February 27, 2024 - Russia-Ukraine news

By Kathleen Magramo, Christian Edwards, Antoinette Radford and Aditi Sangal, CNN

Updated 8:00 p.m. ET, February 27, 2024
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8:00 p.m. ET, February 27, 2024

Our live coverage has ended. Follow the latest Ukraine news or read through the updates below.

7:27 p.m. ET, February 27, 2024

Ukrainian resistance forces says it blew up a pro-Putin party office in an occupied southern city

From CNN’s Mariya Knight in Atlanta

Ukraine’s National Resistance Center, an official body, said Tuesday that Ukrainian resistance forces blew up an office of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “United Russia” party in the occupied southern Ukrainian city of Nova Kakhovka in Kherson region.

The National Resistance Center which is run by Ukraine's Special Forces said the attack was carried out in order “to stop the fake election process in the captured city” as the preparations are underway for the Russian presidential elections in March.

The Center of National Resistance called on citizens of Ukraine who are currently residing on the occupied territories, not to participate in the upcoming Russian election and warned that “every collaborator who helps organize the 'election process' will be held accountable for their actions.” 

Marina Zakharova, the head of the Russian-appointed Electoral Commission of the Kherson region, said in a video message on Tuesday that “as a result of a terrorist attack by Ukraine” in Nova Kakhovka “the premises of precinct commissions were damaged.” 

Zakharova said that Tuesday was “the first day of early voting in the presidential elections in hard-to-reach and remote settlements, including those located along the line of military contact.”

This was not the first incident when Ukraine was trying to sabotage the election sights on Tuesday, according to Zakharova. She said “an enemy shell exploded near the territorial election commission in the Holoprystanskyi municipal district,” which is in Kherson region as well.

Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-appointed acting head of the Kherson region administration, also confirmed the attacks but claimed they were carried out by drones. Saldo said there were no victims following the attacks and posted the video of the destruction on the cites to his Telegram channel.

6:56 p.m. ET, February 27, 2024

One of Navalny’s lawyers released after detention in Moscow

From CNN’s Mariya Knight in Atlanta

One of Alexey Navalny’s lawyers was released after being detained in Moscow, Russia, on Tuesday, according to Vasily Dubkov’s comment to the Russian Independent media Verstka, following his release.

Dubkov was the lawyer who flew with Navalny’s mother to Salekhard — the Siberian town where Navalny's body was being kept in a morgue — in order to receive official confirmation of his death, according to Verstka.

Dubkov “did not comment on the reason and circumstances of his detention, saying only that he considered it to be an obstruction of his lawyer’s activities,” Verstka said.

CNN cannot independently verify Verstka's reporting.

Navalny's three other lawyers — Vadim Kobzev, Alexey Liptser and Igor Sergunin — were arrested in October 2023 and accused of "being members of an extremist community,” according to Navalny’s team.

The Basmanny court in Moscow ordered the arrest in absentia of Navalny’s other lawyer Olga Mikhailova and Alexander Fedulov on the same charge on February 15, according to the courts of general jurisdiction of the city of Moscow.

6:44 p.m. ET, February 27, 2024

6th person charged for allegedly spying for Russia in the UK, Crown Prosecution Services says

From CNN’s Sugam Pokharel in London

Britain’s prosecution service has charged a sixth person for allegedly spying for Russia in the UK.

The Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) said in a statement Tuesday that Bulgarian national Tihomir Ivanchev, 38, was charged with conspiring to collect information “which might be or was intended to be directly or indirectly useful for a purpose prejudicial to the safety and interest of the state.”

In September last year, the CPS charged five other Bulgarian nationals for alleged conspiracy to conduct espionage.

"A sixth suspect was identified and arrested as a result of enquiries made following the previous five arrests in this investigation," said Commander Dominic Murphy, who leads the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command.

Ivanchev was arrested on February 7 as part of an ongoing investigation being led by the terrorism command, the police said in a statement.

He was subsequently bailed, and then charged on Tuesday. The Bulgarian national will appear at London’s Westminster Magistrates' Court on Wednesday, according to the police. The trial for the other five charged under the same alleged offense is due to start in October, according to the CPS.

7:10 p.m. ET, February 27, 2024

Russian human rights activist sentenced to 2.5 years in prison for "discrediting the military"

From CNN’s Mariya Knight in Atlanta

Oleg Orlov attends his verdict hearing in Moscow on February 27, 2024.
Oleg Orlov attends his verdict hearing in Moscow on February 27, 2024. Alexander Nemenov/AFP/Getty Images

Oleg Orlov, a Russian human rights activist and co-chairman of Memorial Human Rights Defense Center, was sentenced to two years and six months in a general regime correctional colony, the courts of general jurisdiction of the city of Moscow said in a statement on Tuesday.

The Golovinsky District Court of Moscow found Orlov guilty of "discrediting the military" and Orlov was denied the right to access Internet and post on social media for the duration of his sentence, according to the statement posted on the court’s Telegram page. 

Orlov was taken into custody in the courtroom following the verdict, the statement read. In his "final word" addressed to the court on Monday, Orlov said he was “shocked” by the news about the death of Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny.

Orlov called Navalny "a wonderful person, brave, honest, who, in incredibly difficult conditions created especially for him, did not lose optimism and faith in the future” of Russia, according to the transcript published on Memorial Human Rights Defense Center website.

Orlov also said he believes Navalny was murdered “regardless of the specific circumstances of this death.”

The Kremlin has denied any role in Navalny’s death.

Orlov said he "has been on trial for an article that he had written more than a year ago," referring to his article entitled “They wanted fascism. They got it” that he wrote in November 2022 for a French publication. He later reposted that article on his Facebook page.

In that article Orlov criticized the current political regime in Russia and called it “totalitarian and fascist.”

“Orlov was imprisoned for speaking the truth out loud. He talked about the war and the crimes that the Russian state is committing. Orlov’s voice is the voice of many of us, the voice of human rights defenders, activists, citizens of Russia and the world,” the defense center said in a Telegram post following the verdict on Tuesday.

The Memorial Human Rights Defense Center was banned in Russia in late 2021 and the Russian Justice Ministry designated Oleg Orlov a "foreign agent” on February 2, 2024.

5:51 p.m. ET, February 27, 2024

European leaders reject sending troops to Ukraine as Russia takes more territory. Catch up here

From CNN Staff

French President Emmanuel Macron did not rule out sending Western troops to fight on the ground as Ukraine comes under more pressure from Russian advances. Macron's comments have prompted many European nations to quickly allay any domestic fears their countries may be sending soldiers to the war-torn region on Tuesday.

The US State Department reiterated that President Joe Biden has ruled out sending US troops to fight in Ukraine, in response to Macron's comments.

Macron's comments also caused a clash among French oppositions leaders, despite France’s defense minister is defending Macron. “To say that we exclude nothing is neither weak nor escalatory,” French Defense Minister Sebastien Lecornu told the country’s lawmakers Tuesday.

On the ground Tuesday, Ukraine lost its third village within a week on the eastern front. A spokesperson for a grouping of Ukrainian forces said they withdrew from the villages of Sieverne and Stepove, which are both west of the town of Avdiivka in the eastern Donetsk region. On Monday, Ukrainian forces retreated from the village of Lastochkyne, both sides confirmed.

Here's what else to know today:

  • Countries reject Macron's claims: Macron on Monday said sending Western troops into Ukraine "cannot be ruled out" after a meeting of European leaders in Paris. NATO itself rebuked his comments on Tuesday, telling CNN there are "no plans" to deploy combat troops on the ground in Ukraine.
  • US aid to Ukraine: US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer called a White House meeting with Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and fellow congressional leaders "one of the most intense" he’d ever experienced, attributing the intensity to a sense of "urgency." It comes amid pressure on House Speaker Mike Johnson to commit to sending aid to Ukraine.
  • Kremlin responds: Macron's comments also drew a sharp response from the Kremlin, which said conflict with Russia would be inevitable if Western nations sent troops into Ukraine.
  • Russia gas exports: Russia will impose a six-month ban on gasoline exports, starting on March 1, to offset increased demand as well as lower output while some refineries undergo repairs following Ukrainian strikes on some refineries, according to Russian news agencies.
  • Navalny funeral: Alexey Navalny’s team is struggling to find a venue to hold a farewell ceremony for the Russian opposition leader, with one funeral venue saying it was prohibited from working with them, his spokesperson Kira Yarmysh, revealed on Tuesday.
  • Zelensky in Saudi Arabia: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is in Saudi Arabia for talks on his country’s "peace formula" with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, he posted on social media Tuesday.
3:55 p.m. ET, February 27, 2024

French lawmakers clash over Macron's comments on possibly sending troops to Ukraine 

From CNN's Niamh Kennedy in London 

French opposition lawmakers clashed with members of the government including Prime Minister Gabriel Attal on Tuesday over President Emmanuel Macron saying he wouldn't rule out the deployment of Western troops to Ukraine. 

Macron's comments raised eyebrows from several European leaders who moved quickly to stress their opposition to any deployment. On top of that, the French president has also had to contend with fierce criticism from a number of opposition lawmakers at home who said a French deployment would constitute belligerency. 

Marine Le Pen, who is a key figure within the far-right National Rally party, initially criticized Macron's comments in a social media post on Tuesday, accusing the president of playing the "war leader." 

She later clashed with the French prime minister during a parliamentary session where she described the president's remarks as "extremely serious" and "another step" towards "co-belligerence."  

Le Pen said a deployment of French troops to Ukraine would be taking place despite France's "vital interests" not being "at stake." 

Attal highlighted Le Pen's prior ties to Russia and President Vladimir Putin, casting doubt on her credibility as someone who "simply refuses to recognize that there is a war being waged by an authoritarian country, a country where opponents are dying in jails, and that is Russia."

 

2:03 p.m. ET, February 27, 2024

US will not send troops to Ukraine, State Department says in response to Macron comments

From CNN's Michael Conte

The US State Department reiterated that President Joe Biden has ruled out sending US troops to fight in Ukraine, in response to French President Emmanuel Macron saying sending Western troops to Ukraine “cannot be ruled out.”

“Certainly, every country is free to speak to its own interest, but in addition to the president making clear that the US will not send troops to fight in Ukraine, the NATO secretary general has ruled out any NATO troops to fight in Ukraine,” said State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller at a press briefing. 

He also called on Congress to pass additional funding for lethal aid to Ukraine. “We think that the path to victory for Ukraine right now is in the United States House of Representatives,” Miller said. 

2:00 p.m. ET, February 27, 2024

US Senate majority leader calls Oval Office meeting "intense" as House speaker pressured over Ukraine aid

From CNN's Nikki Carvajal

President Joe Biden speaks during a meeting with congressional leaders in the Oval Office of the White House on Tuesday in Washington, DC.
President Joe Biden speaks during a meeting with congressional leaders in the Oval Office of the White House on Tuesday in Washington, DC. Evan Vucci/AP

US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer called a White House meeting with President Joe Biden, Vice President Kamala Harris and fellow congressional leaders "one of the most intense" he’d ever experienced, attributing the intensity to a sense of "urgency."

Schumer said that he — along with the president, the vice president, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell — “made it clear how vital this was to the United States.”

“We couldn't afford to wait a month or two months or three months. Because we would, in all likelihood, lose the war,” Schumer said.

It comes amid pressure on House Speaker Mike Johnson to commit to sending aid to Ukraine. Schumer expressed frustration that Johnson was tying the aid package to the US southern border, saying Democrats "have a tough secure border plan." He said Johnson "tried to do (a) border (deal) for six months and couldn’t come up with a single Democratic vote." 

What Johnson says: The House speaker told reporters at the White House Tuesday that he believes Congress “must take care of America’s needs first,” before addressing foreign aid, including specifically addressing the situation at the border. Johnson has refused to hold a vote on a bipartisan Senate bill that includes funding for the border in addition to aid for Ukraine and Gaza.

Schumer also said that the group discussed how failure to support Ukraine could leave NATO fractured and turn allies away from US leadership. “The presidents of North Korea and Iran would be emboldened in thinking that the United States was this soft, fat country that lost its way and would take advantage,” Schumer added.

Schumer led a congressional delegation to Ukraine at the end of last week, and he said the trip left him "shaken" because Ukrainians are "fighting without arms against a brutal dictator."