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Ukraine has launched its first American-supplied long-range missile strike against Vladimir Putin’s forces, according to Moscow.
Russia’s Defense Ministry said that that Ukraine fired six U.S.-made ATACMs missiles at Russia’s Bryansk region. In a statement carried by Russian news agencies, the ministry said it shot down five of them and damaged one more.
Ukraine didn’t immediately confirm the use of ATACMs in a strike on the region.
However, Ukraine’s General Staff said the army carried out a strike on the arsenal of the 1046th Logistics Support Center in the area of Karachev in Bryansk region of Russia.
The updated doctrine, first announced in September but signed by Putin this week, declares that an attack using conventional weapons by any nation that is supported by a nuclear power will now be considered a joint attack on Russia. It does not specify whether a joint attack will trigger a nuclear response.
But the doctrine does declare that a massive aerial attack against Russia could trigger a nuclear response.
Putin’s silence hangs over Biden’s move to allow missile strikes inside Russia
Vladimir Putin has maintained a cold silence over Washington allowing Ukraine to strike with Russia with its American-made Army Tactical Missile System, or ATACMs.
However, early signals from the Kremlin warned that Mr Biden is adding “fuel to the fire” of the war and would escalate international tensions even higher.
Mr Biden’s decision almost entirely was triggered by North Korea’s entry into the fight, according to a US official who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations, and was made just before he left for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Peru.
“This is a signal the Biden administration is sending to North Korea and Russia, indicating that the decision to involve North Korean units has crossed a red line,” according to Glib Voloskyi, an analyst at the CBA Initiatives Center, a Kyiv-based think tank.
Arpan Rai19 November 2024 06:43
Russian attack kills six, including a child, on 1,000th day of war
Six people were killed, including a child, in Russia’s drone attack on Ukraine’s northeastern region of Sumy, regional officials said this morning.
At least 12 people were injured in the drone attack on a residential dormitory in the small town of Hlukhiv, the military administration of the Sumy region, which borders Russia, said on the Telegram channel.
Arpan Rai19 November 2024 06:18
Lammy responds to question over implications of Trump presidency for Ukraine
David Lammy said “one president at a time” when asked how concerned he was about the implications of Donald Trump’s presidency for the war in Ukraine.
Speaking to press after a meeting of the UN security council, the foreign secretary said: “I’ve studied in this country, I’ve worked in this country, and I know that there’s a simple rule: one president at a time.
“We’re dealing with President Biden and we are committed to putting Ukraine in the strongest possible position.”
Andy Gregory19 November 2024 05:57
Photos: Navalny’s wife and Russian opposition leaders condemn Putin’s 1,000 days of war
Yulia Navalnaya, widow of late Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, speaks during a demonstration of supporters of Russia’s exiled opposition in Berlin (AFP via Getty Images)
Supporters of Russia’s exiled opposition march with placards in support of Ukraine and against Russian president Putin during a demonstration in Berlin (AFP via Getty Images)
Russian-British activist, author and former political prisoner Vladimir Kara-Murza, Yulia Navalnaya, widow of late Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, and Russian opposition politician Ilya Yashin address participants during a demonstration of supporters of Russia’s exiled opposition near the Russian Embassy in Berlin (AFP via Getty Images)
Protesters demonstrate against Putin and Russia’s war on Ukraine in Berlin (Getty Images)
Arpan Rai19 November 2024 05:53
24 hours in Ukraine: A single day shows the reality of life as war hits 1,000 days
The clock on her wall stopped almost as soon as the day began, its hands frozen by the Russian bomb that hit the dormitory serving as home for Ukrainians displaced by war.
It was 1.45am in an upstairs room in the eastern city of Zaporizhzhia, Natalia Panasenko’s home for just shy of a year after the town she thinks of as her real home came under Russian occupation. The explosion blasted a door on top of her, smashed her refrigerator and television and shredded the flowers she’d just received for her 63rd birthday.
“The house was full of people and flowers. People were congratulating me ... and then there was nothing. Everything was mixed in the rubble,” she said. “I come from a place where the war is going on every day. We only just left there, and it seemed to be quieter here. And the war caught up with us again.”
The Associated Press fanned out across Ukraine to chronicle a typical 24 hours of life just as the country was about to mark 1,000 days since Russia’s full-scale invasion on Feb. 24, 2022
Arpan Rai19 November 2024 05:38
At last Biden is taking real steps to help Ukraine – but is it too little too late?
It should also prompt the British and French to follow suit and to generally encourage other allies to boost their support for Ukraine.
However, it is painful to reflect on how much more effective this change in tactics would have been had the move been made, say, a year or two ago. In hindsight, President Vladimir Putin’s veiled threats about escalation proved to be empty – and now no one thinks he’s about to bomb New York, Paris or London in revenge for the West giving the Ukrainians more firepower.
As it is, in the dying days of the Biden administration, it seems unlikely to be the kind of “game changer” that President Zelensky and his long-suffering people have been virtually begging from the West since the earliest days of this conflict.
Editorial: The US president sends a signal on his way out and although President-Elect Trump has a distaste for America’s involvement in the Ukraine war, that doesn’t mean he will bow down to Putin
Arpan Rai19 November 2024 05:21
How has Nato reacted to Biden’s clearance of missile to Kyiv strike Russia
Ukraine’s Nato allies have welcomed the green lighting move by Joe Biden to let Ukraine strike targets inside Russia with US-supplied longer-range missiles.
President Andrzej Duda of Poland, which borders Ukraine, praised the decision as a “very important, maybe even a breakthrough moment” in the war.
“In the recent days, we have seen the decisive intensification of Russian attacks on Ukraine, above all, those missile attacks where civilian objects are attacked, where people are killed, ordinary Ukrainians,” Mr Duda said.
Easing restrictions on Ukraine was “a good thing,” said foreign minister Margus Tsahkna of Russian neighbor Estonia.
“We have been saying that from the beginning — that no restrictions must be put on the military support,” he told senior European Union diplomats in Brussels. “And we need to understand that situation is more serious (than) it was even maybe like a couple of months ago.”
But Slovakian prime minister Robert Fico, known for his pro-Russian views, described Biden’s decision as “an unprecedented escalation” that would prolong the war.
Arpan Rai19 November 2024 05:20
ATACMS: The US-made long-range missiles Ukraine could use to strike Russia after Biden’s green light
Should Putin be afraid of Kyiv using Army Tactical Missile System rockets?
Arpan Rai19 November 2024 05:04
Watch: Zelensky responds to US decision to allow missile strikes in Russia
Ukrainian president Zelensky responds to US decision to allow missile strikes in Russia
Andy Gregory19 November 2024 04:53
Russian and Chinese foreign ministers discuss Ukraine at G20
Chinese and Russian foreign ministers discussed bilateral ties, the conflict in Ukraine, and the situation on the Korean peninsula on the sidelines of the G20 meeting in Brazil, they said today.
“We are truly at an unprecedented stage in the development of our strategic relations of a comprehensive partnership,” Russia’s Sergei Lavrov told China’s Wang Yi, according to a post on the Russian foreign ministry’s Telegram channel.
Mr Wang said Beijing is willing to work with Russia to further strengthen bilateral “comprehensive strategic coordination”, the Chinese foreign ministry said in a statement.
The “two sides also exchanged views on the Ukraine crisis and the situation on the Korean Peninsula”, it added without providing further details.
China and Russia have held a series of bilateral meetings since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine 1,000 days ago. The war isolated Moscow from Kyiv’s Western allies, bringing waves of sanctions on its politicians and businesses, but pushed it closer to China.
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