Russia-Ukraine updates: 2 US veterans who joined Ukrainian forces missing
The Americans, Andy Tai Ngoc Huynh and Alexander Drueke, are both from Alabama.
Russian President Vladimir Putin's "special military operation" into neighboring Ukraine began on Feb. 24, with Russian forces invading from Belarus, to the north, and Russia, to the east. Ukrainian troops have offered "stiff resistance," according to U.S. officials.
The Russian military has since launched a full-scale ground offensive in eastern Ukraine's disputed Donbas region, capturing the strategic port city of Mariupol and securing a coastal corridor to the Moscow-annexed Crimean Peninsula.
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Massive crowds march in Russia as part of Victory Day celebrations
Tens of thousands of Russians marched in processions through major cities on Monday for an event called the Immortal Regiment -- meant to commemorate relatives who fought and died in World War II. But the marches were also co-opted by the Kremlin to support the Ukrainian invasion.
Many Russians believe the Kremlin's false narrative that Russia is justified in fighting in Ukraine. Some said Russian forces are now repeating the same feats as their ancestors and vehemently backed Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Two women told ABC News that "Kyiv is Russia" originally, adding, “We are winning and we will win."
Russians still stalled: US
Russian forces remain stalled in multiple parts of Ukraine, according to a senior U.S. defense official.
The Russians are only making incremental progress in the northern Donbas region "because the Ukrainians keep pushing them back and keep fighting them back," the official said.
The official described Russian movements in southern Ukraine as "stalled" with "virtually no progress."
In Kharkiv, the Ukrainians are continuing to push Russian forces east of the city.
"The Ukrainians are actually pushing them east into the northern Donbas," the official said. "They're not been able to go through or around Kharkiv right now."
U.S.-supplied howitzers are already coming into play for the Ukrainians. Eighty-five of the 90 American-made howitzers are now inside of Ukraine, along with significant amounts of ammunition sent by the U.S., the official said.
"These howitzers are already in the fight," the official said.
-ABC News' Luis Martinez
Zelenskyy: 'Very soon there will be 2 Victory Days in Ukraine'
Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelenskyy released a video message from Kyiv early Monday to mark the World War II victory over Nazi Germany, telling his country that "very soon there will be two Victory Days in Ukraine."
"Today, we celebrate the Day of Victory over Nazism. And we will not give anyone a single piece of our history," Zelenskyy said. "We are proud of our ancestors who, together with other nations in the anti-Hitler coalition, defeated Nazism. And we will not allow anyone to annex this victory, we will not allow it to be appropriated."
"On the Day of Victory over Nazism, we are fighting for a new victory," he added. "The road to it is difficult, but we have no doubt that we will win."
Zelenskyy's remarks came just hours before Russian President Vladimir Putin delivered a patriotic speech in Moscow's Red Square on Monday morning during a military parade for Victory Day, a national holiday in Russia commemorating the Soviet Union's defeat of the Nazis in 1945. Putin defended his invasion of neighboring Ukraine, telling Russian troops: "You are fighting for the motherland, for its future, so that no one forgets the lessons of the Second World War."
Putin defends Ukraine invasion while marking WWII victory
During a military parade in Moscow on Monday, Russian President Vladimir Putin addressed his troops fighting in neighboring Ukraine but offered little insight into his next steps.
"You are fighting for the motherland, for its future, so that no one forgets the lessons of the Second World War," Putin said in a patriotic speech for Victory Day, a national holiday in Russia commemorating the Soviet Union's defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.
Columns of Russian soldiers marched through Moscow's Red Square, alongside tanks and other military vehicles boasting huge intercontinental ballistic missiles.
"Now here, on the Red Square, soldiers and officers from many regions of our vast homeland stand shoulder to shoulder, including those who came directly from Donbas, directly from the combat zone," Putin said.
Although he showed no signs of backing down, the Russian leader did not make any declarations of war, peace or victory during his remarks on Monday. He drew parallels between Soviet soldiers battling Nazi troops and the Russian forces fighting now in Ukraine, as he has vowed to "de-Nazify" the former Soviet republic. He also spoke of the disputed Donbas region of eastern Ukraine as if it was already part of Russia.
"These days, you are fighting for our people in the Donbas. For the security of our homeland, Russia," he said. "You are defending what fathers and grandfathers, great-grandfathers fought for."
Putin accused Ukraine of seeking to attain nuclear weapons and planning a "punitive operation in the Donbas, for an invasion of our historical lands, including Crimea." He also laid blame on the West for refusing to have "an honest dialogue" about Russia's demands for formal guarantees that Ukraine will never join NATO and that the alliance will pull back its forces from countries in eastern Europe that joined after the Cold War.
"Thus, an absolutely unacceptable threat was systematically created for us and directly at our borders," Putin added. "The danger was growing everyday."
He claimed that attacking Ukraine "was a forced, timely and only right decision -- the decision of a sovereign, strong, independent country."
"Russia has given a preemptive rebuff to aggression," he said.
White House national security adviser hints at more sanctions against Russia
White House national security advisor Jake Sullivan hinted Thursday of more sanctions coming against Russia in the "next week or two" aimed at targeting ways Moscow is evading sanctions already imposed.
“Where our focus will be over the course of the coming days is on evasion,” Sullivan said Thursday at the Economic Club of Washington. “As Russia tries to adjust to the fact that it’s under this massive economic pressure, what steps do they take to try to evade our sanctions and how do we crack down on that? And I think we'll have some announcements in the next week or two that identify targets that are trying to facilitate that evasion both inside Russia and beyond."
When Sullivan was asked whether sanctions will automatically be lifted if a negotiated peace deal between Russia and Ukraine is worked out, he appeared cautious with his words, saying, “a lot of that depends on what the shape and scope” of the agreement is.
“A lot of it depends on what the Ukrainians, in consultation with us and the Europeans come to agree to," Sullivan said. "You know, we're not going to do a deal over the head of the Ukrainians where we give a bunch of sanctions relief to Russia. But if some measure of sanctions relief were built in to some credible diplomatic solution led by the Ukrainians, that's something that we would happily discuss."
But Sullivan said Russian oligarchs shouldn't expect to ever get back their yachts and other assets seized under sanctions that have been imposed, saying the ultimate goal is "not to give them back” once the war is over.
“The president is actively looking at how we can deal with the fact that as we seize these assets, our goal is not to give them back. Our goal is to put them to a better use than that," Sullivan said. "But I'll be careful in what I say today because there's an ongoing kind of policy process around how we end up dealing with that question. But, rest assured, that the goal is not just to sit on them for a while."
-ABC News' Justin Gomez