Russia and China mark victory in WWII as Ukraine war grinds on

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Russian President Vladimir Putin shakes hands with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping during a signing ceremony following their talks at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, May 8, 2025. REUTERS/Evgenia Novozhenina

Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping during a signing ceremony following their talks at the Kremlin in Moscow on May 8.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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MOSCOW - Russia marks the 80th anniversary of the Soviet Union’s victory over Nazi Germany in World War II on May 9 with a military parade attended by China’s Xi Jinping that Moscow fears Ukraine will try to disrupt after three years of devastating war.

President Vladimir Putin, the longest-serving Kremlin chief since Josef Stalin, will speak at a 0700 GMT (3pm Singapore time) parade where thousands of Russian soldiers usually march by and drive military hardware such as intercontinental ballistic missiles and tanks past Lenin’s Mausoleum on Red Square.

But the Ukraine war, Europe’s deadliest since World War II, haunts this celebration. Ukraine attacked Moscow with drones for several days this week, and Moscow and Kyiv accused each other of breaking a 72-hour ceasefire declared by Mr Putin.

The Kremlin says the attendance of Russian allies such as Mr Xi, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and several dozen leaders from the former Soviet Union, Africa, Asia and Latin America shows Russia is not isolated from the wider world even if Moscow’s former WWII Western allies want to stay away. From Europe, the leaders of Serbia and Slovakia will attend.

“The victory over fascism, achieved at the cost of enormous sacrifices, has an everlasting significance,” Mr Putin told Mr Xi in the Kremlin. “The countless sacrifices made by both our peoples should never be forgotten.”

The Soviet Union lost 27 million people in World War II, including many millions in Ukraine, but pushed Nazi forces back to Berlin, where Adolf Hitler committed suicide and the red Soviet Victory Banner was raised over the Reichstag in 1945.

For Russians - and for many of the peoples of the former Soviet Union - May 9 is the most sacred date in the calendar, and Mr Putin, angry at what he says are attempts by the West to belittle the Soviet victory, has sought to use memories of WWII to unite Russian society.

Chinese Communist Party historians say China’s casualties in the 1937-1945 Second Sino-Japanese War were 35 million. The Japanese occupation caused the displacement of as many as 100 million Chinese people and significant economic hardship, as well as the horrific 1937 Nanjing Massacre, during which an estimated 100,000 to 300,000 victims were killed.

Moscow and Kyiv do not publish accurate casualty numbers for the war in Ukraine, though US President Donald Trump, who says he wants peace, says hundreds of thousands of soldiers on both sides have been killed and injured.

Moscow parade

Mr Putin has sought to insulate Moscow from the grinding artillery and drone war being fought 600km away in Ukraine, though Ukrainian drone attacks have in recent days disrupted air travel to the Russian capital.

The Kremlin said the military is doing everything it can to ensure security for the parade next to the Kremlin which Russia said was targeted in 2023 by Ukrainian drones.

There were some drone attack warnings announced overnight in some western Russian regions, but no reports of attacks on Moscow, which along with the surrounding region has a population of at least 21 million.

Security is very tight in Moscow.

Mr Putin proposed a 72-hour ceasefire

would run on May 8, May 9 and May 10, though Ukraine said Russia had broken the ceasefire, a claim dismissed as absurd by Moscow.

The Kremlin said military units from 13 countries, including China, will take part in the parade along with Russian troops, though it was unclear how North Korea - which has helped Russia fight in Ukraine - would be represented.

In Kyiv, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called on allies to help it resist Russia, which now controls about a fifth of Ukraine.

“Evil cannot be appeased. It must be fought,” Mr Zelensky said, according to the Kyiv Post. He criticised Moscow’s Victory Day parade. “It will be a parade of cynicism. There is just no other way to describe it. A parade of bile and lies.” REUTERS

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