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Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine

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Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine Article Talk Read View source View history Tools From Wikipedia , the free encyclopedia    Areas and   cities occupied by  Russia (for another, semi up-to-date, interactive map, see  here ) Map showing Russia in dark red with  Russian-occupied territories  in Europe in light red, as follows: In Moldova:  Transnistria  (1), since  1992 In Georgia:  Abkhazia  (2) and  South Ossetia  (3), since  2008 In Ukraine:  Crimea  (4) and parts of  Luhansk Oblast  (5) and  Donetsk Oblast  (6) since  2014 , and parts of  Zaporizhzhia Oblast  (7) and  Kherson Oblast  (8) since  2022 The  Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine  are areas of southern and eastern  Ukraine  that are controlled by  Russia  as a result of the  Russo-Ukrainian War  and the  ongoing invasion . In Ukraini...

In blow to Trump plan, Russia rejects European peacekeepers in Ukraine

Overnight air strikes by Russia caused a near-total power outage in Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia and Dnipropetrovsk regions. January 8, 2026 at 7:33 a.m. EST Today  A street in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, during a power blackout following a Russian drone strike on Wednesday. (Reuters) By David L. Stern, Francesca Ebel, Kostiantyn Khudov and Serhiy Morgunov, The Washington Post , [Jan 8]  KYIV -- After Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky claimed progress in developing a plan for postwar security guarantees, Russia’s foreign ministry on Thursday again rejected a core pillar of the emerging peace initiative: the deployment of British and European soldiers as part of a peacekeeping force. Russia said it regarded the prospect of foreign troops in Ukraine as a “direct threat.” Russia’s refusal to accept a peacekeeping force poses a serious obstacle to the effort by President Donald Trump to halt the war but it is hardly the only provision in Trump’s plan that the Kremlin opposes .   Pr...

When It Comes to Russia, Trump Navigates Conflicting Goals

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President Trump’s efforts to court President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia are rife with contradictions about stability and displays of American power. President Trump meeting with President Vladimir V. Putin in Alaska last August. Mr. Trump’s focus on strength has magnified tensions with Russia in regions like Latin America, where Mr. Putin has sought to extend his influence   Credit... Doug Mills/The New York Times By  Anton Troianovski Reporting from Washington The New York Times , Jan. 8, 2026,  12:00 a.m. ET The Trump administration  declared in December  that it sought “strategic stability with Russia.” That goal has run headlong into an even higher Trump priority: displaying American power. On Wednesday, the United States took one of its most provocative actions against Moscow since President Trump returned to the White House, seizing a Russian-flagged oil tanker in the North Atlantic in a military operation that involved a Navy P-8 submarine-hunting aircra...