Kharkiv defense order

Because Russia launches the entire invasion of Ukraine, Western countries inflicted aggression, in a war effort.
But on the ground here in Ukraine, these sanctions seem to have limited effect.
Only outside Kharkiv, in a secret location, has a collection of crooked metal nests from attacks on and around the city. It’s a scrapery of the save – the lips of bombs in Russia, rockets, missiles and drones hit by Kharkiv for the past three and a half years.
“This is the material evidence that we are, as prosecutors, testify of Russian guilt in Kharkiv’s crimes in Kharkiv Reguror’s Reharkutor. The Rocket and Reviewed.
The Dyytro shows one of the latest editions – a Russian version of Shahede in Iran. Russia recently fired hundreds of kamikaze drones in Ukrainian cities and towns. They are pretty cheap to do, he told me – about $ 20,000 (£ 15,000) each.
He taught the adjacent carcass of a Russian cruise missile. He says it costs millions.
But these weapons are not fully produced in Russian – there are “many substances from western countries,” says Dymtro. “Possible (for Russia) to differentiate sanctions, but no one is made not a choice yet,” he added.

Donald Trump appears to have lost patience with President Vladimir Putin. After early rapprochement efforts between the US and Russia, president of the US is currently threatening to develop the Kremlin outside of a quit Ukraine this Friday.
Trump says The second sentences also come in force In that day, it affects any trading in the country with Russia. He has already set up an additional 25% Indian tariff for buying Russian oil. US Envoy Steve Witkoff Met Putin In Moscow on Wednesday for talks in front of deadline deadline.
So, if President Trump has chosen to impose additional chemlin sanctions, is it enough to force Russia to change the course of this war? Dymtro believes Oil and Gas Exports can have an important economic impact.
“We can’t stop it with a snap with our fingers, but we have to do it, we have to work,” he said. There is hope that President Trump could work.
Kharkiv, only 30 miles from the Russian border, carried several attacks across the battle. Thousands of buildings are damaged or damaged. The whole region almost 3,000 civilians were killed, 97 of children.
Police Colonel Bolvinov shows me to burn the shell at the police point he used. A Russian strike in 2022 killed three civilians. He pointed a hole in the hole in the wall where the missiles were entered. Russian tactics, he said, did not change. “Russia tried to hit and kill a lot of civilians.”

Colonel Bolvinov’s job is to examine each civilian death. He had no abandoned stone that was unchanged. He had 1,000 men and women who worked for him, now scattered at the basement offices across the town. They carry the worst forensic work to build a criminal case against responsible.
The photos of Russian military officers tied with specific attacks were filled with the wall – the likes.
In another building, crime scene investigators implemented DNA tests to determine the most recent casualties – civilians Ukraine killed in their Russian attacks in water collection. Colonel Bolvinov shows my footage from strike – unrecognized birds flowing on the ground.
“It is difficult to do this work, but it is very important job for future justice for us, for the Ukrainian people,” he said. He showed me a three-dimensional computer image in a mass of grave in Izium where more than 400 bodies were discovered. “Some of the cases left a scara with all of us all, and we could not forget this trauma,” he said.
Colonel Bolvinov says he wants to end this war. He hopes that President Trump’s increased pressure to President Putin moves. But police chief does not want peace at any price. “Peace without justice, never peace,” he said. Although a ceasefire can be agreed, it still does not meet the wounds of most people in Ukrainian.

In a cemetery outside Kharkiv is another reminder of the cost of the war: the constant growing rank of dead soldiers in Ukraine. Each grave is marked with blue and gold on the National Flag. Silence here is just shattered with the sound of their air flap.
Nearby, in the civilian section of the cemetery, a mother and her family put flowers in their daughter’s grave. Sofia is only 14 years old when a host of the glide has taken his life last year. She sat on a bench bench in kharkiv park, enjoying hot summer in the afternoon of a friend.
I asked his mother Yulia if President Trump’s increased pressure in Russia could provide comfort, but he was not optimistic.
“These conversations have long been ongoing,” he told me.
“But so far there are no consequences … Hope will disappear.”
