Friday, June 19, 2026

Human Origins Destroys Core Fascist Mythology – OpEd


June 19, 2026 
By Yann Perreau


How deep history challenges fascist myths of purity, hierarchy, and identity.

The deeper we explore humanity’s past, the harder it becomes to sustain some of the most powerful political myths of the modern world.

For more than a century, authoritarian ideologies have sought legitimacy in origin stories: pure people, ancestral homelands, primordial hierarchies, and civilizational destinies. Fascism, in particular, has always been obsessed with beginnings. Whether in Nazi fantasies of Aryan ancestry, myths of ethnic continuity, or contemporary narratives of demographic replacement and civilizational decline, the past is transformed into a source of authority. History becomes destiny. Origins become a source of legitimacy.

Yet archaeology, anthropology, genetics, and evolutionary science increasingly tell a different story. Research across these fields has challenged older assumptions about purity, hierarchy, and human nature. Deep history reveals migration rather than isolation, cooperation rather than perpetual conflict, and experimentation rather than inevitability.

Few 20th-century thinkers saw this more clearly than Georges Bataille, who observed that competing visions of the past often conceal varying perspectives of humanity.

Better known today for his writings on eroticism, sacrifice, and transgression, French philosopher Bataille was also one of the first major European intellectuals to recognize that prehistory could serve as an antidote to fascist mythology. During the 1930s and 1940s, when fascist movements were mobilizing myths of origin on an unprecedented scale, he turned to cave art, ritual, and the earliest traces of human life, immersing himself in the latest archaeological, anthropological, paleontological, and sociological research.

His writings on prehistory drew extensively on the discoveries and debates of his time, delving into philosophical, anthropological, and political interests at once. What distinguishes humans from other animals? How did symbolic thought emerge? What forms of community existed before states, nations, and organized religions? These questions acquired a particular urgency during the rise of Benito Mussolini in Italy and Adolf Hitler in Germany, when competing visions of humanity became a matter of life and death.

Studying cave art and the discoveries emerging from sites such as the Lascaux Cave in France, Bataille became fascinated by a simple fact. The artists who painted the walls left no names. They founded no dynasties. They erected no monuments to rulers or conquerors. But they created some of the most extraordinary images in human history.

For Bataille, the lack of names was not a footnote; it was the point.


The caves revealed forms of collective creation that preceded authorship, ownership, and sovereignty. Art appeared not as an expression of individual genius or political authority but as a shared symbolic activity through which a community understood itself and its place in the world.

Instead of fascism’s cult of leadership, Bataille discovered a humanity whose earliest masterpieces emerged from participation rather than domination, anonymity rather than glory, and collective creation rather than the cult of personality.

The political implications of these observations became increasingly difficult to ignore during the rise of the totalitarian regimes that would engulf much of Europe and Asia. In his 1933 essay “The Psychological Structure of Fascism,” Bataille analyzed the attraction to sovereignty, authority, and charismatic leadership. In 1936, he founded Acéphale, an anti-fascist intellectual group whose symbol was a headless human figure.

The image was deliberately provocative. Against the Führer, Il Duce, Stalin, and every cult of leadership, Bataille proposed a humanity without a head. The figure was less of a political statement than a symbolic reversal of the principles celebrated by totalitarian movements. Against sovereignty, he imagined forms of collective existence that could not be reduced to a single authority. Against hierarchy, he emphasized participation, reciprocity, and shared experiences.

Prehistory became important not because it provided an alternative mythology, but because it revealed a past that resisted mythological simplification. Bataille turned to caves such as Lascaux as they seemed to preserve traces of human existence before nations, before states, and before centralized authority. What he found there was not an original people or an ancestral race, but forms of collective life that escaped the categories through which modern politics often tends to understand itself.

Against Hobbes

In this sense, Bataille’s reading of prehistory amounted to a direct challenge to one of the founding myths of modern political thought. In Leviathan(1651), Thomas Hobbes famously described life before political authority as “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” Human beings, he argued, originally lived in a condition of universal conflict—a “war of all against all”—from which only a sovereign power could rescue them.

This image has shaped centuries of political theory. It continues to influence assumptions about human nature and social order. If conflict is primordial, hierarchy appears necessary. If competition is humanity’s defining characteristic, strong authority becomes easier to justify.

Yet few anthropologists, archaeologists, or evolutionary researchers today would recognize early human societies that were part of Hobbes’s description. Over the past century, discoveries from prehistory have gradually eroded the picture of humanity emerging from a primordial war of all against all. Instead, these findings have shed light on how the social bond preceded sovereignty.

Cooperation and Human Success


Research in the 21st century has begun to explain the reasoning behind this. Far from being a secondary achievement of civilization, cooperation was one of the conditions that made civilization possible. Human infants require years of care, and this knowledge needs to be transmitted across generations. Food sharing, communication, and reciprocity were not late cultural inventions. They were essential to survival.

Increasingly, researchers describe Homo sapiens as a uniquely hyper-cooperative species. In a landmark study published in the journal Nature in 2014, the authors argued that cooperative breeding and exceptional levels of social cooperation played a decisive role in the evolution of human cognition and culture. Shared childcare, collective learning, and social transmission enabled forms of cumulative culture unmatched elsewhere in the animal world.

Human beings did not become cooperative because civilization imposed cooperation upon them: civilization became possible because humans were already cooperative. American anthropologist Sarah Blaffer Hrdy makes a similar point in Mothers and Others, stating that networks of care extending far beyond biological parents helped shape human evolution. Humans survived because they learned to depend upon one another.

Developmental and comparative psychologist Michael Tomasello reaches a similar conclusion. In A Natural History of Human Morality, he argues that what distinguishes human cognition is not superior individual intelligence but the capacity for shared intentionality—the ability to coordinate attention, goals, and actions with others. Human intelligence, in this view, is fundamentally social.

A similar intuition reappears today in discussions about artificial intelligence (AI). Blaise Agüera y Arcas, an AI researcher, has argued that intelligence is not simply an individual property but something that emerges through communication, learning, and exchange. Language may be less of an instrument of individual advantage than a technology of collective intelligence.

While Hobbes saw society emerging from conflict, many contemporary scholars suggest that society was shaped by cooperation.

The Archaeology of Possibility


The same shift has transformed our understanding of political development. In The Dawn of Everything, authors David Graeber and David Wengrow challenge the familiar narrative of how human societies progressed through a fixed sequence—bands, tribes, chiefdoms, and states—becoming more hierarchical at every stage.

Drawing on decades of archaeological research, they describe societies that repeatedly experimented with different political arrangements. Some adopted hierarchical structures only temporarily before abandoning them. Others alternated between centralized and decentralized forms of organization according to seasonal rhythms. Large populations sometimes existed without kings, standing armies, or centralized bureaucracies. These accounts make human history look less like a march toward the state and more like a field of political experimentation.

The implications of this outlook extend well beyond archaeology. If hierarchy is not inevitable, authoritarianism can no longer present itself as the culmination of human development. If human beings repeatedly invented different ways of organizing collective life, then political alternatives are not utopian fantasies. They are historical realities. The past does not reveal our destiny, but another possibility of how to exist.

Deep History Against Race


The anti-fascist implications of prehistory became especially visible during the 20th century.

As Nazi scholars attempted to transform archaeology into a science of racial origins, other researchers moved in the opposite direction. In Man Makes Himself, archaeologist V. Gordon Childe emphasized that human progress is a result of innovation, exchange, and collective invention, instead of a biological destiny. Anthropologist Franz Boas’s The Mind of Primitive Mandismantled theories of racial hierarchy and demonstrated that cultural differences were historical rather than biological. Ethnologist Paul Rivet’s studies of migration and the peopling of the Americas highlighted human circulation, encounter, and mixture over purity and permanence in the region. Working in different disciplines, these researchers arrived at a similar conclusion: the deeper one investigates human history, the less sustainable are the ideas of fixed origins and permanent identities.

Advances in the 21st century in genetics have further strengthened this conclusion. Ancient DNA research has transformed our understanding of the past as dramatically as the discovery of cave art transformed our understanding of prehistoric culture a century ago. Across Eurasia and beyond, genetic studies have revealed repeated episodes of migration, admixture, and exchange that challenge older narratives of stable and isolated populations.

Far from revealing isolated groups preserving fixed identities over millennia, genetics shows continuous movement and transformation. Even Homo sapiens bear the marks of encounters with other human groups, including Neanderthals and Denisovans.

The further we travel into the past, the harder it becomes to sustain fantasies of racial purity.

Why Bataille’s Thinking Remains Important

Prehistory does not provide a political program. It does not tell us how contemporary societies should be organized, nor does it reveal a lost golden age. The important point is not that prehistoric humanity was peaceful, egalitarian, or morally superior. Human violence is ancient. So are domination and conflict.

The lesson is something else.

Deep history undermines some of the stories authoritarian ideologies tell us about humanity. Against the myths of racial purity, it reveals a mixture of races. Against myths of primordial hierarchy, it reveals experimentation with political structure. Against myths of sovereign necessity, it reveals human cooperation. Against myths of fixed identity, it reveals transformation.

Bataille understood that prehistory was not simply about origins. It was also about what happens when origin stories lose their authority. Now, with nationalism and authoritarian politics again looking for acknowledgment in ancestry, identity, and destiny, deep history offers a different perspective. The further back we go, the harder it is for fascism to find validity in historical narratives. Instead, what comes into view is a history of movement and exchange, cooperation and shared invention.

Prehistory doesn’t excuse domination. It doesn’t erase it, either. It places domination in perspective. And at a moment when authoritarianism is once again on the rise, the deep past reveals something both humbling and reassuring: our greatest strength has never been purity or domination, but our capacity to cooperate, connect, and depend on one another.


Credit Line: This article was produced by Human Bridges.

About Yann Perreau
Yann Perreau is a writer, educator, contemporary art curator, and writing fellow for the Human Bridges project of the Independent Media Institute. He has published several books with French publishers on climate, anonymity, and more. His articles have appeared in many publications, including Le Monde, the London Review of Books, and Art Press. He has served as a cultural attaché for both the French Embassy in London and the French Consulate in Los Angeles. He holds an MPhil in art history from Paris's EHESS.
View all posts by Yann Perreau →








Ritual, Power, And The Weekend Arena – OpEd

President Donald J. Trump and UFC CEO Dana White arrive at UFC Freedom 250, the mixed martial arts event produced by the Ultimate Fighting Championship, Sunday, June 14, 2026, on the South Lawn of the White House. (Official White House Photo by Daniel Torok)


June 18, 2026 
By Gary M. Feinman


In a March 2026 paper published in the journal Science Advances, which focused on variability in governance along the autocratic-democratic axis, my coauthors and I found that one of the strongest associations for the 40 case observations, which were part of our study, was between the nature of rituals and the concentration of power.

For this global sample, autocratically organized societies were characterized by spectacles that foment fear and awe, while participatory rituals predominated in more democratically organized contexts. For example, in the region where I study (Oaxaca, Mexico), when governance was typified by distributed power relations, the pre-Hispanic rubber ball game was played in a large court adjacent to a broad, flat open plaza, the Main Plaza at Monte Albán, a space that could accommodate many of the settlement’s inhabitants. Later, however, as political power became more concentrated, the size of ball courts was reduced, access to them became more restricted, and some were even built immediately adjacent to the houses or palaces of ruling families.

Social scientists have long recognized that communal rituals are a universal human experience that binds people together in various ways. Spectacles, often rich in disorienting noise, shock, and awe, tend to captivate observers through the powerful figures at the center of the spectacle, who inspire fear and wonderment, reinforcing authoritarian cults of personality. In contrast, participatory rituals like communal dancing, singing, or chanting tend to instill camaraderie among participants, solidarity, and trust among those involved. As a student of history and a sports fan, the mirrored reflections of the past provide an analytical perspective about the final Knicks game on June 13, a sports agenda that cannot be ignored.

During the 2026 National Basketball Association playoff between the New York Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs, Madison Square Garden, the storied home of the Knicks, once again became like a civic commons after a 53-year championship drought. The competitiveness of the Knicks during the playoffs elevated the space from merely being a site of entertainment to a participatory ritual arena. The crowd did not passively observe; it chanted, rose, groaned, anticipated, and collectively willed momentum into existence. One needed to only look at the faces in the stands—season ticket holders and first-timers, celebrities and subway riders alike—to notice that the sight was closer to what might be considered an integrative ritual: one in which meaning is not imposed from above but generated, often with spontaneity, among participants.


Basketball, by definition, is a team sport, but this is typified by the game that the Knicks currently play. It is not about consistent domination by a central figure. Even the most celebrated player, Jalen Brunson, depends on coordination, timing, and trust in his teammates. The drama unfolds collectively, and its outcome remains contingent on who makes a foul shot and who grabs a rebound. Participation matters—not just symbolically but materially. The arena amplifies the idea, however imperfectly enacted, that communal engagement shapes outcomes. And these outcomes transcended the arenas where the Knicks games were played, stimulating joy and collective actions, and bringing people together in the desire for a common outcome.

By contrast, the spectacle of an Ultimate Fighting Championship event, staged in a garish steel cage, on the grounds of the White House on June 14 operated on a fundamentally different ritual logic. It was not designed for mutual participation but for spectacle: with the concentration of attention onto a staged center, where one-on-one conflict and mayhem are distilled into physical dominance and symbolic submission. The audience’s role is not to join but to witness—to be awed, to see blood and hear pain, be unsettled, and ultimately to orient themselves toward the figures who command the stage and oversee the event.

The choice of venue was not incidental. The White House has long functioned as a site of state ritual. But traditionally, those rituals—press briefings, public ceremonies, even contentious protests beyond its gates—are tethered, at least aspirationally, to norms of decorum, accountability, and public engagement. Introducing a choreographed combat spectacle into that space shifts its symbolic significance. It recasts a locus of governance into an arena of performance, where the aesthetic of dominance and self-promotion, by a small network of cronies, overshadows any ethical prospect of leading to wider participation.


This is precisely the distinction our comparative work on governance and ritual helps illuminate. When power is broadly distributed, rituals tend to be inclusive, iterative, and co-constructed. They require participants to see one another as collaborators in a shared process, even when competition is involved. In contrast, when power is tightly concentrated, rituals often become spectacles—staged experiences that reinforce hierarchy, channel emotions toward a focal point, and reduce the audience to spectators instead of actors. The Knicks, for all the commercialism of modern sports, still lean toward the former model. Their playoff games invited identification not with an owner but with a collective—however abstract—called a team, a city, a fan base. Victory was widely shared across an entire metropolitan area, communally. The ritual binds laterally, person-to-person.

A UFC spectacle staged in the orbit of political power points in the other direction. It binds vertically. The emotional energy of the crowd is drawn upward and inward, toward a center that is insulated from participation. The unpredictability of sport is replaced by an orchestrated spectacle; even the violence, ostensibly raw, is framed and contained to produce maximum symbolic effect. None of this is to suggest that one form of ritual is wholly virtuous and the other entirely malign. Spectacle has always been part of human societies, and participatory rituals can exclude to the same extent as they can include. Madison Square Garden is not immune to hierarchy, nor is fandom evenly accessible. But the contrast remains as glaring as instructive because it reveals not just different entertainments, but different models of how people relate to power—and to one another.

At stake is more than this season’s recreational programming. Rituals, whether ancient ball games in Mesoamerica or modern sporting events in New York, are not peripheral to political life; they are constitutive of it. They shape how individuals experience belonging, authority, and agency. They encode assumptions about who acts and who is meant to watch. The event at the White House reinforces values such as “might makes right” and life is a “zero-sum game.”


Alternatively, in an era when democratic practices often feel attenuated, the spaces where participation is still enacted—even imperfectly—carry heightened significance, thereby fostering shared aims and emphasizing the potential win-win-win outcomes that interdependence and collaborative action can generate. The roar of a crowd that believes its collective voice matters stands in quiet contrast to spectacles that ask only for attention, passivity, and allegiance.

We would do well to recognize the difference.


Credit Line: This article was produced by Human Bridges, a project of the Independent Media Institute.


About Gary M. Feinman
Gary M. Feinman is the MacArthur curator of Mesoamerican, Central American, and East Asian anthropology, at the Negaunee Integrative Research Center.
View all posts by Gary M. Feinman →



BRINGING THE WAR HOME

Massive drone attack puts Moscow in flames during G7 summit

Massive drone attack puts Moscow in flames during G7 summit
Drone attack on Russian capital industrial area. / bne IntelliNewsFacebook
By bne IntelliNews June 18, 2026

Russian authorities reported intercepting at least 200 Ukrainian drones targeting Moscow during the early hours of June 18, making it the largest drone attack on the Russian capital since the start of the war, according to official statements and regional authorities.

 Ukraine has steadily expanded the scale and range of its long-distance drone campaign against Russian military, energy and infrastructure targets

Earlier this month, the flagship Saint Petersburg International Economic Forum (SPIEF) kicked off as Ukraine struck Saint Petersburg oil terminals with long-range drones.

The timing of the latest attack on Moscow coincides with the G7 summit, where Kyiv is seeking additional air defence systems, weapons and political support from Western allies

The previous largest attacks on Moscow occurred on March 11, 2025, when more than 90 drones were reportedly intercepted, and on May 17, 2026, when authorities reported shooting down more than 120 drones, according to The Bell. 

Russian military bloggers and pro-war Telegram channels argued that some targets inevitably penetrated air defences because of the scale of the attack, while maintaining that Moscow's air defence system had generally performed effectively.

One of the most significant targets appears to have been the Moscow Oil Refinery in the Kapotnya district.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin admitted that several drones had "managed to reach" the facility. Videos widely circulated on social media showed fires and large columns of black smoke coming from the refinery's territory. The refinery is a key supplier of fuel to Moscow and the surrounding region. 

Air traffic was also disrupted. All four major airports serving Moscow, Sheremetyevo, Domodedovo, Vnukovo and Zhukovsky, temporarily suspended operations during the attack. According to reports in Russian media, passengers were evacuated from some aircraft at Sheremetyevo Airport. Telegram channel SHOT estimated that a total of 527 flights were delayed or cancelled.

The latest drone attack also caused damage to civilian infrastructure. Debris from drones intercepted by Pantsir air defence systems reportedly fell on the Sadovod shopping centre, damaging one of its buildings. 

In Zhukovsky district, a drone struck a residential apartment building, while in Lyubertsy, debris damaged a fitness centre and the roof of the Belaya Dacha shopping centre, which suspended operations for what management described as technical reasons. Moscow Region Governor Andrei Vorobyov reported 16 people injured.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy described the operation as a "fair response" to Russian attacks on Ukrainian cities and simultaneously called for negotiations, as cited by The Bell. 

 

MOSCOW BLOG: Ukrainian drone strikes spark fuel fears in the Russian capital



By Newsbase June 19, 2026

Ukraine has once more brought the war to Russia’s capital, launching its biggest drone strike against Moscow since the start of the conflict, causing what may be extensive damage to the city’s main oil refinery and sparking fears of fuel shortages.

Nearly 200 drones struck targets across the city, demonstrating Ukraine’s growing drone capability, in terms of scale, frequency and range of attacks. According to Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin, almost as many drones were shot down — but enough still got through to damage critical infrastructure, disrupt airports and remind Muscovites that the war is no longer confined to Russia’s border regions.

The attack on Gazprom Neft’s 240,000 barrel per day (bpd) refinery in Moscow’s southeast Kapotnya district was the most strategically significant strike. The plant supplies 40% of the capital’s fuel supply, including jet fuel to the city’s four airports.

The extent of damage is unclear, but video footage shows multiple fires sending large plumes of black smoke into the sky. According to Reuters, a 140,000-bpd crude distillation train was damaged, along with a catalytic reformer and a diesel hydrotreatment unit. Some secondary units, piping and auxiliary equipment were also affected, and storage tanks caught fire.

It was the second strike against the refinery this week – on June 16 a drone also damaged and set alight one of the plant’s crude distillation units. 

Ukraine has shifted the focus of its drone campaign over the past two months, from targeting terminals and other oil export infrastructure to the country’s refineries. Rather than causing further disruptions to global fuel supply, the aim now it seems is to intensify pressure on Russia’s domestic fuel demand, not only depriving the Russian military of critical diesel but also making average motorists aware of the toll that Moscow’s war is taking on their daily lives.

The Moscow refinery was one of a number of processing plants nationwide to be targeted over the past month – a coordinated attack aimed at inflicting maximum damage to fuel supply all at once. The consensus among analysts is that over 2mn barrels per day of refining capacity — a third of the national total – has been struck by drones since late April. How much of this capacity is still offline is unclear, however. 

But the recent strikes on the Moscow plant set a precedent. While previous attacks have mostly affected only fuel supply in Russia’s regions, Kyiv’s drone campaign now risks causing shortages in the Russian capital. 

For now, Moscow is not facing an obvious city-wide fuel panic. There is no evidence of long queues emerging at filling stations, and fuel prices set by Russia’s integrated oil companies such as Rosneft and Gazprom Neft have seen relatively little change, as they are best positioned to absorb supply pressure for longer. But there have been sharp increases in prices charged by some independent retailers. On June 18, Russia’s Federal Antimonopoly Service asked Neftmagistral, an independent chain with around 100 filling stations in Moscow and the surrounding region, to explain why it raised the price of AI-95 gasoline by 19% in a week.

While the city may not be facing widespread panic-buying, several motorists who spoke with IntelliNews confirmed that they had stocked up on extra fuel in the wake of the June 18 attack, anticipating that prices would rise over the coming days. Authorities have taken steps to reassure the public – the mayor’s office issued a statement on the same day as the attack that fuel supply to Moscow was “proceeding as normal.”

The government has already mostly maintained a ban on gasoline exports over the past two years because of refinery disruptions. According to Reuters, the country has even begun importing fuel following the latest strikes. The government has also eased regulations regarding fuel quality – some refineries can now sell gasoline and diesel on the domestic market that falls short of the Euro-5 standard for sulphur and other emissions. While the move will enable refiners to maximise output, lower standards could cause damage to some modern vehicles. 

The main question is whether Ukraine can sustain the frequency of its attacks. While today’s refineries in Russia often have similar designs as those built during the Cold War – built to withstand major aerial bombardments, the facilities will be rendered inoperable if Kyiv can continue striking them often enough that repairs simply cannot take place.

Ukraine’s prowess in drone technology continues to grow. The US has even sought access to the country’s homegrown drone technology, which is all the more proficient as it has been tested and refined in battlefield conditions rather than merely in laboratories. Russia’s aerial defence systems – and its own drone capabilities – have simply failed to keep up. 

While Russia’s fuel supply situation for now appears manageable, risks are growing. A single damaged refinery can be worked around, but repeated strikes on core processing units, storage tanks and logistics infrastructure are harder to absorb. Ukraine does not need to collapse Russia’s entire refining system to bring the war home to Muscovites. It only needs to show that the capital’s fuel supply is vulnerable, and that the costs of the war are no longer confined to the border regions or the federal budget. 

In Moscow, car ownership is high, commutes can be long and driving remains central to daily life for many of the city’s citizens. Fuel shortages or sharp price rises would therefore be felt quickly and personally, creating exactly the kind of visible, everyday grievances that can fuel civil unrest and greater war fatigue. 

Russia Targets Cultural Landmarks, As Ukraine Deepens Defense Ties With Europe – Analysis

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visits the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra monastery and a museum complex in Kyiv to inspect the aftermath of the Russian attack. 

Photo Credit: Ukraine Presidential Press Service

June 19, 2026 
Hudson Institute
By Can Kasapoğlu

1. Battlefield Assessment

Last week the Ukrainian battlespace continued to witness over two hundred tactical engagements each day. Russian offensives again targeted Huliaipole, Pokrovsk, and Kostyantynivka, while Lyman, Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, Orikhiv, Oleksandrivka, and Kupiansk also saw increased combat. Additionally, the Ukrainian General Staff noted that Russia used thousands of attack drones to target Ukrainian positions, rear areas, and population centers.

Russian forces reached the outskirts of Kostiantynivka from multiple directions and continued to infiltrate the city. Infantry activity emerged from the east of the city through Novodmytrivka, with additional pressure from the Berestok and Illinivka axes. Kostiantynivka is quickly becoming anotherattritional flashpoint in Donetsk Oblast. Russian forces appear to hold a manpower advantage around the city and are shifting focus to a longer campaign to capture it.

In addition to their strikes against military infrastructure, Russian forces targeted the cultural symbols of Ukrainian statehood. On June 15, Russian strikes badly damaged the Dormition Cathedral at Kyiv’s historic Pechersk Lavra monastery, a vital symbol of Ukraine’s Orthodox Christian heritage and national identity. The attack set fire to the roof of one of Ukraine’s key religious sites and formed part of a larger barrage of missiles and drones that killed at least 11 people nationwide.


The Security Service of Ukraine stated that a Shahed-type drone hit the Dormition Cathedral, which had previously suffered war damage, including during a January strike that hit monastery buildings and caves. The latest attack coincided with increased diplomacy around the Group of Seven summit in France, where President Donald Trump spoke separately with Ukrainian and Russian leaders about ending the war.

Ukraine, for its part, conducted a drone strike that forced a major refinery in southeastern Moscow to suspend operations after a fire damaged its main processing unit. The refinery is a key fuel supplier for Moscow Oblast. Though a second processing unit at the installation may recover, the attack supports Ukraine’s expanding campaign against Russia’s refining and fuel distribution network.


2. Ukraine Deepens Its Strategic Defense Ties with Europe

Ukraine continued to deepen its ties with the most prominent European defense companies. The relationship between Ukraine and its private-sector European partners now reaches beyond arms deliveries to strategic systems, including missiles, turbojet and turboprop propulsion, joint production, and deep-strike and counter-drone systems.

MBDA, a multinational European defense corporation, is among the firms moving deeper into Ukraine’s long-range strike ecosystem. The European missile manufacturer signed a memorandum of understanding with LUCH, a Ukrainian designer of components for the defense industry, to support further development of the Neptune cruise missile, including the NEPTUNE2 with deep-strike capability.

This agreement matters for two reasons. First, it links Ukraine’s wartime missile experience with one of Europe’s most important weapons developers. Second, it signals that Ukraine’s long-range strike program is moving beyond wartime emergency adaptation and toward structured industrial cooperation with European partners.

MBDA also agreed to partner with Ukrainian Armor, a defense company located in Kyiv, on deep-strike and counter-drone solutions, with a focus on technology exchange, joint production, and other possible joint ventures. Additionally, Ukrainian Armor signed a separate agreement with a Czech firm, AviaNera Technologies. This partnership covers turbojet and turboprop engines for Ukrainian missile and drone platforms, and aims to expand production, localize technologies, and explore joint ventures. This agreement will likely improve Ukraine’s propulsion capabilities, which have been a critical bottleneck for Kyiv.

Collectively, Ukraine’s agreements with its European defense partners mark a shift from arms delivery to coproduction. Kyiv is securing technology and production transfers with Europe to enable scalable defense growth. In addition to seeking weapons, Ukraine is building a European-integrated industrial base for missiles, drones, air defenses, and counter-drones.

Another Ukrainian defense technology firm, Fire Point, signed a memorandum of understanding with the German radar manufacturer Hensoldt at Eurosatory 2026, the world’s largest land and air-land defense and security trade show held last week in Paris. The agreement supports the development of the Freyja air-defense system, a mobile radar designed to detect and track more than 1,500 targets at ranges of up to 155 miles.

Under the terms of the deal, Hensoldt commits to producing, testing, and supplying the Freyja ground-based missile-defense architecture. Hensoldt’sTRML-4D radar is the most important sensor in the Freyja system. Fire Point, for its part, will have overall design authority over the system. The company will produce, test, and deliver its Fire Point FP-7 missiles and integrate the main components into the system. The Ukrainian company’s FP-7.x interceptor concept is designed for high speeds and recently passed a controlled maneuvering flight test.


This deal marks Ukraine’s attempt to move from improvised wartime air-defense adaptations to a structured missile-defense industrial program. The cooperation between Fire Point and Hensoldt demonstrates tangible progress in Kyiv’s effort to add a proven European radar layer to its defense-industrial architecture. Progress in this arena may offer Ukraine a pathway to counter Russia’s missile threat using systems built to Ukrainian requirements.


3. What to Monitor in the Coming Weeks

While Kostiantynivka has turned into a meat grinder for Russia’s invading forces, Ukraine’s hold on the city is weakening. The coming weeks will determine whether Ukrainian forces can hold critical terrain and deny Russian assaults further tactical gains.




About the author; 
Can Kasapoğlu is a nonresident senior fellow at Hudson Institute. His work at Hudson focuses on political-military affairs in the Middle East, North Africa, and former Soviet regions. He specializes in open-source defense intelligence, geopolitical assessments, international weapons market trends, as well as emerging defense technologies and related concepts of operations.


Source: This article was published by the Hudson Institute

About Hudson Institute
Hudson Institute is a nonpartisan policy research organization dedicated to innovative research and analysis that promotes global security, prosperity, and freedom.
View all posts by Hudson Institute


Russian drones hit two foreign-flagged civilian ships in the Black Sea, Ukraine says

A municipal worker installs anti drone net to prevent Russian attacks on people and transport in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, Thursday, June 18, 2026.
Copyright Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

By Nathan Rennolds
Published on

Local air defences shot down 79 of 90 Russian drones from Thursday evening into Friday morning, per Ukraine's air force.

Russian drones struck two foreign-flagged civilian ships in the Black Sea on Thursday night, Ukrainian authorities said.

According to Oleksii Kuleba, Ukraine’s Deputy Prime Minister for Restoration, the drones hit one vessel flying the flag of Saint Kitts and Nevis and one Panamanian-flagged ship, leaving one person dead and five injured. One of the injured sailors is in a critical condition, per Kuleba.

"This is yet another proof that Russia is waging a war against freedom of navigation, international trade, and global food security," he wrote.

The governor of Ukraine's Odesa region, Oleh Kiper, said the vessels were now on the move again.

The strikes came amid a wave of overnight Russian attacks across Ukraine.

Kiper said strikes in southern Odesa had resulted in a fire at a truck parking lot, killing one person and injuring four others.

At least four people were also reported to have been injured in another Russian drone strike on a minibus in the city of Kherson in southern Ukraine.

The Kherson Regional State Administration said a 46-year-old woman and three men aged 67, 46, and 59 had been taken to hospital after suffering blast injuries and shrapnel wounds in the attack.

Image shared by Oleh Kiper. Oleh Kiper/X

A guided bomb assault on the Kholodnohirskyi District of Kharkiv injured nine people and damaged more than 40 homes, Kharkiv Mayor Ihor Terekhov added.

Local air defences shot down 79 of 90 Russian drones from Thursday evening into Friday morning, per Ukraine's air force.

It follows a huge Ukrainian strike on a Moscow oil refinery on Thursday morning.

Video footage circulating on social media appeared to show an enormous explosion and large fire at the facility.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy confirmed the strike in a post on X, calling it "a fully justified response to Russian attacks on our cities and communities".

It was the second time Kyiv had targeted the refinery this week, as it continued its efforts to hamper Moscow's energy industry.

Eleven Years After Landmark Nuclear Deal, US And Iran Are ‘Back To Square One’ – Analysis


US-Iran talks. Photo Credit: Mehr News Agency


US and Iranian diplomats are meeting in Switzerland on Friday to open a new chapter in negotiations over Iran’s nuclear programme – talks that could ultimately lead to a deal resembling the one abandoned by Donald Trump in 2018.

June 19, 2026 
SwissInfo
By Dorian Burkhalter

Representatives from the United States and Iran are convening at Bürgenstock, in canton Nidwalden, for initial discussions on implementing a peace memorandum of understanding signed on Wednesday evening. Mediators from Pakistan and Qatar will assist the talks, though the composition of the delegations has not been disclosed.

The MOU, the result of several weeks of negotiations and published immediately after its signing, outlines the broad principles of a final agreement. The finer details are to be negotiated over the next 60 days.

Key provisions include the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz – the closure of which has disrupted the global economy – and a halt to military operations on all fronts, including in Lebanon, the scene of fighting between Israel and Hezbollah. The document also addresses the lifting of US sanctions and the future of Iran’s nuclear programme.

Back to square one

Friday’s meeting marks the beginning of a new phase in negotiations, particularly on the highly contentious issue of Iran’s nuclear activities, the outcome of which remains uncertain. No immediate breakthroughs are expected.

“It’s back to square one,” says Marc Finaud, a research fellow at the Geneva Centre for Security Policy (GCSP).

Donald Trump has described the memorandum as “a bulwark against any possibility of Iran ever acquiring a nuclear weapon,” claiming it is “the opposite” of the 2015 Vienna agreement from which he withdrew in 2018. In his view, the deal negotiated under Barack Obama was too “weak” and overly favourable to Tehran.

“The 2015 agreement was highly detailed, based on mutual trust, and included systems of verification, inspections and strong involvement from the international community, the UN Security Council and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),” notes Finaud, an expert on nuclear disarmament.

The Vienna Agreement, formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), was concluded by Iran, the United States, China, France, the United Kingdom, Russia, and Germany. It placed strict limits on Iran’s nuclear programme in exchange for the lifting of international sanctions and introduced enhanced controls on the country’s nuclear facilities. However, several key provisions were designed to expire over time.

60 days to negotiate

The 60-day deadline, which the parties may extend by mutual agreement, appears particularly ambitious, given that the Vienna Agreement was the culmination of more than ten years of diplomatic efforts.

“This timeline is realistic only if expectations remain modest and the goal is to return to something broadly resembling the JCPOA,” Finaud explains. “But if the aim is to go further, for instance, by including ballistic missile capabilities, then it is not feasible.”

The issue of ballistic missiles was on the agenda of earlier rounds of talks mediated by Oman in Geneva this year, which ultimately ended in failure. Notably, the current memorandum makes no reference to it.

As it stands, the text signed on Wednesday simply reaffirms Iran’s commitment not to acquire nuclear weapons and addresses the dilution of its enriched uranium stockpiles. It also notes that “both parties have agreed to discuss the issue of enrichment.”

Back to Switzerland?


It remains unclear whether further rounds of negotiations over the coming 60 days will continue in Switzerland. The country has a long history of hosting such talks, dating back to the first discussions on Iran’s nuclear programme in 2003, as well as the talks between 2013 and 2015 in Geneva and Lausanne.

“Geneva is convenient for everyone because of its infrastructure and because there is a precedent,” says Marc Finaud. “But it remains to be seen whether the Pakistani and Qatari mediators will be willing to host these negotiations on their own territory.”

Speaking on Swiss public radio RTS on Monday, Hasni Abidi, a lecturer at the University of Geneva’s Graduate Institute and director of the Centre for Arab and Mediterranean Studies, expressed hope that Switzerland, which has so far been largely absent from the negotiations, could “move beyond its role as facilitator to play a part in consolidating the agreement.”

When contacted, the Swiss foreign ministry said that Switzerland “is acting as a facilitator, creating the practical and diplomatic conditions necessary for this meeting to take place on its territory.”

Switzerland has represented US interests in Iran since 1980, giving it a unique and longstanding intermediary role between the two countries.



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