US Imposes Sanctions on 4 Russians Linked to FSB

FILED - 21 April 2021, Berlin: Pro-Navalny demonstrators stand with a banner in front of the Russian embassy as they protest to demand the release of the imprisoned leading Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny. Photo: Paul Zinken/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa
FILED - 21 April 2021, Berlin: Pro-Navalny demonstrators stand with a banner in front of the Russian embassy as they protest to demand the release of the imprisoned leading Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny. Photo: Paul Zinken/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa
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US Imposes Sanctions on 4 Russians Linked to FSB

FILED - 21 April 2021, Berlin: Pro-Navalny demonstrators stand with a banner in front of the Russian embassy as they protest to demand the release of the imprisoned leading Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny. Photo: Paul Zinken/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa
FILED - 21 April 2021, Berlin: Pro-Navalny demonstrators stand with a banner in front of the Russian embassy as they protest to demand the release of the imprisoned leading Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny. Photo: Paul Zinken/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa

The United States on Thursday imposed sanctions on four Russians it accused of being involved in the 2020 poisoning of now jailed Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny.

The US Treasury Department in a statement said the four hit with sanctions are linked to Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) and included two it said are among the main reported perpetrators of Navalny's poisoning.

“Today we remind Vladimir Putin and his regime that there are consequences not only for waging a brutal and unprovoked war against Ukraine, but also for violating the human rights of the Russian people,” Treasury's Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, Brian Nelson, said in the statement.

“The assassination attempt against Aleksey Navalny in 2020 represents the Kremlin’s contempt for human rights, and we will continue to use the authorities at our disposal to hold the Kremlin’s willing would-be executioners to account.”

Thursday's sanctions were levied under a 2012 act which authorizes the US government to sanction those connected to gross violations of human rights in Russia, freezing their assets and banning them from entering the United States.

Those targeted on Thursday are FSB Criminalistics Institute operatives Alexey Alexandrovich Alexandrov, Konstantin Kudryavtsev and Ivan Vladimirovich Osipov, as well as FSB operative Vladimir Alexandrovich Panyaev.

Russia's embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Navalny, Putin's fiercest domestic critic, is already serving sentences totaling 11-1/2 years on fraud and other charges that he says are bogus. His political movement has been outlawed and declared "extremist". Navalny had an extra 19 years in a maximum security penal colony added to his jail term earlier this month.

A former lawyer, Navalny rose to prominence more than a decade ago by lampooning Putin's elite and voicing allegations of corruption on a vast scale.

Navalny, who in the 2010s brought tens of thousands of people onto the streets, was detained in 2021 after returning to Moscow from Germany where he had been treated for what Western doctors said was poisoning by a Soviet-era nerve agent.



Russia Bombards Kyiv in Major Strike, at Least 13 People Killed

Ukrainian experts work at the site of a Russian glide bomb strike in Kharkiv, northeastern Ukraine, 29 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. EPA/SERGEY KOZLOV
Ukrainian experts work at the site of a Russian glide bomb strike in Kharkiv, northeastern Ukraine, 29 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. EPA/SERGEY KOZLOV
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Russia Bombards Kyiv in Major Strike, at Least 13 People Killed

Ukrainian experts work at the site of a Russian glide bomb strike in Kharkiv, northeastern Ukraine, 29 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. EPA/SERGEY KOZLOV
Ukrainian experts work at the site of a Russian glide bomb strike in Kharkiv, northeastern Ukraine, 29 June 2026, amid the Russian invasion. EPA/SERGEY KOZLOV

Russia launched hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles at Ukraine's capital Kyiv in the early hours on Thursday, blasting apart residential buildings, killing at least 13 people and wounding scores, Reuters reported.

Multiple explosions shook buildings and reverberated across the capital throughout the night as thousands of residents rushed to bomb shelters and underground metro stations. It was the second-deadliest Russian attack on Kyiv so far this year. "This night, Russia once again carried out a cynical, large-scale attack on Ukraine," Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said on the Telegram app. "The enemy launched dozens of ballistic missiles. Kyiv was hit the hardest."

"As of now, 13 people are known to have been killed."

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy had cut short a visit to Dublin on Wednesday night and warned Ukrainians about the upcoming strike.

Russia launched 74 missiles and 496 drones during the attack, the Ukrainian air force said. Air defense units downed most of those but 25 ballistic missiles ‌and 12 drones struck ‌33 locations.

The Russian Defense Ministry, in a Telegram post, said its "massive attack" using long-range, high-precision air-, ‌land-, sea-launched ⁠weapons and drones ⁠hit military and energy facilities, as well as airports in Kyiv and other locations.

The ministry said it was a retaliation for Ukrainian attacks on Russian civil infrastructure. Russia downed 327 drones overnight, the ministry said.

For its part, the Ukrainian General Staff said it had hit an oil refinery in the town of Kstovo in Russia's Nizhny Novgorod region overnight. Russia's Nizhny Novgorod Governor Gleb Nikitin said one person was killed and four people wounded in a drone strike that damaged an industrial facility.

DAY OF MOURNING ANNOUNCED IN KYIV

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha reiterated Kyiv's urgent plea for Ukraine's allies to supply more air defenses, saying that the capital had "suffered a night of horror".

Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko announced a day of mourning in Kyiv for Friday. He ⁠said that damage was recorded across the entire city of about 3 million people, with some ‌buildings smashed.

Emergency services were working through the rubble of what used to be a nine-storey building ‌on the left bank of the Dnipro River that bisects the city as the sun rose and fires flared up around it. City officials said that about 90 ‌people, including children, paramedics and drivers at an ambulance station, were wounded and that some people were still trapped inside damaged residential buildings.

"Our ‌house is on fire. The attack is still going on. Oleg was pulling our neighbor out of the burning house, while I was phoning all the emergency services during the explosions," Iryna Plekhova, a Kyiv resident, said on Facebook, posting a picture of a half-destroyed apartment building with no windows.

"We do not have an apartment anymore."

Pictures posted online showed a blaze at the top of a building on the central Shevchenko Boulevard, while elsewhere in the city, windows blew ‌out and cars were destroyed.

People crowded into underground stations carrying children, belongings, tents and pets as air raid alerts blared across the city.

Ukraine's neighbor Poland, a NATO and European Union member, briefly scrambled fighter ⁠jets as a preventive measure. Finland ⁠also briefly issued a temporary aviation restriction zone in the eastern Gulf of Finland before lifting it later, its defense forces said on X.

MORE PRESSURE ON RUSSIA NEEDED

After years in which Ukraine bore the brunt of relentless long-range attacks from Russia, Kyiv has intensified its own strikes deeper into Russian territory in recent months, mainly hitting energy targets. That has triggered a fuel crisis in Russia, forcing the world's third-biggest oil producer to import gasoline from as far away as India.

Russia has responded with a stepped-up air campaign against Ukrainian cities, last month hitting a thousand-year-old Kyiv cathedral foundational to the Orthodox faith in both countries.

Kaja Kallas, the EU's foreign policy chief, said only sustained military support for Ukraine and increased pressure on Moscow could help stop Russian attacks.

"Today, I will propose to sanction more entities supporting Russia’s military-industrial complex in response to the strikes," she said in a post on X. "The more Moscow attacks civilians, the more sanctions must be imposed."

Zelenskiy has proposed talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin to end the more than four-year-old war, which the Kremlin leader has rejected.

Russia has killed thousands of Ukrainian civilians in strikes on Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities since it launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Moscow denies intentionally attacking civilians but says attacks on what it describes as civil infrastructure are legitimate because they hurt Ukraine's ability to wage war. Kyiv has also launched attacks on Russia and Russian-occupied Ukraine on a far smaller scale.


Iran Chief Negotiator Calls to Avenge Khamenei Death with Massive Funeral Turnout

FILED - 12 October 2024, Lebanon, Beirut: Iranian Parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf speaks during a press conference in Beirut. Photo: Hassan Ibrahim/Lebanese Parliament/dpa
FILED - 12 October 2024, Lebanon, Beirut: Iranian Parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf speaks during a press conference in Beirut. Photo: Hassan Ibrahim/Lebanese Parliament/dpa
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Iran Chief Negotiator Calls to Avenge Khamenei Death with Massive Funeral Turnout

FILED - 12 October 2024, Lebanon, Beirut: Iranian Parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf speaks during a press conference in Beirut. Photo: Hassan Ibrahim/Lebanese Parliament/dpa
FILED - 12 October 2024, Lebanon, Beirut: Iranian Parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf speaks during a press conference in Beirut. Photo: Hassan Ibrahim/Lebanese Parliament/dpa

Iran's chief negotiator Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf called on Thursday for massive turnout at Ali Khamenei's funeral to avenge the supreme leader's death in US-Israeli strikes at the start of the war.

"I invite all the Iranian people... to write a glorious page in the history of Islamic Iran through your presence" at the funeral ceremonies starting Saturday, Ghalibaf said in a statement, adding: "The nation's call for vengeance must ring in the ears of the whole world."


China Urges US to Handle Taiwan Issue ‘with Utmost Caution’

 US Secretary of State Marco Rubio (L) shakes hands with China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Munich, on February 12, 2026. (AFP/Getty Images)
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio (L) shakes hands with China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Munich, on February 12, 2026. (AFP/Getty Images)
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China Urges US to Handle Taiwan Issue ‘with Utmost Caution’

 US Secretary of State Marco Rubio (L) shakes hands with China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Munich, on February 12, 2026. (AFP/Getty Images)
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio (L) shakes hands with China's Foreign Minister Wang Yi in Munich, on February 12, 2026. (AFP/Getty Images)

Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi urged the US to handle matters related to Taiwan with "the utmost caution", during a phone call with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Tuesday, Wang's ministry said on Wednesday.

"A slight move on the Taiwan issue could affect the whole situation," Wang said, adding that ‌China and ‌the US should work to manage ‌all ⁠kinds of risks, ⁠according to an official Chinese summary of the phone conversation.

The US State Department did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

The call followed a mid-May summit between Chinese President Xi ⁠Jinping and US President Donald ‌Trump in Beijing, ‌where Xi told Trump that mishandling the countries' ‌disagreements over Taiwan could push China-US relations ‌into an "extremely dangerous place".

Beijing claims the democratically governed island as its own territory and refuses to rule out military force to gain ‌control of it. Taipei rejects Beijing's claims, and the United States ⁠is bound ⁠by law to provide Taipei with the means to defend itself.

Wang said the US and China should work to build a "constructive, strategically stable relationship".

"Both sides should eliminate disruptions, overcome obstacles, and continue firmly along this correct direction," Wang said.

The Chinese foreign ministry said Wang and Rubio agreed to "continue maintaining communication in a flexible manner".