Russia - Ukraine War Update

<div class=\"default-font-wrapper\" style=\"line-height: 1;font-size: 12pt; font-family: Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif;\"><div style=\"line-height: 1;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12pt; font-family: Verdana, Geneva, sans-serif;\">Russia - Ukraine War Update&nbsp;<br id=\"isPasted\"><br>--Ukraine reportedly fired 12 British Storm Shadow cruise missiles &ndash; the latest Western weapon it has been permitted to use on Russian targets &ndash; into Russia&#39;s Kursk region, according to pro-Russian Telegram channels.<br>--The Ukrainian military said a Russian command post has been &#39;successfully struck&#39; in the town of Gubkin in Russia&#39;s Belgorod region, about 168km (105 miles) from the border with Ukraine.<br>--Russian forces have taken control of the settlement of Illinka in eastern Ukraine&#39;s Donetsk region, according to the country&#39;s Defence Ministry.<br>--The United States has reopened its embassy in Kyiv after it was shut on Wednesday due to what it called the threat of a significant air attack.<br>--Sergey Naryshkin, the head of Russia&#39;s Foreign Intelligence Service, has said Russia will punish any NATO states that help Ukraine strike deep into Russia with long-range Western weapons.<br>--Turkiye&#39;s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has expressed opposition to the US&#39;s decision to allow Ukraine to use long-range missiles to attack inside Russia, saying it will further inflame the conflict.<br>--French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot has dismissed Russian President Vladimir Putin&#39;s decision to lower his country&#39;s threshold for a nuclear strike as just &#39;rhetoric&#39;, saying France is &#39;not intimidated&#39;.<br>--The Netherlands has handed the final two of 18 promised F-16 fighter jets to a training facility in Romania, where --Ukrainian pilots and ground staff are being taught to fly and maintain the planes, the Dutch Defence Ministry has said.<br>--The Pentagon has announced $275m in military aid to Ukraine, including more ammunition for the HIMARS rocket system. --The Biden administration also moved to forgive $4.7bn in US loans to Ukraine, though Congress could still block the move.<br>--Nearly 11,000 North Korean troops have been deployed to Kursk as part of Russia&#39;s airborne unit and marines, with some already participating in battles against Ukrainian troops, South Korean lawmaker Lee Seong-kweun has said, citing the country&#39;s spy agency. North Korea has also shipped additional arms for the war in Ukraine, including self-propelled howitzers and multiple rocket launchers, Lee added.<br>--North Korea and Russia have signed another protocol on cooperation after meetings covering trade, the economy, science and technology in Pyongyang, North Korean state media KCNA has said.<br>--Britain and Romania offered their support to Moldova in tackling the effects of Russia&#39;s 1,000-day-old invasion of neighbouring Ukraine, as London signed a new security and defence partnership agreement with the ex-Soviet state.<br>Russia dismissed as &#39;absurd&#39; suggestions it was involved in damage caused to two fibre-optic data telecommunication cables in the Baltic Sea, after European governments accused Russia of being responsible for cutting one cable between Finland and Germany and another between Sweden and Lithuania.<br>--Austrian Foreign Minister Alexander Schallenberg said that Kremlin-controlled gas producer Gazprom&#39;s decision to cut supply to Austria showed how poor the rule of law was in Russia and sent a message to firms the world over.<br>--A group of Russian doctors have appealed to President Putin over the jailing of a Moscow paediatrician for comments she was alleged to have made opposing the war in Ukraine.<br>--Russia has detained a German citizen on suspicion of explosives smuggling and terrorism, accusing him of blowing up a pipe at a gas distribution station in the Kaliningrad Baltic Sea exclave, the Federal Security Service has said.<br><br></span></div></div>