"The russian occupiers have begun using long-range drones in a new tactic. Instead of flying to the respective targets one after the other at intervals of a few minutes, the drones now cluster a few kilometers from the attack sites at an altitude of several thousand meters, in order to then simultaneously strike the respective city," notes BILD military observer Julian Röpcke.
https://www.bild.de/politik/ausland-und-internationales/inferno-in-ukrainischen-staedten-putins-neue-perfide-drohnen-taktik-67e6c109ee15d54841c5bbd5Apparently, this is also the reason why more and more drones are hitting houses and infrastructure objects. It's been especially bad in the Dnipro lately.
https://uatv.ua/uk/rozbyti-budynky-ta-znyshheni-mashyny-naslidky-udaru-rf-po-dnipru-pokazaly-zhurnalisty-freedom-video/https://www.slovoidilo.ua/2025/03/28/novyna/bezpeka/rosiyany-masovano-atakuvaly-dnipro-dronamy-spalaxnuly-pozhezhirussian President Vladimir putin has once again stated that Ukraine has no legitimate government and proposed introducing external rule in the country.
https://www.bbc.com/ukrainian/articles/c89y9gj9e87oIn response, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said that putin will die soon.
https://www.bbc.com/ukrainian/articles/cq5zvz3d1nvorussian forces are preparing to launch a fresh military offensive in the coming weeks to maximize pressure on Ukraine and strengthen the Kremlin’s negotiating position in ceasefire talks, Ukrainian government and military analysts said.
https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-war-spring-fighting-offensive-ceasefire-talks-49ee814cc4a8416c444ab7deae42488cPoland gears up for war. Warsaw is already spending big on defense. Now it needs the manpower. Poland spent almost two centuries as a colony of Moscow and retains a deep-seated wariness of the country. Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 has kicked that worry into overdrive.
Warsaw is now NATO’s biggest defense spender at 4.7 percent of GDP, has the EU's largest army, and is spending billions of euros on jets, rockets, tanks, artillery and more. Now the frontline state is getting its population ready for war.
Were a full-scale conflict to erupt, Poland doesn't have the strategic depth of some other European countries, Chief of the General Staff of the Polish Armed Forces General Wiesław Kukuła told POLITICO.
https://www.politico.eu/article/poland-military-training-war-defense-russia-belarus/Instead of relying on space to hold off the Russians, Poland is planning to more than double its military to half a million troops and to train millions of reservists, Tusk told parliament earlier in March. "By the end of the year, we want to have a model ready so that every adult male in Poland is trained for war, and so that this reserve is adequate for possible threats," Tusk said in parliament, adding that women can also sign up. The training will be voluntary, he said, seeking to offset concerns of a return to the country's hugely unpopular conscription policy, which ended in 2008.
For Poland, a high-income country with some of the strongest economic growth rates in the EU, the switch to battle-readiness will mark a shift in mindset — and many of its citizens are eager to get started.
Authorities plan to roll out short-term military training programs aimed at civilians with no prior experience, the Rzeczpospolita newspaper reported. These crash courses, lasting just a few days, will introduce participants to the fundamentals of civil defense, first aid and select military skills.
For those with prior military training, the government is offering targeted refresher courses designed to sharpen specialized skills, including firearms proficiency, combat medicine and land navigation.
Civilians looking for more comprehensive preparation can enroll in a month-long training program, available in both in-person and online formats.
Of course, not all Poles want to serve in the army, but perhaps the Polish authorities will take into account the Ukrainian experience and will have no problems with mobilization if necessary.
It is also unknown how many Poles will decide to leave Poland in the event of war, but this may be compensated by Ukrainians who decide to stay in Poland.
The European Union’s “temporary protection” scheme, which offers the bloc’s 4.3m Ukrainian refugees access to housing, employment and benefits, is due to expire next March. Europe will probably not imitate Donald Trump, who is considering revoking the status of Ukrainian refugees in America. But whether or not the eu’s programme is extended (for a second time), Ukrainians in exile are increasingly giving up on the idea of going home writes The Economist.
According to a recent study by the Centre for Economic Strategy (ces), a Ukrainian research group, only 43% of the refugees worldwide plan on returning, versus 74% two years earlier. For many, what matters is not only when the war ends, but how. The growing prospect of a ceasefire without Ukrainian membership in nato or the eu, along with continued Russian occupation of a fifth of the country, does not inspire much confidence. Many Ukrainians fear russia would attack again soon.
Ukrainians in Europe are putting down roots. In Poland the share of refugees, most of them women, working or actively seeking work has topped 67%. The government plans to let refugees exchange temporary protection for a residence permit valid for three years. The number that apply “might be a few hundred thousand, or it could be all of them,” says Maciej Duszczyk, the deputy minister of the interior.
Ukrainians contribute much more to Poland’s economy as workers and taxpayers than they cost in humanitarian assistance. In 2023, they added as much as 1.1% to gdp, according to Deloitte, a consultancy. Even a fresh exodus from Ukraine would not pose a problem. Poland’s unemployment rate is just 2.6%, tied for lowest in the eu. Without immigration, the country’s workforce would shrink by up to 2.1m people in the next decade due to ageing, says Andrzej Kubisiak of the Polish Economic Institute, a think-tank. Refugees from Ukraine help plug the gap.
https://www.economist.com/europe/2025/03/27/ukrainian-refugees-may-be-in-europe-for-good