Russia hits Ukraine power grid and gains ground in east; Biden to visit
Poland
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[February 11, 2023]
By Olena Harmash
KYIV (Reuters) -Russian missiles hit power facilities on Friday across
Ukraine, where President Volodymyr Zelenskiy returned from a tour of
Western capitals and Ukrainian officials said a long-awaited Russian
offensive was underway in the east.
Ukraine's armed forces said in an evening update that Russian forces
fired more than 100 missiles throughout the country and staged 12 air
and 20 shelling attacks. The Facebook post said 61 cruise missiles were
destroyed.
Energy Minister German Galushchenko said Russia had hit power facilities
in six regions with missiles and drones, causing blackouts across most
of Ukraine.
In Washington, the White House said President Joe Biden would travel to
Poland from Feb. 20-22 to show support for Kyiv ahead of the first
anniversary of Russia's invasion on Feb. 24 and make clear additional
security assistance and aid will be coming from the United States.
"The president will make it very clear that the United States will
continue to stand with Ukraine for as long as it takes," said John
Kirby, spokesperson for the White House National Security Council.
International Monetary Fund staff will meet with Ukrainian officials in
Warsaw next week, a source familiar with the plans said on Friday, as
Ukraine presses for a multi-billion dollar borrowing program to cover
its funding needs given Russia's war.
Global ratings agency Moody's on Friday downgraded Ukraine's sovereign
rating to Ca as it expects the war with Russia to create long-lasting
challenges for the country. Moody's website said the rating means debt
obligations are "likely in, or very near, default."
The latest Russian attacks came as Zelenskiy ended a tour of European
allies where he was enthusiastically received but secured no public
promises of the fighter jets he sought.
"London, Paris, Brussels - everywhere I spoke these past few days about
how to strengthen our soldiers. There are very important understandings
and we received good signals," he said in his nightly video address.
"This concerns long-range missiles and tanks and the next level of our
cooperation - fighter aircraft."
Russia has repeatedly attacked civilian infrastructure far from the
front lines, leaving millions of Ukrainians without power, heat or water
for days at a time in the middle of winter.
The barrages have often followed Ukrainian diplomatic or battlefield
advances.
Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said 10 Russian missiles had been shot down
over the capital after sirens blared during the morning rush hour and
weary civilians took shelter.
Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said Ukraine was without 44% of
nuclear generation and 75% of thermal power capacity.
"This is a deliberate targeting of infrastructure that keeps Ukrainians
alive in winter," U.S. State Department deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel
said. Russia denies targeting civilians and says it targets Kyiv's war
effort.
Ukraine has been bracing for a new Russian offensive, believing that
after months of reverses President Vladimir Putin wants to tout a
battlefield success before the anniversary of his Feb. 24 invasion.
Ukrainian governors in the eastern regions of Donetsk and Luhansk said
that thrust had begun.
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A school student attends a lesson as she
takes shelter inside a metro station during massive Russian missile
attacks in Kyiv, Ukraine February 10, 2023. REUTERS/Viacheslav
Ratynskyi
Putin will give his delayed annual showcase address to parliament on
Feb. 21, the date last year when he recognised as independent the
parts of Donetsk and Luhansk that were controlled by Russian-backed
separatists, a prelude to invading.
The complete capture of those provinces, among four Russia
subsequently claimed to have annexed, would let Putin assert that
one of his main priorities had been achieved.
RUSSIAN ADVANCES
Moscow's main recent focus has been Bakhmut, a small city from which
most of the pre-war population of around 70,000 has fled, and the
Ukranian military said it and surrounding areas had come under fresh
tank, mortar and artillery fire.
After months of static artillery battles both sides call the "meat
grinder", Russian forces have begun to encircle the city. Their
troops include the Wagner private army that has recruited tens of
thousands of convicts with a promise of pardons.
Russia's regular army is now also able to deploy many of the 300,000
or more men enlisted in a forced mobilisation late last year.
Britain's Defence Ministry said Wagner forces appeared to have
advanced 2 to 3 kilometres (1 to 2 miles) around the north of
Bakhmut since Tuesday - a rapid push in a battle where front lines
have barely moved for months.
It said they were now threatening the main western access road to
Bakhmut although a Ukrainian military analyst said supplies were
still getting through.
Britain also said Russian forces had made some advances near
Vuhledar, a Ukrainian-held bastion that has been a linchpin between
the southern and eastern fronts, but the limited Russian gains there
had likely come at a high cost, including at least 30 armoured
vehicles abandoned in one failed assault.
Ukrainian positions in Vuhledar have held since the war started and
this week's assault has been branded as a costly fiasco by some
pro-war Russian military bloggers. Grey Zone, a semi-official Wagner
channel on Telegram, said "a disaster is unfolding around Vuhledar,
and it is unfolding again and again".
Reuters could not verify the battlefield reports.
Ukraine plans its own major military counteroffensive in the coming
months to reclaim more of the nearly one fifth of Ukrainian
territory that Russia occupies.
But it appears likely to wait until it has received at least some of
the new weapons, including hundreds of battle tanks and armoured
vehicles, promised lately by the West.
(Reporting by Reuters bureausWriting by Michael Perry, Kevin Liffey,
Andrew Cawthorne and David Brunnstrom; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore, Peter Graff, Frances Kerry and Cynthia Osterman)
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