Despite the poll results, a Kremlin source reportedly said Russian President Vladimir Putin's administration does not believe large anti-war protests will occur.
Rafael Grossi, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, described the fresh clashes around the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant as a "close call."
An official of Alexei Navalny's Anti-Corruption Foundation accused prison officials of torturing and letting the Russian dissident freeze to death.
Lawyer Maksim Grebeniuk believes the arrests were made "as a warning to others."
The mayor of Melitopol in Ukraine said resistance forces destroyed an ammunition depot and a railway bridge used by Russian troops to transport heavy weapons.
A Ukrainian official said they created mobile groups to document the crimes and offenses made by Russian troops against the Ukrainian children.
Aleksandr Dugin, known as "Putin's Brain," blamed the West for implying that he has turned against the Russian leader.
Some see Russia's Kherson retreat as a tactical concession in a larger conflict with the West, but others find it humiliating and unsurprising.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky did not mention the demand for Russian President Vladimir Putin's ouster while outlining conditions for peace talks Monday.
The Security Service of Ukraine put the priest and his accomplice on its wanted list after the two fled to Russia.
The Russian Armed Forces have "already stretched" following the mobilization of 300,000 Russians, according to the U.K. defense ministry.
Surveys showed that Russian support for the "military operation" in Ukraine peaked in March and April and began to decline slowly by autumn.
Ukrainian authorities said that as of Monday, Russia lost a total of 76,460 military personnel, including 530 in the previous day.
Patriarch Kirill, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, warned that "forces outside of Russia" are trying to destabilize the country, Ukraine, and Belarus.
The Pentagon announced Friday they plan to give Ukraine an additional $400 million in military aid.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed a law that will immediately mobilize citizens convicted of serious crimes.
Senior U.S. officials told The New York Times about the conversation within the Russian military about the use of a tactical nuclear weapon against Ukraine.
Russia has lost more than 73,000 personnel since it invaded Ukraine in late February, according to Ukraine's military.
The leaked emails were allegedly from a Russian intelligence source close to the Kremlin.
The U.S.-based Institute for the Study of War (ISW) suggested in a report that Putin is unlikely to use tactical nuclear weapons in the war.
U.K. Foreign Secretary James Cleverly warned Russia of "severe consequences" if they decide to use nuclear weapons against Ukraine.
"We know specifically about three people that keep appearing, but how many there are, we don't know. They all had plastic surgery to look alike," Ukrainian military intelligence Maj. Gen. Kyrylo Budanov said.