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Ukraine war latest: Kremlin denies Putin plans to invade European countries

The Kremlin has denied that Vladimir Putin plans to invade European countries; and a Russian general has been killed after an explosive device detonated underneath his car in southern Moscow. Follow live updates below.

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In pictures: Virtual desolation in frontline Ukrainian town

A series of pictures published today offer a glimpse at the scale of devastation in a Ukrainian frontline town.

The images show the scene in Kostiantynivka, in the Donetsk region, which has been subject to repeated Russian military strikes.

Ukraine hits oil terminal on Russian coast, officials say

Ukraine's military has hit a "critical" Russian oil terminal in the Krasnodar region, Ukrainian officials say.

According to the military officials, the Tamanneftegaz oil and petroleum products export terminal was struck.

They say Tamanneftegaz is a large Russian export terminal located near the port of Taman, which specialises in the transshipment of oil and petroleum products from tank farms for shipment by sea. 

They describe it as a "critical hub for Russian oil exports".

A statement said damage had been reported to a pipeline, two berths, and two vessels, with a fire breaking out over an area of more than 1,000 square meters and affecting at least one vessel.

Analysis: Killing of Russian general shows Trump that Moscow isn't in total control

by Ivor Bennett, Moscow correspondent

A Russian general being blown up on his own doorstep isn't a good look for Moscow, and it seems it's becoming increasingly common.

The latest high-profile figure to be assassinated since Russia's invasion of Ukraine is Lieutenant General Fanil Sarvarov. He was killed by a car bomb that detonated outside a residential complex, little more than ten miles from the Kremlin.

He was a senior figure. Head of the Operational Training Directorate of the General Staff, Sarvarov prepared forces for future deployment, having previously served in Chechnya and Syria. 

There was no immediate claim of responsibility but Moscow believes Kyiv may have been behind it. No wonder - they've carried out similar attacks many times before.

This time last year, Ukraine took credit for the assassination of Lieutenant General Igor Kirillov, who Kyiv alleged had ordered chemical weapons to be used against its troops on the battlefield. He was killed by a bomb hidden in a scooter outside his apartment block, which Vladimir Putin referred to as a "major blunder" by the security services.

But the attacks didn't stop there. In April, Lieutenant General Yaroslav Moskalik was killed after a car exploded in a town just outside Moscow.

And two months ago, another car bomb in Siberia killed a Russian commander accused of committing war crimes.

It's unclear why Sarvarov was targeted - perhaps simply because his rank and apparent vulnerability.

The timing appears significant. It follows the latest peace talks between US and Russian officials in Miami over the weekend, where Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev met with Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner.

In the past, Ukraine has used these kinds of attacks to embarrass Moscow and to bring the war closer to home for Russians. This time could be Kyiv's way of undermining Moscow’s narrative in the negotiations.

The Kremlin has been trying to persuade the White House that a Russian victory is inevitable, and that it’s futile to support Ukraine, in the hope of securing a more preferential settlement.

Ukraine has been trying to convince the Trump administration of the opposite - that it’s still full of fight - and taking out Russian generals in their own backyard is one way of doing that.

It shows Washington that the Kremlin is clearly not in total control.

Russia launching cross-border attacks in bid to trick West, analysts say

Russia has been carrying out limited cross-border attacks across a broad part of the previously dormant northern frontline in Sumy and Kharkiv regions.

However, analysts from the Institute for the Study of War think tank describe the attacks as part of a new cognitive warfare campaign.

It cited Ukrainian authorities as reporting Russian raids on the village of Hrabovske, in Sumy, and another small rural border village in Kharkiv.

But, the analysts said, Russian forces have put in place preparations for a new offensive across the international border in northern Ukraine.

"ISW has not observed evidence that would indicate that Russian forces are preparing for or capable of conducting a significant offensive operation across the international border area into northern Ukraine," the group said.

"These two cross-border attacks likely intend to advance the Kremlin's cognitive warfare campaign to convince the West that the frontlines in Ukraine are collapsing, such that Ukraine should concede to all of Russia’s demands.

"The Kremlin likely intends to portray these limited cross-border attacks against small rural border villages in long-dormant areas of the international border as part of a broad new Russian offensive to reinforce a false narrative that Ukraine’s frontline is collapsing across the theater.

"ISW continues to assess that the frontlines in Ukraine are not in danger of rapid collapse and that a Russian victory is not inevitable."

Russia natural gas exports to China expected to have risen 25%, source says

Russia's pipeline exports of natural gas to China are expected to have risen by a quarter this year, a source familiar with the data has told Reuters.

It comes as Moscow ramps up sales to Asia and cements ties with the world's largest energy consumer.

However, calculations indicate this will not offset the fall in revenue from the loss of the European gas market.

Russia has re-routed most of its oil to India and China since the start of the war in Ukraine in 2022 as Moscow and Europe - once its main commodity  export market and source of revenue - cut ties.

It's proven harder to  divert gas flows eastwards and painstaking talks to bring more Russian gas to China have yielded limited results.

The source, who spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorised to talk to media, told Reuters that Russian energy giant Gazprom expected gas exports to China via the Power of Siberia Pipeline to reach around 38.6-38.7 billion cubic metres this year, up from 31 bcm in 2024 and exceeding the pipeline's planned annual capacity of 38 bcm.

Gazprom has not responded to a request for comment.

During Vladimir Putin's visit to China in September, the countries agreed to increase annual volumes on the route by an additional 6 bcm, to 44 bcm, a year. Russia and China also gave their blessing to the Power of Siberia 2 pipeline, which could one day deliver an additional 50 bcm of Russian gas per year through Mongolia from the Arctic gas fields of Yamal.

However, the main obstacle to implementing the project, the price of Russian gas, remains unresolved.

Russia's economy ministry estimates that revenue from gas exports to China will be 30%-40% lower than the value of exports to Europe in 2025-2028.

The only operational route for Russian gas supplies to Europe is via the TurkStream pipeline under the Black Sea. Deliveries via Ukraine - which amounted to around 12-15 bcm in recent years - were halted at the start of the year as Moscow and Kyiv failed to extend a transit deal.

According to Russian finance ministry data, gas exports generated around 420 billion roubles (£3.93bn) for the state budget in January - November.

China is an ally of Russia and has been accused of helping its war in Ukraine, though Beijing has repeatedly denied allegations that it has supplied Kremlin forces with weapons.

The high-profile Russians killed since Putin's invasion of Ukraine

As we have been reporting, Lieutenant General Fanil Sarvarov was killed when a car bomb detonated this morning in Moscow.

He became the latest high-profile Russian to be assasinated since Vladimir Putin ordered the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Here is a breakdown of those figures killed:

22 December 2025 - Lieutenant General Fanil Sarvarov is killed by a bomb that explodes under his Kia Sorento in southern Moscow. Sarvarov was head of the Russian General Staff's army operational training directorate. Russian investigators say they suspect the involvement of Ukrainian special services, although here is no immediate comment from Kyiv.

25 April 2025 - Lieutenant General Yaroslav Moskalik, 59, is killed by a car bomb near Moscow. Moskalik was deputy head of the Main Operations Directorate of the General Staff.

17 December 2024 - Lieutenant General Igor Kirillov, who was chief of Russia's nuclear, biological and chemical protection troops, is killed outside a Moscow apartment building along with his assistant when a bomb hidden in an electric scooter goes off.

13 November 2024 - A bomb planted under a car kills a Russian serviceman in Sevastopol in Russia-annexed Crimea. A Ukrainian security source names him as Valery Trankovsky, a Russian naval captain whom Kyiv accused of war crimes for ordering missile strikes on civilian targets.

4 October 2024 - Andrei Korotkiy, an employee at the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine is killed in a car bomb attack. Ukrainian military intelligence calls him a collaborator and a war criminal.

6 December 2023 - Illia Kyva, a former Ukrainian lawmaker regarded by Kyiv as a traitor, is shot dead near Moscow.

11 July 2023 - Russian military officer Stanislav Rzhitsky, who had commanded a submarine in the Blac Sea and appeared on a Ukrainian blacklist of alleged war criminals, is shot dead while out on a morning run in the southern city of Krasnodar.

2 April 2023 - Vladen Tatarsky, a pro-war Russian military blogger, is killed by a bomb concealed in a statuette presented to him by a woman in a St Petersburg cafe.

20 August 2022 - Darya Dugina, the daughter of a pro-war nationalist figure, is killed by a car bomb in the Moscow region.

Russia launches strikes on port and energy infrastructure - Ukrainian officials

Russian troops hit port and energy infrastructure in an overnight attack on Ukraine's Odesa region, causing a fire at a major port and disrupting electricity supplies to tens of thousands of people, a senior Ukrainian official has said.

Ukraine's Black Sea ports are crucial for its export-driven economy and their security and functionality have been vital for the country's economic survival throughout nearly four years  of war.

"Russia is attempting to disrupt maritime logistics by launching systematic attacks on port and energy infrastructure," deputy prime minister Oleksiy Kuleba said.

"Last night, ports and energy facilities were targeted again."

Kuleba said a blaze had broken out in the port of Pivdennyi after the attack, and that about 30 containers of flour and vegetable oil were on fire. Port workers and emergency services were battling the blaze.

Because of damage to the energy infrastructure, electricity supplies were disrupted to more than 120,000 customers in the Odesa region, he said. One person had been hurt in the attack, the interior ministry said.

Russia did not immediately comment on the overnight attack.

In the past few weeks, Russia has increased attacks on Odesa port and the surrounding region, trying to limit Ukraine's access to the Black Sea and disrupt critical logistics routes to the border with Moldova, Ukrainian officials said.

Ukraine also targets Russia's maritime logistics, increasingly focusing on shadow-fleet oil tankers that are used to bypass sanctions imposed on Russia over the war.

Russia claims it has captured village in Kharkiv

Russia's Defence Ministry announced this morning it had captured Vilcha in Ukraine's eastern Kharkiv region, according to Russian state news RIA Novosti.

The report could not be immediately verified.

What we know about Russian general killed in car explosion

In our 7.44 post, we reported on the death of Fanil Sarvarov when an explosive device detonated underneath his car in southern Moscow this morning.

Here's what we know about the 56-year-old:

  • Born on 11 March 1969, he graduated from the Krasnoznamensk Higher Tank Command School in Kazan in 1990. He also graduated from the Armoured Forces Military Academy in 1999 and the General Staff Military Academy of the Russian Armed Forces in 2008;
  • From 1992 to 2003, he participated in combat operations during the Ossetian-Ingush conflict and the counter-terrorism operation in Chechnya for six years;
  • After graduating from the General Staff Military Academy, he continued his military service in the Main Operational Directorate of the General Staff of the Armed Forces and the Directorate of Operational Preparation of the Russian Armed Forces;
  • In 2015-2016, he was involved in Russia's operations in Syria;
  • Since 2016, he has been appointed to the position of Head of the Directorate of Operational Preparation of the Russian Armed Forces;
  • He was awarded the Order of Courage, the Medal of the Order "For Services to the Motherland" of the second degree, the Order "For Military Merit", the Medal of the Order "For Services to the Motherland" of the first degree.
  • He was also granted the honorary title of "Merited Military Specialist of the Russian Federation".
Kremlin denies Putin plans to invade European countries

Reuters cited six sources last week as saying US intelligence reports continued to warn that Vladimir Putin has not abandoned his aims of capturing all of Ukraine and reclaiming parts of Europe that belonged to the former Soviet empire.

The reports presented a starkly different picture from that painted by Donald Trump and his Ukraine peace negotiators, who have said Putin wants to end the conflict.

And the intelligence also contradicts the Russian president's denials that he is a threat to Europe.

The US findings have been consistent since Putin launched his full-scale invasion in 2022. They largely align with the views of European leaders and spy agencies that he covets all of Ukraine and territories of former Soviet bloc states, including members of the NATO alliance, according to the sources.

However, the Kremlin said today that if US intelligence believed that Putin wanted to capture all of Ukraine and reclaim parts of Europe that were once part of the Soviet Union, then US intelligence was wrong.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that Moscow did not know how reliable the sources quoted by Reuters were, but that if the report was accurate, then the US intelligence conclusions were wrong.

"This is absolutely not true," Peskov said of the US intelligence conclusions as reported by Reuters.