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Zelenskyy says work of his negotiators ‘will be adjusted’ after Russia used ‘record number’ of ballistic missiles in latest attack
Shifting our attention back to Ukraine now, where the country’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said Russia’s latest attacks involved a “record number” of ballistic missiles and deliberately targeted energy infrastructure.
Zelenskyy said there were 32 ballistic missiles, 28 cruise missiles, 11 missiles of “other types” and 450 attack drones used in the assualt that was launched as temperatures dropped to -20C and left many apartments in Kyiv without heating.
In a post on X, Zelenskyy wrote:
Energy infrastructure facilities in several regions were hit, with the greatest damage in the Kharkiv and Dnipro regions, Kyiv and the region, the Vinnytsia and Odesa regions, as well as in Zaporizhzhia…
The heating situation is particularly difficult in Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Dnipro, as well as Lozova in the Kharkiv region …
Each such Russian strike confirms that attitudes in Moscow have not changed: they continue to bet on war and the destruction of Ukraine, and they do not take diplomacy seriously. The work of our negotiating team will be adjusted accordingly.
The overnight Russian ballistic and drone attack came shortly before Nato chief Mark Rutte was in Kyiv to meet Zelenskyy and to address the national parliament. The latest round of talks between Russia, Ukraine and the US are due to be held on Wednesday and Thursday in Abu Dhabi. You can read more here.
Key events
Russia ‘paying heavy price’ for the war, with over ‘one million casualties to date and rising’ – Nato chief
According to a summary of the address, Mark Rutte also said:
President Trump and his team are determined to stop the bloodshed, with the support of America’s allies – and it is clear that Ukraine is committed.
Direct talks are now underway and this is important progress. But Russian attacks like those last night, do not signal seriousness about peace. We know Russia is paying a heavy price for this war with over one million casualties to date and rising.
Yet, despite Putin’s willingness to sacrifice countless of his own people, he’s not winning. Any gains on the battlefield are grindingly slow.
Nato chief says securing Russia-Ukraine agreement ‘will require difficult choices’
During Nato chief Mark Rutte’s address to the Ukrainian parliament earlier, he said:
The United States, Europe and Canada have affirmed their readiness to provide the assurance that Ukraine needs to be able to forge a peace with Russia. The members of the coalition of the willing made encouraging progress on these guarantees when they met last month in Paris. I was at that meeting and so was President Zelenskyy.
Some European allies have announced that they will deploy troops to Ukraine after a deal is reached. Troops on the ground, jets in the air, ships on the Black Sea. The United States will be the backstop, others have vowed to support in other ways.
The security guarantees are solid, and this is crucial – because we know that getting to an agreement to end this terrible war will require difficult choices.
Zelenskyy says work of his negotiators ‘will be adjusted’ after Russia used ‘record number’ of ballistic missiles in latest attack
Shifting our attention back to Ukraine now, where the country’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said Russia’s latest attacks involved a “record number” of ballistic missiles and deliberately targeted energy infrastructure.
Zelenskyy said there were 32 ballistic missiles, 28 cruise missiles, 11 missiles of “other types” and 450 attack drones used in the assualt that was launched as temperatures dropped to -20C and left many apartments in Kyiv without heating.
In a post on X, Zelenskyy wrote:
Energy infrastructure facilities in several regions were hit, with the greatest damage in the Kharkiv and Dnipro regions, Kyiv and the region, the Vinnytsia and Odesa regions, as well as in Zaporizhzhia…
The heating situation is particularly difficult in Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Dnipro, as well as Lozova in the Kharkiv region …
Each such Russian strike confirms that attitudes in Moscow have not changed: they continue to bet on war and the destruction of Ukraine, and they do not take diplomacy seriously. The work of our negotiating team will be adjusted accordingly.
The overnight Russian ballistic and drone attack came shortly before Nato chief Mark Rutte was in Kyiv to meet Zelenskyy and to address the national parliament. The latest round of talks between Russia, Ukraine and the US are due to be held on Wednesday and Thursday in Abu Dhabi. You can read more here.
Son of Norway’s crown princess denies four counts of rape as trial begins

Miranda Bryant
Miranda Bryant is the Guardian’s Nordic correspondent
The son of Norway’s crown princess has pleaded not guilty to four counts of rape on the first day of his trial for multiple offences, a legal saga that has embarrassed the royal family and raised questions over domestic abuse in Norway.
Appearing in front of a packed courtroom at Oslo district court on Tuesday morning, Marius Borg Høiby also denied charges including abuse in close relationships and filming women’s genitals without their knowledge.
Høiby, 29, pleaded guilty to charges including sexually offensive behaviour, a serious drug offence, violation of a restraining order and several driving-related offences. He pleaded partially guilty to serious bodily harm, reckless behaviour and violation of a restraining order.
His pleas for two of the charges, bodily injury and two cases of damage, were inaudible. He faces 38 charges in total.
The lead prosecutor, Sturla Henriksbø, said that despite Høiby’s status there should be “equality before the law”. You can read more here:
The Guardian’s Europe correspondent, Jon Henley, has written a full report on why prosecutors have raided the French headquarters of Elon Musk’s social media platform X, which you can read here:
The EU’s foreign policy chief, Kajas Kallas, has been speaking as part of a panel on Arctic security. Kallas was asked if the EU was “too cautious” in taking action because of its dependence on the US for security, which has been exposed amid Russia’s war on Ukraine and the Trump administration’s threats on Greenland and erratic behaviour towards its longstanding western allies. Kallas, who has said Nato must “become more European” to maintain its strength, responded:
Of course, we are cautions because there is a lot at stake. There is a full-scale war going on the European continent and there are threats coming from economic coercion, big challenges from China that is influencing our economies.
If it is influencing our economies, it is influencing jobs and people’s salaries and then it is creating polarisation within our societies and more instability, so it is all very much interlinked.
So, we have to carefully walk this road and try to adapt and work. We don’t want conflict with anybody, we want a peaceful life and prosperity for our peoples.
But it is the situation where we are and if you have such big risks, also the military threats, then you also need to work on building the defence that is acting as a deterrence so we might not need it if the deterrence is strong enough.
Her comments come in the wake of the Donald Trump backing down over his repeated threats to use force or trade sanctions to take control of Greenland, an autonomous Danish territory, that arguably triggered the most serious crisis in Nato’s history. They also followed Nato chief, Mark Rutte, saying European lawmakers should “keep on dreaming” if they believed Europe could protect itself without the US.
Spain to ban social media for under-16s as Pedro Sánchez vows to ‘hold social media executives accountable’
In other news, Spain will seek to ban under-16s from using social media platforms, the country’s prime minister Pedro Sánchez announced this morning, following Australia’s ban for under-16s in December and French lawmakers last week passing a bill that would ban social media use by under-15s.
“Spain will ban access to social media for minors under the age of 16. Platforms will be required to implement effective age verification systems, not just checkboxes, but real barriers that work,” Sánchez said, speaking at a leaders summit in the UAE.
“Today, our children are exposed to a space they were never meant to navigate alone. Space of addiction, abuse, pornography, manipulation, violence. We will no longer accept that.”
To enforce the ban, the Spanish government will reportedly seek to order platforms to put stringent age verification methods in place. The government will introduce a new bill next week to hold social media executives accountable for illegal and hateful content.
Sánchez said Spain had joined five other European countries that he labelled the “Coalition of the Digitally Willing” to coordinate and enforce cross-border regulation.
The coalition will hold its first meeting in the coming days, he said, without specifying what countries would be involved.
The European Commission last month launched an investigation into Elon Musk’s X over the production of sexually explicit images and the spreading of possible child sexual abuse material by the platform’s AI chatbot, Grok.
The investigation extended a probe into X’s recommender systems, algorithms that help users discover new content, as my colleague Jennifer Rankin noted in this story.
It came after Grok caused outrage by allowing users through its AI image generation and editing capabilities to digitally strip people. Researchers said some images appeared to include children. Some governments subsequently banned the service or issued warnings.
Paris prosecutor’s cybercrime unit search French offices of Elon Musk’s X
Offices belonging to Elon Musk’s widely-used social media platform, X, in France are being raided by the Paris prosecutor’s office.
A search is being carried out at the French premises of X by the cybercrime unit of the Paris prosecutor’s office, a statement read, with the support of Europol.
The raid is linked to a year-long investigation into alleged abuse of algorithms and fraudulent data extraction by X or its executives.
Paris Prosecutor’s office said it was widening that investigation after complaints over the functioning of X’s artificial intelligence chatbot Grok.
According to the prosecutor’s office, both Musk and former X CEO Linda Yaccarino had been summoned to appear at hearings in April as part of its probe.
“At this stage, the conduct of this investigation is part of a constructive approach, with the aim of ultimately ensuring that the X platform complies with French laws, insofar as it operates on national territory,” the prosecutor’s office said. X has not issued an immediate response but has previously denied allegations it had manipulated its algorithm.
Poland’s defence ministry said this morning that one of its employees has been detained and charged with collaboration with a foreign intelligence service.
News website Onet had earlier reported that a defence ministry employee was detained for collaborating with Russian intelligence.
“The services have been monitoring this man’s activities for many months. His actions were thoroughly documented and analyzed. Therefore, the evidence gathered against him is very strong. This is one of our greatest successes,” a source familiar with the operation told Onet. We have not yet been able to independently verify the contents of the report.
Trump says US may have ‘good news’ on Russian war on Ukraine
Donald Trump has said his administration may have “some good news” soon on its efforts to end the war in Ukraine, something the US president boasted he could do within 24 hours of returning to office for his second term in the White House.
“I think we’re doing very well with Ukraine and Russia. For the first time, I’m saying that,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office on Monday. “I think we’re going to, maybe, have some good news.”
As we mentioned in the opening post, Ukrainian talks with Russian and US officials are due to take place over two days from Wednesday in Abu Dhabi. A White House official said US envoy Steve Witkoff would attend the talks. Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the Ukrainian delegation would also hold bilateral meetings with US officials during the two days.
The Kremlin has insisted that any agreement has to involve Ukraine ceding the entire eastern Donbas region, including areas still under Ukrainian control.
As my colleague Pjotr Sauer notes in this story, Kyiv has strongly rejected those terms, although Zelenskyy has said he is willing to consider alternative arrangements, including the withdrawal of Ukrainian troops from parts of the east and the creation of a demilitarised zone.
The first round of trilateral talks in Abu Dhabi were held on 23-24 January, with no apparent breakthrough despite positive noise being made afterwards.
Nato chief arrives in Kyiv in previously unannounced visit
Nato secretary-general Mark Rutte has arrived in Kyiv. He will address the Rada, Ukraine’s parliament, according to the Kyiv Post.
The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, shared a video on X of himself and Rutte paying tribute to Ukrainian soldiers killed fighting for the country.
Maidan Nezalezhnosti. The People’s Memorial of National Remembrance. A memorial honoring our heroes, warriors, our people who defended Ukraine against the enemy, fought, and made the ultimate sacrifice in this war.
Together with @SecGenNATO Mark Rutte, we honored the memory of… pic.twitter.com/ugWsJChlAV
— Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) February 3, 2026
Nato did not issue an official announcement regarding Rutte’s diplomatic visit, but this is not unusual given the heightened security concerns stemming from the conflict.
A bit more detail on the brief energy ceasefire:
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The Kremlin said on Friday it had agreed to halt strikes on energy infrastructure until Sunday at the request of Donald Trump, and Kyiv said it would reciprocate.
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The Kremlin said Trump had made a personal request to Vladimir Putin to refrain from striking Kyiv until Sunday (1 February).
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Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the truce was supposed to last for a week, starting Friday (30 January). Ukraine and Russia disagreed on the timeframe for the truce.
Putin ‘waited for temperatures to drop to continue genocidal attacks on Ukrainians’, minister says as energy ceasefire ends
The latest Russian attacks on Ukraine indicate the end of a brief energy ceasefire, under which Russian President Vladimir Putin was said to have agreed to temporarily suspend strikes on Ukraine’s critical energy infrastructure.
The Ukrainian foreign minister, Andrii Sybiha, said the overnight Russian attack involved 450 drones and over 60 missiles, including ballistic ones, with the main targets being energy and residential houses in Kyiv, Dnipro, Kharkiv, Sumy and Odesa, alongside other regions. In a lengthy post on X, Sybiha wrote:
Putin waited for the temperatures to drop and stockpiled drones and missiles to continue his genocidal attacks against the Ukrainian people.
Neither anticipated diplomatic efforts in Abu Dhabi this week nor his promises to the United States kept him from continuing terror against ordinary people in the harshest winter.
We are dealing with terrorists who must be forced to stop violence. The world has the tools. Strengthen Ukraine’s air defense and energy resilience. Increase pressure on Moscow.
About 1,170 residential buildings in Kyiv have been left without heating, the city’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, wrote in a Telegram post, as temperatures fell to -20C.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy said yesterday that Russia had not carried out any targeted missile or drone strikes on Ukrainian energy infrastructure in the past 24 hours, although Russian shelling hit energy facilities near the frontline.
Europe and US to pursue coordinated military action if Russia persistently violates future ceasefire – report
Under a proposal discussed between Ukrainian, European and American officials, Kyiv has agreed with western allies that repeated breaches of any future ceasefire agreement from Russia would lead to a coordinated US-Europe military response, sources briefed on the discussions have told the Financial Times.
A Russian ceasefire violation would be met with a response within a day, starting with a “diplomatic warning” and a response from the Ukrainian army to stop the violation, three people familiar with the plan told the FT in a report which we are yet to independently verify.
If fighting continued, there would be a second phase of intervention using forces from the ‘coalition of the willing’, made up of over 20 of Ukraine’s allies who have agreed to provide Kyiv security guarantees once a ceasefire is brokered with Russia, which has so far been sticking to its maximalist demands.
If the ceasefire violation developed into a wider attack, three days after the initial breach, then a coordinated military response by a western-backed force involving the US military would be triggered, according to the officials.
American, European and Ukrainian officials discussed the proposals on several occasions in December and January, according to the FT.
British prime minister Keir Starmer – who has been at the forefront of the ‘coalition of the willing’ initiative – said last month after talks in Paris that the UK and France would send troops to Ukraine “in the event of a peace deal” with Russia.
Russia has repeated that it would regard the deployment of any foreign military forces or infrastructure in Ukraine as unacceptable foreign intervention and treat those forces as legitimate targets, the Russian foreign ministry said on Monday, citing foreign minister Sergei Lavrov
A second round of talks between Russian, Ukrainian and US officials on a US-drafted plan to end the war will begin on Wednesday, Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said over the weekend.
Despite the continuing diplomatic efforts to bring Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine to an end after nearly four years, attacks on Ukrainian towns and cities remain unabetted.
Russian forces attacked Ukraine’s capital of Kyiv, its second-largest city of Kharkiv and other centres early this morning, officials said, triggering fires and dealing new blows to energy infrastructure. The strikes injured at least four people, officials in the two largest cities said. Stick with us as we bring you the latest.



