Ukraine appears to show ability to strike deep in Russia
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[December 07, 2022]
(Reuters) -A third Russian airfield was set ablaze by a
drone strike a day after Ukraine demonstrated an apparent new ability to
penetrate hundreds of kilometres into Russia with attacks on two air
bases.
Officials in the Russian city of Kursk, about 90 km (60 miles) north of
the Ukraine border, released pictures of black smoke above an airfield
after the latest strike on Tuesday. The governor said an oil storage
tank had gone up in flames but there were no casualties.
On Monday, Russia said it had been hit hundreds of kilometres from
Ukraine by what it said were Soviet-era drones - at Engels air base,
home to Russia's strategic bomber fleet, and in Ryazan, a few hours'
drive from Moscow.
Ukraine did not directly claim responsibility for the strikes but
nonetheless celebrated them.
Late on Tuesday, sirens sounded at the airfield in Engels, Russian
state-run news agencies reported, citing the first deputy of the
district administration.
In Washington, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken repeated his
country's determination to provide Ukraine with equipment it needs to
defend itself while saying it had neither encouraged nor enabled the
Ukrainians to strike inside Russia.
U.S. lawmakers agreed to provide Ukraine at least $800 million in
additional security aid next year.
Russia's defence ministry said three service members were killed in the
attack at Ryazan. Although the attacks struck military targets, it
characterised them as terrorism and said the aim was to disable its
long-range aircraft.
Ukraine never publicly acknowledges responsibility for attacks inside
Russia. Asked about the strikes, Defence Minister Oleskiy Reznikov
repeated a longstanding joke blaming carelessness with cigarettes. "Very
often Russians smoke in places where it's forbidden to smoke," he said.
Neighbouring Belarus, a close Russian ally, plans to move military
equipment and forces on Wednesday and Thursday to check its response to
terrorism, the BelTA state news agency reported, adding that imitation
weapons would be used for training.
Ukraine has for months voiced fears that Belarus and Russia could be
planning a joint incursion across Ukraine's northern border, although
Belarus has said it will not enter the war.
'LEVERAGE AND CONTROL'
At least 20 oil tankers queuing off Turkey face more delays to cross
from Russia's Black Sea ports to the Mediterranean as operators race to
adhere to new Turkish insurance rules added ahead of a G7 price cap on
Russian oil, industry sources said.
The disruption in tanker traffic was not the result of the price cap on
Russian oil agreed by a coalition of G7 countries and Australia, a group
official said.
The price cap of $60 a barrel was imposed on Monday at a level above the
current price for Urals crude from Russia, the world's second largest
oil exporter.
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A satellite image shows bomber in flight
at northeast of Engels Air Base in Saratov, Russia, December 3,
2022. Satellite image 2022 Maxar Technologies/Handout via REUTERS
G7 countries and Australia would be busy in coming weeks determining
two more price cap levels on Russian refined oil products slated to
be in place by Feb. 5, a U.S. Treasury official told Reuters.
"I think the point is that we have all the leverage and all the
control now that we've been able to set the ceiling at $60," the
official said. "Any adjustments will be in the interest of the G7
and will be in the interest of Ukraine, it will be in the interest
of the world economy and will not be in the interest of Russia."
ZELENSKIY WITH TROOPS
On the battlefields of eastern, northeastern and southern Ukraine,
Russian forces kept up their shelling of towns and villages, the
Ukrainian military said late on Tuesday.
Six people were killed as Donetsk came under rocket and artillery
fire, the Russian-installed city mayor, Alexander Kulemzin, reported
in his Telegram channel.
"Look what they have done," said a resident named Irina, gesturing
towards the building where her flat had been destroyed. "There are
people living over there ... Go in the fields and fight each other
over there, not here."
Dmytro Zhyvytsky, the governor of Sumy region on the Russian border,
said several people were wounded when Russian forces fired 226
shells on seven communities during the day.
War crimes investigators are looking into the deaths of hundreds of
civilians since the beginning of the near 10-month conflict. Russia
denies targeting civilians during what it calls a special operation
to rid Ukraine of dangerous nationalists.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy visited troops close to
front lines in eastern Ukraine on Tuesday.
Addressing servicemen later in Kyiv, Zelenskiy said he had spent the
day with troops in Donbas, theatre of the heaviest battles, and in
Kharkiv region, where Ukrainians have retaken swaths of territory
from Russian forces.
"Thousands of Ukrainians have given their lives so that the day
might come when not a single occupying soldier will remain in our
land and when all our people will be free," Zelenskiy, clad in his
trademark khaki green, told the gathering.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Grant McCool and Lincoln
Feast; Editing by Cynthia Osterman, Robert Birsel)
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