000 Russian Merlin-VR reconnaissance UAVOperation "Spider Web": 117 modified drones cause $7 billion damage to Russian bomber basesUkrainian Beaver (UJ-26) drones penetrate Crimean air defenses, destroy Su-30 fighter jetNight of 810 Shaheds: Russia's largest drone swarm attack in history68% interception rate achieved by Ukraine's new drone-killer interceptors🔑 Key Terms Explained:FPV (First-Person View) UAV (Unmanned Aerial Vehicle)UCAV (Unmanned Combat Aerial Vehicle)ISR (Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance)Loitering MunitionMALE (Medium-Altitude Long-Endurance)HALE (High-Altitude Long-Endurance)EW (Electronic Warfare)📚 Drones Mentioned:Shahed-136 / Geran-2 (Iran/Russia)Bayraktar TB2 & Akıncı (Turkey)MQ-9 Reaper & RQ-4 Global Hawk (USA)ZALA Lancet (Russia)Ukrainian: Beaver (UJ-26), RAM-2X, Bulava, Vyriy, Leleka-100, SharkFPV Interceptors: Win_Hit, Mongoose, Besoram-3210📖 Source:This episode is based on "The Ultimate Drone Guide: Everything You Need to Know About UAVs" by UNITED24 Media.🔗 Read the full article: https://united24media.com/war-in-ukraine/the-ultimate-drone-guide-everything-you-need-to-know-about-uavs-12746Support Ukraine:UNITED24 Media is Ukraine's official media platform. Support frontline reporting and defense technology at united24media.com/donate—#MilitaryDrones #UAV #DroneWarfare #Ukraine #FPVDrone #Shahed #Bayraktar #UkraineWar #DefenseTechnology #ModernWarfare #UNITED24 #UkraineNews #WarInUkraine #Drones2025 #MilitaryTech #LoiteringMunition #DroneStrike #RussiaUkraineWar
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    14 mins
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