Prior to this, UP wrote that Zelenskyy wants to dismiss Malyuk and appoint him as head of the Foreign Intelligence Service or secretary of the National Security and Defense Council. That’s how democracy works in wartime. 3X
Full-scale invasion and national resilience, broadcasted live.
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Zelenskyy rumored to fire spy chief; top commanders publicly support him
Yesterday, the media reported rumors that Zelenskyy wants to fire Malyuk, the spy agency chief behind the Spiderweb operation last year. Today, top commanders of Ukraine expressed support for him and argued against this decision publicly and effectively. 1/
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Ukrainian commanders back Security Service chief Malyuk amid removal opposition.
Ukrainska Pravda: Military commanders Denis “Redis” Prokopenko, Mykhailo Drapatiy, Robert “Madyar” Brovdi, Andriy Biletskyi, and Ihor Obolenskyi wrote on social media that they support Head of Security Service of Ukraine Vasyl Malyuk and oppose his removal from office. 2/
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Putin’s failed 3-day plan leads to heavy losses and asset seizure talks
Putin aimed to subjugate Ukraine in 3 days. Instead: 1.5M Russian casualties, a battered army, oil prices below $60, and discussions of seizing $200B in frozen Russian assets. 7/
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Emerging deal: Ukraine cedes territory, Russia ends failed war
The emerging deal is bad for Ukraine — but catastrophic for Moscow. Kyiv would cede 17% of territory and remain outside NATO, yet Russia ends the war after four years of failure. 6/
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Russia claims 91 drones attacked Putin’s palace; residents saw nothing
Russia claimed 91 drones attacked one of Putin’s palaces. Local residents saw and heard nothing. These estates are protected by Russia’s most advanced air defenses — systems missing at the front. 3/
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Trump’s 95% peace deal claim panics Moscow, triggers lies
After Trump said an Ukraine peace deal was “95% complete”, echoed by Zelensky — Moscow panicked. The Kremlin response followed a familiar script: implausible claims, crude lies, and escalation through noise. 2/
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22-year-old Kharkiv resident on first blood and growing up in war
2 army replaced everything: 22-year-old Khartiyets Kupa about first blood, commanding old men, and growing up at war
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Hospital realization leads to drone training and role change.
In hospital, it finally hit him: people die here. Prison is real. Fear is real. Childhood ends fast at 50 meters from Russians. He didn’t quit. He switched roles. Never held a soldering iron before — learned ground drones. Logistics. Evacuation. Managing men twice his age. 3/
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Soldier Kupa, 22, loses leg to 120-mm mine, provides immediate assistance
“A 120-mm mine fell near us and tore off a man’s leg. And in all this commotion, you start working — immediately, without hesitation, you provide assistance.” This is the story of a 22-year-old soldier Kupa from the Khartia brigade. Writes Hromadske. 1/
