PA-EFE/Mikhail Metzel/Sputnik/Kremlin pool
A selection of our coverage of the conflict from the past fortnight.
Vladimir Putin speaking during a concert in Moscow’s Red Square to mark the 10th anniversary of Crimea’s reunification with Russia.
Sergei Ilnitsky / EPA
Since annexing Crimea ten years ago, Putin has set out to destroy non-Russian identities on the peninsular.
Activist Sair Smedlja stands in front of the Crimean Tatar self-governing assembly (the Mejlis) which was closed down when the Russians occupied Crimea.
DPA/Alamy
A spokesman claims that Crimean Tatars who are arrested by their Russian occupiers are beaten and tortured.
Sevastopol: Russia’s naval base in Crimea has suffered several major attacks in recent months.
Sipa US/Alamy Live News
Russia has lost control of the Black Sea, which will have major implications for the war on land.
Family members at the Kyiv memorial of Ukrainian soldiers killed in the country’s war against Russia.
(AP Photo/Alex Babenko)
Ad-hoc crowdsourcing efforts amid the Ukraine war, initially intended as stop-gap measures to support an underfunded Ukrainian military, have since coalesced into major global fundraising campaigns.
Retaking Snake Island in May 2022 has become symbolic of Ukraine’s defiance.
PA-EFE/Mykola Tys
Ukraine’s recent successes at sea and in Crimea create strategic opportunities in the Black Sea and, in the longer term, for the war on land.
The long-range ATACMS missiles that Ukraine desperately wants the US to provide.
US army/Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy Stock Photo
Pressure is mounting on Joe Biden and Nato leaders to supply Kyiv with more – and long-range – weapons.
A handout photograph shows Sevastopol governor Mikhail Razvozhaev speaking on a mobile phone from the scene of the missile attack.
EPA-EFE/Governor of Sevastopol Mikhail Razvozhaev handout
Two successful operations in and around Crimea demonstrate that, while Ukraine’s ground counteroffensive is moving slowly, Kyiv is expanding the scope of its ambition.
Ukrainians celebrate on Nov. 12, 2022, in Kherson, Ukraine, after Ukraine regained control of the city.
Yevhenii Zavhorodnii/Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images
For President Zelenskyy and Ukraine’s citizens, the country’s quest for NATO and EU membership is about security – and identity.
Face masks depicting Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, and Wagner Group leader Yevgeny Prigozhin displayed at a souvenir shop in St. Petersburg, Russia. Prigozhin reportedly died in a plane crash on Aug. 23.
(AP Photo, File)
Russian mercenary leader Yevgeny Prigozhin, the founder of the Wagner Group, reportedly died when a private jet he was said to be on crashed on Aug. 23, 2023, killing all 10 people on board.
Slow but steady: Volodymyr Zelensky receives a briefing on the counter-offensive from officers in Zaporizhzhia.
The Presidential Office of Ukraine via/dpa/Alamy Live News
Updates from various frontline sectors suggest progress for Ukraine’s counter-offensive. But it’s slow progress.
The town of Sviatohirsk in Ukraine’s Donbas Region. Just a few months ago, it was occupied by Russian forces.
Sipa/Alamy
Russian and Ukrainian communists who in 1919 mapped out the border between Ukraine and Russia took as their starting point the former Russian empire’s provincial boundaries.
Russian president Vladimir Putin visits the Kerch bridge linking Russian-occupied Crimea with the Russian mainland, after an attack damaged it.
AP/Alamy
About 100,000 Crimean Tatars died as part of a massive deportation of these people by Soviet leader Joseph Stalin towards the end of the second world war.
Members of the Wagner Group sit atop a tank in a street in the city of Rostov-on-Don, on June 24, 2023.
Roman Romokhov/AFP via Getty Images
A historian explains how Russian President Vladimir Putin, weakened by a short-lived mutiny, might find a path to peace with Ukraine.
The breach of the Kakhovka dam in Ukraine could have lasting ecological and health impacts.
Ukrainian Presidential Office via AP
Russia and Ukraine have blamed each other for the attack on crucial civilian infrastructure. Experts explain what the incident means for future war plans, and for the safety of the affected region.
Ukraine's Presidential Office via AP
The destruction of this massive dam is a huge blow to Ukraine’s plans for a counter-offensive in the south.
Popular will: a protest in Warsaw for peace in Ukraine.
EPA-EFE/Albert Zawada
Ukraine is hinting it may be prepared to talk, with conditions. Here’s what both sides could learn from the Northern Ireland peace process.
REUTERS/Toby Melville
A selection of our coverage of the conflict over the past fortnight.
Crimea: as pro-Moscow citizens celebrate nine years of Russian occupation, talk of Kyiv’s plans to retake the peninsula grows louder.
EPA-EFE/stringer
Russia is reportedly preparing massive defences to prevent a lightning offensive to retake the occupied peninsula.
Russian troops outside the Perevalne military base near Simferopol, Crimea.
Stephen Foote/Alamy
If the west had paid more attention to the Russian invasion of Crimea, it may have avoided a Ukraine war.