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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Putin claims conflict ‘coming to an end’ after scaled-back Victory Day parade

The Independent — World Maira Butt,Alisha Rahaman Sarkar and Harriette Boucher 1 переглядів 8 хв читання
Putin condemns Nato in scaled-back Victory Day parade address

Vladimir Putin has said the war in Ukraine was “coming to an end” - just hours after vowing victory in the conflict at a dramatically scaled-back parade in Moscow on Saturday.

"I think that the matter is coming to an end," Putin told reporters of the war, which started more than four years ago. He also said he would be willing to negotiate new security arrangements for Europe, and that his preferred negotiating partner would be Germany's former Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder.

His comments came after the annual Victory day parade on Moscow, which marks the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Second World War. During the event, the Russian leader had voiced that he was confident of victory in Ukraine.

“Victory has always been and will be ours,” Putin said, as columns of troops lined up on Red Square. “The key to success is our moral strength, courage and valour, our unity and ability to endure anything and overcome any challenge.”

Volodymyr Zelensky issued a decree "permitting" Russia to hold the Victory military parade and said his forces wouldn’t target Red Square, after Donald Trump announced a three-day ceasefire.

The parade was a far cry from past years, where it has been used to show off Russia's vast military, including its nuclear-capable intercontinental ballistic missiles.

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Harriette Boucher10 May 2026 05:33

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Oleksandr Boik, in Kharkiv, stated: “This ceasefire - for a day, or two or three - these are temporary measures. We ⁠need peace. It is the fifth year already. It is enough.

Another Kharkiv resident, Ramaz Tsytsyashvili, ‌said he hoped that the ceasefire would ​open the way for more talks to end the war.

“I have lost everything... We need peace.

“And perhaps there ‌will be a miracle and this temporary silence, this ceasefire, ​will hold up a bit and continue, and then step by step it will move to negotiations, and affairs will be solved in offices, not on the battlefield.”

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The fear behind the fanfare: Putin’s paranoia amid Victory Day celebrations

The Independent’s Maira Butt writes:

Vladimir Putin used his Victory Day speech to claim confidence in Russia’s triumphs, as he presided over a dramatically scaled-back parade in Moscow on Saturday.

Addressing the crowd at the annual parade, which marks the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Second World War, the Russian leader voiced that he was confident of victory in Ukraine.

“Victory has always been and will be ours,” Putin said, as columns of troops lined up on Red Square. “The key to success is our moral strength, courage and valour, our unity and ability to endure anything and overcome any challenge.”

Volodymyr Zelensky issued a decree “permitting” Russia to hold the military parade and said his forces wouldn’t target Red Square, after Donald Trump announced a three-day ceasefire.

Putin attempted to use his speech, which lasted less than 10 minutes, to project strength, claiming Russia would succeed in the Ukraine war thanks to its “moral strength, courage and valour”.

But the parade was a far cry from past years, when it had been used to show off Russia's vast military, including its nuclear-capable intercontinental ballistic missiles.

Four years ago, Putin had stood grandly at a podium, surveying a legion of armoured military vehicles. Weeks earlier, he’d invaded neighbouring Ukraine, sparking a conflict that has dragged on ever since. During a defiant speech on that day, the Russian president launched an attack on Nato, Ukraine and a host of Western countries.

Surrounded by military hardware, he insisted that Russia was “fighting for the motherland, for her future, and so that nobody forgets the lessons of World War II”.

But this year things are different. For the first time in nearly two decades, those celebrations went ahead without any showy and heavy military hardware, amid new fears of long-range Ukrainian drone strikes that have been hitting deep inside Russia.

The fear behind the fanfare: Putin’s paranoia amid Victory Day celebrations

A series of assassinations of top Russian figures has left Putin fearing for his life, but experts warn that the real threat could be far closer to homeHarriette Boucher10 May 2026 00:00

In pictures: Russian service members participate in the Victory Day military parade

(AFP/Getty)
(AP)
(AFP/Getty)
Harriette Boucher9 May 2026 23:00

Special dispatch: Ukrainian general’s rise from far-right agitator to war hero

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Putin’s scaled-back parade shows Ukraine war has depleted Russian military

Russian officials defended the decision to carry out this year's Victory Day parade in a slimmed-down form, without the usual display of weaponry such as tanks and missiles.

Officials said they need their war tanks to be on the battlefield, signalling that the Kremlin does not have enough weaponry to spare even for an hour's display.

"Our tanks are busy right now," Russian MP Yevgeny Popov told BBC.

"They are fighting. We need them more on the battlefield than on Red Square."

On being asked if the parade is being scaled back, he said: "What other choice do we have?"

"Nato countries, Ukraine and Great Britain's weapons, your king and your prime minister, are threatening us,” Popov told BBC’s Steve Rosenberg.

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France arrests Ukrainian linked to Russian torture prison

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The man is suspected of having voluntarily collaborated with Russian officials from 2017 to 2019, while assisting the head of the prison in torturing detainees, Ukraine's prosecutor general Ruslan Kravchenko said. He has been living in France since 2021.

The torture prison was set up by Russian forces at the premises of a former factory and art centre, Izolyatsia, in Donetsk after capturing the city in 2014.

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Alisha Rahaman Sarkar9 May 2026 20:00NewerOlder

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