Kyiv granted E.U. membership candidacy in symbolic win amid war – The Washington Post

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Analysis: How a Russian investigative reporter found out he was a Kremlin target
McDonald’s Russian successor sells nearly 120,000 burgers on opening day
Updates from key battlefields: Ukraine stalls Russian takeover in Severodonetsk-Lysychansk area
European leaders celebrate Ukraine’s E.U. candidate status
A celebration of E.U. decision on Ukraine, in photos
Biden administration approves delivery of additional artillery, patrol boats to Ukraine
Ukraine files symbolic European Court of Human Rights case against Russia
The E.U. has approved candidate status for Ukraine. Here’s what that means.
European Union leaders back ‘candidate status’ for Ukraine
G-7 could discuss fate of gas pipeline turbine stuck in Canada
U.S.-donated HIMARS have arrived, Ukraine’s defense minister says
Putin at summit says BRICS’ influence is growing, cooperation is deepening
Cisco, Nike to fully exit Russia in latest corporate withdrawals
Rights groups urge Biden to negotiate with Russia to free WNBA star
Britain imposes further sanctions on Russia
Analysis: How a Russian investigative reporter found out he was a Kremlin target
McDonald’s Russian successor sells nearly 120,000 burgers on opening day
Updates from key battlefields: Ukraine stalls Russian takeover in Severodonetsk-Lysychansk area
European leaders celebrate Ukraine’s E.U. candidate status
A celebration of E.U. decision on Ukraine, in photos
Biden administration approves delivery of additional artillery, patrol boats to Ukraine
Ukraine files symbolic European Court of Human Rights case against Russia
The E.U. has approved candidate status for Ukraine. Here’s what that means.
European Union leaders back ‘candidate status’ for Ukraine
G-7 could discuss fate of gas pipeline turbine stuck in Canada
U.S.-donated HIMARS have arrived, Ukraine’s defense minister says
Putin at summit says BRICS’ influence is growing, cooperation is deepening
Cisco, Nike to fully exit Russia in latest corporate withdrawals
Rights groups urge Biden to negotiate with Russia to free WNBA star
Britain imposes further sanctions on Russia
This live coverage has ended. For Friday’s live updates, click here.
BRUSSELS — European Union leaders meeting on Thursday approved Ukraine’s to become a formal candidate for E.U. membership status, giving the war-torn country and its leader, Volodymyr Zelensky, a much-needed morale boost. The European Parliament also backed the move in a Thursday vote.
Russia’s investigative journalists are no strangers to pressure from the Kremlin. But for Andrei Soldatov, what has happened to him after the Russian invasion of Ukraine has been an alarming escalation.
At the start of June, Soldatov, a journalist who co-founded the investigative website Agentura.ru, said he began getting text messages from his Russian bank demanding he pay huge government fines. With no explanation, Soldatov assumed it was a phishing attack — a regular hazard in his line of work. But then another bank got in contact to say that his assets were being frozen, he said.
Vkusno i Tochka, the fast-food chain that replaced McDonald’s after the U.S. franchise left Russia in the aftermath of the invasion of Ukraine, said it had sold almost 120,000 burgers on opening day last week.
Chief executive Oleg Paroev told Reuters that the franchise opened 50 restaurants in the Moscow area June 12 and June 13. The chain also started launching additional venues in St. Petersburg this week, according to Russian media. Paroev said his goal is to open 1,000 outlets in the next few years, more than the 850 McDonald’s restaurants that had been open in Russia.
Ukraine continues to suffer high casualties as Russia presses forward with its aggression in the eastern Ukrainians cities, causing injuries and forcing Ukrainian armed forces to regain footing in new terrain. The recalculation of Ukraine’s ground troops indicates that authorities could be considering the loss of two key areas, according to analysis from the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War.
Here are more updates from across the country:
European leaders are celebrating Ukraine’s European Union candidacy status, a stinging rebuke of the Kremlin, which has long held the nation as “Little Russia.”
President Zelensky called the decision “a unique and historical moment in [Ukraine-European Union] relations.”
As leaders of the European Union discussed — and ultimately granted — candidate status to Ukraine for their 27-member bloc, demonstrators, including Ukrainians, gathered in support of the nation’s inclusion.
Outside the European Union building on Thursday, one protester held up a sign with the words “nothing can stop the idea when its time has arrived,” spray-painted in blue. Other signs read: “Ukraine must be in the EU” and “Freedom for Ukraine.”
The United States will send an additional $450 million in weapons and ammunition to Ukraine as it fends off a Russian invasion, the Biden administration said Thursday, including additional multiple-launch rocket systems and patrol boats to defend its shores.
White House spokesman John Kirby said the United States will send more M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, or HIMARS; additional rounds for artillery already provided to Ukraine; and the vessels. It marks the 13th weapons package that President Biden has approved for delivery to Ukraine in the wake of Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion, with a total of $6.1 billion in security assistance, Kirby said.
Ukraine filed a court case in the European Court of Human Rights against Russia for what it says are human rights violations during the war, Ukraine’s Justice Ministry announced Thursday.
“In due course, the Court will be invited to find that Russia has been guilty of the most flagrant, serious and sustained violations of the [European Convention on Human Rights] ever placed before the Court, and to award just satisfaction on an equally unprecedented scale,” the ministry wrote.
BRUSSELS — European leaders meeting Thursday formally backed European Union candidate status for Ukraine, a historic moment for the bloc and a major morale boost for Kyiv amid the war with Russia. The European Parliament also backed the move in a vote Thursday.
Ukraine’s push has revived the enlargement debate more broadly.
BRUSSELS — European Union leaders on Thursday agreed to make Ukraine a candidate for membership in the bloc, a symbolic win for Kyiv amid its war with Russia and another sign of how the conflict is reshaping the world.
Candidate status does not confer membership, which could still be decades away. But the decision is a historic step for Europe — and sends a signal to Russia.
The future of a turbine at the center of a geopolitical standoff between Russia and the West is likely to be discussed at a Group of Seven summit this week, a Canadian minister told Reuters.
The turbine, used in a key Russia-to-Europe gas pipeline operated by Russian state energy firm Gazprom, is stuck in Canada, where it had been undergoing maintenance.
Ukraine has received a batch of M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, commonly known as HIMARS, from the United States, Ukraine’s defense minister said Thursday.
“HIMARS have arrived to Ukraine,” Oleksii Reznikov tweeted, thanking his U.S. counterpart, Lloyd Austin, for the “powerful tools.”
The “BRICS” virtual summit — a meeting of the leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — continues into its second day Thursday, with Russian President Vladimir Putin making an appearance.
The Russian leader said at the summit that the five-nation bloc is “deepening cooperation” and that “every year the authority of the BRICS and its influence on the global stage is steadily increasing,” Russian state media Tass reported.
The sports apparel giant Nike plans to fully withdraw from Russia in the latest corporate move to isolate Moscow from the global economy.
Nike had already suspended its operations in the country after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. But a host of high-profile Western brands have since announced plans to completely exit the Russian market as the war escalates into a deadlier phase and as world leaders enact aggressive international sanctions to punish President Vladimir Putin and his financial allies.
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The latest: Ukrainian forces will have to be withdrawn from the besieged city of Severodonetsk, which had been the largest city in the Luhansk region still under partial Ukrainian control, according to the regional governor. The outcome is a symbolic and territorial victory for Moscow.
The fight: A slowly regenerating Russian army is making incremental gains in eastern Ukraine against valiant but underequipped Ukrainian forces. The United States and its allies are racing to deliver the enormous quantities of weaponry the Ukrainians urgently need if they are to hold the Russians at bay.
The weapons: Ukraine is making use of weapons such as Javelin antitank missiles and Switchblade “kamikaze” drones, provided by the United States and other allies. Russia has used an array of weapons against Ukraine, some of which have drawn the attention and concern of analysts.
Photos: Post photographers have been on the ground from the very beginning of the war — here’s some of their most powerful work.
How you can help: Here are ways those in the U.S. can help support the Ukrainian people as well as what people around the world have been donating.
Read our full coverage of the Russia-Ukraine crisis. Are you on Telegram? Subscribe to our channel for updates and exclusive video.
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