Russia-Ukraine updates: Putin suspends key US-Russia nuclear treaty in speech denouncing West
President Vladimir Putin said he'd sought an "open dialogue" with the West.
Almost a year after Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion of neighboring Ukraine, the two countries are engaged in a struggle for control of areas throughout the east and south.
Putin's forces pulled out of key positions in November, retreating from Kherson as Ukrainian troops led a counteroffensive targeting the southern port city. Russian drones have continued bombarding civilian targets throughout Ukraine, knocking out critical power infrastructure as winter sets in.
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Latest headlines:
European Parliament declares Russia a terrorist state
The European Parliament adopted a resolution on Wednesday recognizing Russia as a state sponsor of terrorism.
"The European Parliament adopts a resolution declaring Russia a terrorist state," Guy Verhofstadt, a member of the European Parliament from Belgium, said in a Twitter post. "Putin's regime is a state sponsor of terrorism, complicit in war crimes [and] must face the international consequences."
Investigation launched after claim that Russian soldiers who surrendered were killed
Ukraine's prosecutor general launched an investigation after a video emerged on social media of the Kremlin claiming Russian soldiers were killed after surrendering to Ukrainian forces.
Ukraine claimed Russia staged the attack, but Ukrainian authorities said they will investigate.
The videos, verified by the New York Times as authentic, have been circled online and in Ukrainian and Russian media show moments before and after a group of at least 11 Russian troops were killed by Ukrainian fighters after one of their fellow fighters suddenly opened fire on Ukrainian soldiers standing nearby.
The Ukrainian prosecutor general said law enforcement opened the criminal case "after Russian occupiers pretended to give up and then opened fire on fighters of the Armed Forces of Ukraine," according to a statement.
-ABC News' Will Gretsky
Ukraine liberated over 1,800 settlements from Russian occupation, Zelenskyy says
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy claimed Ukrainian forces have liberated over 1,800 settlements that were occupied by Russian forces. Zelenskyy claimed that more than 3,700 settlements have been occupied, he said in an address Tuesday.
Zelenskyy claimed that Russian soldiers mined and looted everything they could, leaving behind hundreds of thousands of buildings destroyed or damaged by shelling.
-ABC News' Will Gretsky
US warns Russia's eroding situation could lead to 'more nuclear saber-rattling'
Russia's eroding situation could lead Russian President Vladimir Putin to "more nuclear saber-rattling," U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin warned Saturday.
"The ripples of Russia’s invasion has traveled far beyond Europe. Beijing, like Moscow, seeks a world where autocrats can stamp out the flame of freedom," Austin said while addressing the Halifax International Security Forum.
Austin said the deadly explosion in Poland this week was the result of the "recklessness of Putin’s war of choice."
"Russia’s invasion offers a preview of a possible world of tyranny and turmoil that none of us would want to live in. And it’s an invitation to an increasingly insecure world haunted by the shadow of nuclear proliferation," Austin said.
He went on, "Putin’s fellow autocrats are watching and they could well conclude that getting nuclear weapons would give them a hunting license of their own. And that could drive a dangerous spiral of nuclear proliferation."
-ABC News' Matt Seyler