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April 29, 2026

Major overnight strikes

Ukraine war latest: Three Russian ships, MiG-31 aircraft damaged in major overnight strikes on Crimea

The Kyiv Independent news desk

Three Russian ships, MiG-31 aircraft damaged in major overnight strikes on Crimea, SBU reports

Ukrainian drones strike Russia's Yaroslavl oil refinery, General Staff says amid latest mass attack inside Russia

US intercepts Iranian 'shadow fleet' vessel Sevan in Arabian Sea, US Central Command says

Germany believes Russia responsible for global cyber campaign on Signal, WhatsApp, media reports

Ukrainian forces struck three Russian ships, a fighter jet, and other targets in Russian-occupied Crimea overnight on April 26, the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) reported.

In an operation led by the SBU's Alpha special forces unit, long-range drones hit the Russian Black Sea Fleet's naval base in occupied Sevastopol and the Belbek military airfield, the agency said in a statement.

Targets reportedly damaged included the Russian Navy's large landing ships Yamal and Filchenkov, the reconnaissance ship Ivan Khurs, the Black Sea Fleet's Lukomka training center, the headquarters of Russia's air defense radio-technical reconnaissance unit, and the MR-10M1 "Mys-M1" radar station.

At the Belbek military airfield, a MiG-31 aircraft and the technical and operational unit of the airfield were struck, the SBU said.

The Russian-installed head of Sevastopol, Mikhail Razvozhayev, said on Telegram late April 25 that Russian forces were repelling a Ukrainian attack, with air defense systems and mobile fire teams engaged.

Razvozhayev said air defenses shot down 71 Ukrainian drones. He said one civilian was killed and four others were injured.

He added that 17 homes were damaged in different parts of the city, along with civilian vehicles, shops and a railway contact line.

"Overnight, our city came under a massive attack by enemy (Ukrainian) drones," Razvozhayev said.

The acting head of the SBU, Yevhen Khmara, said the operation aimed to degrade Russia's military infrastructure.

"Every such operation follows a clear logic: We are methodically destroying key elements of the enemy's military infrastructure — the fleet, aviation, reconnaissance and air defense," Khmara said.

He said the strikes reduce Russia's ability to control airspace, protect its forces, and plan attacks.

Ukraine has repeatedly targeted military infrastructure deep inside Russia and in occupied territories in an effort to weaken Moscow's war-fighting capacity.

Ukraine says it hits Russian oil pumping station

Ukraine says it hits Russian oil pumping station 1,500 km away

Story by Reuters 

Ukraine struck what it said was an oil pumping station 1,500 km (900 miles) into Russia near the Ural Mountains with drones overnight, and President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Kyiv would keep increasing the range of its strikes.

Kyiv has stepped up its attacks inside Russia in recent weeks, aiming to knock out oil refineries, depots and ports and cripple Moscow's biggest source of funding for its war in Ukraine, as global prices have risen due to the Iran war.

Zelenskiy said Ukraine's security service had reported a successful strike deep inside Russia, calling it "a new stage in the use of Ukrainian weapons to limit the potential of Russia's war" in a post on X.

He posted a video of smoke billowing into the sky from what he described as a Ukrainian strike inside Russia.

Zelenskiy did not identify the target, but Ukraine's SBU security service later said Ukrainian drones had hit a Russian oil pumping station near the city of Perm overnight. The Russian governor there reported a fire at an industrial facility.

"The straight-line distance is over 1,500 kilometres. We will continue to extend these ranges," Zelenskiy added.

The SBU described the Transneft-owned station as a "strategically important" hub for Russian oil transport, distributing oil in four directions, including to a refinery in Perm. Transneft did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment on the incident.

Zelenskiy said that Ukraine has recorded an updated level of Russian export losses from Ukraine's long-range attacks on Russia's key western ports.

He said throughput in the Baltic Sea oil ports of Primorsk and Ust-Luga was down by 13% and 43%, respectively, and in the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk by 38%.

Trade and industry sources and Reuters estimates showed that Russia has managed to keep crude oil loadings at these ports in April at March levels despite ongoing drone attacks.

On Tuesday, a Ukrainian drone attack caused a major fire at a Russian oil refinery in the Black Sea port of Tuapse, a third attack on the refinery in less than two weeks.

Russian President Vladimir Putin described it as evidence of increased Ukrainian attacks on civilian targets. Russia has been pounding Ukrainian civilian energy targets throughout the war and has killed thousands of Ukrainian civilians.

Ukraine's Defence Ministry said on Tuesday that since 2022, when Russia launched the full-scale invasion of its neighbour, Ukraine had increased the range of its strikes against Russia by 170%.

In February, Ukrainian drones struck the Ukhta refinery in Russia's Komi region, some 1,750 km from the Ukrainian border, regional officials said.

"It is important that every strike reduces the capabilities of Russia's military industry, logistics, and oil exports," Zelenskiy added.

Comey and Kimmel cases

Comey and Kimmel cases drive home Trump’s dim view of foes’ free speech

Analysis by Aaron Blake

Three weeks into President Donald Trump’s second term last year, Vice President JD Vance infamously lectured Europe about its free speech abuses. He also made a promise.

“Just as the Biden administration seemed desperate to silence people for speaking their minds, so the Trump administration will do precisely the opposite,” Vance said in Munich, Germany. “And I hope that we can work together on that. In Washington, there is a new sheriff in town.”

Ever since then, though, the Trump administration has appeared bent on making Vance eat those words. It has taken a remarkably dim view of free speech rights, at least where Trump’s foes and other disfavored groups are concerned.

And perhaps no day has driven that home like Tuesday did.

Early on, we learned that the Federal Communications Commission was taking the remarkable step of challenging ABC’s station licenses – as Trump once again is calling for the network to punish talk show host Jimmy Kimmel for a joke. Soon after, we learned the administration had secured an indictment against former FBI Director James Comey for conduct that, much like Kimmel’s joke, appears very likely to be constitutionally protected speech.

Both are second bites at the apple to punish foes after the first ones didn’t pan out. And in each case, they’re arguably even more transparent than the initial efforts.

In Kimmel’s case, the FCC ordered the review of the station licenses, which it claimed is tied to a probe into parent company Disney’s diversity practices, after the comedian told a joke that involved Trump’s demise. The offending remark was about how first lady Melania Trump had the “glow of an expectant widow.” The president had called for Kimmel’s firing.

This follows a previous instance in which ABC briefly suspended Kimmel’s show amid threats from FCC Chairman Brendan Carr over another Kimmel joke – this one involving the possibility that conservative activist Charlie Kirk’s assassin was a MAGA supporter (which has never appeared to actually be true).

Whether either of those jokes were good or even tasteful isn’t really material here; the point is that both appear to be well within the bounds of protected speech.

While Kimmel’s joke about the president’s demise lands differently after a gunman was later arrested a floor above Trump at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner over the weekend, it was hardly a threat. And Kimmel has explained that he was making a joke about the age gap between the 56-year-old Melania Trump and the 79-year-old and visibly aging Trump.

In the prior incident involving Kimmel, Carr claimed he wasn’t actually threatening ABC (despite saying things could be handled “the easy way or the hard way”). And part of the criticism there was also that Kimmel was spreading misinformation about an assassin.

But both of those claims are out the window this time as the FCC takes the major and very rare step of reviewing broadcast licenses, rather than just suggesting others should do something. Despite the FCC’s assertions, it’s difficult to argue this episode is about anything other than punishing a joke the administration didn’t like.

The Comey indictment presents similar dynamics.

Much like with Kimmel, the administration tried to go after the ex-FBI chief for a separate issue that didn’t pan out – namely, a September indictment for alleged false statements to Congress.

Except even conservative legal scholars were quite skeptical of those charges. The case was also apparently so thin that grand jurors rejected one charge and only narrowly approved two others – despite grand jurors very rarely rejecting charges.

The case was thrown out when the US attorney who secured it was ruled to be serving in the role illegally.

But rather than secure a re-indictment on those charges, the Justice Department has gone for a completely separate case – one stemming from Comey posting an image of seashells arranged to spell out “86 47.”

Trump and top administration officials had claimed when he posted it last year that it was a threat or even treason, even though “86” has plenty of meanings that aren’t “kill.” (“47” is shorthand for Trump, the 47th president.) Comey said he didn’t know it could have that meaning, and he quickly deleted the post.

The administration appears to face a similarly steep hill in getting a conviction in this case. It must not only convince jurors that “86” constitutes a threat – which could be extra-difficult given Comey says he stumbled upon the shells rather than arranged them himself – but recent Supreme Court precedent means it must also prove that Comey had “some subjective understanding of the threatening nature of his statements.”

That’s a very high bar. And experts have been dubious it can be cleared.

That said, landing a conviction of Comey or revoking licenses from ABC after what’s due to be a lengthy review process probably isn’t the point. There’s also plenty to be said for inconveniencing people you don’t like and sending a message to others who might do you wrong.

And the administration has made it clear that its foes’ free speech rights are of little concern in that effort.

Federal prosecutors previously, of course, sought indictments of six Democratic members of Congress for telling members of military not to obey illegal orders from Trump – even though that’s guidance service members are already given. A grand jury rejected those charges.

The Department of Defense launched an onerous press policy for Pentagon reporters that was later struck down.

The administration has sought to deport legal immigrants who expressed support for Palestinians.

Trump has launched thin lawsuits against media organizations whose coverage he disagrees with.

And after Kirk’s assassination, then-Attorney General Pam Bondi briefly previewed a planned crackdown on hate speech, even though hate speech is protected speech under Supreme Court precedent.

That and the first Kimmel episode around the same time are some of the few instances in which even conservative free-speech advocates actually pushed back on the administration – and caused it to retreat.

But clearly, it’s not done pushing the limits – in ways that fly in the face of what it promised on the First Amendment.

UBS profits soar

TotalEnergies, UBS profits soar thanks to oil price swings

By Hanna Ziady

Profits at French energy company TotalEnergies and Swiss bank UBS have jumped as a result of higher oil prices and heightened market volatility because of the Iran war.

TotalEnergies today reported a 29% jump in earnings for the first three months of the year to $5.4 billion, partly driven by the oil price move. However, the war has forced the energy major to shut some oil and natural gas production in the Middle East, affecting about 15% of the group’s total output.

Yesterday rival oil company BP reported its profits more than doubled in the first three months of the year as its traders made the most of wild swings in oil prices. The war-related boon has fuelled calls for windfall taxes on energy companies to help offset the rising cost of gas and electricity for households.

UBS, meanwhile, posted an 80% surge in first-quarter profit to $3 billion, as financial market volatility drove client inflows and trading activity. “In the first quarter, we continued helping clients navigate a volatile and unpredictable geopolitical and market environment,” UBS CEO Sergio Ermotti said in an earnings statement. The bank’s shares jumped 4.5% in Zurich to 34.8 Swiss francs ($44).

Hits record low

Iranian currency hits record low amid US blockade and shaky ceasefire

By Nadeen Ebrahim and Sarah Tamimi

Iran’s national currency has hit a record low against the US dollar, trading at around 1.8 million rials against the dollar, according to Iranian media.

Over the last two days, the price of one dollar has increased by more than 23,000 tomans, the Iranian Students’ News Agency (ISNA) reported, referring to the widely used currency unit in Iran, which is worth 10 Iranian rials.

The devaluation comes amid a shaky ceasefire with the United States and Israel, and as the US maintains a naval blockade on Iranian ports, restricting movement of oil.

Iran’s economy was in a dire state before the conflict. National income per person had fallen from about $8,000 in 2012 to $5,000 in 2024, ravaged by inflation, corruption and sanctions.

The outlook is even worse. Up to 4.1 million more people could fall into poverty due to the conflict, according to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

Frustration because of tiny dick..

Trump shows his frustration as Iran keeps him waiting

Analysis by Nic Robertson

All eyes are on Tehran as everyone awaits the Iranian leadership’s next move.

Pakistani mediators expect a revised peace proposal from Iran after US President Donald Trump rejected a previous version. Sources familiar with the efforts say an answer could come as soon as today, or slide to Friday. The same sources say these delays hint at difficulties reaching the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei.

Patience is playing out in different ways.

Pakistan’s Prime Minister, Shehbaz Sharif, told his cabinet that Iran’s foreign minister, who led talks in Islamabad at the weekend, “assured me that he would give me an answer.”

No timeline was given but the public nudge to the Iranians is notable, coming soon after the White House signaled its patience is wearing thin.

Trump’s message that Iran “better get smart soon” was in contrast to his more patient messaging yesterday, when he said he believed Iran will be able to “figure out their leadership situation.”

He seemed to echo concerns about Khamenei — still yet to be seen in public — raised by Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who questioned whether top officials can reach the supreme leader, suggesting access to him was “questionable.”

The more Iran delays, the more the questions will follow. Is the slow decision-making process a symptom of an Ayatollah holed up in secret at the end of a long logistical chain? Or, more problematically, is it tactical ploy by hardliners who are intentionally isolating him so they can play for time to pressure Trump”

No one seems to have an answer to that, and it suits Iran to keep everyone guessing.

Smart... Not...

Trump discusses continuing blockade at meeting with energy executives at White House, sources say

By Alayna Treene

President Donald Trump and some of his top aides met with executives at the White House on Tuesday, where they discussed measures that could be taken to continue the blockade for months, if needed, and how to limit the effects on American consumers, White House officials told CNN.

The conversation was part of a broader discussion about the continued strain on oil prices amid the war with Iran, among other topics such as oil exports from Venezuelan, the officials said.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent hosted the meeting, which was also attended by Vice President JD Vance, White House chief of staff Susie Wiles, special envoy Steve Witkoff and the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, one of the officials said.

Chevron CEO Mike Wirth attended, as did executives from Trafigura, Vitol and Mercuria.

“The President meets with energy executives frequently to get their feedback on domestic and international energy markets — and they met yesterday,” the official said. “The executives discussed many topics including domestic production, progress in Venezuela, oil futures, natural gas, and shipping.”

Another official said meeting attendees praised the blockade, encouraged Trump to keep it in place and asked for more Jones Act waivers.

The president granted a ​90-day extension to the Jones Act waiver last week, making it easier to move oil, gas and other commodities throughout the US.

Oil prices higher

Trump says Iran ‘better get smart soon’ as talks deadlock sends oil prices higher

Mediators in Pakistan expect to receive a revised proposal from Iran in the next few days.

Nic Robertson 

Here's the latest
• Peace talks: US President Donald Trump has warned Iran “better get smart soon,” posting a mocked-up image of himself on his Truth Social platform holding a gun and referring to a “nonnuclear deal.” Pakistan expects to receive a revised proposal from Iran in the next few days, sources say.

• Defense hearing: US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Dan Caine will face a congressional hearing later today focused on their department’s budget request amid the ongoing war. The White House wants to boost military spending to the highest point in modern history.

• Latest on economy: Oil and gas prices are rising again today amid ongoing concerns over the Strait of Hormuz, and Iran’s national currency has hit a record low against the US dollar. The UAE is quitting oil cartel OPEC, a move that could allow them to pump more oil yet prices remain above $110 a barrel.

• In Lebanon: Two people, including an off-duty soldier, have been killed in an Israeli strike on southern Lebanon, according to the Lebanese army. At least eight people were killed in Israeli attacks in Lebanon yesterday, according to state media and national authorities, despite a stated ceasefire.

Age of Electricity

The “Age of Electricity” Is Upon Us

As war in Iran upends fuel markets, two new reports confirm that 2025 was a banner year for renewables.

Zoya Teirstein

The war launched by the United States and Israel on Iran has caused an unprecedented disruption in global energy markets, bottlenecking 20 percent of the world’s supply of oil and liquefied natural gas. We don’t yet know exactly what this means for the fight against climate change. But, thanks to two new reports released last week, we now have the clearest picture yet of the path the world was on before the conflict sent the price of oil soaring—and it was a path where the fossil fuels threatened by the war were less central than ever to meeting growing global energy needs.

The world is entering an “age of electricity,” according to the reports, which come from the International Energy Agency, or IEA, an intergovernmental organization that publishes the world’s most authoritative analyses on the global energy sector, and the think tank Ember. That’s because core economic activities that traditionally involve burning oil and gas—driving cars, heating buildings, and even running industrial processes like steelmaking—are increasingly powered by electricity instead. And, most importantly for the climate fight, an ever-larger share of that electricity is coming from renewable sources. 

The two new analyses confirmed that 2025 was a banner year for renewable energy. Solar power was the single biggest source used to meet humanity’s growing appetite for electricity. New power generation from the broader suite of carbon-free sources—including wind, nuclear, and hydropower—actually exceeded the overall rise in electricity demand, meaning renewables began to displace fossil fuel sources. If this trend sticks, it would mean that the so-called energy transition meant to shepherd humanity out of the climate crisis is no longer theoretical.

“This was a year when the economy boomed, electricity demand grew very healthily—and still all that demand growth was met with renewables,” said Daan Walter, a lead researcher at Ember. 

In 2025, renewables edged out coal in global electricity generation for the first time in more than a century. This progress was fueled by China and India, the world’s two most populous countries that together comprise 42 percent of global fossil power generation. The nations both saw electricity generated by fossil fuels fall in the same year for the first time this century. Like other countries around the world, China and India have been rapidly building out solar, wind, and battery infrastructure. (The cost of batteries fell 45 percent in 2025, an even steeper decline than the 20 percent drop in costs that analysts tracked in 2024.)

There’s another sign that 2025 marked a turning point in the energy transition, according to the Ember report: Unlike in past years, the plateau in fossil fuel use was not tied to a recession. Global economic growth last year was normal, which indicates that renewable energy is driving a structural trend away from fossil fuels when it comes to generating electricity. 

But that doesn’t mean that oil, gas, and coal use are nearing extinction. When it comes to the broader energy economy, rather than just electricity generation, the IEA’s report finds that renewables still aren’t displacing fossil fuels fast enough to force a sustained decline in the world’s use of greenhouse-gas-emitting energy. (This is because not all energy—for instance that which currently powers jets, cargo ships, and many motor vehicles—is generated from electricity.)

As a result of complications like these, global carbon dioxide emissions reached a record high last year, rising 0.4 percent from 2024 levels. The pace of the increase, however, is declining as renewables rise. For years, emissions declines were driven by developed countries like the United States and European Union member states. Last year, however, emissions from advanced economies grew faster than emissions from developing countries for the first time since the 1990s, according to the IEA. 

The trend reversal was driven by the US, where coal demand rose 10 percent last year. Rising natural gas prices prompted power producers to switch back to coal, which had been displaced by fracked natural gas in recent years. Plus, electricity use rose thanks to a harsh winter across much of the eastern part of the country, as well as the rollout of industrial-scale power customers like the data centers needed for new artificial intelligence applications.

But trends in the opposite direction in developing countries played a role, too. In Indonesia, for example, electric cars now comprise more than 15 percent of new car sales—a larger share than in the United States and up from virtually zero in the early 2020s. Many customers are “leapfrogging” gasoline-powered cars altogether and purchasing an EV as their first vehicle.

“The energy transition was conceived as something that is led by the developed world, and the developing world kind of hobbles after at a slower pace,” said Walter. “We’re now seeing ‘leapfrogging’ across the world where actually developing economies are going faster in many ways than developed economies.”

GOP leaders at impasse

House GOP leaders at impasse on FISA, farm bill and budget resolution

Mike Johnson doesn’t have a clear path forward to advance any of these key legislative priorities.

Meredith Lee Hill

The House floor is completely frozen after GOP leaders failed to advance a procedural rule governing consideration of three key pieces of legislation.

The chamber reconvened this morning, only to immediately recess as leaders continue to negotiate with their rank-and-file in hopes of breaking a number of stalemates.

King Charles III will arrive on Capitol Hill shortly after 1 p.m to meet with the speaker and Hill leadership before his 3 p.m. address, slicing into key negotiating time.

Speaker Mike Johnson is facing a raft of internal GOP crises on a spy power extension, the farm bill and the budget resolution.

Republican leaders worked late into the night to force hard-liners to swallow the same plan to reauthorize Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act that those same lawmakers tanked last week.

But at least ten Republicans are still dug in on the matter and the full House Freedom Caucus has not agreed to any FISA deal with Johnson, according to three people granted anonymity to discuss private conversations.

The ultraconservatives also are still pushing for a ban on a central bank digital currency as part of any FISA deal, which GOP leadership, White House officials and other Republicans have blocked.

GOP leaders are also trying to navigate a MAGA revolt over a pesticide provision in the farm bill. They are working to make in order for a floor vote an amendment from Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R-Fla.) to strip out a controversial pesticide provision that MAHA advocates argue acts as a liability shield for pesticide companies.

A group of midwestern Republicans are also pushing for a vote on an amendment that would facilitate year-round sales of a type of ethanol known as E-15, which is major fight among GOP factions.

Conservatives are also wary of proceeding with the Senate-advanced budget resolution that would only allow Congress to craft a party-line package addressing funding for immigration enforcement rather than a wider array of policy priorities.