After a 90-minute Trump-Putin call, Russia signaled openness to a temporary May 9 ceasefire timed to V-E Day. Ukraine, meanwhile, hit Russia’s Tuapse Black Sea oil refinery a third time in two weeks and claimed responsibility for an explosion at a Perm pipeline facility — even as Odesa took its heaviest residential strike in months.
President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke for roughly ninety minutes on April 29, and on Wednesday Trump told reporters the conversation included the idea of ‘a little bit’ of a ceasefire timed to May 9 — the date Russia commemorates the defeat of Nazi Germany in the Second World War. Putin’s foreign-policy adviser, Yuri Ushakov, separately said the Russian president was ‘prepared’ to honor a pause through or around the V-E Day anniversary, according to RT and the Moscow Times.
European officials reacted with conspicuous skepticism. EU foreign-policy chief Kaja Kallas said calls between Trump and Putin continue to leave ‘many questions unanswered,’ a diplomatic phrasing that, in context, translates roughly to: we do not know what either side has actually agreed to. The pattern of high-profile phone calls followed by competing readouts has become a familiar feature of the Trump administration’s Russia diplomacy, and the May 9 framing has not yet been confirmed in writing by either capital.
On the battlefield, the war kept escalating. RFE/RL reported that Ukraine struck Russia’s Tuapse oil refinery on the Black Sea coast for the third time in two weeks, sending acrid smoke over the region and depositing leaked oil onto coastal beaches. Telegram channels then reported a separate explosion near a Perm-region oil-pipeline facility, which Ukraine’s SBU claimed responsibility for. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy framed the strikes as ‘entirely justified Ukrainian responses to Russian terror’ and indicated that Ukraine intends to expand both the range and the cadence of its operations inside Russia.
Russia answered overnight. Massive air and missile strikes hit Odesa in the early hours of Thursday, with the Primorskyi district taking the heaviest damage — high-rise buildings reportedly burning, a kindergarten significantly damaged, and at least twenty civilians injured according to Ukrainian officials cited by the Kyiv Post. The targeting pattern was consistent with previous Russian responses: civilian energy and residential infrastructure, justified rhetorically as retaliation for Ukrainian strikes on Russian refineries.
The ceasefire optics matter politically more than militarily. A May 9 pause, if it materialized, would be brief, narrow and almost certainly unilateral on Russia’s side — Ukraine has shown no public willingness to halt strikes on Russian energy infrastructure absent a broader settlement, and Zelenskyy’s Wednesday remarks suggested the opposite. For Putin, however, even a symbolic May 9 quiet day would offer a propaganda dividend on the most ideologically loaded date in the Russian state calendar.
NewsRescue’s reading is that the call between Trump and Putin is a working-level gesture, not a settlement framework. Real progress on a Russia-Ukraine ceasefire requires three things that remain absent: agreement on territorial questions, a security architecture for what is left of Ukraine, and consent from Kyiv. None of those is on the table right now. What is on the table is a continued slow squeeze on Russian refining capacity by Ukrainian deep strikes, and continued punitive bombardment of Ukrainian cities by Russia. That is not a pre-ceasefire dynamic. That is the war finding new operational normal.




