Zelenskiy shows up failed Russian efforts with visit to east Ukraine
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[December 20, 2022]
By Tom Balmforth and Oleksandr Kozhukhar
KYIV (Reuters) -Russian President Vladimir Putin said the situation in
Russian-held parts of Ukraine was "extremely difficult" on Tuesday while
his Ukrainian counterpart drove home the message by visiting a frontline
town that Russia has long tried and failed to capture.
Addressing Russia's security services, Putin told operatives they needed
to significantly improve their work in a speech that was one of his
clearest public admissions yet that the invasion he launched almost ten
months ago is not going to plan.
It followed a visit to close ally Belarus that fuelled fears, dismissed
by the Kremlin, that the country could help Russia open a new invasion
front against Ukraine.
Some of the fiercest fighting in recent weeks in Ukraine has taken place
around the eastern city of Bakhmut. Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskiy's office said on Tuesday he had visited the city to meet
military representatives and hand out awards to soldiers.
Earlier, he renewed calls for more weapons after Russian drones hit
energy targets in a third air strike on power facilities in six days.
Putin ordered the Federal Security Services (FSB) to step up
surveillance of Russian society and the country's borders to combat the
"emergence of new threats" from abroad and traitors at home. Western
countries have imposed unprecedented sanctions on Russia and the rouble
slumped to an over seven-month low against the dollar on Tuesday after
the European Union agreed to cap prices of gas, a major Russian export.
In a rare admission of the invasion of Ukraine not going smoothly, Putin
cautioned about the difficult situation in regions of Ukraine that
Moscow moved to annex in September and ordered the FSB to ensure the
"safety" of people living there.
"The situation in the Donetsk and Luhansk People's Republics, in the
Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions is extremely difficult," Putin said in
a video address to security workers translated by Reuters.
In September, Putin sought to regain the initiative after a series of
battlefield defeats by declaring that four partially occupied regions in
Ukraine's east and south had joined Russia. Kyiv and its Western allies
said the move was illegal.
In October, Russian forces drew back in one of the regions - Kherson -
and dug in elsewhere. They have failed to gain ground and earlier this
month, Putin said the war could be a "long process".
On Monday, Putin made his first visit to Belarus since 2019, where he
and his counterpart extolled ever-closer ties at a news conference late
in the evening but hardly mentioned Ukraine. On Tuesday, Russian news
agencies reported that Belarus had reached an understanding with Moscow
on the restructuring of its debt and had agreed on a fixed price for
Russian gas for three years.
Kyiv, meanwhile, was seeking more weapons from the West after weeks of
attacks on energy facilities which have knocked out both power and water
supplies amid freezing temperatures.
"Weapons, shells, new defence capabilities ... everything that will give
us the ability to speed up the end to this war," elenskiy said in his
evening address.
Ukraine's military said it had shot down 30 of 35 "kamikaze" drones
fired by Russia on Monday, mostly at the capital Kyiv. The unmanned
aircraft fly towards their target, then plummet and detonate on impact.
Ukrainian officials said on Tuesday that five people had been killed in
the eastern Donetsk and southern Kherson regions, with eight wounded,
and that 21 missiles had knocked out power in the southern city of
Zaporizhzhia.
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A woman removes broken glass inside a
hospital damaged by recent shelling in the course of Russia-Ukraine
conflict in Donetsk, Russian-controlled Ukraine, December 20, 2022.
REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko
BELARUS ACTIVITY
To the northwest of Ukraine, there has been constant Russian and
Belarusian military activity for months in Belarus, which Moscow's
troops used as a launch pad for their abortive attack on Kyiv in
February.
Lukashenko has said repeatedly he has no intention of sending his
country's troops into Ukraine. But the commander of Ukraine's joint
forces, Lieutenant General Serhiy Nayev, said his country was
prepared.
"The level of the military threat is increasing, but we are taking
adequate measures," he was quoted as saying by the defence ministry
on Telegram. "The Armed Forces' General Staff provides for the
expansion of units in the event of a significant increase in the
other side's forces."
The Kremlin on Monday dismissed the suggestion that Putin wanted to
push Belarus into a more active role. The RIA Novosti news agency
quoted Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov as saying such reports
were "groundless" and "stupid".
Both Putin and Lukashenko were also at pains to dismiss the idea of
Russia annexing or absorbing Belarus.
"Russia has no interest in absorbing anyone," Putin said.
Asked about this comment, U.S. State Department spokesperson Ned
Price said it should be treated as the "height of irony", given it
was "coming from a leader who is seeking at the present moment,
right now, to violently absorb his other peaceful next-door
neighbour."
FIGHTING GRINDS ON
The 10-month-old conflict in Ukraine, the largest in Europe since
World War Two, has killed tens of thousands of people, driven
millions from their homes and reduced cities to ruins.
Ukraine's General Staff said Russian artillery hammered 25 towns and
villages around Bakhmut and Avdiivka in the east and several areas
around Kupiansk, a northeastern town retaken by Ukraine in
September.
Alexei Kulemzin, the Russian-installed mayor of the city of Donetsk,
said Ukrainian shelling hit a hospital wing, along with a
kindergarten, posting on Telegram a photo of what appeared to be a
waiting room with smashed furniture and fittings.
Reuters could not independently verify the battlefield accounts of
either side.
Russia says it is waging a "special military operation" in Ukraine
to rid it of nationalists and protect Russian-speaking communities.
Ukraine and the West describe the Kremlin's actions as an unprovoked
war of aggression.
(Reporting Ronald Popeski in Winnipeg, Valentyn Ogirenko in Kyiv,
Lidia Kelly in Melbourne, Humeyra Pamuk in Washington and Aleksandar
Vasovic in Belgrade; Writing by Costas Pitas, Shri Navaratnam and
Philippa Fletcher; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Nick Macfie)
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