Russian commander Yevgeny Vashunin was killed on?the battlefield in Ukraine,?Russian state news agency TASS said on Monday.?
Ukraine’s defense minister said Kyiv’s counteroffensive is behind schedule but is still according to plan. Separately, the military said Russia’s been able to jam Ukrainian drones, impeding progress.
Experts with the UN nuclear watchdog discovered mines on the site of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, which is under Russian control, IAEA chief Rafael Grossi said Monday.??
Lithuania approves 3-year military assistance plan for Ukraine worth 200 million euros
From CNN’s Mariya Knight
Lithuania’s State Defence Council approved a military assistance plan to Ukraine, worth 200 million euros ($221 million), the Lithuanian Defense Ministry said in a statement on Monday.
Russian commander was killed while fighting in Ukraine, state news agency TASS reports
From CNN’s Mariya Knight and Josh Pennington?
Col. Yevgeny Vashunin, a Russian commander, was killed on?the battlefield in Ukraine,?the Russian state news agency TASS said Monday.?
Vashunin was a commander of the “Leningrad Regiment,” which consists of mobilized residents of St. Petersburg and the northwest regions of Russia, according to TASS.?
He “died after a serious injury?sustained?while performing?his?duty in the special military operation,” the news agency said.
Alexander Belsky, chairman of the Legislative Assembly of St. Petersburg, said that while on the battlefield, Vashunin decided to come to the aid of the Russian Storm detachment that was encircled by Ukrainian forces, TASS reported.?
During the fight with Ukrainians, he was “cut off from fellow soldiers and seriously wounded,”?Belsky said, according to TASS. “Despite self-help measures, he died.”
Vashunin was?”posthumously awarded the title of Hero of Russia,” Belsky said.?
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Ukraine will keep attacking targets in Crimea and the Kerch Bridge, defense minister says
From CNN's?Sebastian Shukla,?Alex Marquardt?and?Sana Noor Haq
The Kerch Bridge is pictured July 17.
Reuters
Ukraine’s Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov says that?Ukraine?will continue carrying out attacks on Russian-occupied Crimea and the Kerch Bridge that connects it to the Russian mainland, while also admitting that Ukraine’s plan for its sluggish counteroffensive is behind schedule.
As Russia has pummeled the southern port city of Odesa and the surrounding region over the past week, Ukraine has continued to carry out strikes inside Crimea. On Tuesday, Ukrainian drones hit an ammunition depot, just a week after seaborne drones struck the Kerch Bridge.
Asked if Ukraine’s goal is to permanently disable the bridge, Reznikov responded: “It’s normal tactics to ruin the logistic lines of your enemy to stop the options to get more ammunition, to get more fuel, to get more food, etcetera. That’s why we will use these tactics against them.”
Reznikov also accused Russia of operating as “a terrorist state.”
The fifth night of Russian strikes in Odesa badly damaged more than two dozen landmarks in the historic city center. Drones meanwhile pounded the region’s port infrastructure, targeting crucial grain stocks days.
UN nuclear watchdog chief says agency discovered mines at Zaporizhzhia plant site
From CNN’s Mariya Knight, Olga Voitovych and Josh Pennington??
A Russian service member stands guard at a checkpoint near the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant on June 15.
Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters
Experts from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) discovered mines at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear?power?plant (NPP)?site, agency chief Rafael Grossi said Monday —after previous claims by Kyiv that it had been mined.???
Zaporizhzhia NPP is currently occupied by Russian forces.?Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly called on world leaders to put pressure on Russia to hand the station over to the IAEA and for Russian fighters to leave the territory of the station.??
Grossi added that the IAEA team has been aware of the previous placement of mines outside and inside of the plant and they have been told that it was “a military decision, and in an area controlled by military.”?
“IAEA team saw some mines located in a buffer zone between the site’s internal and external perimeter barriers,” Grossi said, noting that the mines were “situated in a restricted area that operating plant personnel cannot access and were facing away from the site.”??
Grossi called having explosives on the site “inconsistent with the IAEA safety standards and nuclear security guidance.”??
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Air defenses are at work in Kyiv region, local official says
From CNN's Mariya Knight
Ukrainian air defenses are at work in the Kyiv region on the outskirts of the capital, according to Serhiy Popko, the head of the Kyiv city military administration.
Ukraine’s Air Force said there is a threat of Russian UAV attacks in the area.
The Kyiv city military administration also said there were air raid sirens in the country’s capital early Tuesday.
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A slow counteroffensive and drone strikes in Moscow: What to know about the war in Ukraine
From CNN staff
Progress is slow in Ukraine’s counteroffensive efforts, officials said, pointing to several variables that are impeding progress on the front lines.
Ukraine has claimed responsibility for drone strikes that hit Moscow and Crimea.
Here are the top headlines:
Ukraine counteroffensive: Kyiv’s counteroffensive?is behind schedule, according to Ukraine’s Defense Minister Oleskii Reznikov. He listed a few reasons why the counteroffensive may be slower than anticipated, including ammunition, artillery shells and artillery systems.?Other local officials said Russia’s electronic warfare capabilities are jamming Ukrainian drones. The situation on the southern front in Ukraine has been slowed largely due to intricate minefields laid by Russian forces who were given time to build up defenses.
Moscow drone attack:?Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence, an arm of the Ministry of Defense, says it?carried out a drone attack?on Moscow early Monday morning, a Defense Intelligence official told CNN. The Kremlin said that all the drones targeting the Russian capital?had been neutralized, in what Russian authorities described as a “thwarted” attack. The Russian foreign ministry issued a statement calling on international organizations to condemn the attack and recent Ukrainian strikes on Crimea.
Latest on Odesa attacks: Authorities in the southern Ukrainian city of Odesa say that part of the?city’s historic cathedral is structurally unsound?after the building was hit Sunday by a Russian missile. The Odesa strikes killed at least one person and injured several others, Ukrainian officials said, the latest in a wave of attacks on the port city. The attacks also destroyed other historic buildings, Ukraine’s culture ministry said.
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Russian ability to jam drones is slowing Ukrainian advance, military says
From CNN's Tim Lister, Olga Voitovych, Mari Kostenko and Josh Pennington
Ukraine’s counteroffensive is partly struggling because of Russian ability to jam drones, according to military officials.
Oleksandr Tarnavskyi, commander of the Ukrainian forces in the south, said heavy losses were being inflicted on the Russians, but it’s clear that progress is slow.
One reason, according to Ukrainian air force spokesperson Yuri Inhat, is that Russia has a major advantage in electronic warfare.?
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Ukrainian forces report modest progress. Here's where things stand
From CNN's Tim Lister, Olga Voitovych, Mari Kostenko and Josh Pennington
A Ukrainian service member prepares to fire a mortar near the city of Bakhmut in the Donetsk region on July 13, 2023.
Sofiia Gatilova/Reuters
Ukrainian forces say they are making modest progress in the east and south, as well as restraining Russian efforts to move forward in the Donetsk region, but overall there appears to have been little change on the front lines.
Ukrainian military officials said Russian minefields and electronic warfare capabilities are impeding progress.
Here’s where things stand:
In the south: Oleksandr Kurbatov, with the Dnipro city territorial defense, said Monday that Ukrainian units were working hard to move forward in an area known as the Vremivskyi Ledge.?
He said that Russian forces were bringing in new units of “highly qualified military” who are using the cover of darkness and carefully designed corridors through the minefields to attack Ukrainian positions.
Valerii Shershen, a spokesperson for Ukrainian forces in the south, acknowledged that progress was slow, saying that “strike units had partial success and advanced into enemy territory from 350 meters up to 1.4 kms.”?
Near Melitopol: The general staff of the Ukrainian military said that offensive operations continued in the Melitopol and Berdiansk directions, and units were consolidating their positions.
Russia carried out 58 air strikes over the past day — higher than the recent average, the general staff said. Some came near the town of Kupyansk in Kharkiv, which was liberated by the Ukrainians last September and has been a target of Russian attacks. But Ukrainian officials say the Russians are being held east of the Oskil River.?
Bakhmut and the East: In the Bakhmut area, there have been efforts by the Russians to retake recently lost ground, but the general staff said a number of attacks had been repelled.?
Serhii Cherevatyi, the spokesperson for the Eastern Grouping of the Ukrainian military, said that the defense forces “are gradually liberating Ukrainian land. Hundreds of meters every day, kilometers every week.”
But he said that fierce Russian resistance continued, with seven battles over the past day alone in which he claimed “94 occupiers were killed and 152 were wounded.”
CNN cannot verify Ukrainian claims of advances on the battlefield or of casualty numbers.
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Biden administration imposes sanctions on 3 Malian officials for facilitating Wagner Group
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
The Biden administration on Monday imposed sanctions against three Malian officials accused of facilitating the Wagner Group’s presence in that country.
The action comes weeks after Wagner chief Yevegny Prigozhin led an unsuccessful revolt against the Russian government. The Wagner Group is deeply entrenched in Mali and is accused of committing atrocities there.
The US Treasury Department imposed sanctions on Mali’s Minister of Defense Col. Sadio Camara, Chief of Staff of the Air Force Col. Alou Boi Diarra, and Malian Air Force Deputy Chief of Staff Lt. Col. Adama Bagayoko for their roles in supporting the Russian mercenary group.
According to the news release from the Treasury Department, “Camara planned and organized the deployment of the Wagner Group in Mali,” and in 2021, “Camara made several trips to Russia to solidify the agreement between the Wagner Group and the Malian transition government to deploy the Wagner Group to Mali.”
Diarra accompanied Camara on several of his trips to Russia, the Treasury Department said, and “in his previous role as Air Logistics Chief, Diarra significantly contributed to the logistical movement of Russian entities in Mali.”
“Together, Camara and Diarra formulated and executed the plan that ultimately ushered the Wagner Group into Mali,” the agency said.
“Bagayoko serves as an advocate for the Wagner Group to the Burkinabe transition government, working to secure the Wagner Group’s deployment to Burkina Faso,” the Treasury said. “Additionally, Bagayoko is also reportedly seeking to facilitate the Wagner Group’s access to gold mining in Mali.”
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US journalist with AFP news agency wounded in Russian drone attack near Bakhmut
From CNN's Tamara Qiblawi
An Agence France-Presse journalist was wounded in a Russian drone attack while reporting from a Ukrainian position near Bakhmut on Monday, according to AFP reporters who witnessed the attack.
Dylan Collins, a US citizen on assignment in Ukraine, sustained multiple shrapnel injuries in the attack in a forested area while reporting at a Ukrainian artillery position.
The video journalist was evacuated to a nearby hospital where he is being treated. Doctors say his condition is not life-threatening.
Since the start of a counteroffensive in June, Ukrainian forces have been advancing slowly to the north and south of Bakhmut in an attempt to surround Russian forces and eventually re-take the city.
Collins has been working for AFP since 2018 and has reported from Middle East conflict zones. He also covered the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh conflict for AFP.
Ukrainian counteroffensive is behind schedule but is going according to plan, defense minister says
From CNN's Sebastian Shukla and Alex Marquardt in Kyiv
Ukraine’s Defense Minister Oleskii Reznikov admitted that Kyiv’s counteroffensive is behind schedule, but insisted he is “not worried” because it is going according to plan, adding that it was a “misconception that every counteroffensive should be quick.”
The official said, “our generals, our commanders, they see the real situation on the battlefield. And again, I have to repeat the main value for us is the life of for our soldiers.”?
The situation on the southern front in Ukraine has been slowed largely due to intricate minefields laid by Russian forces who were given time to build up defenses. Ukrainian forces have had to resort to clearing, by hand, paths through the fields, Reznikov said.
The minister said the Russians have “serious security zones with the mines” and that it “very difficult to break through.”
“We need to use our soldiers, sappers, deminers very slowly, and very slowly preparing the corridors for the real offensive movement,” Reznikov said, adding this activity in different places would confuse Russians on the main direction that Ukraine would take.
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Ukraine defense minister claims Russia is at the start of a "transition moment" after failed Prigozhin mutiny
From CNN's Sebastian Shukla and Alex Marquardt in Kyiv
Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov.
CNN
Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov said he believes the start of a power “transition moment” is underway in Moscow after the failed Wagner rebellion last month.
“This coup d’état is a real illustration that regime in the Kremlin became weaker. It means they are not so strong as they were the year before. I think we will see the continuing of this so called conflict,” he told CNN.?
Asked if he was witnessing those around Russian President Vladimir Putin jockeying for position to replace him, Reznikov said, “I think the conflict among them started.”
More background: Prigozhin’s whereabouts have been unknown since the failed mutiny but a video emerged last week that appears to show?him?greeting his fighters in Belarus, in what would be his first public appearance since he led an?armed rebellion in Russia?last month. The video is grainy and filmed in low light so CNN cannot definitively say the speaker is Prigozhin or when it was filmed.
Zelensky appeals for an end to restrictions on Ukrainian grain exports through neighboring states
From CNN's Tim Lister and Olga Voitovych
With Ukrainian grain exports through the Black Sea at severe risk, President Volodymyr Zelensky is arguing for a lifting of European restrictions on exports via land.
The restrictions were introduced in five European states bordering Ukraine in May to protect their markets against being flooded with cheaper Ukrainian grain. They are due to expire in September.?
The European Commission stated when it introduced the measures: “Wheat, maize, rapeseed and sunflower seed originating in Ukraine can continue to be released for free circulation in all the Member States of the European Union other than the five frontline Member States: Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia. The products can continue to circulate in or transit via these five Member States by means of a common customs transit procedure or go to a country or territory outside the EU.”
The European Commission introduced the relief “given the exceptional circumstances of serious logistical bottlenecks experienced in five Member States.”
The restrictions have made it more difficult for Ukraine to export its grain using overland routes.
Zelensky said Monday: “We believe in the agreement with the European Commission, but we are preparing for any scenario. Our position is clear: blocking exports by land after September 15, when the relevant restrictions expire, is unacceptable in any form. We are in touch with all stakeholders to find a solution that suits everyone.”
Some context: Zelensky’s remarks come as Russia has repeatedly struck the southern port city of Odesa, damaging grain warehouses and further threatening Ukraine’s ability to export food after the Black Sea grain deal collapsed.
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Russian attacks on Odesa provide "new evidence they are a terrorist state," Ukrainian defense minister says
From CNN's Sebastian Shukla and Alex Marquardt in Kyiv
In this photo provided by the Ukrainian Armed Forces, a grain warehouse destroyed by a Russian drone strike is seen in a sea port in Odesa, Ukraine, on July 24.
Ukrainian Armed Forces/Reuters
Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov told CNN that he thinks Russia’s targeting of the Ukrainian port city of Odesa is an “absurd” approach and claimed the attacks were “new evidence they are a terrorist state.”
Speaking before the attack on the cathedral in Odesa over the weekend, Reznikov said in a wide-ranging interview with CNN senior national security correspondent Alex Marquardt that he was not surprised by the ferocity of the attacks, saying that “honestly, after February of last year, it is very difficult to surprise me.”
When asked if he felt the attacks were a response to Ukraine’s admitted attack on the Kerch Bridge on July 17, Reznikov said that Moscow “tried to explain that it’s a response for some explosions in their territories, but they are fighting with the civilians. That’s why I call them looters, rapists and murderers.”??
Last week, a CNN team in Odesa witnessed four consecutive nights of attacks against the port city. The attacks came as Russia withdrew from the crucial Black Sea grain initiative. Odesa had been one of the key ports that exported Ukrainian grain to the world under a wartime agreement.
On Russia’s withdrawal from the initiative, Reznikov said “You know, that is why I have a saying, the sign of Russian signature on the paper, costs less than the price of this piece of paper.”
Ukraine will respond if attacked in the Black Sea, Reznikov told CNN.
The defense minister said “we have capacity” and “if they threaten us in the Black Sea we’ll have to respond.”
Reznikov used the example of the Russian cruiser ship?The Moskva,?which sank after being targeted by Ukrainian naval forces in the Black Sea.?
Last week CNN reported US officials were worried Russia may target civilian ships in the Black Sea and “blame Ukraine.” CIA director Bill Burns said “false flag” attacks by Russia in the body of water could be being prepared.
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Odesa cathedral structurally unsound after being hit by Russian missile, mayor says
From CNN's Olga Voitovych
Authorities in the southern Ukrainian city of Odesa say that part of the city’s cathedral is structurally unsound after the building was hit Sunday by a Russian missile.
Odesa Mayor Hennadii Trukhanov said that one of the walls at the Transfiguration Cathedral “is in an unstable position and a sudden uncontrollable collapse may occur.”
Trukhanov said emergency work was required to dismantle the dangerous section of the wall and a temporary roof was needed.?
He thanked volunteers for helping to remove rubble, but added: “We need to understand that there are dangerous areas that can pose a threat.”
Some more context: The Odesa strikes killed at least one person and injured several others, Ukrainian officials said, the latest in a wave of attacks on the port city. The attacks also destroyed other historic buildings, Ukraine’s culture ministry said.
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US secretary of state spoke to the Romanian foreign minister after Russian strike near Romania
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
Secretary of State Antony Blinken talks to reporters in the press briefing room at the State Department Harry S. Truman headquarters building on July 17, 2023 in Washington, DC.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke on Monday with Romanian Foreign Minister Luminita Odobescu about “collective security and unwavering support for Ukraine and Moldova, global food security, and cooperation on Black Sea security,” according to a readout from State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller.
Their call comes in the wake of an overnight Russian strike on a Ukrainian port on the Danube River near Romania.
As CNN reported earlier, this is believed to be the closest to NATO territory a Russian-fired weapon has landed since the war began.
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Wheat prices rise after strikes on Ukrainian river port
One grain silo at the port of Reni was hit and substantially damaged, according to geolocated images and video.?
At 9 a.m. ET, the price of wheat for September delivery on the Chicago exchange was nearly 6% higher than the previous close.
Markets are concerned about a tightening supply situation following the collapse of the Black Sea grain initiative last week and a sequence of Russian drone attacks against Ukrainian port infrastructure.??
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Russian foreign ministry condemns Ukraine drone strikes and vows retaliation
From CNN's Anna Chernova
Members of the security services investigate the site of a damaged building following a reported drone attack in?Moscow, Russia, on July 24.
Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
The Russian foreign ministry has issued a statement calling on international organizations to condemn the recent Ukrainian drone attacks on Moscow and Crimea.?
“We strongly condemn this yet another crime of the Kyiv regime. We call on international organizations to give it a proper assessment,” it added.
The ministry blamed the West for exacerbating the situation, stating that the actions of Kyiv were influenced by the West’s focus on further escalating tensions.
“The Russian side reserves the right to take tough retaliatory measures,” the ministry said, adding that the Investigative Committee of Russia has opened criminal cases in response to these incidents, assuring that all those responsible will be identified and brought to justice.
Some context:?The reported attacks come after Russian missiles badly damaged a historic Orthodox cathedral in the southern Ukrainian port city of Odesa, sparking outrage and prompting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to vow retaliation.
The Odesa strikes killed at least one person and injured several others, Ukrainian officials said, the latest in a wave of attacks on the port city. The attacks also destroyed other historic buildings, Ukraine’s culture ministry said.
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It's mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know
From CNN staff
Members of the security services collect debris as they investigate near the site of a damaged building following a reported drone attack in?Moscow, Russia, on Monday, July 24.
Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
Ukrainian intelligence claimed responsibility for a targeted drone attack on Moscow early Monday, according to an official, as the Kremlin launched a barrage of strikes on the southern port city of Odesa amid intensified cross-border attacks from Russian and Ukrainian forces.
Here are the latest developments:
Drone attack in Moscow: Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence, an arm of the Ministry of Defense, says it carried out a drone attack on Moscow early Monday morning, a Defense Intelligence official told CNN. The Kremlin said that all the drones targeting the Russian capital had been neutralized, in what Russian authorities described as a “thwarted” attack.
Strikes in Odesa: At least 25 historical sites were damaged in a Russian assault on the southern port city, which is protected by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). A historic Orthodox cathedral in Odesa was destroyed, triggering widespread condemnation from Kyiv and its Western allies.
Russia targets Ukrainian grain: Moscow aimed Iranian-made Shahed drones at Ukrainian grain stocks on the Danube River overnight, the Ukrainian Army said, days after the Kremlin withdrew from a crucial deal that allowed for the safe export of Ukrainian wheat to international markets. The attack lasted for four hours.
Fighting escalates in Crimea: Traffic on the railroad and highways of parts of annexed Crimea were suspended “for safety reasons” following strikes on transport infrastructure, a Moscow-installed governor said on Monday. An ammunition depot was also hit. A Ukrainian security official said Kyiv was responsible for the attacks.
US-made cluster munitions: Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov told CNN he will share a report with Washington about the use of US supplied cluster munitions in Ukraine this week. The controversial and highly destructive weapons are outlawed by the UK, France, Germany and other key US allies, but the US and Ukraine are not signatories to the ban.
Age limit extended: Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law on Monday raising the age limit by five years for certain categories of citizens to remain in Russia’s military reserve. The new rules will take effect on January 1.
Here’s the latest map of control:
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Putin signs law extending age limit for military reservists
From CNN's Anna Chernova
Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a law on Monday that raises the age limit by five years for certain categories of citizens to remain in Russia’s military reserve, as Moscow intensifies attacks on Ukraine.
The amendments to the Federal Law “On military duty and military service,” published on the official portal of legal information, increases the age limits for various categories of servicemen, including soldiers, sailors, sergeants, foremen, warrant officers and midshipmen.
For soldiers, sailors and sergeants, the age limit increases from 35 to 40 years. For foremen and warrant officers, it increases from 45 to 50 years, and for midshipmen, it increases from 50 to 55 years.
Additionally, the law extends the maximum age limit for those in the mobilization reserve.
The new rules will take effect on January 1, 2024, with a transitional period until January 1, 2028 when citizens in the reserve will be gradually transferred to retirement.
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Romanian president condemns Russian strikes on Ukrainian river port
From CNN’s Clare Sebastian, Tim Lister, Vasco Cotovio and Andrew Carey
Romanian President Klaus Iohannis has criticized Moscow’s strikes on Ukraine’s river port infrastructure, calling them an “escalation” in the war.
“I strongly condemn the recent Russian attacks against the Ukrainian civilian infrastructure on Danube, very close to Romania,” Iohannis tweeted on Monday.
Romania, a NATO country, shares a border with Ukraine along the Danube River. The Danube, near the area that was struck overnight, is less that one kilometer wide.
“This recent escalation pose[s] serious risks to the security in the Black Sea,” he added. “It also affects further [Ukrainian] grain transit [and] thus the global food security.”
Russia targeted Ukrainian grain stocks overnight, the Ukrainian Army said earlier, days after Moscow withdrew from a crucial grain deal that allowed for the safe export of Ukrainian wheat to international markets — worsening a global food crisis.
Images shared with CNN by a witness on the Romanian side of the Danube show damage to the Ukrainian port of Reni, just across the river. The damage matches images shared by Ukrainian authorities earlier on Monday.?In this area, the Danube River is less than 500 meters wide (1,640 feet).?
Why this matters: From all available information, CNN believes this to be the closest to NATO territory a Russian-fired weapon has landed since the war began. In March 2022, an attack on the Yavoriv military base – which killed dozens – struck roughly ten miles from the Polish border.
Ukraine behind Moscow drone attack, Defense Intelligence official says
From CNN's Victoria Butenko
A member of the security services investigates a damaged building following a reported drone attack in Moscow on Monday.
Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence, an arm of the Ministry of Defense, says it carried out a drone attack on Moscow early Monday morning, a Defense Intelligence official has told CNN.
The official was speaking on condition of anonymity because they had not received authorization to talk publicly about the incident.
Russian authorities said that Ukrainian drones hit two non-residential buildings in Moscow, calling the incident a “thwarted” attack. The Kremlin said later that all the drones targeting the Russian capital had been neutralized.
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Kremlin says all drones neutralized in Moscow
From CNN's Anna Chernova
A member of the security services stands guard next to the site of a damaged building following a reported drone attack in Moscow, Russia, on July 24.
Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
Russian air defenses successfully neutralized all drones that targeted Moscow on Monday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
“All the drones have been neutralized today, and measures are being taken,” Peskov said. “As for the development of the defense system, ensuring its more intensive work, this is a question for the Ministry of Defense.”
When asked about potential retaliation for the strike, Peskov reiterated Moscow will carry on with what it calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine.
“The special military operation is ongoing, it will continue, and its goals must be accomplished,” he added.
A Ukrainian security official has claimed Kyiv’s responsibility for the drone strikes that hit the Russian capital of Moscow and Crimea overnight.
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Explosive traces found on ship that visited Ukrainian river port, Russian intelligence says
From CNN's Vasco Cotovio and Maria Kostenko
The Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) claims remnants of explosives were found aboard a bulk carrier crossing the Black Sea, which had made a stop at a Ukrainian river port earlier this year.
“On July 22, in the hold of a foreign dry cargo ship en route from Turkey to the port of Rostov-on-Don to load grain crops, traces of explosives – dinitrotoluene and tetryl were found,” the FSB said on Monday, according to Russian state news agency TASS.
“Signs of third-party interference in the structural parts of the dry cargo ship were also revealed.”
The vessel allegedly visited the Ukrainian river port of Kiliya, on the Danube River, and in July its 12-sailor Ukrainian crew was swapped out and the name of the vessel changed, the FSB claimed, according to TASS.
“These circumstances may indicate the possibility of using a foreign civilian ship to deliver explosives to the territory of Ukraine,” the FSB added.
The port of Kiliya was not part of the now defunct UN-brokered Black Sea Grain Initiative, which included the ports of Chornomorsk, Odesa and Yuzhny/Pivdennyi, with a much larger export capacity. Moscow announced last week it was pulling out of the grain deal.
The expired grain deal allowed for the safe shipment of grain from docks in southern Ukraine, after Russia barricaded ports and exacerbated a global food crisis.
Russian drone strikes have ramped up in the region along the Danube port, amid threats from Moscow against civilian ships crossing the Black Sea.
Overnight, Russia launched what Ukrainian authorities on Monday described as “4-hour-long attack by Shahed-136 drones” directed at its port infrastructure on the Danube. The attacks hit infrastructure used to export grain, but it was not immediately clear which port was hit.
Three drones were destroyed by air defense forces, although “some got through,” according to military officials in Odesa.
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Drones brought down near Russian Ministry of Defense complex in Moscow
From CNN's Teele Rebane, Tim Lister and Vasco Cotovio
Police secure an area outside a damaged non-residential building on Komsomolsky Prospekt after a reported drone attack in Moscow, on July 24.
Alexander Nemenov/AFP/Getty Images
One of the drones spotted in Moscow on Monday was brought down near a Russian Ministry of Defense complex. Social media footage of the aftermath, verified by CNN, showed damage to one of its buildings.
One of the buildings seen damaged in footage geolocated by CNN houses the Russian Ministry of Defense military orchestra. It was not immediately clear if the damage had been caused by the drones.
The area also houses the Russian Foreign Military Intelligence, known as GRU, 26165 unit, which carries out cyber activities, according to multiple Western sources. It’s also in the vicinity of the Russian Ministry of Defense’s National Defense Management Center.
Drones struck two non-residential buildings in Moscow in the early hours of Monday morning and were “suppressed” by defenses there, Russian authorities said, describing the incident a “thwarted” attack.
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Ukrainian minister claims responsibility for strikes in Moscow and Crimean peninsula
From CNN Maria Kostenko and Vasco Cotovio
Mykhailo Fedorov attends a briefing in Kyiv on June 19.
A Ukrainian security official has claimed Kyiv’s responsibility for the drone strikes that hit the Russian capital of Moscow and Crimea overnight.
Fedorov’s ministry is in charge of the Ukrainian “Army of Drones” initiative, the government’s drone procurement plan.?
Ukraine almost never publicly claims responsibility for attacks that have taken place on Russian soil or in Russian-occupied territories?during the course of the war, but has recently admitted its role in the huge explosion of the Crimean bridge in October.
What happened? The Russian Ministry of Defense says Ukraine launched 17 drones toward Crimea overnight through Monday, referring to strikes on the peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russian forces in 2014, as a “terrorist attack.”
A Russian?ammunition?depot was hit by the Ukrainian drone attack in Crimea.
Meanwhile in Russia, Ukrainian drones struck two non-residential buildings in Moscow in the early hours of Monday morning and were “suppressed” by defenses there, Russian authorities said, describing the incident a “thwarted” attack.
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Ukrainian Defense Minister to share cluster munitions report with US this week
From CNN's Sebastian Shukla and Alex Marquardt in Kyiv
Oleksii Reznikov participates at a NATO Summit in Vilnius on July 12.
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images
The Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov has said he will share a report with the United States about the use of US supplied cluster munitions in Ukraine this week.
The minister, speaking to CNN’s Alex Marquardt in Kyiv over the weekend, said he is awaiting the report which he will then pass on to the Pentagon “probably Monday or Tuesday,” meaning?July 24 or 25.
Reznikov, speaking exclusively to CNN added, “we’ll report about the consequences of this using [cluster munitions] so I think that next week I would have first report and I will share with my partners in Pentagon?this reports. I hope that they will be more efficient than normal ammunition.”?
On Thursday the White House’s John Kirby said that?Ukrainian forces are using US-provided cluster munitions against Russia “appropriately” and “effectively” in combat.”
Reznikov wouldn’t offer detail before the report comes but said he expects them to be most effective “especially against the artillery systems, especially during the counter battery fighting and also they will be efficient against the armored personnel carriers, for the infantry fighting vehicles, they will also be good against their infantry in the fields.”
The sharing of the report is part of the deal with the Pentagon to obtain the cluster munitions, called DPICMS, Reznikov said.?
The US has said the decision to provide Ukraine with DPICMs is due to a low supply of the standard unitary 155mm artillery round. The supply of clusters is “temporary,” according to US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan.
CNN was first to report that the US clusters had arrived in Ukraine.
Why is it controversial?Cluster munitions scatter “bomblets” across large areas, which would allow Ukrainian forces to target larger concentrations of Russian forces and equipment with fewer rounds of ammunition.
But the bomblets can also fail to explode on impact, and can pose a long-term risk to anyone who encounters them, similar to landmines.
The UK, France, Germany and other key US allies have outlawed the munitions under the Convention on Cluster Munitions, but the US and Ukraine are not signatories to the ban.
The Russian Ministry of Defense says Ukraine launched 17 drones toward Crimea overnight, referring to strikes on the peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russian forces in 2014, as a “terrorist attack.”
The ministry said 14 Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles?(UAVs) “were suppressed by means of radio-electronic warfare”.
Three of the drones were shot down by Russian air defenses, three fell into the Crimean peninsula and 11 of the drones fell into the Black Sea, the Russian Ministry of Defense said.
“There were no casualties,” the MOD added.
Some context: Earlier on Monday, Sergey Aksyonov, the Moscow-installed governor of Crimea had said an ammunition depot and a house had been destroyed in strikes hitting Crimea overnight into Monday. He also said road and rail traffic had been suspended in certain areas of the peninsula.?
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Crimea highway and railroad suspended after Ukrainian strikes, Russian-installed official says
From CNN’s Maria Kostenko and Martin Goillandeau
Traffic on the railroad and highways of parts of Crimea have been suspended “for safety reasons” following drone attacks on transport infrastructure, Sergey Aksyonov, the Moscow-installed governor of the annexed region said on Monday.
The northern part of the occupied Crimean peninsula were heavily affected, with the railroads of the Dzhankoi district and the Dzhankoi-Simferopol highway closed off, according to Aksyonov.
He added that residents within a 5 kilometer (3 mile) radius from the site of the accident in Dzhankoi district “would be evacuated?to temporary accommodation centers.”
There were no reported casualties in the attack, he added.
Aksyonov earlier said that Ukrainian strikes hit Crimea overnight into Monday, damaging an ammunition depot in the peninsula.
CNN has not independently verified the reports of the attacks.
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Russian?ammunition?depot hit by Ukrainian drone attack in Crimea, Russian-appointed official says
From CNN’s Maria Kostenko in Kyiv
An ammunition depot and a house were destroyed in strikes hitting Crimea overnight into Monday, according to Sergey Aksyonov, the Russian-installed head of the occupied region.?
Aksyonov said in a statement that “eleven enemy UAVs were shot down by air defense forces and suppressed by electronic warfare equipment in the skies over Crimea.”
CNN has not independently verified reports of the attacks.
This comes after Ukrainian forces hit an ammunition dump in?Crimea on Saturday, forcing an evacuation of the area and canceling train services, Russian-backed authorities in the annexed peninsula say.
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Russian drones strike Ukraine port infrastructure destroying grain hangar
From CNN’s Maria Kostenko and Martin Goillandeau
This picture shows the aftermath of Russian drones attacks at an Ukraine’s port infrastructure on the Danube river.
Ukraine Operational Cmd South
Russian drones have attacked Ukraine’s port infrastructure on the Danube river overnight, targeting Ukrainian grain stocks, the Ukrainian Army said in separate statements.?
The attack was carried out by Iranian-made?Shahed drones and lasted for 4 hours, Ukraine’s Southern Operational Command posted on Facebook.
There are three main Danube ports in Ukraine — Izmail, Reni and Ust-Dunaiskyi but the post did not specify which were hit.
The statement added that three drones were destroyed by Ukrainian air defense forces, although “some got through,” according to a separate statement by Serhiy Bratchuk, a spokesperson for the Odesa regional military administration.
Six people have been injured in the attack, Oleh Kiper, the head of Odesa’s regional military administration said on Telegram. He said three of those injured were hospitalized with light shrapnel wounds and bruises.
Grain hanger damaged: The Ukrainian Army said a hangar with grain was destroyed while storage tanks for other types of cargo also were damaged in the attack. The army said a fire broke out in one of the production facilities but was quickly extinguished.
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Putin claims vital Black Sea deal "failed" to ensure the delivery of grain as Russia continues attacks on key Ukrainian port city
From CNN's Mariya Knight
Farmers harvest grain in Stavropol, Russia, on July 16.
Denis Abramov/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Russian President Vladimir Putin said Moscow withdrew from a vital Black Sea grain deal intended to stabilize global food prices and bring relief to developing countries because it “failed” to ensure the delivery of grain.
The deal struck a year ago allowed Ukraine to export grain by sea, with ships bypassing a Russian blockade of the country’s Black Sea ports and navigating safe passage through the waterway to Turkey’s Bosphorus Strait in order to reach global markets.
Vessels were inspected before they arrived in Ukraine by Russian, Ukrainian and Turkish officials, to ensure weapons were not being smuggled into Ukraine.
The impact of the war on global food markets was immediate and extremely painful, especially because Ukraine is a major supplier of grain to the World Food Programme (WFP).
Since quitting the deal, Russia has continually attacked the southern city of?Odesa, a key Ukrainian food-exporting port.
In a self-penned article published Monday on the Kremlin’s website ahead of a Russia-Africa summit scheduled to take place later this week, Putin claimed Moscow could make up the shortfall in Ukrainian grain.
“I want to give assurances that our country is capable of replacing the Ukrainian?grain?both on a commercial and free-of-charge basis, especially as we expect another record harvest this year,”?Putin?wrote.?
“Notwithstanding the sanctions, Russia will continue its energetic efforts to provide supplies of?grain, food products, fertilizers and other goods to Africa,” he added.?
Putin claimed the grain deal had been used for the “enrichment of large US and European businesses” and that “barriers have been mounted” to Russia’s own attempts to supply mineral fertilizers to countries in need – an effort that, in his opinion, “should be exempt from any sanctions.”?
“Considering all these facts, there is no longer any use in continuing the “grain deal” as it has failed to serve its original humanitarian purpose,” Putin concluded.?
Food security threats: Last week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky spoke with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres after Russia pulled out of the grain deal.
According to the European Commission, Ukraine accounts for 10% of the world wheat market, 15% of the corn market, and 13% of the barley market. It is also a key global player in the market of sunflower oil.
Prior to Russia’s withdrawal, the deal had allowed for the export of almost 33 million metric tons of food through Ukrainian ports, according to?data from the United Nations.?
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Russian assault on Odesa destroys historical cathedral. Here's what happened over the weekend
From CNN staff
Another round of Russian attacks on the port city of Odesa?killed at least one person and wounded 19 others overnight into Sunday, according to Ukrainian officials.
Kyiv’s air defense systems are?struggling to fend off the assaults?because they’re ill-equipped to knock down certain types of missiles, the defense ministry said.
Within Russia, drones strikes hit two non-residential buildings in the capital Moscow at early Monday morning, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said on Telegram.
Here’s what you need to know:
Overnight strikes in Odesa:?A fifth night of Russian strikes on the southern port city of?Odesa?damaged a Ukrainian Orthodox Church, architectural monuments and homes, according to Ukraine’s military. At least one person was killed and more than a dozen others were wounded. Russia’s defense ministry claimed Sunday that it is avoiding civilian infrastructure, as well as cultural and historical objects, in its strikes, which Ukraine, its allies and international bodies dismiss as patently false.
Monuments damaged:?The attacks damaged?25 architectural monuments?in the historic city center, many of which were protected by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Among the damaged buildings was an Orthodox cathedral that was the largest in the city and has a history that traces back to the 1800s.
Call for more air defense:?Ukraine has been?struggling in the past week?to repel a wave of Russian strikes against Odesa, its air defenses unable to cope with the types of missiles that Moscow has used to pummel the region. Ukrainian President?Volodymyr Zelensky?reiterated his call for a “sky shield” provided by partners.
Fighting in other areas of Ukraine:?Deadly Russian shelling also continued overnight in Ukraine’s Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia regions. According to regional leaders, at least two people were killed in Kharkiv. Russia also shelled about 20 different civilian settlements in Ukraine’s?Zaporizhzhia region, a military leader there said.
Black Sea grain deal:?Russian President Vladimir Putin said Moscow withdrew from the Black Sea grain deal nearly two weeks ago because it has “failed” to ensure the delivery of grain, according to a an article he penned in the Kremlin website on Sunday. The deal allowed Ukraine to export grain by sea, with ships bypassing a Russian blockade of the country’s Black Sea ports, helping to stabilize global food prices and bring relief to developing countries which rely on Ukrainian exports.
Wagner fighters in Belarus:?Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko told Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday that the Wagner mercenaries who are in his country have?begun to “stress” him?because they want to “go to the West” on “an excursion.” Lukashenko is a close ally of Putin and he was apparently joking, but the?tensions are very real?surrounding the private military group’s presence in Belarus and plans to hold training exercises near the border of NATO member Poland.
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Russia claims drone strikes hit two non-residential buildings in Moscow
From CNN's Josh Pennington,?Simone McCarthy?and?Sophie Jeong
This picture shows a damaged building following a reported drone attack in?Moscow, Russia, on July 24.
Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
Drones struck two non-residential buildings in Moscow in the early hours of Monday morning and were “suppressed” by defenses there, Russian authorities said, describing the incident a “thwarted” attack.
The strikes caused no serious damage or casualties, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said on Telegram Monday.
According to Russian state media outlet, TASS, a drone hit a high-rise business center on Likhacheva Avenue in Moscow.
TASS reported drone debris was found on Komsomolsky Avenue in Moscow on Monday morning.
Traffic on Komsomolsky Avenue from the center of Moscow towards the region has been blocked off, TASS reported citing the Department of Transportation and Road Infrastructure Development of Moscow.
CNN could not independently verify the reports.
Ukraine almost never publicly claims responsibility for attacks which have taken place on Russian soil during the course of the war which Moscow began when it invaded in February last year.
Some context: The reported attack comes after Russian missiles badly damaged a historic Orthodox cathedral in the southern Ukrainian port city of Odesa, sparking outrage and prompting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to vow retaliation.
The Odesa strikes killed at least one person and injured several others, Ukrainian officials said, the latest in a wave of attacks on the port city. The attacks also destroyed other historic buildings, Ukraine’s culture ministry said.
Those include a?drone attack?on Moscow in May, which damaged two buildings and and injured two people for which Ukraine?denied?direct involvement.
Earlier this month, Russia said it “destroyed or neutralized” five Ukrainian drones in what it described as a “terrorist” attack.
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Ukrainian defense minister says F-16 training will start in August, with pilots in the skies next year
From CNN’s Sebastian Shukla and Alex Marquardt in Kyiv
Oleksii?Reznikov?addresses the media in Vilnius, Lithuania on July 11.
Ints Kalnins/Reuters
Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov says F-16 training for Ukrainian pilots will begin in August.
Reznikov, speaking in an exclusive interview with CNN over the weekend, added that the training will take “a minimum of 6 months” and that Ukraine still needs to add some infrastructure for the fighter jets.
The defense minister said he thought, optimistically, pilots could be operating F-16s in the skies of Ukraine by spring of next year.
Speaking to CNN’s Alex Marquardt in the Ukrainian capital, Reznikov, a lawyer turned defense official, did concede that if Ukraine had these fighter jets now they would “certainly” have helped Ukraine make more progress in the ongoing counteroffensive.
The training — which Reznikov said will likely be held in Denmark and the Netherlands, as well as possibly in the United Kingdom or Poland — will also include intensive sessions for technicians. The defense minister said the maintenance of the jets is a “serious task”.
He said the trainings may be split between countries, but the final plans were still being finalized.
The minister joked that the group of 11 nations that have committed to helping Ukraine train pilots on the F16s are called “Ocean’s 11,” after the popular film.
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Zelensky says NATO-Ukraine Council will meet Wednesday
From CNN's Mariya Knight
Volodymyr Zelensky attends a news conference in Kyiv, Ukraine, on July 19.
Clodagh Kilcoyne/AP
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his nightly address Sunday that the NATO-Ukraine Council will meet Wednesday.
The news comes one day after Zelensky?urgently called for a meeting?with the military alliance, saying the council should convene to discuss the crisis caused by Russia?pulling out of the Black Sea grain deal. The Ukrainian leader said the council needs to decide on steps “to unblock and ensure the stable operation of the grain corridor.”
The meeting will also come on the heels of?several consecutive nights?of Russian strikes on the southern port city of Odesa, which has further threatened Kyiv’s ability to export food.
About the council:?The?NATO-Ukraine Council?is the joint body where Zelensky formally meets with leaders from the alliance for crisis consultation, input on key issues and updates on Ukraine’s ongoing membership efforts.
Ukrainian defense minister eyes next year for country's accession to NATO
From CNN's Sebastian Shukla and Alex Marquardt in Kyiv
Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleskii Reznikov speaks to the media after a meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group at Ramstein Air Base in Ramstein-Miesenbach, Germany, on April 21.
Thomas Lohnes/Getty Images
Ukraine’s defense minister says he is eyeing next year’s NATO summit as possible timing for Ukraine to be admitted to the alliance.?
Oleskii Reznikov noted that next July’s summit in Washington, DC, will be the 75th anniversary of the alliance.?
The United States and other NATO countries have said it is?impossible to admit Ukraine now?because of the ongoing war. The alliance’s Article 5 says allies will come to the aid of a member if attacked.
Reznikov acknowledged that Ukraine will only be able to join the alliance once the war is over, referencing Article 5 and saying “we have no options to have a unanimous vote” while the conflict is ongoing.
When asked if he thought the war would be over by next summer he quickly answered, “Yes. We will win this war.”?
Reznikov downplayed the Biden administration’s refusal to commit to Ukraine getting admitted immediately after the war’s end.
“I think it’s not necessary,” he said. Ukraine will have a streamlined admission process and in the meantime will continue to work on the?necessary reforms, Reznikov added.
The defense minister emphasized that the benefits of admitting Ukraine to the alliance have only grown given its fight against Russia.
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Historic Ukrainian cathedral badly damaged in Russian strikes
From CNN's Heather Chen,?Josh Pennington,?Maria Kostenko?and?Radina Gigova
People clear away debris after a Russian missile struck the historic Holy Transfiguration Cathedral in central Odesa, Ukraine, on July 23.
Scott Peterson/Getty Images
Russian missiles badly damaged a historic Orthodox cathedral in the southern Ukrainian port city of Odesa, sparking outrage and prompting President Zelensky to vow retaliation.
The strikes killed at least one person and injured several others, Ukrainian officials said, the latest in a wave of attacks on Odesa. The attacks also destroyed other historic buildings, Ukraine’s culture ministry said.
The Transfiguration Cathedral is Odesa’s largest church building. It was consecrated in 1809, destroyed during the Soviet era in 1936 before being rebuilt when Ukraine became an independent nation.
The cathedral lies in Odesa’s city center, which UNESCO named a World Heritage Site amid the threat of Russia’s invasion.
Video showed the inside of the cathedral strewn with debris. Ukrainian officials said the icon of the patroness of the city had been retrieved from under the rubble.
Odesa is a key cultural center, and has long links with Russia. It was founded under Catherine the Great and was once Russia’s second most important port.
Ukraine’s Operational Command said on Telegram “dozens of cars were damaged, facades and roofs of many buildings in the city were damaged and windows were blown out” in the strikes.
Russia’s denial: The Russian Ministry of Defense denied targeting the cathedral and said it carried out attacks on where “terrorist acts” were being prepared. “All targets scheduled for attack were destroyed,” a statement added.
Wave of Russian strikes: Ukraine has been struggling in the past?week?to repel a wave of Russian strikes against Odesa – its air defenses unable to cope with the types of missiles that Moscow has used to pummel the region.
In a statement on Sunday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky condemned Moscow latest attack.
Belarus president jokes with Putin, says Wagner fighters "stress" him as they want to go to Poland?
From CNN’s Uliana Pavlova and Radina Gigova
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko told Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday the Wagner mercenaries in his country have begun to “stress” him, because they want to “go to the West” on “an excursion.”
“Why do you need to go to the West? ‘Well, go on an excursion to Warsaw, to Rzeszow,’” Lukashenko said.?“I keep them in the center, as agreed, of Belarus.”?
Lukashenko is a close ally of Putin and he was apparently joking with him. A video showed Putin smiling at the comments.
Key context:?The Wagner private military group is in Belarus after Lukashenko helped broker a deal to end the group’s?short-lived rebellion against Moscow. Ukraine says as many as 5,000 fighters are already in the country.
On Friday, Putin, without providing any proof, accused NATO member Poland of wanting to annex parts of Belarus, saying any aggression would be met with “all the means at our disposal.”
Western allies have responded in kind, with Germany?publicly pledging?that NATO will defend its alliance member Poland if there is an attack on its eastern flank from the Wagner troops in Belarus.