These are the key events on day 1,184 of Russiaโs war on Ukraine.
Here is where things stand on Friday, May 23:
Fighting
- Ukrainian drones disrupted air traffic around Moscow, grounding planes at several major airports on Thursday, as 35 drones targeting the city were downed, according to Russiaโs Ministry of Defence.
- According to the ministry and Moscow mayorโs office, a total of 46 Ukrainian drones targeted Russiaโs capital, while an additional 70 drones were launched against other targets across the country.
- Russia launched 128 drones at Ukraine overnight, according to Ukraineโs air force, with 112 of those drones either shot down, jammed or were lost en route to their targets.
- Russia said that 12 civilians were injured in a โmassiveโ Ukrainian strike on the town of Lgov in Russiaโs Kursk region.
- Valerii Zaluzhnyi, the former top commander of Ukraineโs military who was known for clashing with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said it was unlikely Ukraine would be able to return to the borders with Russia it held from 1991 until the Russian invasion of 2014. Even keeping Ukraineโs borders up until Russiaโs full-scale invasion in 2022 may also not be possible, he said.
- โI hope that there are not people in this room who still hope for some kind of miracle or lucky sign that will bring peace to Ukraine, the borders of 1991 or 2022 and that there will be great happiness afterward,โ Zaluzhnyi told a forum in Kyiv.
- Russia said it has received a list of names from Ukraine for a prisoner of war swap. A swap of 1,000 prisoners from each side was agreed to during a meeting last week between Russian and Ukrainian officials in Istanbul aimed at ending the war.
Regional security
- Finland said it is closely monitoring a Russian military build-up along its 1,340km (832-mile) joint border with Russia. Finland closed the border with its neighbour in December 2023 when 1,000 migrants crossed its frontier without visas.
Economy
- Following a meeting in Canada this week, the G7โs finance ministers said they would explore further sanctions on Russia if it fails to reach a ceasefire with Ukraine. They also said they will work to ensure โno countries or entitiesโ that fuelled โRussiaโs war machineโ will be able to benefit from Ukraineโs reconstruction.
- Moscow is moving to block foreign companies returning to Russia from accessing โbuybackโ options for assets left there when they pulled out following the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. The bill before Russiaโs legislature allows โRussian citizens and companies to refuse to return assets to foreign investors, subject to a number of conditionsโ.


