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Ukraine-Russia war live: Putin war dead at 70,000 amid claims Moscow warned over Kursk but couldn’t stop raid

Leaked documents reveal Russia’s failure to repel Ukraine’s Kursk incursion after months of warnings

Rachel Hagan
Friday 20 September 2024 05:57
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Related: Ukraine’s attack is only way to force Russia to negotiating table, Zelensky aide says

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Eric Garcia

Washington Bureau Chief

Russia’s military had been anticipating Ukraine’s assault on its Kursk region and was preparing for months to counter it, according to a trove of documents reportedly seized from Russian positions.

Leaked documents shared with The Guardian suggest mounting anxiety within the ranks, compounded by low morale and rising casualties.

More than 70,000 Russian soldiers have died since the invasion began. Volunteer soldiers, once Russian civilians, now make up the majority of recent casualties for the first time according to figures compiled through an open-source data analysis by BBC Russian and Mediazona. The full toll is believed to be considerably higher.

Russia reacted slowly to the first occupation of its territory since World War II, when thousands of Ukrainian troops crossed the border from Ukraine’s Sumy region on 6 August.

The leaked documents contain months of warnings about possible Ukrainian advances with one handwritten log from 4 January warning of the “potential for a breakthrough at the state border” by Ukrainian armed groups. It ordered increased training to prepare to repel any attack.

The Guardian could not independently verify the authenticity of the documents.

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Opinion: Armenia could be Russia’s next victim

A proposed corridor through Armenia would effectively sever the country’s connection to Iran and slice through its sovereign territory, with the support of Moscow, writes former MP Lord Alton:

Is this the next target on Russia’s hitlist?

A year after Armenia was abandoned by the West during the Nagorno-Karabakh crisis, it cannot be left to face a new threat on its own, says David Alton

Jane Dalton20 September 2024 01:05
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Watch: Church that survived Second World War destroyed in Russian aerial bombardment

Church that survived Second World War destroyed in Russian aerial bombardment

The sound of broken brick and glass could be heard underfoot as Ukraine’s special “White Angel” police officers walked through a destroyed church in Donetsk on Tuesday 17 September. Blue, gold and red hues of the church’s decorative paintings were set against rubble on the ground. The church was built more than 110 years ago, Gennadiy Yudin, the major of the special police unit said, walking through the debris in Novoeconomichne, a small village a few kilometers from the frontline in eastern Ukraine. The dome was completely destroyed and several icons of Jesus Christ left in ruins. “Locals are saying that this church survived the Second World War, but was destroyed by the Russian army,” Yudin said. Russian forces destroyed the church with aerial bombardment on 8th July according to Ukrainian officials.

Jane Dalton19 September 2024 23:50
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US sanctions groups over North Korean supply of rockets and missiles to Moscow

The United States has imposed sanctions on a network of five groups and one person for enabling payments between Russia and North Korea to support Moscow’s war in Ukraine and Pyongyang’s weapons programmes, the Treasury Department has said.

“The growing financial cooperation between Russia and (North Korea) directly threatens international security and the global financial system,” State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said.

Russia has become increasingly dependent on the DPRK as it faces mounting battlefield losses and increasing international isolation.”

The new sanctions expose how Russian president Vladimir Putin’s government uses illegal financial schemes to help North Korea access the international banking system, in violation of UN Security Council sanctions, the Treasury said.

The US and Ukraine, as well as independent analysts, say North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is helping Russia by supplying rockets and missiles in return for economic and other military assistance.

Jane Dalton19 September 2024 22:40
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Russia targets power grid with air strikes

Russian forces targeted Ukraine’s energy sector and hit an old people’s centre in the city of Sumy in a new wave of airstrikes on Thursday, killing at least one civilian, Ukrainian officials said.

A UN monitoring body said attacks on the power grid probably violated humanitarian law while the International Energy Agency said in a report that Ukraine‘s electricity supply shortfall in the critical winter months could reach about a third of expected peak demand.

During a daytime strike on the northern city of Sumy, a Russian guided bomb hit a five-storey building, regional and military officials said.

One person was killed and 12 wounded, the interior ministry said on the Telegram messaging app.

Jane Dalton19 September 2024 21:30
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Women disproportionately hit by power cuts, says UN

Women have been disproportionately hit by power cuts caused by Russian air strikes on vital infrastruture, a new UN report says.

Attacks on electricity infrastructure facilities this year have led to the deaths of 18 civilians and 84 being injured, according to the United Nations Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine.

Drivers, older people and those with limited mobility are also among those to have suffered from blackouts, it says.

“From the onset of the electricity shortage, living conditions in Ukraine deteriorated, as cooking, cleaning, and food storage dependent on electricity became more difficult,” the report says.

“Since women in Ukraine spend substantially more time per week on unpaid domestic work, they have been disproportionately affected, with half of women reporting that electricity cuts have had a major impact on food preparation and storage.

“Individuals with low mobility, older persons and families with small children struggled to safely leave or reach apartments in high-rise buildings with elevator service cuts.

“Widespread traffic-light outages created road hazards for drivers and pedestrians, while commuters faced challenges reaching their employment due to public transport disruptions.”

A blackout in Kharkiv
A blackout in Kharkiv (Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)
Jane Dalton19 September 2024 20:25
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Russia 'makes new advance in Donetsk’

Russian forces have taken control of the village of Heorhiivka in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region, the RIA state news agency has cited the Defence Ministry as saying.

It would be the latest in a series of reports by Russia of gains in eastern Ukraine, although Reuters could not independently verify it.

A Ukrainian serviceman pets dogs at the front line in Donetsk region
A Ukrainian serviceman pets dogs at the front line in Donetsk region (AP)
Jane Dalton19 September 2024 19:25
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The scale of losses is huge – and Russia is bearing the brunt

In case you missed it: The Independent’s frontline reporter Askold Krushelnycky looks at how death tolls on both sides are assessed:

I’ve witnessed first-hand the horrific cost of Putin’s war – as casualties hit 1m

As the conflict reaches its grim milestone, The Independent’s frontline reporter Askold Krushelnycky explains why Russian forces are taking the brunt of the damage

Jane Dalton19 September 2024 18:45
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Germany set to hand Ukraine €400m extra for weapons and drones

Germany is set to approve close to €400m in additional military aid to Ukraine, according to a finance ministry letter.

The funds are in addition to around €8bn budgeted for Ukraine in 2024 and a fresh package of tanks, vehicles, radars, weapons and other equipment.

Germany is Ukraine’s biggest supporter in Europe in terms of military aid.

“In view of the continuously deteriorating military situation in Ukraine, there is a serious risk that Ukraine, without significantly increased material support, could be defeated in its defence campaign,” the letter said.

Following a request by the defence ministry, the finance ministry in the letter is asking for the approval of the extra expenditure from the budget committee of the lower house of parliament.

The funds will be used to buy ammunition, fighting vehicles, drones and protective equipment, among other items.

German aid to Ukraine will be cut to €4bn next year, according to the draft of the 2025 budget, as the country hopes Ukraine will be able to meet the bulk of its military needs with loans from the proceeds of frozen Russian assets approved by the Group of Seven.

Jane Dalton19 September 2024 17:45
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Russia launches fresh air strikes on Ukraine’s energy network

Russia has targeted Ukrainian energy facilities in a new wave of air strikes, Ukrainian officials have said, despite a UN monitoring body saying attacks on the power grid probably violated humanitarian law.

Regional officials said civilian infrastructure had also been damaged, and the International Energy Agency warned of an electricity shortfall in Ukraine this winter.

Ukraine’s air force said it had shot down all 42 drones and one of four missiles launched by Russia.

Three people were killed in shelling near Krasnopillia in the Sumy region on Wednesday evening and two were wounded in shelling of the frontline region on Thursday that damaged a medical institution, local prosecutors said.

Ukraine’s energy ministry said power cuts had been introduced in 10 regions, and the IEA said in a report that electricity supply shortfall in the winter months could reach about a third of expected peak demand.

The European Union said a fuel power plant was being dismantled in Lithuania to be rebuilt in Ukraine.

Kyiv says the targeting of its energy system is a war crime, and the International Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants for four Russian officials and military officers for the bombing of civilian power infrastructure. Moscow says power infrastructure is a legitimate military target.

A burnt transformer from a power plant damaged in a Russian missile attack goes on display in Kyiv
A burnt transformer from a power plant damaged in a Russian missile attack goes on display in Kyiv (AP)
Jane Dalton19 September 2024 16:59
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Russian funds to be used for heating in Ukraine

European Union chief Ursula von der Leyen is heading to Ukraine tomorrow, with the promise of €160m (£134m) in fresh energy funds to heat homes, hospitals and schools through the winter.

Much of the funds will come the proceeds of the Russian assets held in the EU. “It is only right that Russia pays for the destruction it caused,” she said.

EU chief travels to Kyiv with promise of fresh energy funds to get Ukraine through winter

European Union chief Ursula von der Leyen is traveling to war-ravaged Ukraine with the promise of 160 million euros in fresh energy funds to get the nation through the winter

Jane Dalton19 September 2024 16:15

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