September 1, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news

By Chris Lau, Rob Picheta, Adrienne Vogt, Hannah Strange, Aditi Sangal, Matt Meyer, Elise Hammond and Tori B. Powell, CNN

Updated 9:15 p.m. ET, September 1, 2023
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11:55 a.m. ET, September 1, 2023

New Russian missile system known as "Satan II" has been placed on combat duty, official says

From CNN's Tim Lister

In this handout photo released by Roscosmos Space Agency Press Service on April 20, 2022, the Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile is launched from Plesetsk in Russia's northwest.
In this handout photo released by Roscosmos Space Agency Press Service on April 20, 2022, the Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile is launched from Plesetsk in Russia's northwest. Roscosmos Space Agency Press Service/AP

Russia says its newest nuclear weapons system, the Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile, is now operational.

"The Sarmat strategic complex has been put on combat duty," Yury Borisov, the director general of the state space corporation Roscosmos, said in a media appearance. 

It had been due to go on combat duty at the end of 2022.

The Sarmat will replace Soviet-era Voevoda missiles, known by the NATO designation SS-18 "Satan," in Russia's strategic arsenal. As the SS-18's successor, the Sarmat has been nicknamed "Satan II" in the West.

Some background: Russian President Vladimir Putin said in April last year that the Sarmat would be capable of delivering multiple nuclear warheads as far as the continental United States – and would “give thought to those who are trying to threaten Russia.”

At the time, Western analysts told CNN the threat to the US and its allies from Satan II was “extremely low,” and that Putin's high-profile testing of the weapon may have been intended to hide Russian military failures in its war in Ukraine.

Like the SS-18, the Sarmat could carry 10 and possibly more independently targeted nuclear warheads with a range of up to 18,000 kilometers (or about 11,185 miles), according to the Missile Defense Project at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

It is expected to serve as a one-for-one replacement for the Voevoda missiles. Hans Kristensen, director of the Nuclear Information Project at the Federation of American Scientists, likened Satan II to a "facelift" for the Soviet-era SS-18, though he said there were "probably some enhancements under the hood."

12:45 p.m. ET, September 1, 2023

Russia and Belarus invited back to Nobel Prize banquet after being barred last year due to Ukraine invasion

From CNN's Amy Cassidy and Christian Edwards

Ambassadors from Russia and Belarus have been invited back to the Nobel Prize banquet after being excluded last year because of Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the Nobel Foundation said.

The foundation said it is "broadening our invitations" to involve even those who do not share the values of the Nobel Prize.

“It is clear that the world is increasingly divided into spheres, where dialogue between those with differing views is being reduced,” Vidar Helgesen, executive director of the Nobel Foundation, said in a statement Thursday.

“To counter this tendency, we are now broadening our invitations to celebrate and understand the Nobel Prize and the importance of free science, free culture and free, peaceful societies,” Helgesen said.

Russians and Belarusians have been excluded from countless events since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, which has been heavily assisted by Minsk, in February 2022.

The foundation said its decision was made to prevent further “polarisation.”

The Nobel Banquet takes place annually in Stockholm on December 10, where five out of six Nobel Prizes are awarded. The Nobel Peace Prize is awarded in Oslo, Norway.

Swift criticism: Ukraine has condemned the decision and urged the foundation to reverse course.

"Most likely, the day the Russian ambassador sits in a nice suit in the Stockholm Concert Hall, the Russian army will be committing yet another war crime in the occupied Ukrainian territories, and Russian missiles will be destroying yet another residential neighborhood in Ukrainian cities," foreign ministry spokesperson Oleg Nikolenko said Friday.

A Swedish member of the European Parliament also called the decision “extremely inappropriate.”

On Swedish national radio, Swedish Liberal MEP Karin Karlsbro questioned why the foundation invited “three rogue states … that suppress their citizens, wage war and terror both in their own and neighboring countries” and “in no way subscribe to democratic values.”

Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson has said he would not have made the decision to invite Russia back to the banquet held in his country. 

“The Nobel Foundation naturally decides themselves who they want to invite. But I, like many others, reacted with great surprise that Russia was invited,” Kristersson said in a statement sent to CNN on Friday. 
“I understand that it upsets many people in both Sweden and Ukraine,” he added.

Read the full story here.

CNN’s Niamh Kennedy and Henrik Pettersson contributed reporting to this post.

2:00 p.m. ET, September 1, 2023

Ukrainian teenagers forcibly deported to Russian centers say they were fed propaganda from Moscow

From CNN's Christiane Amanpour, Madalena Araujo, Olha Konovalova and Christian Edwards

The lives of Ukrainian children and teens have been utterly upended by Russia’s invasion of their country. When the International Criminal Court issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin in March, the foremost charge against him was over an alleged scheme to deport Ukrainian children to Russian detention centers.

CNN spoke with Ukrainian teenagers in Kyiv who claim that they had been forcibly deported to Russia before being found and brought home by family members. Their return was made possible by Save Ukraine, an organization working to return deported children to their families.

“I was there for four months. And throughout these four months, I had to sing the Russian national anthem. That was compulsory,” said Nastya Motychak, a 15-year-old girl who said she was taken from the southern Kherson region and sent to Russian-occupied Crimea.
“We asked: Why aren’t we being collected? When will the buses come? Why aren’t we allowed out?”

Motychak was told by Russian guards that “the buses were too expensive.” And so she remained in the center during Christmas 2022 and into the beginning of the year – and she said she was only granted access to basic necessities if she performed acts of Russian patriotism.

“There were some secondhand clothing and hygiene products delivered for us. So when we asked for these, they said, ‘Whoever doesn’t like Russia doesn’t like me and isn’t going to get these things.’”

'If you don’t sing the Russian anthem, you’re not going to get anything,'" Motychak said she was told by an officer.

Motychak said she was able to speak to her mother on the phone once a week. Her mother contacted a volunteer working to bring detained Ukrainian children home. Together, they were able to travel to Crimea in February and bring Motychak home, along with other teens she had been detained with.

This week, Kyiv opened more than 3,000 criminal cases over Russia’s alleged crimes against children in the country, including dozens of torture cases, Ukrainian prosecutors said Thursday. Russia has repeatedly denied these accusations of torture and human rights abuses.

In July, Moscow authorities claimed some 700,000 children had been brought into Russian custody since the war began. The Russian government has defended the practice, saying they are saving the children and denying that the deportations are forced. Ukraine however, claims the children were illegally deported and that a much smaller number of children have been taken – an estimated 19,500.

CNN also spoke with Ksenia Koldin, 19, who helped retrieve her 12-year-old brother from a Russian detention center. Having been separated for months, Koldin said the reunion was tough, since she could see that her brother had been “tormented.”

“Not only had there been almost a thousand kilometers between us and we didn’t see each other for nine months – we’d also grown apart because of the psychological pressure put on him,” she said.

During his detention, Koldin said her brother had been shown Russian propaganda, making him doubt his own country and reluctant to return home.

“I understood I was being faced with the fact that he didn’t want to come with me. He was comfortable there, he had friends there, there was a war on in Ukraine, it was bad. Everything he’d been told by those around him – that there was a war on, all these khokhols [a derogatory term for Ukrainians], Nazis. I was very scared," Koldin said.

Koldin said that, with the help of a volunteer, she had been able to convince her brother to leave the center and come back with her.

“I couldn’t believe I had managed to bring him close to me, and in a few hours we could be on our way,” she said.

Watch more here:

11:24 a.m. ET, September 1, 2023

Students prepare for air raids and huddling in shelters as they return to school in Ukraine

From CNN's Olga Voitovych in Kyiv and Ivana Kottasová in London

Kateryna Pylypenko pictured with her son on his first day of school on Friday.
Kateryna Pylypenko pictured with her son on his first day of school on Friday. Kateryna Pylypenko

Kateryna Pylypenko prepared two backpacks for her youngest son’s first day of school on Friday: one with school supplies, and one for the bomb shelter.

“The bag (for the shelter) will be kept in the classroom. We were told it should contain water, a toy … and something to eat while they wait in the shelter for the air raid alarm to end,” Pylypenko told CNN.

As Russia’s brutal and unprovoked assault on Ukraine enters its third academic year, almost 4 million children went back to primary and secondary schools on Friday, according to the country’s education ministry. According to UNICEF, only about a third of children enrolled in Ukraine will be attending in-person classes this year, with the rest studying at least partially online.

Pylypenko’s two sons, who are 6 and 14 years old, will be going back in person. Their school in Kyiv decided to bring pupils back in after surveying parents a few weeks ago.

In-person classes involve some risk – Ukraine’s capital has been struck by Russian missiles and drones a number of times in recent months. But Pylypenko said she was keen for her sons to have a school experience that is as close to “normal” as possible, even though their father, her husband, is currently away fighting in the war.

The first day of school is usually a special occasion in Ukraine. Crowds of parents gather outside the gates, as children dress up in their best clothes and present their teachers with flowers.

“We were told that we shouldn’t buy flowers this year, but instead donate to the Ukrainian army,” Pylypenko said. “But I bought a small bouquet for my first-grader anyway. It’s all about the mood.”

Hundreds of miles away in Zaporizhzhia, 9-year-old Dmytro Ukrainsky is one of the kids not allowed to return to class. Frequent attacks on the city, near the front lines in southern Ukraine, make in-person education far too dangerous.

“I used to love gym classes and computer science the most. But now they’re my two least favorite classes. Physical education is not the same now, because what kind of physical education is there in an apartment?” he told CNN.

Read more here.

12:42 p.m. ET, September 1, 2023

Ukraine is "moving forward" in counteroffensive, foreign minister tells CNN

From CNN’s Catherine Nicholls and Zoe Cantley

Ukraine is “not failing” but “moving forward” in its counteroffensive, the country’s foreign minister told CNN on Friday.

“If Ukraine was failing, I would probably be the first one just to speak the truth. But we are not failing — we are moving forward,” Dmytro Kuleba said in an interview with CNN's Christiane Amanpour in Kyiv. 

The foreign minister added that those criticizing the speed of Ukraine’s counteroffensive should consider the soldiers fighting at the heart of it. 

“How does it feel when you come back from your mission and you take back your phone, you open it, and you start reading all the smart people saying how slow you are and that you're not doing well enough?” Kuleba said. “You just lost two of your buddies. You were almost killed. You crawled one kilometer on your belly demining the field. You sacrificed yourself - you took the damn Russian trench in a fierce fight. And then you read someone saying ‘Oh guys, you're too slow’?” 

“Our partners who are helping us, including the United States, they understand that things are moving in the right direction. And they understand that there's no tragedy or no kind of slow down,” Kuleba continued. “It's just happening because it's tough. It's a tough fight.”

Most recently, Ukrainian forces said they had penetrated the “first line” of Russian strongholds in the Zaporizhzhia region, in a sign that Kyiv is edging closer to Moscow’s sprawling network of fortified trenches along the southern front.

Watch a clip of the interview here:

11:16 a.m. ET, September 1, 2023

"Barbie" has unofficially reached Russia's cinemas, despite Western studios pulling out of country during the war

From CNN's Radina Gigova and Katharina Krebs

Margot Robbie as Barbie in Warner Bros. Pictures' "Barbie".
Margot Robbie as Barbie in Warner Bros. Pictures' "Barbie". Warner Bros. Pictures

This summer’s blockbuster “Barbie” has made it to Russia — despite not being officially released there due to the war in Ukraine — and it seems Barbiemania has infatuated many Russians even as the movie draws condemnation from officials.

“Barbie” distributor Warner Bros., which is owned by CNN’s parent company Warner Bros. Discovery, was among the Western studios to pull out of Russia after its full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year. Since spring 2022, not a single movie from the company has been released in Russia.

Russia’s Ministry of Culture said it hasn’t received an application to release “Barbie,” and authorities denied reports that a dubbing studio had started working on Russian voiceovers for the movie, according to state news agency TASS. When approached by CNN, Warner Bros. Discovery had no further comment on the story.

While several Russian cinema networks have said they won’t be showing “Barbie” without a proper license and have stayed away from pirated copies, some smaller theaters have chosen to hold screenings of lower-quality pirated versions due to the high demand.

Nearly 90 people showed up to watch an improvised screening of the movie in the Siberian city of Tyumen earlier this month, according to state news outlet RIA Novosti. The organizers told the outlet they had found a good adapted version with proper voiceovers.

Similar screenings with Russian voiceovers have also been promised at several cinemas in the capital of Moscow. A “Barbie House” photo zone was also set to open in Moscow last week, and Russian clothing brands have launched pink Barbie-themed collections.

Barbiemania has taken over social media as well, with numerous Russian influencers and celebrities posting Barbie-related images and videos and highlighting their own Barbie-themed looks.

Russian officials are not (publicly) fans of "Barbie world": Despite the enthusiasm, a number of Russian officials and lawmakers have slammed the iconic doll, made by US toy manufacturer Mattel, and the movie for promoting what they consider to be morally degraded Western values. Commentaries in state media have linked the movie and the doll to the United States’ “downhill” culture and geopolitical aims.

Former spy-turned-lawmaker Maria Butina told state outlet Duma TV that images of Barbie dolls should be removed, because they promote “the LGBT theme.”

Even though the movie largely lampoons Barbie’s body standards, long-criticized as unrealistic, Butina’s position is echoed by a number of Russian officials, who maintain that both the doll and the movie could have a negative influence on young girls. It’s unclear if any of those officials have even seen the movie.

“If you take the dimensions of Barbie and put them on a real person, then this is a waist of 35 centimeters, it’s very hard to imagine a girl with a waist of 35 centimeters,” said Tatyana Butskaya, deputy chair of the State Duma Committee on Family, Women and Children, speaking at a press conference in Moscow on the influence of toys on the child psyche.

Read more here.

8:51 a.m. ET, September 1, 2023

It's afternoon in Kyiv. Catch up on the latest headlines here

From CNN staff

Ukrainian officials say they are consolidating their positions on the southern front and have claimed to launch drone strikes from inside Russian territory.

Here's what you need to know on Friday.

  • Ukraine targets Russian cities: Ukrainian drones again targeted Russia's capital and a southwestern region bordering Ukraine, Russian officials said Friday. Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin said air defenses downed a drone approaching the capital overnight, and flights there were disrupted. Officials in other cities around the country also reported attacks. 
  • Attacks "launched inside Russia:" The head of Ukrainian Defense Intelligence said that separate drone attacks earlier this week, which hit a Russian air base in Pskov, were launched from within Russian territory. Kyrylo Budanov told the online publication WarZone: "We are operating from Russian territory; four Russian IL-76 military transport planes were hit as a result of the attack."
  • The southern front: The Ukrainian military says its units on the southern Zaporizhzhia front are consolidating their positions after making some progress. The General Staff said Friday that forces were pushing toward the village of Novoprokopivka, adding: "They have been successful, are consolidating their positions, inflicting artillery fire on the identified enemy targets, and conducting counter-battery operations."
  • Russia arrests blogger: Andrey Kurshin, who ran an influential Russian military Telegram channel, was arrested in Moscow, state news reported. An ultra-nationalist, Kurshin had been critical of how the Kremlin had managed the war in Ukraine. 
  • Thousands of inquests opened: Ukrainian prosecutors say they have opened more than 3,000 cases of alleged Russian crimes against children, including murder, torture and sexual violence. Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February last year, Ukrainian authorities, rights groups, international bodies and news organizations have documented an overwhelming body of evidence of alleged Russian war crimes and human rights abuses.
  • Grain deal: Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will meet Monday, the Kremlin has confirmed. The meeting comes after Russia's foreign minister said it is willing to rejoin the Black Sea grain deal once it sees guarantees that promised benefits will be implemented. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres later presented “a set of concrete proposals.” 
7:22 a.m. ET, September 1, 2023

Kremlin confirms Putin will meet Turkish president as Black Sea grain deal negotiations continue

From CNN’s Anna Chernova

Russian President Vladimir Putin will hold talks with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in the southern Russian city of Sochi on Monday, the Kremlin confirmed.

“Indeed, the negotiations will take place on Monday in Sochi,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told journalists Friday.

The meeting is to be held against the backdrop of Ankara’s efforts to convince Moscow to reconsider its withdrawal from the Black Sea grain deal. Russia withdrew from the initiative in July, nearly a year after it was brokered by Turkey and the United Nations to guarantee safe passage of Ukrainian grain through the Black Sea and help facilitate Russian exports of grain and fertilizer.

Following bilateral talks in Moscow with his Turkish counterpart, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov reiterated Thursday that Russia will be ready to rejoin the Black Sea initiative as soon as it sees guarantees that benefits promised to Russia will be implemented.

United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres later Thursday presented “a set of concrete proposals” in order to renew the deal in a letter to Lavrov.

More context on the grain deal: The Black Sea initiative has been significant in stabilizing global food markets since the war started in February last year, particularly for poorer countries relying more heavily on grain supplies from the region.

7:37 a.m. ET, September 1, 2023

Ukrainian intelligence official says drone attacks against Russian airbase were launched from inside Russia

From CNN's Tim Lister and Olga Voitovych

This satellite photo from Planet Labs PBC shows the dual military-civilian use Princess Olga Pskov International Airport in Pskov, Russia, on August 31.
This satellite photo from Planet Labs PBC shows the dual military-civilian use Princess Olga Pskov International Airport in Pskov, Russia, on August 31. Planet Labs PBC/AP

The head of Ukrainian Defense Intelligence, Kyrylo Budanov, said that drone attacks earlier this week on a Russian air base in Pskov were launched from within Russian territory.

Budanov told the online publication WarZone: "We are operating from Russian territory; four Russian IL-76 military transport planes were hit as a result of the attack."

"Two were destroyed and two were seriously damaged," Budanov said.

Satellite imagery shows that two Il-76s — the aircraft that forms the backbone of Russian military airlift — were destroyed, and two appear to have damaged fuselages. 

"The fuel tanks and an important part of the wing spar located in the upper part of the IL-76 were targeted," Budanov said.

However, he declined to tell WarZone what type of drones and how many were used in what was one of Ukraine's most ambitious aerial attacks inside Russia.

Pskov is about 800 kilometers (roughly 500 miles) from the Ukrainian border in northwestern Russia near Estonia.

The Kremlin declined to comment on the claim Friday, with spokesperson Dmitry Peskov deferring questions to the Russian defense ministry.

CNN’s Anna Chernova contributed reporting to this post.