Tag: Russia

  • Russia declares end of mobilisation for Ukraine war

    Russia declares end of mobilisation for Ukraine war

    Russia says it has finished calling up reservists to fight in Ukraine, having drafted hundreds of thousands of people in a month, with more than a quarter of them already sent to the battlefield.

    The announcement appears to bring to a close a divisive mobilisation drive – Russia’s first since World War II – which had seen tens of thousands of men flee the country and gave rise to the first sustained public protests against the war.

    “The task set by you of [mobilising] 300,000 people has been completed. No further measures are planned,” Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu told President Vladimir Putin at a televised meeting in the Kremlin. He said 82,000 had already been sent to the combat zone and the rest were training.

    Putin thanked reservists “for their dedication to duty, for their patriotism, for their firm determination to defend our country, to defend Russia, which means their home, their family, our citizens, our people”.

    Both men acknowledged “problems” in the early days of the call-up. Shoigu said initial issues in supplying newly mobilised troops had since been resolved. Putin said mistakes had probably been inevitable as Russia had not carried out a mobilisation for such a long time, but that lessons had been learned.

    Zelensky doubts call-up ending

    Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said he doubted Moscow was finished calling soldiers up.

    Russian forces “are so poorly prepared and equipped, so brutally used by their command, that it allows us to presume that very soon Russia may need a new wave of people to send to the war”, Zelensky said in his nightly televised address.

    The mobilisation which Putin ordered last month after his forces suffered major setbacks on the battlefield was the first time most Russians faced a direct personal impact from the “special military operation” launched in February.

    More than 2000 people were arrested in anti-mobilisation protests, notably in parts of the country populated by ethnic minorities who complained they were being disproportionately targeted to be sent to the front.

    Putin and other officials have acknowledged some mistakes, including calling up some men who were too old or unfit, but said problems would be resolved. Tens of thousands of Russian men are believed to have fled the country to avoid being forced to fight, many to neighbouring former Soviet republics.

    Call-up may ease manpower problems

    Putin ordered the call-up in September at the same time as he endorsed plans to annex Ukrainian lands. The West describes those moves as an escalation of the conflict in response to setbacks on the battlefield that showed Russia was on course to lose the war.

    Western military analysts have said the call-up could help ease Moscow’s shortages of manpower along the 1000km front line, but the draft’s military value will depend on whether Moscow can properly equip and train the reservists.

    Meanwhile, Kyiv has continued to make gains. Serhiy Gaidai, the Ukrainian governor of Luhansk province, said on Friday advancing Ukrainian troops had practically gained full control of an important road connecting Svatove and Kreminna, major towns seen as the next big battle front in the east. Reuters could not independently verify the claim.

    In the south, Ukrainian forces have advanced this month towards Kherson, the biggest city Russia has captured intact since the invasion in February, at the mouth of the wide Dnipro River that bisects Ukraine. The surrounding region controls land approaches to Crimea, which Moscow has held since 2014.

    The Ukrainian advance appears to have slowed in recent days, however, with Kyiv blaming poor weather and tough terrain.

    The enemy troops dug into muddy trench lines north of the city exchanged rocket, mortar and artillery fire.

    Ukrainian soldiers manning a 120mm mortar hidden in bushes loosed high explosive rounds in thundering bursts of flame at Russian positions around a grain silo less than a kilometre away.

    Hennadyi, 51, said the Russians were using the silo for cover and observation. It poked like a finger above a vast expanse of fields, a column of smoke floating behind it.

    Hennadyi said Ukrainian gunners were targeting Russian armoured vehicles and ammunition behind the silo and avoiding hitting the structure itself because of its importance to the agricultural region. But they did not have enough shells, he said.

    “For every one shell that we send, they send back five,” he said amid the shellfire duels. “They shoot at us most of the time.”

    Russia has ordered civilians out of a pocket of land it occupies on the west bank of the Dnipro River, which includes Kherson city. Kyiv said the evacuation of the area was cover for a forcible deportation of civilians by Russian forces, which Moscow denies.

    Sergey Aksyonov, the leader of Crimea, said work had been completed on moving residents seeking to flee Kherson to regions of Russia ahead of Ukraine’s expected counter-offensive.

    Ukraine’s general staff said hospital and business equipment was being removed from the area, while extra Russian forces were being deployed in empty homes.

    Putin’s escalation in recent weeks has also included a new campaign to rain down missiles and Iranian-made suicide drones on Ukrainian civil infrastructure targets, particularly electricity substations.

    Kyiv said the strikes intended to freeze Ukrainians in winter were an intentional war crime. Moscow said it was permitted as retaliation for Ukrainian attacks including a blast on a bridge to Crimea.

  • Stoltenberg warns Russia not to ‘use false pretexts’ for escalation

    Stoltenberg warns Russia not to ‘use false pretexts’ for escalation

    NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg has said that “Russia must not use false pretexts for further escalation” in the Ukraine conflict.

    “Russia now falsely claims Ukraine is preparing to use a radiological ‘dirty bomb’ on its own territory,” the NATO boss said.

    “NATO allies reject this transparently false allegation.”

    “Russia often accuses others of what they intend to do themselves.

    “We have seen this pattern before. From Syria to Ukraine,” he added. “The world is watching closely.”

    Moscow had previously alleged that Ukraine was planning to detonate a radioactive “dirty bomb” in a bid to discredit Russia.

  • Putin declares martial law in four Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine

    Putin declares martial law in four Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine

    Russian President, Vladimir Putin,  on Wednesday introduced martial law in four Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine that Moscow claimed last month as its own territory.

    In televised remarks to members of his Security Council, Putin boosted the powers of Russia’s regional governors and ordered the creation of a special coordinating council under Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin to step up the faltering war effort.

    He said the “entire system of state administration”, not only the specialized security agencies, must be geared to supporting what Russia calls its “special military operation”.

    The package of moves, nearly eight months into the war, marked the latest escalation by Putin to counter a series of major defeats at the hands of Ukrainian forces since the start of September. A Kyiv official said it would change nothing.

    The published Kremlin decree ordered an “economic mobilization” in eight regions adjoining Ukraine, including Crimea, which Russia invaded and annexed in 2014.

    It placed them in a special regime one step below martial law and allowed for the restriction of people’s movements.

    Putin declares martial law in four Russian-occupied regions of Ukraine
    Russian President, Vladimir Putin

    Putin conferred additional powers on the leaders of all Russia’s 80-plus regions to protect critical facilities, maintain public order and increase production in support of the war effort.

    But it was far from clear how fast or how effectively the new measures might bolster Russia’s military position on the ground, and what effect they would have on public opinion.

    The Russian-installed acting governor of occupied Kherson, Vladimir Saldo, confirmed that he would hand power to the military.

    However, TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports that several Russian regions including Moscow that were named in parts of the decree said nothing would change for them.

    Putin’s order came on the day that Russian-installed officials in Kherson told civilians to leave some areas as soon as possible in anticipation of an imminent Ukrainian attack.

    Ukrainian presidential adviser, Mykhailo Podolyak, said on Twitter: “This does not change anything for Ukraine: we continue the liberation and de-occupation of our territories.”

     

  • Ukraine crisis: Russia’s president, Putin warns of global catastrophe

    Ukraine crisis: Russia’s president, Putin warns of global catastrophe

    Russia’s President Vladimir Putin said on Friday that any direct clash of Nato troops with Russia would lead to a “global catastrophe”.

    “I hope that those who are saying this are smart enough not to take such steps,” Putin said at a news conference in the Kazakh capital Astana following a summit of ex-Soviet nations.

    The Russian president also said he saw “no need” for talks with his US counterpart Joe Biden, as tensions with Washington soar over a litany of issues including Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

    “We should ask him if he’s ready to hold such talks with me or not. I don’t see the need, to be honest,” Putin said, when asked about a potential meeting with Biden on the sidelines of a G20 summit in November.

    He added that his participation in the summit hosted by Indonesia is not yet decided. “The question of my trip there has not been finalised. Russia will certainly take part. As for the format, we’re still thinking about it,” Putin told reporters. Speaking earlier this week, Biden said he had “no intention” of meeting with Putin but did not rule out potential talks.

    ‘No need now for massive strikes’

    Putin said he does not plan more “massive” strikes against Ukraine “for now” and that the Kremlin’s aim was not to “destroy” the pro-Western country.

    “There is no need now for massive strikes. There are other tasks. For now.

    And then it will be clear,” Putin said. “We do not set ourselves the task of destroying Ukraine.”

    He spoke days after Russia unleashed a wave of missile strikes across Ukraine, including on the capital Kyiv.

    Putin, who sent troops to Ukraine on February 24, is facing increasing isolation and criticism even from allies.

    But he said Russia is “doing everything right” in Ukraine — despite a failed attempt to topple the government and weeks of territorial losses.

    “What is happening today is not pleasant. But all the same (if Russia hadn’t attacked in February) we would have been in the same situation, only the conditions would have been worse for us,” he said. “So we’re doing everything right.”

  • ‘We do not want a world war’ – Macron tells Putin

    ‘We do not want a world war’ – Macron tells Putin

    French President Emmanuel Macron has called on Russian President Vladimir Putin to give up his war in Ukraine, saying the world did not want to see an escalation of the violence.

    “We do not want a world war,” Macron tweeted on Thursday.

    “We are helping Ukraine to resist on its soil, never to attack Russia.

    “Vladimir Putin must stop this war and respect Ukraine’s territorial integrity,” the president said.

    Macron also explained France’s continued arms deliveries to Ukraine, which he announced the previous evening.

    The assistance includes “CAESAR howitzers to conduct the counter-offensive, radars, systems, and missiles to protect from air attacks, armoured vehicles, and training.”

    Macron pledged France would “continue to support the Ukrainian resistance and boost our military assistance.”

    In an hour-long TV interview with France 2 on Wednesday night, Macron said he is ready to speak with the Russian president at any time.

    “Any time it is necessary, I will talk to Vladimir Putin and at some point, I hope as soon as possible, all parties will return to a negotiating table and there will be peace negotiations between Ukraine and Russia,” he said.

  • Russia can’t erase sovereign state from map, says Biden

    Russia can’t erase sovereign state from map, says Biden

    U.S. President said the UN resolution against Russia’s annexations in Ukraine, passed with a historic majority, was a message to Moscow that it can’t erase sovereign state from the map.

    “Today, the overwhelming majority of the world nations from every region, large and small, representing a wide array of ideologies and governments voted to defend the United Nations Charter.

    “It condemn Russia’s illegal attempt to annex Ukrainian territory by force,” Joe Biden said in a statement.

    “The stakes of this conflict are clear to all and the world has sent a clear message in response: Russia cannot erase a sovereign state from the map.

    “Russia cannot change borders by force. Russia cannot seize another country’s territory as its own,” Biden said.

    “Nearly eight months into this war, the world has just demonstrated that it is more united, and more determined than ever to hold Russia accountable for its violations,” the U.S. leader added.

    The UN General Assembly on Wednesday condemned Russia’s recent move to annex the eastern Ukrainian regions of Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhya, by a vote of 143-5, with 35 countries abstaining.

  • Russian attacks on Ukraine could be war crimes – UN

    Russian attacks on Ukraine could be war crimes – UN

    UN Human Rights Office in Geneva on Tuesday said the spate of recent deadly Russian attacks on Ukraine could be classified as war crimes.

    The UN spokesperson, Ravina Shamdasani said “attacks targeting civilians and objects indispensable to the survival of civilians are prohibited under international humanitarian law.

    “The location and timing of the strikes when people were commuting to work and taking children to school is particularly shocking.’’

    In addition to putting civilians in harm with strikes on city centres, 12 energy companies and other important infrastructure were hit, the office said.

    Shamdasani said attacking power plants just before winter hits particularly vulnerable people who are unable to flee because of their age or illness.

    Ukrainian authorities on Tuesday spoke of 19 dead as a result of the attacks on Monday.

    The UN Human Rights Office called on Russia to refrain from further escalation and to do everything in its power to avoid civilian casualties and damage to civilian infrastructure.

  • Erdogan, Putin scheduled to meet later this week

    Erdogan, Putin scheduled to meet later this week

    Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan will hold a meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin later this week in the Kazakh capital of Astana, a Turkish presidential source said on Tuesday.

    The meeting between the two leaders is scheduled for Thursday, on the sidelines of an Asian security summit, the source said.

    Erdoğan and Putin will discuss “the idea of holding talks between Russia and the West,” Turkish.

    Local media reported that 11 leaders are expected at the summit of the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia (CICA).

    Ukraine is not on the list.

    NATO member Turkey has positioned itself as a mediator between Ukraine and Russia since Moscow invaded its neighbour in February.

    While Ankara has criticised Moscow, it has refused to join Western sanctions.

  • U.S. President, Biden reiterates commitment to supply weapons to Ukrainian forces

    U.S. President, Biden reiterates commitment to supply weapons to Ukrainian forces

    United States President, Joe Biden, has reiterated America’s commitment to supply billions in aid and weapons to Ukrainian forces, following Russia’s latest aerial assault on Ukraine.

    Biden, in a statement, denounced Russia’s latest hit, stressing that the attacks “only further reinforce our commitment”.

    Biden, Secretary of State- Antony Blinken and leading military officials all spoke out in the wake of the strikes that Russian President, Vladimir Putin, called retaliation for a weekend explosion that damaged a key bridge linking Russia and Crimea, the disputed peninsula Putin annexed from Ukraine in 2014.

    On Sunday night, 12 Russian missile strikes hit residential Zaporizhzhia neighborhoods in Ukraine, Ukrainian officials said, and on Monday morning another series of Russian missiles struck civilian targets in Kyiv, Lviv, Kharkiv and other cities.

    At least 11 people died and 64 were wounded across eight oblasts and the capital of Kyiv, according to the Ukrainian State Emergency Service, while power and other critical infrastructure services like energy were interrupted in several cities.

    U.S. President, Biden reiterates commitment to supply weapons to Ukrainian forces

    In a statement issued as he was returning to the White House from Delaware, Biden said the missile attacks demonstrate Putin’s “utter brutality” in the “illegal war on the Ukrainian people.”

    Biden spoke Monday with Zelenskyy, the White House said later that day; and Biden is expected to attend a virtual meeting on Tuesday of the Group of Seven countries to discuss the situation.

    The White House said that in his call with Zelenskyy, Biden “conveyed his condolences to the loved ones of those killed and injured in these senseless attacks” and “pledged to continue providing Ukraine with the support needed to defend itself, including advanced air defense systems.”

    In a tweet, however, Zelenskyy said air defenses were critical. He and others in Ukraine have urged the U.S. to institute a so-called no-fly zone to deter Russian air strikes.

    But the U.S. believes such a direct step could risk escalating the conflict beyond Ukraine and into a continental if not global war.

    The president last week warned of a possible nuclear “Armageddon,” given Putin’s repeated invocations of his country’s arsenal amid Russia’s recent string of defeats in Ukraine.

  • Massive Abuses: Russia’s mass strike on Ukraine is horrific- NATO reacts

    Massive Abuses: Russia’s mass strike on Ukraine is horrific- NATO reacts

    Jens Stoltenberg, Secretary General of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, NATO, has condemned Russia’s mass strike on Ukraine on Monday morning, describing it as horrific.

    Stoltenberg tweeted condemnation of Russia’s “horrific & indiscriminate attacks on civilian infrastructure.”

    He said: “NATO will continue supporting the brave Ukrainian people to fight back against the Kremlin’s aggression for as long as it takes.”

    Oblast Attack: Russia's mass strike on Ukraine is horrific- NATO reacts

    On Monday morning, Russia launched 75 missiles toward Ukraine but Forty-one of those missiles were struck down by air defenses, said Ukraine’s Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces, Valeriy Zaluzhnyi.

    Explosions were heard in Kyiv, Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, Lviv, Zhytomyr, Kharkiv and Ternopil.

    Two missiles landed in quick succession on the edges of Shevchenko Park in central Kyiv, one striking a busy intersection next to a major university.

    The second hit a children’s playground in a park about 20 metres away from apartment blocks.

    TheNewsGuru.com recalls that France President, Emmanuel Macron, had said Russia cannot be allowed to win the war in Ukraine, as Germany and France toughened their stance.

    “I really hope that the end [of the conflict] can be achieved by the end of the year, with a certainty and a desire, which is that Russia cannot and must not win,” the French president said at a news conference at the G7 summit.

    Massive Abuses: Russia's mass strike on Ukraine is horrific- NATO reacts

    TheNewsGuru.com reports that the missiles came two days after an explosion damaged the only bridge from Russia to the Crimean peninsula, which Moscow seized from Kyiv in 2014.

    Russia did not succeed in hitting any military targets in Ukraine, as most of the targets were civilian critical infrastructure responsible for providing heat and electricity.

    “With all these strikes across all the territory of Ukraine, they did not hit one military target only civilian ones,” an advisor to Ukraine’s president, Oleksiy Arestovych said in an interview.

    Sergei Surovikin, the man that Russia’s forces in Ukraine on Monday mass strikes

    Amid fury in Moscow on Saturday over the partial destruction of the Crimea bridge, Russian President, Vladimir Putin, appointed Sergei Surovikin- a man with a reputation for brutality and ruthlessness- to lead Russia’s forces in Ukraine.

    Experts say this morning’s bombing of Ukraine’s capital appeared to bear all his hallmarks.

    A military veteran who served in the Soviet Union’s ultimately doomed war with Afghanistan during the 1980s, the 55-year-old is infamous for ordering troops to open fire on pro-democracy protesters in Moscow in 1991.

    He went on to lead Russian forces’ intervention during the Syrian War in 2017.

    There, he was allegedly complicit in the indiscriminate bombing of opposition fighters and of overseeing chemical weapons attacks, in a campaign thought to have been pivotal in helping Syria’s government regain control over most of the country.

    His appointment has raised fears that Russia could be about to shift towards a major escalation of its war with Ukraine – and that it could increase the risk that nuclear weapons might be used.

    Putin’s warning on harsh response, if attacks continue against Russia 

    According to Putin, the hit was revenge for an attack on a key Russian bridge on Saturday.

    He warned that “if attacks continue against Russia, the response will be harsh.”

    Massive Abuses: Russia's mass strike on Ukraine is horrific- NATO reacts

    In his words: “To leave without an answer to a crime of such a type is already simply impossible. This morning, at the proposal of Russia’s ministry of defense and general staff, a massive strike of high precision, long-range weapons have been delivered from air, land and sea, on Ukraine’s energy facilities, military command and communication.

    “In the case of continuing terrorist attack on our territory, the answers from Russia will be severe and by their scale correspond to the level of threat created for the Russian Federation. No one should have any doubts about that.”