Russia strikes Ukrainian towns, NATO plans Europe air defences
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[October 13, 2022]
By Max Hunder and Sabine Siebold
KYIV/BRUSSELS (Reuters) -Russian missiles
have pounded more than 40 Ukrainian cities and towns over the past 24
hours, as NATO allies meeting in Brussels unveiled plans on Thursday to
jointly beef up Europe's air defences with Patriot and other missile
systems.
"We are living in threatening, dangerous times," said German Defence
Minister Christine Lambrecht at a signing ceremony where Germany and
more than a dozen of European NATO members committed to jointly
procuring weapons for a "European Sky Shield" to better protect their
territory.
Moscow renewed warnings that more military aid for Kyiv agreed earlier
this week at the NATO meeting made members of the U.S.-led military
alliance "a direct party to the conflict," and said admitting Ukraine to
the alliance would trigger a World War.
"Kyiv is well aware that such a step would mean a guaranteed escalation
to a World War Three," deputy secretary of Russia's Security Council,
Alexander Venediktov, told the state TASS news agency on Thursday.
Moscow has repeatedly justified the Feb. 24 invasion that has killed
tens of thousands of people, in what it calls a "special operation", by
saying Ukraine's ambitions to join the alliance posed a threat to
Russia's security.
NATO is not likely to quickly allow Ukraine to join, not least because
its membership during an ongoing war would put the United States and
allies into direct conflict with Russia under the alliance's collective
defence clause.
Washington and other NATO members have provided Ukraine with weapons to
fight Russia and imposed sweeping economic sanctions but have tried to
avoid more direct involvement in the war.
Ahead of the meeting of NATO's defence ministers, including close-door
talks by its nuclear planning group, U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin
vowed to defend "every inch" of members' territory.
Even before the invasion, NATO had dragged its feet on Ukrainian
membership. Shortly after Russia's assault began Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskiy signalled he was willing to consider neutrality.
Zelenskiy has since asked for fast-track membership, hours after Russian
President Vladimir Putin proclaimed partially occupied regions of
Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia as Russian land on Sept. 30.
The annexation sparked international outrage. On Wednesday the United
Nations General Assembly overwhelmingly adopted a resolution condemning
it as "illegal".
In the past 24 hours Russian missiles hit more than 40 settlements,
while Ukrainian air force carried out 32 strikes on 25 Russian targets,
Ukraine's Armed Forces General Staff said.
The southern port city of Mykolaiv came under massive bombardment, local
officials said.
“It is known that a number of civilian objects were hit," regional
governor Vitaly Kim said in a social media post.
He said the top two floors of a five-story residential building were
completely destroyed and the rest were under rubble. Video footage
provided by state emergency services showed rescuers pulling from under
the rubble an 11-year-old boy, who Kim said had spent six hours trapped
under the debris.
Ukraine’s Prosecutor General’s Office three people were killed in the
strike.
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An aerial view shows a residential
building heavily damaged during a Russian military attack in
Mykolaiv, Ukraine October 13, 2022. Press service of the State
Emergency Service of Ukraine/Handout via REUTERS
KAMIKAZE DRONES
Russia also targeted a settlement in the region of Ukraine's capital
Kyiv, where three drone strikes hit critical infrastructure early on
Thursday, the region's administration said on Telegram.
Governor of the Kyiv region, Oleksiy Kuleba, said that based on
preliminary information the strikes were caused by Iranian-made
loitering munitions, often known as "kamikaze drones".
Ukraine has reported a spate of Russian attacks with the Shahed-136
drones in recent weeks. Iran denies supplying the drones to Russia,
while the Kremlin has not commented.
Missiles struck about 30 multi-storey buildings and houses, gas
pipelines and power lines in the city of Nikopol in the
Dnipropetrovsk region, leaving more than 2,000 families without
electricity, regional governor Valentyn Reznichenko wrote on
Telegram.
Reuters was not able to immediately verify the reports.
As his forces suffered several setbacks since September, Putin has
ordered the call-up of hundreds of thousands of reservists and
repeatedly threatened to use nuclear weapons to protect Russia,
including regions annexed last month.
'COLD AS WEAPON'
On Wednesday, more than 50 Western countries met to pledge more
military aid to Ukraine, especially air defence weapons, after Putin
ordered heavy retaliatory strikes in response to an explosion on a
bridge in Crimea.
Germany has sent Ukraine the first of four IRIS-T SLM air defence
systems, while Washington said it would speed up delivery of a
promised NASAMS air defence system.
While Moscow denies targeting civilians, Kyiv says the strikes are
aimed at the Ukrainian population and its power supply, with Russian
forces trying to use "cold as their weapon."
"In their sick imagination, Ukrainians sitting for several hours
without electricity is a victory," Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said
on Wednesday while calling on citizens to conserve energy and
prepare for winter by stocking up on warm clothes, candles, torches
and batteries.
At least 26 people have been killed since Monday in the Russian
missile attacks. Ukrainian officials reported strikes at 28 energy
installations.
Stressing the urgency of further assistance, Zelenskiy told the
Parliamentary Assemby of the Council of Europe on Thursday that
Ukraine still had about only 10% of what it needed to protect itself
against Russian air attacks.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore and
Tomasz Janowski; Editing by Michael Perry, Stephen Coates and Frank
Jack Daniel)
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