Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Saturday urged the United States to expand sanctions on Russian oil from two companies to the whole sector, and appealed for long-range missiles to hit back at Russia.
Zelensky was in London for talks with two dozen European leaders who have pledged military help to shield his country from future Russian aggression if a ceasefire stops the more than three-year war.
The meeting hosted by British Prime Minister Keir Starmer aimed to step up pressure on Russian President Vladimir Putin, adding momentum to recent measures that have included a new round of sanctions from the United States and European countries on Russia’s vital oil and gas export earnings.
The talks also addressed ways of helping protect Ukraine’s power grid from Russia’s almost daily drone and missile attacks as winter approaches, enhancing Ukrainian air defences, and supplying Kyiv with longer-range missiles that can strike deep inside Russia. Zelensky has urged the US to send Tomahawk missiles, an idea US President Donald Trump has flirted with.
The Ukrainian leader said Trump's decision this week to impose oil sanctions was “a big step”, and said “we have to apply pressure not only to Rosneft and Lukoil, but to all Russian oil companies”.
“Besides, we are carrying out our own campaign of pressure with drones and missiles specifically targeting the Russian oil sector," he said at a news conference at the Foreign Office in London.
Putin has so far resisted efforts to push him into negotiating a peace settlement with Zelensky and has argued that the motives for Russia’s all-out invasion of its smaller neighbour are legitimate. Russia has also been adept at finding loopholes in Western sanctions.
Putin's unbudging stance has exasperated Western leaders.
“He’s rejected the opportunity for talks once again, instead making ludicrous demands for Ukrainian land, which he could not and has not taken by force," Starmer said at a news conference alongside Zelensky and several other European leaders. “Of course, that is a complete non-starter.”
NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte said Putin's goals remain unchanged, but he "is running out of money, troops and ideas”.
Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof also attended the meeting of the “Coalition of the Willing” in person. About 20 other leaders joined by video link.
Building a 'reassurance force'

Zelensky and Starmer are expected to be joined at the Foreign Office in London by NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, Danish Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen and Dutch Prime Minister Dick Schoof. About 20 other leaders are to join via video link in the meeting of the group dubbed the Coalition of the Willing.
Details of the potential future "reassurance force" are scant, and the London meeting seeks to further develop the idea — even though any peace agreement appears at the moment to be only a distant possibility.
The force is likely to consist of air and naval support rather than Western troops deployed in Ukraine, according to officials. UK Defence Secretary John Healey says it would be “a force to help secure the skies, secure the seas, a force to help train Ukrainian forces to defend their nation”.
Its headquarters is expected to rotate between Paris and London for 12-month periods.
The war has shown no sign of subsiding, as a front-line war of attrition kills thousands of soldiers on both sides while drone and missile barrages cause damage in rear areas.
Russia says it has captured Ukrainian villages

The Russian Defence Ministry claimed that over the past week, its forces have captured 10 Ukrainian villages. The small conquests are part of Russia’s slow but steady slog to envelop the remaining Ukrainian strongholds in the Donetsk region from both the north and the south and create footholds for pressing further west into the Dnipropetrovsk region.
The Defence Ministry also said its forces downed 111 Ukrainian drones over several regions overnight, with debris causing damage to homes and infrastructure.
One drone hit an apartment building in Krasnogorsk on Moscow’s northwestern edge, injuring five people, including a child, according to Andrei Vorobyov, the governor of the Moscow region.
Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin reported that air defences downed three drones heading to Moscow, which forced flights to be suspended at two Moscow airports.
Three other Russian airports briefly suspended flights because of the drone attacks.
Meanwhile, Ukrainian authorities said Russian artillery struck a residential block in the southeastern city of Kherson on Friday, killing two people and injuring 22 others, including a 16-year-old.
Also, Russian planes dropped at least five powerful glide bombs on the northeastern city of Kharkiv, injuring six people and damaging homes, according to city mayor Ihor Terekhov.
And for the first time, Russia fired glide bombs in Ukraine’s southern Odesa region Friday, according to Oleh Kiper, head of the Odesa Regional Military Administration, calling it “a new, serious threat” in the area.
Russian war bloggers said the military used a new jet-propelled glide bomb with an extended range of up to 200 kilometres, significantly increasing Russian deep strike capacity. Glide bombs are significantly cheaper than missiles and carry a heavier payload.
Ukraine’s rail company, Ukrzaliznytsia, announced train delays and route changes in three regions caused by “massive shelling” that damaged infrastructure, which Russian forces have targeted in recent months.






















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