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Ukraine war: Zelensky calls for more long-range missiles after Kyiv attack

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Ukraine war: Zelensky calls for more long-range missiles after Kyiv attack

Ukraine getting ‘closer and closer’ to becoming Nato member, says secretary general

Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky has called on Western allies to provide more long-range weapons after Kyiv was targeted in Russia’s fifth drone attack in just two weeks.

Russia has launched “systematic attacks” and rained missiles and drones across the capital region, looking for new tactics to make battlefield gains, Kyiv’s military head said.

Defence analysts said the attacks appeared to involve a new, unidentified type of low-flying drone that operates at an altitude of just 20-30 metres.

Ukrainian defence systems destroyed 35 of the 39 drones and two cruise missiles that Russia had launched overnight to target 10 regions in Ukraine.

Mr Zelensky said the attack showed how it was necessary to target bases within Russia to protect Ukraine from air raids.

“Our sufficient long-range capabilities should be a fair response to Russian terror. Everyone who supports us in this supports the defence against terror,” he said.

The attack on Kyiv came after Ukrainian officials confirmed that former MP Iryna Farion, a linguist who was well known for her campaigns defending the country’s language, had been shot dead in the city of Lviv. A manhunt is underway to find the attacker.

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Boris Johnson says Trump has ‘bravery’ required to bring peace in Ukraine

Former British prime minister Boris Johnson has said he is more convinced than ever that Donald Trump can “save Ukraine” and bring peace to the region.

Writing an opinion piece in the Daily Mail, Mr Johnson praised Mr Trump for his courage after he survived an assassination attack during his rally in Pennsylvania.

“Having talked to Donald Trump this week, I am more convinced than ever that he has the strength and the bravery to fix it, to save Ukraine, to bring peace — and to stop the disastrous contagion of conflict,” Mr Johnson wrote.

He recounted the dramatic moment during Mr Trump’s presidential campaign when he narrowly escaped death by turning his head at the right moment, the bullet grazing his head instead.

Mr Johnson said in those critical and chaotic situations Mr Trump’s true character was revealed.

“I believe that indomitable spirit is exactly what the world needs right now, and exactly what is needed in the White House,” he wrote.

Shweta Sharma21 July 2024 12:08

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Zelensky appeals for more long-range weapons after latest attack on Kyiv

Ukraine needs long-range weapons to protect its cities and troops on the frontline from Russian bombs and drones, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky said on Sunday after a massive overnight drone and missile attack.

Russia launched its fifth drone attack on Kyiv in two weeks overnight, with Ukraine’s air defence systems destroying all the air weapons before they reached the capital, Ukraine’s military said.

Ukraine’s air force said on Telegram that its air defence systems destroyed 35 of the 39 drones and two cruise missiles that Russia had launched overnight. The weapons, the air force said, targeted 10 of Ukraine’s regions.

It was not immediately clear how many drones were launched at Kyiv. There were no casualties and no significant damage reported, Serhiy Popko, head of the Ukrainian capital’s military administration, said on the Telegram.

“During last night alone, the Russian army used almost 40 ‘Shaheds’ against Ukraine. Importantly, most of them were shot down by our defenders of the sky,” Zelensky said on Telegram, referring to the drones.

He said it was necessary to destroy Russian bombers at Russian air bases to protect Ukraine from air raids.

“Our sufficient long-range capabilities should be a fair response to Russian terror. Everyone who supports us in this supports the defence against terror,” Zelensky said.

Zelensky renewed his call for Western allies to allow long-range strikes on Russia on Friday in London, saying Britain should try to convince its partners to remove the limits on their use.

Nato members have taken different approaches to how Ukraine can use weapons they donate. Some have made clear Kyiv can use them to strike targets inside Russia while the United States has taken a narrower approach, allowing its weapons to be used only just inside Russia’s border against targets supporting Russian military operations in Ukraine.

Russia launched three Iskander ballistic missiles, Ukraine’s air force said, without saying what happened to them.

The military administration of the Sumy region in Ukraine’s northeast bordering Russia said on Telegram that a Russian missile damaged critical infrastructure in the Shostkynskyi district of the region.

The administration did not provide detail on what infrastructure was hit.

There was no immediate comment from Russia about the attacks. Moscow says it does not attack civilian targets in Ukraine.

“These systematic attacks … with drones, once again prove that the invader is actively looking for an opportunity to strike Kyiv,” Popko said. “They’re testing new tactics, looking for new approach routes to the capital, trying to expose the location of our air defence.”

Reuters21 July 2024 11:01

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Conscription spreads across Europe: ‘This is where Russia has put us’

On 1 January this year, Latvia became the latest European country to reintroduce conscription, with all male citizens becoming eligible for the draft once they hit the age of 18 or – if still in higher education – once they graduate.

Seen most notably in the Scandinavian and Baltic countries, it’s part of a wider trend of expanded mobilisation across the continent as a result of the increasingly aggressive actions of Vladimir Putin’s Russia.

Robert Hamilton, head of Eurasia research at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, tells CNN that the West is “coming to the realisation that we may have to adjust the way we mobilize for war”.

“It is tragically true that here we are, in 2024, and we are grappling with the questions of how to mobilize millions of people to be thrown into a meatgrinder of a war potentially, but this is where Russia has put us,” he told the broadcaster.

General Wesley Clark, who is now retired but served as Nato’s Supreme Allied Commander Europe, told CNN: “So we’ve now got a war in Europe that we never thought we would see again. Whether this is a new Cold War or an emerging hot war is unclear,” he said, but “it’s a very imminent warning to Nato that we’ve got to rebuild our defenses.”

File: Nato forces conduct training exercise with Leopard 2A6 Tanks and fighting vehicles in Adazi, Latvia
File: Nato forces conduct training exercise with Leopard 2A6 Tanks and fighting vehicles in Adazi, Latvia (Getty Images)

Adam Withnall21 July 2024 10:08

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Russia defence ministry claims its jets prevented US bomber planes violating state border

Russia’s Defence Ministry claimed on Sunday that Russian MiG-29 and MiG-31 fighter jets prevented US strategic bombers from violating the state border over the Barents Sea.

“As the Russian fighter jets approached, the American strategic bombers adjusted their flight course… and subsequently turned away from the state border of the Russian Federation,” the ministry said in a statement.

Tara Cobham21 July 2024 09:09

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Recap: Zelensky calls on Starmer to ‘show leadership’ and allow Ukrainian strikes on Russia

Archie Mitchell and Tom Watling report:

Tara Cobham21 July 2024 08:39

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Russia targeted Kyiv with new-type of low-flying drones – report

Russia appears to have targeted Kyiv with a new type of drone that flew at a very low altitude, according to analysis of debris from the fallen weapon.

In aerial bombardments this weekend, the Russian military has launched not only missiles and kamikaze drones of the now-familiar Shahed-136 type but also deployed another new drone of an unknown type, according to the military analytical website Defence Express.

It said the drone flew at a low altitude of just 20-30 metres, analysing photographs of the weapon used in the attack.

The unidentified unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) had “a possible wingspan of more than 4 metres, beam plumage, a push rotor, and a square fuselage,” it said.

The drone’s fragments are still being investigated, the website said.

Shweta Sharma21 July 2024 07:33

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Ukraine defends against fifth drone attack on Kyiv in two weeks

Ukraine’s air defence systems repelled Russia’s fifth drone attack on Kyiv in two weeks, officials said, as Moscow targeted the capital with a new unidentified type of low-flying drone.

Russia has launched “systematic attacks” and rained missiles and drones across the capital region, looking for new tactics to make battlefield gains, Kyiv’s military head said.

No casualties or significant damage have been reported, Serhiy Popko, head of the Ukrainian capital’s military administration, said on the Telegram messaging app.

“These systematic attacks… with drones, once again prove that the invader is actively looking for an opportunity to strike Kyiv,” Mr Popko said. “They’re testing new tactics, looking for new approach routes to the capital, trying to expose the location of our air defence.”

Ukraine‘s air force said on Telegram that its air defence systems destroyed 35 of the 39 drones and two cruise missiles that Russia had launched overnight. The weapons, the air force said, targeted 10 of Ukraine‘s regions.

It was not immediately clear how many drones were launched at Kyiv.

Russia launched three Iskander ballistic missiles, Ukraine‘s air force said, without saying what happened to them.

Kyiv Classic Orchestra performs "Requiem for the Dead" at the ruins of Okhmatdyt Children's Hospital that was recently hit by a Russian missile in Kyiv
Kyiv Classic Orchestra performs “Requiem for the Dead” at the ruins of Okhmatdyt Children’s Hospital that was recently hit by a Russian missile in Kyiv (REUTERS)

Shweta Sharma21 July 2024 07:13

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Recap: Zelensky becomes first foreign leader to address UK cabinet for nearly 30 years

Zelensky becomes first foreign leader to address UK cabinet for nearly 30 years

Joe Middleton21 July 2024 06:30

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Ukraine’s biggest music festival returns for first time since Russian invasion

This weekend 25,000 music lovers are gathering for Ukraine’s biggest music festival, an annual event that hasn’t been held since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.

Journalist Paul Niland shared a video on X of a large crowd watching the Ukrainian rock band BoomBox on stage. The billing this year will understandably mostly be made up of domestic talent, though the event has previously had headline acts from global stars like Kasabian, The Chemical Brothers and Liam Gallagher.

Speaking to the BBC, event organiser Vlad Yaremchuk explained how the festival is being conducted in a car park outside one of Kyiv’s biggest shopping malls – so if a Russian air attack does take place, “there will be more than enough space to get everyone evacuated quickly — and we’re talking minutes”. The mall has a capacity of 100,000, he says.

So far the festival, running from Friday to Sunday, is going smoothly. It already had to be pushed back one week after the major aerial assault on Kyiv that hit a children’s hospital.

“We didn’t even expect to have a chance to do a festival while the war is still happening.” Yaremchuk says.

“The reality showed us that cultural events are still possible in wartime.”

Joe Middleton21 July 2024 05:30

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Rare public protest in southern Russian over power cuts

Residents outraged over frequent power cuts in southern Russia staged a rare public protest on Saturday as officials blamed blackouts on a heatwave.

Police arrested at least two people in the city of Krasnodar as protesters demanded relief from mass power outages in several regions.

The south of Russia has been affected by unusually hot weather and led to the shutdown of one of four power units at the Rostov nuclear power plant, the region’s largest, earlier this week.

The unit has been put back into operation since then.

“There has been abnormal heat in the Krasnodar region for a week now. The load on the energy system is colossal. I know and understand all the indignation of residents due to power outages,”

Veniamin Kondratyev, the governor of Krasnodar region, said on the Telegram messaging app. He said power capacities were not currently sufficient to meet peak demand during the hot summer months.

It marked one of the rare incidents of protest in Russia where authorities have clamped down on any form of demonstration, especially politically-laced dissent, since the start of the conflict with Ukraine in February 2022, and public assemblies are very rare given the risk of arrest.

Shweta Sharma21 July 2024 04:50

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