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LIVE – Updated at 18:30
The Kremlin has denied dropping a rule permitting fathers of three to defer mobilisation in Russia’s war in Ukraine, as Vladimir Putin is feared to be mulling a further push for troops.
Citing the deputy chair of Russia’s Human Rights Council, state Duma deputy Nina Ostanina claimed that the loophole in Mr Putin’s mobilisation drive last autumn had been closed, in comments echoed by a top military official in Russia’s Zabaikalsky region.
But a senior politician in Mr Putin’s ruling United Russia party, Andrei Turchak, denied that the rule had been scrapped, while Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said it was “not aware” of the rule’s cancellation. Kyiv has repeatedly warned that Moscow plans to mobilise half a million more troops.
It came as Russia vowed to take retaliatory measures against French media in response to RT France’s announcement that it was shutting down after authorities used European Union sanctions to freeze its bank accounts.
Kyiv urged its allies to “think faster”, as pressure piled on Germany to decide on supplying Kyiv with its main battle tanks, the Leopard 2.
A close ally of Vladimir Putin has threatened that Western arms deliveries to Ukraine “will lead to a global catastrophe”, claiming that arguments against using weapons of mass destruction “in local conflicts” are untenable.
Duma speaker Vyacheslav Volodin, formerly a deputy prime minister and head of Mr Putin’s presidential administration, warned that US and Nato support of Ukraine was leading the world to a “terrible war”.
“If Washington and Nato countries supply weapons that will be used to strike civilian cities and attempt to seize our territories, as they threaten, this will lead to retaliatory measures using more powerful weapons,” Mr Volodin said on Telegram.
“Arguments that the nuclear powers have not previously used weapons of mass destruction in local conflicts are untenable. Because these states did not face a situation where there was a threat to the security of their citizens and the territorial integrity of the country.”
“Deliveries of offensive weapons to the Kyiv regime will lead to a global catastrophe,” he added, claiming that politicians in the US, France, Germany and elsewhere in Europe “must realise their responsibility to humanity”.
Western allies pledged billions of pounds’ worth of weapons for Ukraine last week, although they failed to persuade Germany to lift a veto on providing Leopard 2 battle tanks, which are held by an array of Nato nations but whose transfer to Ukraine requires Berlin’s approval.
French president, Emmanual Macron, said on Sunday that he won’t rule out sending Leclerc tanks over to Ukraine.
He said it’s a possibility as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine continues.
The French president was speaking at a summit with the German chancellor Olaf Scholz.
Conquering Kyiv “remains the main dream” in Vladimir Putin’s “fantasies,” the secretary of Ukraine’s Security and Defense Council has said.
Oleksii Danilov warned that Russia may try to intensify its attacks in the south and in the east and to cut supply channels of Western weapons. He described the Kremlin’s goal in the conflict as a “total and absolute genocide, a total war of destruction.”
“Moscow wants to completely destroy Ukraine as a historical phenomenon — its language, history, culture, carriers of Ukrainian identity,” Danilov wrote in a column published by Ukrainska Pravda.
Hawkish ex-Russian president Dmitry Medvedev said earlier this week that Western discussions about arming Ukraine “left no doubt that our enemies will try to exhaust or better destroy us”, adding that “they have enough weapons” to achieve that purpose.
Mr Medvedev warned that Russia could seek to form a military alliance with foes of the United States. Russia has defence cooperation with Iran and Venezuela, an existing military alliance with Belarus and strong ties with North Korea. Since invading Ukraine, Russia also has increased both the scope and the number of its joint military drills with China.
“In case of a protracted conflict, a new military alliance will emerge that will include the nations that are fed up with the Americans and a pack of their castrated dogs,” said Mr Medvedev, who was president between 2008 and 2012.
A day earlier, he had written: “The defeat of a nuclear power in a conventional war may trigger a nuclear war … Nuclear powers have never lost major conflicts on which their fate depends.”
Russia’s defence ministry has claimed for a second straight day that its troops are improving their positions in Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region.
“During offensive operations in the direction of Zaporizhzhia, units of the Eastern Military District took up more advantageous ground and positions,” the defence ministry said.
It claimed to have inflicted casualties and destroyed equipment including Ukrainian fighting vehicles, howitzers and two US-made HIMARS rockets.
Ukraine said yesterday that Russia’s claims of progress in Zaporizhzhia are exaggerated. Neither side has claimed major movements on the southern front since November, when Russia pulled out of the city of Kherson.
Boris Johnson, who is on a visit to Ukraine, has said he was invited by president Volodymyr Zelensky.
In a statement, the former prime minister said: “It is a privilege to visit Ukraine at the invitation of President Zelensky. The suffering of the people of Ukraine has gone on for too long.
“The only way to end this war is for Ukraine to win – and to win as fast as possible. This is the moment to double down and to give the Ukrainians all the tools they need to finish the job.
“The sooner Putin fails, the better for Ukraine and for the whole world.”
Rishi Sunak is “supportive” of his predecessor’s visit to Ukraine, Downing Street has indicated – despite Boris Johnson’s trip undoubtedly being viewed by some as a move to undermine the PM’s authority and bolster his own legacy.
Mr Sunak’s press secretary said he is “always supportive of all colleagues showing that the UK is behind Ukraine and will continue to support them”.
Our political correspondent Adam Forrest reports:
Boris Johnson has once again visited Ukraine despite warnings from senior military figures that he should stay away and stop “looking for publicity”.
The former PM was seen on the outskirts of Kyiv on Sunday, as he comes under pressure over claims that the BBC chairman helped arrange talks which led to his £800,000 line of credit while at No 10.
Former Army chief Lord Dannett had previously told The Independent that Mr Johnson was a “loose cannon” whose plan could upstage Rishi Sunak, while ex-First Sea Lord warned the former PM against “looking for publicity”.
But Mr Johnson said he was invited by president Volodymyr Zelensky to visit the country once again – as he urged western leaders to give Ukraine “all the tools they need”.
Boris Johnson visits Ukraine – despite military figures urging him not to
The Ukrainian defence of Bakhmut is “likely a strategically sound effort” even in spite of its costs, analysts have suggested.
In its latest daily update on Russia’s offensive, the US-based Institute for the Study of War said: “While the costs associated with Ukraine’s continued defense of Bakhmut are significant and likely include opportunity costs related to potential Ukrainian counter-offensive operations elsewhere, Ukraine would also have paid a significant price for allowing Russian troops to take Bakhmut easily.
“Bakhmut itself is not operationally or strategically significant but had Russian troops taken it relatively rapidly and cheaply they could have hoped to expand operations in ways that could have forced Ukraine to construct hasty defensive positions in less favorable terrain.
“One must also not dismiss the seemingly ‘political’ calculus of committing to the defence of Bakhmut lightly – Russian forces occupy more than 100,000 square kilometers of Ukrainian territory including multiple Ukrainian cities and are inflicting atrocities on Ukrainian civilians in occupied areas.
“It is not unreasonable for political and military leaders to weigh these factors in determining whether to hold or cede particular population concentrations.”
An aide to Volodymyr Zelensky has hit out at threats by a key ally of Vladimir Putin, Vyacheslav Volodin, that by providing Kyiv with more powerful weaponry Western powers are risking “global catastrophe” (see post at 9:52am).
Mykhailo Podolyak hit out at the suggestion that, while Russia has been bombing Ukraine for 11 months, killing civilians en masse, “the world must not resist and silently put up with it”.
Russian forces have launched an offensive in the Zaporizhzhia region in southeast Ukraine as Kyiv condemns the failure of its allies to supply main battle tanks.
Moscow said it had launched “offensive operations” in the region on Saturday and claimed to control “more advantageous lines and positions”.
The UK’s Ministry of Defence also confirmed that both Ukraine and Russia had “massed significant forces” in the area and exchanged artillery fire and skirmishes.
Shelling attacks overnight in the Zaporizhzhia oblast targeted 21 cities and towns across the region. Governor Oleksandr Starukh reported that one woman was killed in the attacks and two other civilians injured.
Russians launch offensive in Zaporizhzhia as indecision continues over Leopard tanks
Britain still wants to see Ukraine equipped with Leopard 2 tanks, the foreign secretary has said – as Germany faces pressure to allow the vehicles to be sent to Kyiv.
“Of course, I would like to see the Ukrainians equipped with things like the Leopard 2 as well as the artillery systems that have been provided by us and by others,” James Cleverly told Sky News.
“I will keep having those conversations with our Nato allies and friends, to facilitate the donation of the best military equipment to Ukraine to help them defend themselves against this brutal invasion.”
Asked whether Germany was doing enough to help Ukraine, Mr Cleverly said he wanted to see “everybody going as far as they can, but each country will support Ukraine in a way that is most appropriate to them.”
Amid fears of a further mobilisation, regional reports from Russia have claimed that military commissars have been ordered to draw up lists of men of fighting age, according to the Daily Telegraph.
Factory managers have also been asked which workers they can spare for the army, the paper reports.
Ukraine has repeatedly warned that the Kremlin could soon seek to mobilise another 500,000 troops, but Moscow has denied such plans.
France and Germany are seeking to overcome differences laid bare by Russia’s war in Ukraine and shore up their alliance with a day of ceremonies and talks on Europe’s security, energy and other challenges.
Germany’s entire cabinet is in Paris on Sunday for joint meetings, and 300 politicians from both countries are coming together at the Sorbonne University to mark 60 years since a landmark treaty sealed a bond between the long-time enemies that underpins today’s European Union.
French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz will oversee two rounds of talks at the Elysee Palace, focusing first on energy and economic policy, and then on defence.
The Kremlin has denied dropping a rule permitting fathers of three to defer mobilisation in Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Citing the deputy chair of Russia’s Human Rights Council, state Duma deputy Nina Ostanina claimed that the loophole in Vladimir Putin’s mobilisation drive last autumn had been closed, in comments echoed by the military commissar of Russia’s Zabaikalsky region, Yuri Shuvalov.
But a senior politician in Mr Putin’s ruling United Russia party, Andrei Turchak, denied that the rule had been scrapped, while Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said it was “not aware” of the rule’s cancellation.
Kyiv has repeatedly warned that Moscow plans to mobilise half a million more troops.
The Baltic states of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania have jointly urged Germany to step up its leadership and send its main battle tanks to Ukraine, as an aide to Voldoymr Zelensky hit out at “indecision” over whether to arm Kyiv with the vehicles (see post at 6:03am).
“We, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania foreign ministers, call on Germany to provide Leopard tanks to Ukraine now,” Estonia’s Foreign Minister said on Twitter.
“This is needed to stop Russian aggression, help Ukraine and restore peace in Europe quickly. Germany as the leading European power has special responsibility in this regard.”
The statement came a day after Germany and Western allies reached no decision on whether Berlin would agree to send its Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine or permit other countries that have them to do so.
Russia’s defence minister Sergei Shoigu announced plans for major changes to the structure of the armed forces on 17 January which will be implemented between 2023 and 2026, as highlighted in the UK MoD’s latest intelligence update.
This included an increase to 1.5 million personnel – an 11 per cent increase on top of the previously announced expansion to 1.35 million.
“Shoigu also announced the re-establishment of Moscow and Leningrad military districts, a partial return to the Soviet era organisation of forces in Western Russia. A new army corps is to be established in Karelia, near the Finnish border,” it added.
The MoD said it signals that Russia’s leadership highly likely assesses that an enhanced conventional military threat will endure for many years beyond the current Ukraine war. However, Russia will highly likely struggle to staff and equip the planned expansion.
US treasury secretary Janet Yellen says the price cap on Russian sales of crude oil could be expanded to include refined petroleum products in February, but that the task will be “more complicated”.
“It’s more complicated, but we’ve been working hard to figure out how to achieve the same objectives,” as with the broader cap on Russian crude, she said.
“We’ve studied these markets very carefully and believe we’re going to come out with a set of caps that will achieve the same things that we’ve achieved with crude so far,” Ms Yellen told reporters Saturday during a visit to Dakar, Senegal.
Mykhailo Podolyak, adviser to president Volodymyr Zelenskiy, criticised the West and Germany for slow decision-making on sending Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine.
In a tweet, he expressed his frustration at “global indecision” over arms supply to Ukraine.
“Today’s indecision is killing more of our people. Every day of delay is the death of Ukrainians. Think faster.”
Senior US officials are advising Ukraine to hold off on launching a major offensive against Russian forces as Volodymyr Zelensky’s adviser said the West’s indecision is killing Ukrainians.
A senior Biden administration official said on Friday the United States was holding fast to its decision not to provide Abrams tanks to Ukraine at this time, amid a controversy with Germany over tanks.
The official who spoke on condition of anonymity said US talks with Ukraine on any counter-offensive have been in the context of ensuring the Ukrainians devote enough time first to training on the latest weaponry provided by the United States.
The US on Thursday announced it will send hundreds of armoured vehicles to Ukraine for use in the fight.
The Baltic states of Latvia, Estonia and Lithuania made a joint call to Germany to step up its leadership and send its main battle tanks to Ukraine, mounting further pressure on Berlin to move faster on aiding Kyiv in its war against Russia.
“We, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania Foreign Ministers, call on Germany to provide Leopard tanks to Ukraine now,” Estonia’s Foreign Minister said on Twitter.
“This is needed to stop Russian aggression, help Ukraine and restore peace in Europe quickly. Germany as the leading European power has special responsibility in this regard.”
The statement came a day after Germany and Western allies reached no decision on whether Berlin would agree to send its Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine or permit other countries that have them to do so.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February last year raised concerns in the small Baltic states – all NATO members that restored their independence after decades of Soviet rule in 1991 – that they could also come under an attack from Moscow.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky attended a memorial service on Saturday to commemorate seven senior officials killed in a helicopter crash and broke down as he met family members of the victims.
In his daily video address, Mr Zelensky spoke about the crash.
“My condolences to all relatives and friends. It hurts to think about it, it hurts to talk about it,” he said.
“We are losing people every day, whom we will always remember and regret we can’t bring back,” he added, talking of “how many bright people are taken by wartime”.
Interior minister Denys Monastyrskyi, his deputy and five other high-ranking ministry officials were killed on Wednesday when their French-made Super Puma helicopter plummeted amid fog into a nursery near Kyiv.
Another seven people were killed, including one child, in the crash. Officials are still investigating the cause.
The helicopter went down just days after at least 45 people were killed in a Russian missile attack that partially levelled a block of flats in the southeastern city of Dnipro.
The US will impose additional sanctions on the Russian private military company the Wagner Group that has been helping the Russian military in Ukraine, the White House said.
White House national security spokesman John Kirby said Wagner “is a criminal organisation that is committing widespread atrocities and human rights abuses”.
“We will work relentlessly to identify, disrupt, expose and target those who are assisting Wagner,” he said.
Responding to the White House’s announcement, the head of Wagner, Yevgeny Prigozhin, published a short letter to the White House asking what crime his company was accused of.
It comes as Wagner said it would send the bodies of Ukrainian soldiers killed in fighting in the captured town of Soledar to territory held by Ukraine, a website linked to founder Prigozhin reported.
Germany’s defence minister Boris Pistorius is planning to visit Ukraine, he told a German newspaper, as Berlin is under mounting pressure to allow the shipment of German-made tanks to Ukraine.
“What is certain is that I will travel to Ukraine quickly. Probably even within the next four weeks,” Mr Pistorius told Bild am Sonntag in an interview published on Sunday.
On Friday, Germany and Western allies reached a deadlock on the decision that whether Berlin would agree to send Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine, or permit other countries that have them to do so, despite Ukraine’s pleas for modern tanks to boost its defence efforts.
Regarding the decision, the minister said: “We are in very close dialogue with our international partners, first and foremost with the US, on this issue.”
Russia’s foreign ministry said the European Union’s sanction of RT France would lead to retaliatory measures against French media in Russia.
“Blocking RT France account will lead to retaliatory measures against French media in Russia. They will be very noticeable, if the French authorities do not stop intimidating Russian journalists,” the ministry said.
The bank account of the pro-Kremlin TV channel was blocked by France at the request of the General Directorate of the Treasury under the French Ministry of Economy and Finance, Le Monde reported on Thursday.
The decision was part of the ninth package of EU sanctions.
The French arm of the Russian state-owned RT television network said on Saturday it was shutting down its operations after authorities used European Union sanctions to freeze its bank accounts.
Late last February, shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine, the European Union said it would ban Russia Today on the grounds it had been spreading disinformation about the war. RT (Russia Today) France appealed the ban but lost.
Xenia Fedorova, the head of RT France, tweeted that French authorities had cited a ninth EU package of sanctions agreed last December.
“The funds of RT France are frozen at the request of the general directorate of the Treasury … our channel can no longer continue its activity,” she said.
In a separate statement, RT France said 133 employees’ jobs were at risk and called itself “a breath of fresh air” that had covered the war in a balanced way.
It accused the French authorities of censorship and said RT France had never been condemned or sanctioned for any reason.
Russia has intensified shelling Ukraine‘s eastern regions outside the main front line in the Donbas industrial area, officials from the Zaporizhzhia and Sumy regions said.
The Ukrainian military’s General Staff said Russia continues its offensive in Zaporizhzhia, increasingly using aerial attacks.
At least 25 settlements in the region were affected by Russian artillery fire on Saturday.
Russian forces launched 115 strikes in the Sumy region that borders Russia in Ukraine‘s northeast, regional Governor Dmytro Zhyvytsky said on Telegram.
Russia’s attacks seek to overload Ukraine‘s defences and deter Kyiv from retaking territory, officials and analysts say.
“Attempting to study our defence, the enemy has activated artillery fire,” Oleksandr Starukh, governor of the Zaporizhzhia region of southeastern Ukraine, said on the Telegram messaging app.
Russia fired on the region 166 times through the day, he said, with 113 attacks aimed at populated areas, killing one civilian. Russia says it does not target civilians.
The first Sea King helicopters donated to Ukrainian forces by the UK have arrived in the country, according to the Ukrainian defence minister.
Minister Oleksii Reznikov announced the helicopters’ arrival in a tweet, thanking his British counterpart and displaying a video of Ukrainian troops using the helicopter winch system.
The UK’s defence minister Ben Wallace said in November that the UK would supply three Sea King helicopters, as well as assist in training 10 crews in their use.
Ukrainian troops foiled a suspected sabotage attempt on Friday night in the northeastern Sumy Oblast, says spokesperson for the border guard service.
Andrii Demchenko, spokesperson for the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine said border troops “detected an attempt to infiltrate from [a] sabotage and reconnaissance group from Russia.”
Speaking at a Ukrainian telethon on Saturday, Demchenko said Russia’s troops “retreated behind the state border” after Ukrainian border troops discovered and fired upon the group.
Sumy Oblast lies just under 200 miles to the north east of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv.
Demchenko also reported on the border with Belarus, saying: “So far, intelligence units and other components that monitor the situation in this area have not noticed the formation of a strike group on the territory of Belarus that could carry out an invasion.
“But the enemy should never be underestimated.”
Read more on Belarus here:
Lukashenko jokes he and Putin are the two ‘meanest, most toxic people on the planet’
The Biden administration has reiterated its support for Finnish and Swedish membership of NATO, following calls with foreign ministers.
Both countries applied to join the alliance following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.
Only two countries in the group, Hungary and Turkey, have yet to approve the membership application.
US secretary of state Antony Blinken spoke with the foreign ministers of Finland and Sweden, stating that the US places great importance on “remaining allies quickly ratifying their accession.”
Hungary is expected to ratify the decision in the coming days, with Turkey said to be holding out on the decision after raising significant objections to the Nordic country’s support for Kurdish groups.
Read more here:
US says it’s time for Finland, Sweden to join NATO
Western countries price caps on Russian refined oil products are “complicated”, says US treasury secretary.
Speaking with reporters on a visit to Senegal, secretary Janet Yellen said markets are volatile and there is a chance the upcoming price caps do not go to plan.
The G7 group of nations will be imposing a price cap on Russian oil products in February to reduce its ability to finance its war in Ukraine.
A broader price cap on Russian crude oil has been in place since December.
However, secretary Yellen remained optimistic, saying: “We’ve studied these markets very carefully and we believe that we’re going to come out with a set of caps that will achieve the same things that we’ve achieved with crude so far.”
She continued saying the crude oil cap had proven successful thus far with a drop in the price that Russia was earning.
Pressure on Germany to provide Leopard 2 battle tanks has intensified in recent days.
Despite the announcement of a squadron of 14 Challenger 2 tanks sent from the UK, Germany’s chancellor Olaf Schultz has yet to approve the transfer of Leopard 2 tanks, which Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly requested.
The Leopard 2 tank is used by other European armies such as Poland, Finland, the Netherlands and Spain.
Poland’s prime minister Mateusz Morawiecki has also indicated he would be willing to send Leopard 2s without Germany’s consent.
Former British army commander and logistics specialist, Major General Tim Cross, has suggested: “One can to an extent understand German reservations about the Leopards. The sight of German tanks rolling east across Ukraine would bring back some bad historic memories.
“But the Ukrainians will be getting tanks and tanks will play an important part in this conflict.”
Read more here:
Germany drags feet on decision to send tanks Ukraine desperately craves
The French arm of the Russian state-owned RT television network said on Saturday it was shutting down after authorities used European Union sanctions to freeze its bank accounts.
Late last February, shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine, the European Union said it would ban Russia Today on the grounds it had been spreading disinformation about the war. RT (Russia Today) France appealed the ban but lost.
Xenia Fedorova, the head of RT France, tweeted that French authorities had cited a ninth EU package of sanctions agreed last December.
“The funds of RT France are frozen at the request of the general directorate of the Treasury … our channel can no longer continue its activity,” she said.
In March, the European Union’s Court of Justice on Wednesday rejected a RT France bid for a temporary reprieve.
In a separate statement, RT France said 133 employees’ jobs were at risk and called itself “a breath of fresh air” that had covered the war in a balanced way.
It accused the French authorities of censorship and said RT France had never been condemned or sanctioned for any reason.
The pressure is on Western leaders to boost their military support for Ukraine – with Britain having stepped up its pledges of equipment in recent weeks.
The dispatch of 14 British Army Challenger 2s answered persistent calls from president Volodymyr Zelensky for Western ground vehicles. Britain has also announced almost 600 more Brimstone missiles will be donated to Ukraine, to boost its offensive capability, as well as air defence missiles.
Attention has now turned to Germany, with Kyiv requesting on countless occasions that Berlin allow its Leopard 2 tanks – used by armies such as Poland, Finland, the Netherlands and Spain – to be re-exported to Ukraine.
Emily Atkinson reports:
What tanks and military aid has the UK sent to Ukraine?
A tearful Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky attended a memorial service on Saturday to commemorate seven senior Interior Ministry officials killed in a helicopter crash this week, a fresh blow to a nation already grieving its many war dead.
Interior minister Denys Monastyrskyi, his deputy and five other high-ranking ministry officials were killed when their French-made Super Puma helicopter plummeted amid fog into a nursery on the eastern outskirts of Kyiv on Wednesday.
Another seven people were killed, including one child, in the crash. Officials are still investigating the cause of the crash.
The helicopter went down just days after at least 45 people were killed in a Russian missile attack that partially levelled a block of flats in the southeastern city of Dnipro.
On the battlefield, Ukrainian forces are fending off an unrelenting Russian onslaught in the east, where Moscow has expended massive resources for incremental advances 11 months into its full-scale invasion.
“The indescribable sadness is covering the soul,” Zelensky wrote in a Telegram post on Saturday. “Ukraine is losing its best sons and daughters every day.”
Zelensky and his wife, Olena Zelenska, paid their respects to the victims’ relatives inside the hulking Ukrainian House cultural centre in central Kyiv. A crowd of mourners snaked outside toward Independence Square.
Kyrylo Budanov, the military intelligence chief, described Monastyrskyi’s death as “a huge loss”.
“If not for (Monastyrskyi), everything could have been completely different,” he told Ukrainian media, referring to the resistance Ukraine mounted after Moscow’s Feb. 24 assault.
“He is a true hero of this country.”
Monastyrskyi had been flying to a location near the frontline, a police spokesperson said on Thursday.
Boris Johnson has compared Vladimir Putin to “the fat boy in Dickens” who wants to “make our flesh creep” with threats of using nuclear weapons.
Speaking about Ukraine at the World Economic Forum in Davos, the former prime minister insisted that the Russian president would not resort to using nuclear weapons, dismissing the idea as “nonsense”.
He said: “Putin wants to present it as a nuclear stand-off between Nato and Russia. Nonsense. He’s not going to use nuclear weapons, okay. He’s like the fat boy in Dickens, he wants to make our flesh creep. He wants us to think about it. He’s never going to do it.”
“He’s not going to do it. Don’t go down that rabbit hole, stop it,” Mr Johnson added.
Boris Johnson compares Putin to ‘the fat boy in Dickens’
The Metropolitan Opera will mark the first anniversary of Russia‘s invasion of Ukraine with a concert to remember victims of the war.
Met music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin will conduct Mozart’s Requiem and Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony. Soprano Golda Schultz, mezzo-soprano Emily D’Angelo, tenor Dmytro Popov, and Ukrainian bass-baritone Vladyslav Buialskyi will be the soloists at the Feb. 24 performance.
“Mozart’s Requiem is to remember the innocent victims of the war, and Beethoven’s Fifth is in anticipation of the victory to come,” Met general manager Peter Gelb said in a statement Friday.
Met Opera concert to mark anniversary of Ukraine invasion
The Metropolitan Opera will mark the first anniversary of Russia‘s invasion of Ukraine with a concert to remember victims of the war.
Met music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin will conduct Mozart’s Requiem and Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony. Soprano Golda Schultz, mezzo-soprano Emily D’Angelo, tenor Dmytro Popov, and Ukrainian bass-baritone Vladyslav Buialskyi will be the soloists at the Feb. 24 performance.
“Mozart’s Requiem is to remember the innocent victims of the war, and Beethoven’s Fifth is in anticipation of the victory to come,” Met general manager Peter Gelb said in a statement Friday.
Met Opera concert to mark anniversary of Ukraine invasion
The US defense secretary, Lloyd Austin, has urged allies to “dig deeper” to support Ukraine at a meeting of Nato and defense leaders in Germany, as pressure grows on Berlin to authorise its German-made Leopard 2 tanks to be sent from nations across Europe to Ukraine. However, so far Berlin has refused to budge.
Ukraine believes the tanks are vital to its ability to hold off Russia‘s invasion, and Western nations believe that – given their use by armies across Europe – they would provide the swiftest way to give Kyiv what it is crying out for. Once Berlin signs off on them being re-exported from other nations. So why does Kyiv rate them so?
The Leopard 2 tank is regarded as one of the West’s best. German defence company Krauss-Maffei Wegmann has built more than 3,500 such tanks since beginning production in 1978.
Chris Stevenson reports:
What are Leopard 2 tanks and why would they help Ukraine?
It is a cliche, but an unavoidable one when faced with the tragedy of Ukraine: the West is about to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.
By failing to supply all of the military equipment Volodymyr Zelensky has begged his Nato friends for, it makes it all the more possible – if not likely – that the war in Ukraine which has cost so much in lives and human suffering, will, in the end, be lost. With the fall of Ukraine, the security of Europe and the world will also be ceded.
Without the right quantity and quality of equipment – especially the main battle tanks essential to restoring Ukrainian territorial integrity – the sheer weight of Russian numbers, poorly equipped and trained as they are, could eventually overwhelm Ukraine and its battered economy.
Read more here:
Editorial: Germany must face up to the threat from the East
Joe Biden told a Polish reporter that Ukraine will “get all the help they need” after he was asked about sending more tanks.
The US president was asked by Marek WaÅ‚kuski if he supported Poland’s call for Germany and other countries to send Leopard tanks to Ukraine.
He simply answered that the war-torn country will be given all of the resources and aid they need to fight Russia.
This video shows the exchange at the White House event.
Joe Biden tells reporter Ukraine will get ‘all the help they need’
The private Russian military group Wagner plans to send the bodies of Ukrainian soldiers killed in fighting in the captured town of Soledar to territory held by Ukraine, a website linked to the group’s founder Yevgeny Prigozhin reported on Saturday.
Wagner said on Jan. 11 it had captured Soledar, and Russian-installed authorities in Ukraine‘s eastern Donetsk region said earlier this week they were in control of the salt-mining town, where intense fighting has taken place.
The RIA FAN website – part of Prigozhin’s media holdings – quoted a Wagner commander as saying the mercenary company would send the bodies from Soledar to Ukrainian-held territory in four or five convoys totalling about 20 trucks.
Saturday’s report did not say how many bodies would be returned to Ukrainian authorities, but said Ukraine‘s forces had suffered heavy losses in Soledar.
It said Prigozhin had made clear that soldiers’ bodies should be returned to Ukraine in a “dignified” way, but gave no further details about the planned operation.
Ukrainian authorities said during the fight for Soledar that Russian forces sustained heavy losses.
Prigozhin, who previously shunned the public spotlight and denied connections to Wagner, admitted in September that he founded the mercenary army, which has played a major role in the conflict. He has described Wagner as a fully independent force with its own aircraft, tanks, rockets and artillery.
A senior adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky urged Kyiv’s allies to “think faster” about stepping up their military support, a day after they failed to agree on sending battle tanks coveted by Kyiv.
Here is the latest on weaponry in the war:
The pressure on Germany from Western allies to authorise the sending of Leopard 2 battle tanks to Ukraine had been intense in the lead up to the summit at the Ramstein Air Base. But in the end Olaf Schulz’s government refused to take that crucial step.
Ukraine has repeatedly stressed that modern battlefield tanks are crucial for fighting off Russia‘s invasion, with a major offensive by the enemy expected as winter ends. President Volodymyr Zelensky said that “the war started by Russia does not allow delays… terror does not allow for discussion.”
The announcement by the German defence minister, Boris Pistorius, that no decision will be made – for up to at least a month according to some reports – is prevarication with significant repercussions which could prove to be costly for Ukraine.
Our world affairs editor Kim Sengupta reports:
Germany drags feet on decision to send tanks Ukraine desperately craves
One woman was also killed in the southern Zaporizhzhia region, where Russian forces launched more than 160 shelling attacks overnight, governor Oleksandr Starukh said.
He added that 21 cities and towns were targeted, and two other civilians were injured.
Five civilians have been killed and 13 wounded by Russian shelling over the past 24 hours in Ukraine’s east and south, the deputy head of Ukraine’s presidential office Kyrylo Tymoshenko said on Saturday.
Ukrainian forces overnight repelled Russian attacks in Bakhmut and other parts of the country’s embattled east, the military added.
A 60-year-old woman died after Russian shells hit her home in the north-eastern Kharkiv region, local governor Oleh Syniehubov said. He added that four other people were wounded in the province.
Kyiv’s military intelligence chief has described the death of Ukraine’s interior minister as a “huge loss.”
Denys Monastyrsky died in a helicopter crash in Brovary on 18 January. His funeral was held today at the Ukrainian House in Kyiv.
Speaking at the ceremony, Kyrylo Budanov said: “If not for (Monastyrskyi), everything could have been completely different,” he told Ukrainian media, referring to the resistance Ukraine mounted against the Russian invasion.
“He is a true hero of this country.”
The US defense secretary, Lloyd Austin, has urged allies to “dig deeper” to support Ukraine at the start of a meeting of Nato and defense leaders in Germany, as pressure grows on Berlin to authorise its German-made Leopard 2 tanks to be sent from nations across Europe to Ukraine.
Ukraine believes the tanks are vital to its ability to hold off Russia‘s invasion, and Western nations believe that – given their use by armies across Europe – they would provide the swiftest way to give Kyiv what it is crying out for. Once Berlin signs off on them being re-exported from other nations. So why does Kyiv rate them so?
The Leopard 2 tank is regarded as one of the West’s best. German defence company Krauss-Maffei Wegmann has built more than 3,500 such tanks since beginning production in 1978.
Chris Steveson has more:
What are Leopard 2 tanks and why would they help Ukraine?
Germany has made many painful sacrifices in order to help defend Ukraine and, thus, Europe and democracy. This is why it needs to take this decisive step with the tanks, to ensure that the effort to protect its allies does not end up wasted.
Read our latest editorial:
Editorial: Germany must face up to the threat from the East
President Volodymyr Zelensky and his wife Olena offered relatives their condolences during the funeral ceremony of interior minister Denys Monastyrsky and other employees of his department at the Ukrainian House in Kyiv today.
Mr Monastyrsky died in a helicopter crash in Brovary on 18 January. Fourteen people were killed, other ministry officials and a child.
The head of Russia’s Wagner group has written a short letter to the White House asking what crime his company was accused of, after Washington announced new sanctions on the group.
White House national security spokesperson John Kirby said on Friday that the private military contractor, which has been supporting Russian forces in their invasion of Ukraine and claiming credit for battlefield advances, would be designated a significant Transnational Criminal Organisation.
A letter in English addressed to Kirby and posted on the Telegram channel of Wagner founder Yevgeny Prigozhin’s press service read: “Dear Mr Kirby, Could you please clarify what crime was committed by PMC Wagner?”
Kirby called Wagner “a criminal organization that is committing widespread atrocities and human rights abuses”.
Last month, the White House said Wagner had taken delivery of an arms shipment from North Korea to help bolster Russian forces in Ukraine, which Pyongyang and Prigozhin dismissed as “gossip and speculation”.
A senior adviser to president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has urged Ukraine’s allies to “think faster” about stepping up their military support, a day after they failed to agree on sending battle tanks coveted by Kyiv.
“You’ll help Ukraine with the necessary weapons anyway and realize that there is no other option to end the war except the defeat of Russia,” Mykhailo Podolyak wrote on Twitter.
“But today’s indecision is killing more of our people. Every day of delay is the death of Ukrainians. Think faster.”
Three civilians have been killed and another four injured during Russian attacks in the Donetsk region, the region’s governor says.
Posting to Telegram, Pavlo Kyrylenko said that two were killed in Bakhmut and another in the small town of Zhelanne.
The pressure is on Western leaders to boost their military support for Ukraine – with Britain having stepped up its pledges of equipment in recent weeks.
The UK government prides itself on having been involved in leading Western efforts in supplying Ukraine with aid to fight Russia’s invasion. Click the link below to see a rundown of all the military aid Britain has provided to Kyiv:
What tanks and military aid has the UK sent to Ukraine?
Images capture the residents of Toretsk and Druzhkovka living among the paraphenilia of war as Russia continues to ramp up its offensive in the Donetsk region.
Just miles from the front line in eastern Ukraine, locals are seen filling up water bottles from tanks and taking wood from buildings destoryed by Russian missiles to sell.
The region’s Kyiv-appointed governor has accused Russia of using scorched-earth tactics.
Both Kyiv and Moscow have massed “significant forces” in the Zaporizhzhia region, the British Ministry of Defence (MoD) has said.
According to its daily intelligence update, the two sides have “conducted artillery exchanges and skirmishes, but have avoided any large-scale offensive effort” in the region so far.
Overall, though “the conflict is in a state of deadlock”, the MoD adds.
In a Twitter statement, the MoD said: “In recent days, the heaviest fighting has focused in three sectors. In the northeast, near Kremina, Ukraine has likely made small gains and successfully defended against a Russian counter-attack.
“Around the Donetsk Oblast, in Bakhmut sector, Russian and Wagner proxy forces have likely been reconstituting in the town of Soledar, after capturing it earlier in the week.”
UK defence officials also warned of a “realistic possibility of local Russian advances around Bakhmut.”
The US is advising Ukraine to hold off on launching a major offensive against Russian forces until the latest supply of American weaponry is in place and training has been provided, reports say.
A senior Biden administration official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the US believed an offensive would stand to be more successful should the Ukrainians take advantage of the training and the significant infusion of new weaponry.
A former US Navy SEAL who went AWOL in 2019 has been killed in Ukraine, American officials have said. Daniel W. Swift, who was not fighting in an official capacity, was injured in Dnipro and died of his wounds, said one of the officials, who all spoke on condition of anonymity.No other details were available, including whether Swift’s body has been taken out of Ukraine.The Navy said he deserted his post in San Diego, California, in March 2019.
“We cannot speculate as to why the former Sailor was in Ukraine,” the Navy said.At least five other Americans are known to have died fighting in Ukraine, according to state department statements and reports from individual families.
Turkish defence minister Hulusi Akar says that a planned visit by his Swedish counterpart to Ankara has been cancelled after Swedish authorities granted permission for protests in Stockholm.
“At this point, the visit of Swedish defence minister Pal Jonson to Turkey on 27 January has become meaningless. So we cancelled the visit,” Akar said.
Swedish defence Mmnister Jonson had planned to travel next week to Ankara at the invitation of his Turkish counterpart as the Nordic country hopes to nudge Turkey to ratify its bid to join Nato.
Akar said he discussed the lack of measures for protests in Sweden against Turkey with President Tayyip Erdogan and conveyed his reaction to his Swedish counterpart on the sidelines of a meeting of Ukraine Defence Contact Group.
Ukrainian forces will train on Leopard-2 battle tanks in Poland, defence minister Oleksii Reznikov was quoted as saying yesterday.
Reznikov spoke to Ukrainian-language Voice of America after attending a meeting at Ramtsein Air Base, Germany, where Ukraine‘s partners did not take a decision on handing over the tanks. Germany, which makes the Leopard tanks, would have to approve any transfer.
Reznikov described the training development as a breakthrough, attributing the success to efforts by Poland.
“We will start with this and then we will move further,” Voice of America quoted him as saying.
A former member of the US special forces, who was not fighting in an official capacity, been killed in Ukraine, American officials say.
Daniel W Swift, a former member of the Navy SEALs, is listed in official records as having deserted.
The Navy did not provide further information about his US military record.
At least five other Americans are known to have died fighting in Ukraine. The US government has discouraged Americans from going to fight there.
Ukraine’s defence minister has said he had “a frank discussion” with Germany’s defence minister about the supply of Leopard tanks.
Oleskii Reznikov added that the talks would continue after Western allies in Germany did not reach agreement to supply tanks to Kyiv.
Germany, which makes the Leopard tanks, would have to approve any transfer.
Russians in St Petersburg and Moscow have been laying flowers at improvised memorials to the victims of a Russian missile attack on a nine-storey apartment block in the Ukrainian city of Dnipro.
Ukraine’s State Emergency Service said on Tuesday, after calling off search operations, that 44 people were confirmed dead from Saturday’s attack, including five children, and that 20 people were still unaccounted for.
On Friday evening, dozens of bunches of flowers and several cuddly toys were arranged around the base of a monument to Ukrainian national poet Taras Shevchenko in central St Petersburg. One ribbon read “Forgive”.
Russia’s Wagner paramilitary group has denied it is recruiting Serbs to fight in Ukraine, a day after activists filed criminal complaints against the organisation in Belgrade.
Among those identified in the complaints were Russia’s ambassador to Serbia, Alexander Botsan-Kharchenko, and Aleksandar Vulin, head of Serbia’s state Security and Information Agency.
“I do not recruit Serbs,” Wagner founder Yevgeny Prigozhin said in a statement, saying he had never head of Botsan-Kharchenko or Vulin.
Earlier this week Serbian president Aleksandar Vucic said Russia should halt its efforts to recruit Serbs to fight alongside Wagner forces. He said Russian websites and social media groups were publishing advertisements in the Serbian language in which the Wagner group called for volunteers.
Taiwan has learned important lessons from Russia’s war in Ukraine that would help it deter any attack by China or defend itself if invaded, the self-ruled island’s top envoy to the US.
Among the lessons: Do more to prepare military reservists and also civilians for the kind of all-of-society fight that Ukrainians are waging against Russia.
“Everything we’re doing now is to prevent the pain and suffering of the tragedy of Ukraine from being repeated in our scenario in Taiwan,” said Bi-khim Hsiao, Taiwan’s representative in Washington, on Friday in an interview with The Associated Press.
“So ultimately, we seek to deter the use of military force. But in a worst-case scenario, we understand that we have to be better prepared,” Ms Hsiao said.
Ms Hsiao spoke at the quiet, more than 130-year-old hilltop mansion that Taiwan uses for official functions in Washington.
The Leopard 2 tank is regarded as one of the West’s best. Given that Ukraine has been using Soviet-era tanks up until now, it would be a big step-up in capability, particularly in terms of range of firepower and manoeuvrability:
What are Leopard 2 tanks and why would they help Ukraine?
The United States will impose additional sanctions next week on Russian private military company the Wagner Group, which officials say has been helping Russia’s military, the White House says.
National security spokesperson John Kirby, who said the US Treasury Department would designate Wagner as a significant transnational criminal organisation, added: “In coordination with this designation, we will also impose additional sanctions next week against Wagner and its support network across multiple continents.
“These actions recognise the transcontinental threat that Wagner poses, including through its ongoing pattern of serious criminal activity.”
The UK government prides itself on having been led Western efforts in supplying Ukraine with aid to fight Russia’s invasion. Emily Atkinson reports on the military aid Britain has provided:
What tanks and military aid has the UK sent to Ukraine?
A bipartisan delegation of three US senators visiting Kyiv blasted the delays to Western tank supplies to Ukraine, one of them warning of an impending “major counter-offensive” by Russia.
The delegation, comprising Republican Lindsey Graham as well as Democrats Richard Blumenthal and Sheldon Whitehouse, met Volodymyr Zelensky, who asked for “investment, not charity”, according to Mr Graham.
The Republican singled out Germany as he expressed his frustration over a lack of tanks sent to Kyiv by Western allies, including the United States.
“I am tired of the s***show of who is going to send tanks and when they are going to send them,” he said. “To the Germans: send tanks to Ukraine, because they need the tanks. It is in your interest that Putin loses in Ukraine.”
Protesters have demonstrated outside the German Chancellery in Berlin demanding the country send Ukraine Leopard battle tanks.
The crowds, many of them expatriate Ukrainians living in Germany, chanted “Free the Leopards”.
The US believes Russian private military company the Wagner Group has 50,000 personnel fighting in Ukraine, including 10,000 contractors and 40,000 convicts that the company has recruited from prisons, America’s security chief says.
White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said the the US believes Wagner, owned by Putin ally Yevgeny Prigozhin, is spending about $100 million a month in the war.
“We are seeing indications, including in intelligence, that tensions between Wagner and the Russian Defence Ministry are increasing,” Mr Kirby said.
“Wagner is becoming a rival power center to the Russian military and other Russian ministries. Publicly, Prigozhin and his fighters have criticised Russian generals and defence officials for their performance in Ukraine.”
Wagner Group mercenaries have been accused by Western countries and UN experts of numerous human rights abuses throughout Africa, including in the Central African Republic, Libya and Mali.
The chairman of the Commons defence select committee has criticised the western allies for being slow to provide battle tanks to Ukraine while Vladimir Putin is threatening to renew attacks.
Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood told The Independent: “The UK has done well to push the envelope of military assistance, but this is all very late in the day.
“Russia is in this for the long haul. It’s retooling its industries, it is preparing for a spring offensive. And here we are arguing over the types of tanks that we may or may not give to Ukraine.”
Western envoys on Friday visited Kosovo and Serbia as part of their ongoing efforts to defuse tensions and help secure a reconciliation agreement between the two former war foes.
Envoys from the United States, the European Union, France, Germany and Italy first met with Prime Minister Albin Kurti in Kosovo. They later met in Belgrade with President Aleksandar Vucic to discuss possible next steps toward normalizing relations between Serbia and Kosovo.
Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in 2008. Serbia, with support from allies Russia and China, has refused to recognize Kosovo’s statehood, which is accepted by the U.S. and much of the West. The dispute remains a source of instability in the Balkans amid Moscow’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Sylejman Kllokoqi and Llazar Semini report:
Western envoys visit Kosovo, Serbia to defuse tensions
Social media posts on Friday said air-defense systems have been installed in several spots in Moscow, including atop the Russian Defense Ministry headquarters.
Russian officials have not commented on the reports of weaponry resembling a Pantsir-S1 mobile anti-aircraft system spotted on the roofs of a building in central Moscow about 2 kilometers (1.2 miles) east of the Kremlin and of the Defense Ministry, which looms along the Moscow River across from Gorky Park.
Reports earlier in the week said S-400 mobile surface-to-air missile units were seen near the sprawling Losiny Ostrov forest park on Moscow’s northern border and at an agricultural institute in the capital.
Read more:
Social media report anti-aircraft systems placed in Moscow
A pledging conference in Germany ended without a commitment by Western allies to send more battle tanks to Ukraine, despite a call from President Volodymyr Zelensky to speed up the delivery of military support in his country’s struggle against Russia.
So far among the Nato allies, only the UK has agreed to send tanks, in the form of 14 British Army Challenger 2s.
There had been hopes that Germany would authorise the release of its Leopard 2 battle tanks, which are potentially available in far greater numbers.
Sophie Wingate reports:
No decision on more tanks for Ukraine, despite pleas from Zelensky
Germany is doing enough to show real leadership in Europe, but “we can all do more”, US defence secretary Lloyd Austin has remarked following Friday’s failure to make a decision on sending tanks to Ukraine.
“Yes. But we can all do more and the United States and every other member of the UDC (Ukraine Defence Contact group) can do more”, Mr Austin told the press conference when pushed on this question mark.
“Germany has contributed a lot to this to this campaign…
“They are a reliable ally, they’ve been that way for a very, very long time and I truly believe that they’ll continue to be a reliable ally going forward.”
Russia claimed Friday to have captured a village in its intense, monthslong push toward the eastern Ukraine city of Bakhmut, as military analysts cautioned that tanks that may be sent by Kyiv’s Western allies wouldn’t be a magic wand in the almost 11-month war.
Russian Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov told a regular media briefing that the village of Klishchiivka, nine kilometers (five miles) south of Bakhmut, had been “liberated.”
The claim couldn’t be independently verified, and Ukrainian officials made no immediate comment on the claim.
Read more:
Russia claims progress in eastern Ukraine; Kyiv craves tanks
Elites from politics, business, academia and the arts on Friday wrapped up the World Economic Forum’s annual conclave in the Swiss town of Davos — where worries about the war in Ukraine, a warming planet and a cooling global economy dominated discussions about the world’s ills.
The 53rd edition of the weeklong gathering in the Alps drew notables like Ukraine’s first lady, climate activist Greta Thunberg, and actor Idris Elba, plus hundreds of presidents, prime ministers, CEOs and other decision-makers who hashed out deals and voiced demands on everything from trade to tanks for Ukraine.
Jamey Keaten and Courtney Bonnell report:
Ukraine, climate, economy: Takeaways from glitzy Davos event
The US government has designated the Russian private military contractor known as the Wagner Group as a “transnational criminal organization,” giving the notorious mercenary outfit the same status as international drug cartels and human trafficking organisations under US law.
National Security Council Coordinator for Strategic Communications John Kirby on Friday said the move is the result of Wagner’s ongoing operations in Ukraine, which he described as “committing atrocities and human rights abuses”.
Mr Kirby also said American intelligence has assessed that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s war effort is increasingly relying on Wagner, leading to tensions between Russian defence officials and the owner of Wagner, Yevgeny Prigozhin.
Andrew Feinberg reports:
US designates Russia’s Wagner Group as ‘transnational criminal organisation’
Moscow has warned the West it will “regret” sending military aid to Ukraine.
The comments come as western defence ministers gathered at the Ramstein airbase in Germany to discuss sending further support to Ukraine.
European leaders urged Berlin to give the green light for the delivery of German-produced Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine in an attempt to drive back Moscow’s forces. However, no decision was reached.
Before the meeting, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov urged the West not to supply additional tanks to Kyiv.
The Independent reports:
Russia warns ‘delusional’ West will ‘regret’ sending military aid to Ukraine
Ukraine is “confident” western allies will eventually provide the battle tanks Kyiv needs, the country’s defence minister has said, after a pledging conference ended without a consensus on the matter.
Yuriy Sak told BBC Radio 4’s PM: “Of course we were expecting a different outcome.
“But let me put it this way, we are confident that this is a temporary decision and we are confident that our allies understand very well that for Ukraine to win this war for all of us, for Ukraine to be able to liberate our territory, for Ukraine to be able to de-occupy our cities, we need those tanks.”
Ukraine needs “only 300 to make a difference”, Mr Sak said.
If no more tanks are released, “the risks for all of us are that this war can become a protracted war”, Mr Sak added.
The Metropolitan Opera will mark the first anniversary of Russia‘s invasion of Ukraine with a concert to remember victims of the war.
Met music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin will conduct Mozart’s Requiem and Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony. Soprano Golda Schultz, mezzo-soprano Emily D’Angelo, tenor Dmytro Popov, and Ukrainian bass-baritone Vladyslav Buialskyi will be the soloists at the Feb. 24 performance.
“Mozart’s Requiem is to remember the innocent victims of the war, and Beethoven’s Fifth is in anticipation of the victory to come,” Met general manager Peter Gelb said in a statement Friday.
Read more:
Met Opera concert to mark anniversary of Ukraine invasion
Several countries have pledged to send air defence systems to Ukraine, US defence secretary Lloyd Austin has announced.
Speaking at a press conference during a pledging conference at the US airbase in Ramstein, Germany, he said: “France, Germany and the UK have all donated air defence systems to Ukraine, and that includes a Patriot battery from Germany, and that’s especially important coming alongside our own contribution of a Patriot system.
“And the Netherlands is also donating Patriot missiles and launchers and training.
“Meanwhile, Canada has procured a NASAM system and associated munitions for Ukraine.
“So these air defence systems will help save countless innocent lives.”
He said he believed the combined arms effort would help Ukraine win the war.
US defence chiefs have commended the UK for its plan to send Challenger 2 battle tanks, as Germany came under pressure to send more heavy weaponry to Kyiv.
US defence secretary Lloyd Austin said the war was about global security, and the contact group that met today was standing up for a world where rules mattered and where people could grow up without tyranny.
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley said this was the most united he had ever seen Nato.
The new US package signified US resolve to protect and liberate Russian-occupied Ukraine, he said.
Eventually President Putin, Russia would realise their strategic miscalculation, he predicted.
The United States and its allies have been ramping up supplies of armoured vehicles being sent to Ukraine amid their concerns about a Russian spring offensive.
Below is a list of some of the vehicles governments have sent or have committed to send to Ukraine, based on sources such as Reuters reports and government websites. The amount of detail published by countries about their support varies.
Russia claims to have captured a village in its intense, months-long push toward the eastern Ukraine city of Bakhmut.
It comes as military analysts said tanks, which could be sent by Kyiv’s western allies, would not be a magic wand in the 11-month war.
Russian Defence Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov told a regular media briefing the village of Klishchiivka, five miles south of Bakhmut, has been “liberated”.
The claim could not be independently verified and Ukrainian officials made no immediate comment on the claim.
Russia’s war against Ukraine is hitting Africans particularly hard by exacerbating food insecurity and putting an unnecessary drag on the continent’s economy, US Treasury secretary Janet Yellen said in Senegal’s capital Dakar on Friday.
Yellen said ending the war would be the best thing to help the global economy, but Treasury estimated that a Group of Seven-led price cap on Russian crude oil and refined products to limit Russia’s revenues could save the 17 largest net oil-importing African countries $6 billion annually.
Speaking at the start of a three-country visit to Africa, Yellen said some emerging market countries were saving even more by using the price cap to negotiate steeper discounts with Russia, and Treasury was encouraging others to follow suit.
Germany’s new defence minister Boris Pistorius denied that Berlin was unilaterally blocking the delivery of Leopard tanks to Ukraine and said the government would be ready to move quickly on the issue if there was consensus among allies.
“There are good reasons for the deliveries and there are good reasons against, and in view of the entire situation of a war that has been ongoing for almost one year, all pros and cons must be weighed very carefully,” Pistorius said.
Ukrainian President Volodmyr Zelenskiy, speaking at the start of today’s meeting at Ramstein Airbase, thanked allies for their support, but said more was needed and more quickly.
“We have to speed up. Time must become our weapon. The Kremlin must lose,” said Zelensky, adding to earlier comments implying the Germany was holding other countries back from sending their tanks.
Russia was regrouping, recruiting, and trying to re-equip, US defence secretary Lloyd Austin said at the meeting.
“This is not a moment to slow down. It’s a time to dig deeper. The Ukrainian people are watching us,” he said, without making specific reference to tanks.
NATO secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg said on Friday that countries backing Ukraine needed to focus not only on sending new weapons to Kyiv, but looking at ammunition for older systems and helping maintain them.
“We need also to remember that we need to not only focus on new platforms, but also to ensure that all the platforms which are already there can function as they should,” Stoltenberg told Reuters on the sidelines of a meeting of defence ministers on arming Ukraine.
Germany’s foreign intelligence service is alarmed by losses the Ukrainian army is suffering in fighting against Russian forces in the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, news magazine Der Spiegel reported on Friday.
The Ukrainian army is losing a three-digit number of soldiers every day, the BND intelligence service told a group of Bundestag lawmakers who focus on security at a secret meeting this week, Spiegel said, citing information it had received.
The BND warned that the capture of Bakhmut by Russian forces would have significant consequences, as it would allow Russia to make further advances. It also said the Russian army was using its own soldiers like cannon fodder in Bakhmut, Spiegel added.
Russian proxy forces in eastern Ukraine said on Friday that Russian forces had taken control of Klishchiivka, a small settlement south of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine.
A senior Russian politician on Friday published a picture of himself clutching a sledgehammer given to him by the Wagner mercenary group, a tool it has adopted as a symbol of vengeance since one was used to murder a Wagner defector last year.
The macabre gift appeared to be a thank you to Sergei Mironov, leader in parliament of the Kremlin-loyal A Just Russia party, for his support for Wagner and its exploits on the battlefields of eastern Ukraine.
Mironov, a former paratrooper, has hailed Wagner, which calls itself a private military company, as “a heroic military formation” after it spearheaded an operation that saw Russian forces this month capture the Ukrainian town of Soledar.
The politician published a picture of himself posing with the sledgehammer on his social media accounts, thanking Yevgeny Prigozhin, Wagner’s founder, for the unusual gift.
Some European countries are prepared to send heavy tanks to Ukraine, the bloc’s chief diplomat said on Friday, adding that he hoped the decision to provide them will be made at the defence ministers’ talks at Ramstein Air Base in Germany.
“This is the discussion that will take place in Ramstein today, where the EU will be represented. We have to give Ukraine the arms necessary not only to repel, which is what they’re doing, but also to regain terrain,” Josep Borrell told reporters in Madrid, referring to Ukraine’s battle against Russia’s invasion of the country.
“I think Ukraine needs the combat arms and heavy tanks that it has asked for and some European countries are prepared to give and I hope that is the decision that is taken,” he added.