Kharkiv has come under almost daily aerial attack since the full-scale war began two years ago.
EPA-EFE/Sergey Kozlov
Ferocity of Moscow’s offensive against Ukraine’s second city appears to be prompting a rethink among Ukraine’s western allies.
Vladimir Putin.
AP/Alamy
Putin is busy consolidating his alliances while the west keeps dithering.
Devastation: firefighters at the scene of a Russian bomb attack in Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second city, April 2024.
EPA-EFE/Yakiv Liashenko
Russia is putting wings and guidance systems on old ‘iron bombs’ and using them to pound Ukraine’s cities.
Farewell to arms: Ukrainians mourn their dead.
AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda
As Ukraine begs its allies for more arms to defend itself, Russia is beginning to advance at several along its front lines.
Many of the buildings in Kharkiv that bats roost in have been destroyed or damaged by shelling.
DarSzach/Shutterstock
Shelling may have led to the killing of 7,000 noctule bats in the city of Kharkiv alone
Police officers look at collected fragments of Russian rockets, including cluster rounds, that hit Kharkiv, Ukraine, in December 2022.
(AP Photo/Libkos)
Ideally, Russia would withdraw from Ukraine peacefully. Absent this, cluster munitions represent an effective way for Ukraine to defeat Russia’s invasion.
EPA-EFE/Sergey Kozlov
Ukraine badly needs a major military success to boost the confidence of its western allies and ensure a continuing flow of military equipment.
EPA-EFE/Maxim Shipenkov
Russia’s military is plagued by problems all the way to its commander-in-chief Vladimir Putin.
Russia moved significant numbers of troops and equipment south to met the Ukraine offensive in the Kherson region.
EPA-EFE/Russian Defence Ministry handout
The success of Ukraine’s recent offensives have shown Ukraine can defeat Russia militarily, as long as it has sufficient support form the west.
Ukrainian soldiers are counterattacking in the east of the country.
Leo Correa/AP/AAP
Vladmir Putin has a new problem. His invasion of Ukraine is not just bogged down. It’s going backwards.
EPA-EFE/Sergei Bobelyv/Sputnik/Kremlin pool
Some of the key articles from our coverage of the war in Ukraine over the past week.
Many Ukrainians returned home after fleeing the Russian invasion, including this family that arrived on April 12, 2022, in Lviv, Ukraine, from refuge in Poland.
Dominika Zarzycka/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
A young woman in Lviv, Ukraine, writes about fleeing Russian aggression not once, but twice, since 2014 and explains the fierce desire to stay in her home country – a desire shared by many.
A resident sits outside a destroyed apartment building after it was hit by artillery shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine, on March 14, 2022.
(AP Photo/Felipe Dana)
Military behaviour usually becomes more restrained when troops feel securely in control of a city. That means Ukrainian civilians may bear the brunt of growing Russian military frustration.
Presenting a unified front.
Saul Loeb-Pool/Getty Images
Biden tapped into themes of unity – both among Americans and with Western allies – while warning Russian President Vladimir Putin that he had badly miscalculated in invading Ukraine.