Zelensky condemns Russian 'utter cynicism' as it strikes ahead of truce
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has condemned Russia's "utter cynicism" for launching deadly attacks while simultaneously proposing a ceasefire. Russia announced a unilateral ceasefire for May 8th and 9th, coinciding with World War Two victory celebrations, and threatened Kyiv with missile strikes if the truce was violated.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedUkrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has condemned Russia's "utter cynicism" for launching deadly attacks while simultaneously proposing a ceasefire. Russia announced a unilateral ceasefire for May 8th and 9th, coinciding with World War Two victory celebrations, and threatened Kyiv with missile strikes if the truce was violated. Ukraine, however, declared its own open-ended ceasefire starting May 6th, stating it would respond symmetrically to any violations. Overnight attacks across Ukraine killed five people and injured dozens, occurring as these ceasefire proposals were made. Zelensky criticized Russia's actions as propaganda-driven, urging them to disarm and engage in genuine diplomacy. The proposed ceasefires appear unilateral, lacking mutual agreement on terms or monitoring.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedZelensky condemned Russia's 'cynicism' for continuing attacks while seeking a pause in hostilities.
Kyiv announced an open-ended ceasefire from midnight on May 6.
Russia announced a ceasefire for May 8 and 9, threatening a missile strike on Kyiv if violated.
Five people were killed and dozens injured in overnight strikes across Ukraine.
Ukraine's open-ended truce is a strategy to show willingness for a lasting ceasefire and pin violations on Russia.