Ukraine pleads for air defense as Russia turns sights on Lysychansk
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[June 27, 2022]
By Tom Balmforth
KYIV (Reuters) - Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Monday urged Western leaders to supply
anti-aircraft defense systems to his embattled nation as Russian forces
assaulted Lysychansk, the last big city still held by Ukrainian troops
in eastern Luhansk province.
Addressing the Group of Seven summit in the Bavarian Alps via video
link, Zelenskiy also asked for help to export grain from Ukraine and for
more sanctions on Russia, a European official said.
As the leaders met, Russian forces were bombarding Lysychansk, the
Kremlin's immediate battlefield target following the fall of neighboring
Sievierodonetsk over the weekend.
Luhansk governor Serhiy Gaidai said the city was suffering
"catastrophic" damage from the shelling and he urged civilians to
urgently evacuate.
"The situation in the city is very difficult," Gaidai wrote on the
Telegram messaging app.
Prior to his address to G7 leaders meeting in the resort of Schloss
Elmaua, Zelenskiy had stressed the urgency of the need for more arms.
"Partners need to move faster if they are really partners, not
observers. Delays with the weapons transfers to our state, any
restrictions - this is actually an invitation for Russia to hit again
and again," he said in the latest of the daily messages with which he
rallies his compatriots.
A senior U.S. official said the G7 countries would commit to a new
package of coordinated actions to raise pressure on Russia and will
finalize plans for a price cap on Russian oil.
A European official said that as well as the air defense systems,
Zelenskiy had asked for security guarantees in his address to the G7.
The leaders will make a long-term security commitment to provide Ukraine
with financial, humanitarian, military and diplomatic support, for "as
long as it takes", including advanced weapons, the White House said.
The United States is likely to announce this week the purchase of
advanced medium to long range surface-to-air missile defense for
Ukraine, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.
U.S. President Joe Biden had earlier told allies "we have to stay
together" against Russia in the face of its assault on Ukraine, now in
its fifth month.
Sanctions have effectively cut Russia out of the global financial system
but the war has created difficulties for countries way beyond Russia's
borders, with curtailed food and energy supplies hitting the global
economy.
These also include Ukrainian grain exports, now trapped in ports, which
normally feed millions of people across the Middle East, Africa and
elsewhere.
But Russian President Vladimir Putin has shown no sign of changing
course as his troops battled to pick off another Ukrainian city.
HORROR
The General Staff of Ukraine's Armed Forces said on Monday Russian
forces were using artillery to try to cut off Lysychansk from the south.
Russian war planes had also struck near the city, the general staff said
in its daily update.
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Smoke rises after a missile strike, as Russia's attack on Ukraine
continues, in Kyiv, Ukraine June 26, 2022. REUTERS/Anna Voitenko
Tass news agency on Sunday quoted an official from
Moscow-backed separatists as saying Russian forces had entered
Lysychansk from five directions and were isolating Ukrainian
defenders.
Reuters could not confirm the report and the general staff update
made no mention of separatists entering the city.
"Lysychansk, it was a horror, the last week," said Elena, an elderly
woman from the city who was among dozens of evacuees who arrived in
the Ukrainian-held town of Pokrovsk by bus from frontline areas.
"I already told my husband if I die, please bury me behind the
house," she said.
In a setback for Ukraine, Russian forces won full control of
Sievierodonetsk, Lysychansk's twin city on the eastern bank of the
Siversky Donets River, over the weekend when Ukrainian troops pulled
out after weeks of bombardments and street fighting.
Luhansk and neighbouring Donetsk province make up Ukraine's eastern
Donbas region - the country's industrial heartland.
The Donbas became a prime target for the Kremlin after Russian
troops failed to take the capital Kyiv in the early stages of the
war.
Russian forces also control a swathe of territory in the south,
including the port city of Mariupol, which fell after weeks of siege
warfare that left it in ruins.
Russian missiles also struck Kyiv for the first time in weeks on
Sunday.
Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24 in what the Kremlin calls a
"special military operation" to rid the country of far-right
nationalists and ensure Russian security.
Kyiv and the West dismiss that as a baseless pretext for a war of
aggression that has killed thousands, sent millions fleeing Ukraine,
destroyed cities and driven up food and energy prices.
NO SPLIT
Western countries rallied around Kyiv when Russia invaded Ukraine in
February, but that unity is now being tested as soaring inflation
and energy shortages rebound on their own citizens.
At the summit, Biden emphasized the need for unity amid concern that
there were diverging opinions in European capitals about how to
handle the situation.
"Putin has been counting on it from the beginning that somehow the
NATO and the G7 would splinter. But we haven't and we're not going
to," the U.S. president said.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Angus MacSwan; Editing by
Frank Jack Daniel)
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