Kremlin warns against nuclear rhetoric after Trump’s submarine order – Europe live | Ukraine
Published: 2025-08-04 11:36:22 | Views: 7
Kremlin warns against using nuclear rhetoric, says won't get into polemic with Trump
And we now have a first public reaction from the Kremlin to Trump’s announcement on nuclear submarines (9:39), with spokesperson Dmitry Peskov saying Russia had no desire to get into a polemic with Trump on the issue, Reuters reported.
He also played down the significance of Trump’s comments, saying it was clear that US submarines were already on combat duty anyway.
“Russia is very attentive to the topic of nuclear non-proliferation. And we believe that everyone should be very, very cautious with nuclear rhetoric,” Peskov said, quoted by AFP.
Key events
SBU says hit Russian military airfield in Crimea, one aircraft 'completely destroyed'
The Security Service of Ukraine, SBU, said it struck five Russian fighter jets at the Saky airfield in the Russian-occupied Crimea, claiming one aircraft was “completely destroyed.”
In a post on Telegram, it said that a Russian aviation weapons depot was also hit, with estimated Russian losses in tens of millions of dollars.
“The successful special operation of the SBU in Saky is another step towards weakening the enemy’s ability to wage a war of aggression against Ukraine. The occupiers must remember that they will never feel safe on our land!,” it said.
Eurostar services to and from Paris disrupted due to power outage near Paris
Eurostar has just put out a note “strongly” advising customers to postpone their journey to and from Paris to a different date if possible due to “severe disruptions including cancellations” expected as a result of part of the track being closed in France.
In a statement, it said:
“Due to part of the track being temporarily closed on the French network, severe disruptions including cancellations are expected all day to and from Paris. We strongly advise all our passengers to postpone their journey to a different date.”
Live updates show disruptions to trains connecting London and Paris throughout the day, with multiple delays and cancellations.
The disruption is caused by a power outage near Moussy, 50 km north of Paris, on a high speed line between Paris Nord and Arras with “major repairs” required, France’s railway company SNCF said on its website.
A Eurostar spokesperson quoted by Reuters said that the London-Amsterdam, London-Brussels and Brussels-Amsterdam routes were unaffected by the disruption in France.
Kremlin sees Witkoff's visit as 'important, substantial, helpful,' talks with Putin possible
Kremlin’s Peskov also said that it was looking forward to US envoy Witkoff’s visit later this week, considering it “important, substantial and helpful.”
Peskov told reporters that a meeting with president Vladimir Putin was an option, as the pair met multiple times in the past.
Russian president Vladimir Putin (R) shakes hands with US president Special Envoy Steve Witkoff (L) before a meeting at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia. Photograph: Kristina Kormilitsyna/SPUTNIK/KREMLIN POOL/EPA
Kremlin warns against using nuclear rhetoric, says won't get into polemic with Trump
And we now have a first public reaction from the Kremlin to Trump’s announcement on nuclear submarines (9:39), with spokesperson Dmitry Peskov saying Russia had no desire to get into a polemic with Trump on the issue, Reuters reported.
He also played down the significance of Trump’s comments, saying it was clear that US submarines were already on combat duty anyway.
“Russia is very attentive to the topic of nuclear non-proliferation. And we believe that everyone should be very, very cautious with nuclear rhetoric,” Peskov said, quoted by AFP.
In wartime, demonstrations in Ukraine can never be more than a peaceful protest
Shaun Walker
in Kyiv
Once a decade, Ukraine has a moment in which street protests redefine the country’s political direction. The Orange revolution of 2004; the Maidan revolution of 2014; and now, over the past 10 days,the first major wave of protest since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion.
Ivan Franko square, central Kyiv, Ukraine. Photograph: Jędrzej Nowicki/The Guardian
A series of unexpectedly boisterous and well-attended demonstrations forced Volodymyr Zelenskyy to execute a swift U-turn on his decision to scrap the independence of two anti-corruption bodies.
On Thursday, MPs reversed the contentious changes they had adopted a week previously. Outside the parliament building, crowds whooped and cheered as the result of the vote was announced.
The size, scope and demands of this latest protest movement have been much more modest than those of its revolutionary predecessors, but the spectacle has been no less remarkable, given the context of full-scale war in which it has taken place.
Over the last week, a lot of attention focused on Zelenskyy’s rushed U-turn on his anti-corruption law reform.
Shaun Walker in Kyiv spoke to people taking part in these protests and their motivation behind them.
Let me bring you his report with great photographs by Jędrzej Nowicki.
Over the weekend, Zelenskyy also said that Ukraine and Russia were preparing a prisoner exchange that would see 1,200 Ukrainian troops return home, following talks in Istanbul in July.
His comments came after an overnight Ukrainian drone attack on an oil depot near the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi ignited a raging fire, as the two countries traded strikes at the end of one of the deadliest weeks in Ukraine in recent months.
'Every day of delay results in loss of our people,' Zelenskyy says as he says Russian army attacks first respondents and wants to 'kill everything alive'
President Zelenskyy also called for more pressure on Russia, as he posted a video of drone strikes on what he said were first responders and medics arriving to help after attacks.
“Deliberate FPV [first person view] drone strikes on first responders and medics arriving to help after attacks – all of this is typical for every city or community within reach of Russian drones. The Russian army simply kills everything that is alive,” he warned.
Zelenskyy said that “the world has enough power to stop this and protect people.”
He added:
“We count on strong decisions from the United States, Europe, and the world regarding secondary sanctions on Russian energy trade and Moscow’s banking sector.
Ukraine looks forward to the implementation of every agreement on strengthening defense that has been reached with its partners.
Every day of delay results in the loss of our people.”
Morning opening: Shush
Jakub Krupa
Andriy Yermak, the most senior aide to Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, seemingly enjoys the silence from Russia following Donald Trump’s decision to move two nuclear submarines in response to provocative comments from the country’s former president, Dmitry Medvedev.
“The moment American nuclear submarines appeared, … [he] suddenly went silent.Russia understands only one thing: strength,” he said.
Expect Kyiv to keep making similar representations this week, before US special envoy Steve Witkoff visits Russia “Wednesday or Thursday” for further talks ahead of Trump’s 8 August deadline for a ceasefire in Ukraine.
On Friday, there were no signs that Vladimir Putin was willing to change his mind, as he repeated that the Russian “conditions certainly remain the same,” even as he claimed that he nominally supported “a lasting and stable peace.”
With things getting quiet elsewhere as we hit peak holiday season, this could be the main focus this week.
I will bring you all key updates from across Europe here.
It’s Monday, 4 August 2025, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.