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Ukraine-Russia war latest: Putin’s missile attack on energy grid is ‘vile escalation’ as 1m without power

Explosions heard across Ukraine in Russia’s second big attack on country’s energy system this month

Arpan Rai,Andy Gregory,Tara Cobham
Thursday 28 November 2024 05:44 EST
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Related: Vladimir Putin hints at strikes on West

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Russia’s “massive” attack on energy infrastructure across Ukraine has been condemned by Volodymyr Zelensky as a “vile escalation” as at least one million people have been left without power.

In Russia’s second big attack on Ukraine’s energy grid this month, damage to the energy and other critical infrastructure was reported by officials in Lviv, Volyn, Rivne and Khmelnytskyi regions in the west, the Mykolayiv and Kherson regions in the south, and Zhytomyr region in the centre.

The Ukrainian President said Russia used cruise missiles with cluster munitions in Thursday's attack, calling it a “vile escalation”.

The strike – the 11th major one on the Ukrainian energy system since March – reinforced fears of long power cuts during the winter months as temperatures across Ukraine hover around zero.

Russia had knocked out about half of Ukraine’s available generating capacity, damaged the distribution system and forced long blackouts.

“Energy infrastructure is once again targeted by the enemy’s massive strike,” Ukrainian energy minister Herman Halushchenko said on Facebook.

Ukrainian air defence shot down 79 out of 91 Russian missiles and downed 35 drones, the air force said.

It comes as a former Ukrainian foreign minister said Vladimir Putin will not accept a peace deal pushed by US president-elect Donald Trump, because the Russian president is “obsessed” with “crushing” Ukraine and exposing the weakness of the West.

Russia is still working to deploy Sarmat intercontinental missile, TASS says

Russia is continuing work to put its Sarmat intercontinental ballistic missile – part of its strategic nuclear arsenal – on combat duty, state news agency Tass has said.

The RS-28 Sarmat missile is designed to deliver nuclear warheads to strike targets thousands of miles away in the United States or Europe, but its development has been dogged by delays and testing setbacks.

In September, arms experts said Russia appeared to have suffered a catastrophic failure in the missile's latest test, leaving a deep crater at the launch silo.

Reuters27 November 2024 13:12

Russian minister claims Oreshnik missile launch needed to make Moscow’s voice heard

Russian deputy foreign minister Sergei Ryabkov has said that the use of the new Oreshnik intermediate-range ballistic missile against Ukraine was needed to make Moscow’s voice heard.

State news agency RIA quoted Mr Ryabkov as saying that Russia did not believe that the time for negotiations with the West had passed, but that it now needed to use stronger methods in order to get its point heard clearly.

Footage appears to show Russia’s ‘Oreshnik’ missile hitting Ukraine
Andy Gregory27 November 2024 12:56

Signing a peace deal ceding Ukrainian land to Russia ‘would be the end of Zelensky politically’

Any move by Volodymyr Zelensky to sign a peace deal which cedes territory to Russia would “be the end of” him politically, his former foreign minister has said.

With Donald Trump expected to push a deal upon Kyiv potentially freezing the current conflict, Dymtro Kuleba told Politico: “The Russians keep the Donbas, they keep Crimea, no Nato membership.

“Can Zelensky sign? He cannot because of the Constitution. And because it will be the end of Zelensky politically.”

Andy Gregory27 November 2024 12:37

Jailed Moscow politician urges end to Ukraine war at start of new terrorism trial

A Moscow district councillor serving a seven-year sentence for criticising Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has staged an anti-war protest from a courtroom cage at the start of a new trial against him on charges of justifying terrorism.

In summer 2022, Alexei Gorinov became the first person in Russia to be jailed under a new wartime censorship law which punished the dissemination of “deliberately false information” about the Russian army.

He is now further charged by Russian prosecutors with “justifying terrorism” for alleged conversations he had with cellmates about Ukraine’s Azov battalion, which Moscow considers a terrorist group, and the bombing of a bridge in Russian-annexed Crimea, independent outlet Mediazona reported.

Mr Gorinov, 63, risks up to five more years in prison if found guilty. His lawyers and supporters have voiced concerns about his health in prison, where they say he regularly suffers from bronchitis and is sometimes forced to shovel snow while ill.

From behind the bars of the defendants’ cage in the city of Vladimir, east of Moscow, Mr Gorinov held up a sign on Wednesday reading “Stop killing” and “Let’s stop the war”, accompanied by a drawing of a peace sign.

Mediazona reported that Mr Gorinov denied the terrorism charge on Wednesday, and told the court: “I have nothing to do with your terrorism and never have in my entire life. I was imprisoned for seven years only for speaking out ... about the fact that civilians are suffering and children are dying during the war.

“Life has shown that I was right.”

Andy Gregory27 November 2024 12:19

Republican claims Biden could be trying to start nuclear war to sabotage Trump

US Republican politician Marjorie Taylor Greene has baselessly suggested that outgoing president Joe Biden may be trying to start a nuclear war in Europe before he leaves office in order to sabotage Donald Trump’s incoming administration.

The Georgia populist, who is never short of a wild conspiracy theory, took to X on Monday to respond to a thinly-sourced post by conservative influencer Mario Nawfal on the Russia-Ukraine war that read: “WTF: U.S WANTS TO ARM UKRAINE WITH NUKES BEFORE BIDEN LEAVES?!

However, there is no evidence at all to suggest he is seeking to escalate the war for domestic political gain or has any intention of returning nuclear weapons to the former Soviet satellite state for the first time in three decades – a move that Russian security official Dmitry Medvedev has warned would invite a direct retaliation from Moscow.

My colleague Joe Sommerlad reports:

Marjorie Taylor Greene suggests Biden ‘trying to start a nuclear war’ to thwart Trump

MAGA Republican baselessly claimed the president is seeking to sabotage his successor’s incoming administration by dramatically escalating conflict in Europe

Andy Gregory27 November 2024 11:59

Slovakia’s Fico and Trump discuss Ukraine war

Slovakia’s prime minister Robert Fico has held a phone call with Donald Trump in which he and the US president-elect’s discussions focused mainly on the war in Ukraine, the Slovakian government has said.

After taking office more than a year ago, Fico’s leftist-nationalist government immediately halted military supplies to Kyiv, while allowing commercial sales to continue, and it has argued that weapons deliveries are prolonging the war there.

Mr Fico’s stance, which echoes that of Hungary’s Viktor Orban – viewed as the European Union leader closest to Mr Putin – contrasts with the official position of the EU, which has mostly looked to isolate Moscow.

The Slovakian leader drew criticism from the country’s opposition last month when he appeared in an interview on Russia’s state-run Rossiya-1 television channel, in which he criticised the EU’s approach to the Ukraine war.

Andy Gregory27 November 2024 11:42

Slovakia’s Fico to attend Victory Day commemoration in Moscow

Slovakian premier Robert Fico has said he has accepted an invitation from Vladimir Putin to attend Second World War commemorations in Moscow in May.

Just two other EU leaders – Hungary’s Viktor Orban and Austria’s Karl Nehammer – have visited Mr Putin since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Mr Fico, a leftist whose government has sought to improve relations with Russia, has spoken before about wanting to attend events in Moscow next year.

He said: “It is natural that as prime minister of the Republic of Slovakia I have an eminent interest in participating in the official celebrations of the victory over fascism, which will take place on May 9, 2025, in Moscow.

“I was therefore pleased to accept the official invitation of the President of the Russian Federation V. Putin to participate in these important celebrations, which I will do.”

Andy Gregory27 November 2024 11:25

Romanian far-right presidential candidate insists he does not want to leave Nato or EU

The surprise far-right winner of the first round of Romania’s presidential election has denied that he wants to leave Nato and the European Union, appearing to roll back some of his positions amid protests over his victory.

Having polled in single digits prior to the first round of Romania’s elections on Sunday, the 62-year-old independent candidate Calin Georgescu surged to a shock victory with 22.9 per cent of the vote, lining him up to face centrist contender Elena Lasconi in a run-off on 8 December.

Mr Georgescu has previously praised 1930s Romanian fascist politicians as national heroes and martyrs, has been critical of Nato and Romania’s pro-Ukraine position, and has said the country should engage, not challenge Russia.

Hundreds of protesters took to the streets of Bucharest on Tuesday evening, chanting: “No Putin, no fear, Europe is our mother,” and “young people ask you not to vote for a dictator”, with demonstrations also held in other major cities.

But in a stream on Facebook on Tuesday evening, he said: “I do not want to leave Nato, I do not want to leave the European Union. What I want, however, is to take a stance, not to kneel over there, not to take everything. Like I said, we should do everything in our national interest.”

Andy Gregory27 November 2024 11:10

Ukraine’s front lines ‘will collapse’ if Trump starves Kyiv of aid, Kuleba warns

Ukraine’s front lines “will collapse” if Donald Trump halts military aid for Ukraine, Kyiv’s former foreign minister has warned – as he criticised a lack of Western support for Kyiv in comparison with North Korea’s intensified backing of Russia.

“The front line in the Donbas will collapse and the Russians will be at the gates of Dnipro, Poltava and Zaporizhzhia,” Dmytro Kuleba told Politico. “That will be the most dangerous moment for Ukraine in this war.”

“People in Europe can be pissed off with me, but I kept saying, and I will keep saying, that the truth is today Russia has a friend ready to send its soldiers to die for Russia[’s] war,” he said, whereas Ukraine’s friends are hesitant even to send it the weapons it needs.

Andy Gregory27 November 2024 10:37

Poland’s Tusk to urge ‘navy policing’ in Baltic Sea

Polish prime minister Donald Tusk has said that he will urge Baltic and Nordic countries to take joint action regarding the security of Baltic Sea waters, during a two-day trip to Sweden.

In the face of an escalation of the conflict in Ukraine, Nato countries are taking joint action to protect themselves, including joint control of airspace over the Baltic countries within the framework of so-called “air policing”.

“I will convince our partners of the need to immediately create an analogous formula when it comes to the control and security of the Baltic waters, to ‘navy policing’, a joint undertaking of the countries that lie on the Baltic Sea and that have the same sense of threat when it comes to Russia,” Mr Tusk said.

Mr Tusk will take part in a meeting of the prime ministers of the Baltic and Nordic countries on Wednesday and Thursday, and will meet with Swedish premier Ulf Kristersson. The talks will cover transatlantic relations, regional cooperation on security and a common policy towards the Ukraine war.

Andy Gregory27 November 2024 10:19

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