Russia has lashed out with a Kamikaze drone strike in the heart of Ukraine’s Kyiv oblast this morning, according to the regional governor.
The drone attack on Bila Tserkva city damaged some infrastructure and started a fire, with one person injured, Kyiv’s governor Oleksiy Kuleba said.
It comes as Volodymyr Zelensky says his soldiers are moving rapidly to push back Russian forces in the war-hit country’s south, recapturing territory in several regions.
“The Ukrainian army is carrying out a pretty fast and powerful advance in the south of our country as part of the current defence operation. Dozens of settlements have already been liberated from the Russian sham referendum this week alone,” Mr Zelensky said.
Ukraine has taken back swathes of land in Kherson, Kharkiv, Luhansk and Donetsk, parts of which Russia claims control over after last week’s illegal referenda.
Meanwhile, the US has said in a new assessment that it has no indication Vladimir Putin is preparing to use nuclear weapons, despite “nuclear sabre-rattling”.
Key Points
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Putin might have just appointed a new scapegoat, observers say
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Ukraine takes back more territory in south and east – officials
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Heavy fighting underway on Ukraine’s frontlines – Zelensky
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Liberated Kharkiv braces for winter of war
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Russia facing challenges in training and deploying mobilised and conscripted troops – MoD
No indication Russia preparing to use nuclear weapons – White House
05:42 , Arpan Rai
Officials in the US have said they do not see the signs of Russia preparing to deploy atomic bombs in its war with Ukraine despite Vladimir Putin threatening to do so.
“We take any nuclear weapons or nuclear sabre-rattling very seriously here, but I do want to say … that we have not seen any reason to adjust our own strategic nuclear posture, nor do we have any indication that Russia is preparing to imminently use nuclear weapons,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said on Tuesday.
Ukrainian army carrying out powerful advance in south – Zelensky
04:55 , Arpan Rai
The Ukrainian soldiers are moving steadily in a rapid push back in the war-hit country’s south to recapture territory from Russian forces, Volodymyr Zelensky said in his address late last night.
“The Ukrainian army is carrying out a pretty fast and powerful advance in the south of our country as part of the current defence operation. Dozens of settlements have already been liberated from the Russian sham referendum this week alone,” Mr Zelensky said.
He added that the land has been taken back in Kherson, Kharkiv, Luhansk and Donetsk altogether, some of which Russia claims control after last week’s referendum denounced by the UN.
“In particular, according to the military reports from the Kherson region: the settlements of Lyubymivka, Khreshchenivka, Zolota Balka, Bilyaivka, Ukrainka, Velyka and Mala Oleksandrivka, and Davydiv Brid were liberated from the occupier and stabilised. And this is far from a complete list,” Mr Zelensky said.
“Our warriors do not stop. And it’s only a matter of time before we oust the occupier from all our land,” he added.
31 Russian troops killed, 8 tanks destroyed
04:30 , Arpan Rai
At least 31 Russian soldiers have been killed in the last 24 hours, the Ukrainian military officials said.
The military’s southern operational command said more than 40 pieces of equipment including 8 tanks, 26 armoured vehicles, and a Msta-B howitzer have been destroyed in Ukraine’s counterattack.
The Ukrainian Armed Forces also downed Mi-8 and Mi-24 helicopters in Kostromka and Bruskinskyi districts of Kherson oblast, it added.
Russia attacks Kyiv city with kamikaze drones – official
04:12 , Arpan Rai
Russia has attacked the city of Bila Tserkva in the heart of Ukraine with Kamikaze drones this morning, Kyiv oblast’s governor Oleksiy Kuleba said.
The drone attack struck an infrastructure object which caught fire and one person has been injured after the attack, the governor said, reported The Kyiv Independent.
The rescue operation and fire extinguishing are ongoing and residents have been asked to remain in shelters, the governor said.
Russia says it called up more than 200,000 troops for Ukraine war
03:00 , Liam James
Russia has drafted more than 200,000 people to fight in Ukraine less than a fortnight after president Vladimir Putin announced the partial mobilisation of recruits (David Harding writes).
Defence minister Sergei Shoigu made the claim while speaking at a consultation with military figures.
“As of today, more than 200,000 people have entered the army,” said Shoigu.
He added that those volunteering to fight should not be turned away without a “serious reason” and that new units were receiving instruction at 80 training ranges and six training centres, according to a defence ministry posting on Telegram.
When Mr Putin announced the partial mobilisation last month – at the same time as advances by Ukraine in the south and east of the country – Shoigu announced that he planned to enlist 300,000 men with previous military experience to bolster Russia’s invasion.
Putin may pin blame for Russian losses on new commander
02:00 , Liam James
Vladimir Putin may try to pin the blame for future Russian losses in eastern Ukraine on a recently appointed commander, observers said.
Russian outlet RBK, citing sources within the Russian regime, reported on Monday that Lieutenant-General Roman Berdnikov had been installed as commander of the Western Military District, which had been operating in Kharkiv Oblast in recent months.
Mr Putin’s forces have lost almost all of their territory in Kharkiv to a Ukrainian counteroffensive launched at the start of September.
The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) said Mr Putin may have made the appointment in order to have a scapegoat for future losses in the region.
He may also be trying to redirect mounting criticism for the Russian loss of land in Kharkiv and the strategically significant Donetsk city of Lyman, the ISW said, adding that the fury has loosened the Kremlin’s hold on information in Russian nationalist circles.
Pentagon ‘can’t corroborate’ reports of Russian nuclear movement
Wednesday 5 October 2022 00:50 , Liam James
A senior Pentagon official said she had no information to corroborate reports suggesting Russia might be moving tactical nuclear weapons by rail, and added the US military had not seen anything to change its own nuclear posture.
“I don’t have anything else but the open source reports,” said Laura Cooper, a deputy assistant secretary of defense focusing on Russia and Ukraine. The Pentagon closely monitors Russia’s nuclear forces, a core part of its mission since the Cold War.
Ms Cooper was responding to a report in The Times on Monday that said Russia had moved a train thought to be linked to a unit of the defence ministry that was responsible for nuclear munitions.
The report also said Nato had warned members that Vladimir Putin was set to demonstrate his willingness to use nuclear weapons by carrying out a nuclear test on Ukraine’s border.
Navalny allies plan to regroup as Kremlin struggles to stem dissent
Tuesday 4 October 2022 23:40 , Liam James
Top allies of jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny announced Tuesday that they would reestablish a network of groups across Russia, saying the time was right because the government has been weakened by questions about the war in Ukraine.
“The sleeping majority woke up, Putin himself woke him up,” said Ivan Zhdanov, former director of Navalny’s Foundation for Fighting Corruption, in a YouTube video posted by Navalny’s closest ally and top strategist, Leonid Volkov.
“It’s time for us to restore our network to fight mobilisation and war,” Mr Zhdanov said. Russia ordered a partial mobilisation on 21 September to beef up its troops in Ukraine.
Mr Zhdanov and Mr Volkov said the new network would operate as a “partisan underground,” and participants would remain anonymous for their safety.
Mr Navalny has been jailed in Russia since January 2021 on charges widely seen as politically motivated. Many of his close associates have left Russia, and his group’s political infrastructure – the anti-corruption foundation and a network of regional offices – was destroyed in 2021 after being labeled extremist.
Russian losses evident in liberated Ukrainian city – AP
Tuesday 4 October 2022 22:58 , Liam James
An account from recently liberated Lyman here from Associated Press reporters:
The bodies of Russian soldiers were lying in the streets of Lyman on Tuesday following their comrades’ retreat that marked the latest defeat for Moscow even as Russia’s upper house of parliament rubber-stamped the annexation of Ukrainian regions.
Russian troops pulled back from the key eastern city over the weekend to avoid being encircled by Ukrainian forces. The city’s liberation gave Ukraine a key vantage point for pressing its offensive deeper into Russian-held territories.
The Ukrainian military collected the bodies of their comrades after fierce battles for control of Lyman, a key logistics and transport hub, but did not immediately remove those of the Russians.
“We fight for our land, for our children, so that our people can live better, but all this comes at a very high price,” said a Ukrainian soldier who goes by the nom de guerre Rud.
Lyman residents emerged from basements where they had hidden during the battle for control of the city and built bonfires for cooking. The city has had no water, electricity or gas since May.
Ukraine advance on Russia ‘major, rapid’, says Zelensky
Tuesday 4 October 2022 22:08 , Liam James
Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Ukraine’s military had made major, rapid advances against Russian forces and freed from occupation dozens of towns in the south and east of the country.
“The Ukrainian army is advancing in quite a rapid and powerful manner in the south of the country within the context of the current defence operation,” Mr Zelensky said in his nightly video address earlier.
“This week alone, since the Russian pseudo-referendum, dozens of population centres have been liberated. These are in Kherson, Kharkiv, Luhansk and Donetsk regions all together.”
Zelensky signs decree ruling out negotiations with Putin
Tuesday 4 October 2022 21:45 , Liam James
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky today signed a decree formally declaring that any talks between Kyiv and President Vladimir Putin were “impossible.”
The decree formalised comments made by Mr Zelensky at the end of last week.
Speaking on Friday, he said: “He [Putin] does not know what dignity and honesty are. Therefore, we are ready for a dialogue with Russia, but with another president of Russia.”
Talks between the two leaders were floated in August by Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan but were not agreed to by the warring parties.
Russia says it called up more than 200,000 troops for Ukraine war
Tuesday 4 October 2022 21:19 , Liam James
Russia has drafted more than 200,000 people to fight in Ukraine less than a fortnight after president Vladimir Putin announced the partial mobilisation of recruits (David Harding writes).
Defence minister Sergei Shoigu made the claim while speaking at a consultation with military figures.
“As of today, more than 200,000 people have entered the army,” said Shoigu.
He added that those volunteering to fight should not be turned away without a “serious reason” and that new units were receiving instruction at 80 training ranges and six training centres, according to a defence ministry posting on Telegram.
When Mr Putin announced the partial mobilisation last month – at the same time as advances by Ukraine in the south and east of the country – Shoigu announced that he planned to enlist 300,000 men with previous military experience to bolster Russia’s invasion.
Russia says it called up more than 200,000 troops for Ukraine war
Pentagon ‘can’t corroborate’ reports of Russian nuclear movement
Tuesday 4 October 2022 20:50 , Liam James
A senior Pentagon official said she had no information to corroborate reports suggesting Russia might be moving tactical nuclear weapons by rail, and added the US military had not seen anything to change its own nuclear posture.
“I don’t have anything else but the open source reports,” said Laura Cooper, a deputy assistant secretary of defense focusing on Russia and Ukraine. The Pentagon closely monitors Russia’s nuclear forces, a core part of its mission since the Cold War.
Ms Cooper was responding to a report in The Times on Monday that said Russia had moved a train thought to be linked to a unit of the defence ministry that was responsible for nuclear munitions.
The report also said Nato had warned members that Vladimir Putin was set to demonstrate his willingness to use nuclear weapons by carrying out a nuclear test on Ukraine’s border.
Don’t give in to Russian threats, says Estonian PM after Musk tweets
Tuesday 4 October 2022 20:26 , Liam James
Estonia’s prime minister said the West must not give in to Russia’s nuclear threats or premature peace proposals, the day after Elon Musk caused a stir with his suggestion for a route to peace in the seven-month war.
Kaja Kallas, who has led the government of one of Russia’s Nato member neighbours since last year, told the Associated Press in an interview that “very dangerous” calls for negotiations and peace in Ukraine have come from “very prominent people” lately.
She did not specify anyone by name, but her comments came a day after Tesla CEO Elon Musk floated on Twitter a proposal for ending the war that elicited fierce opposition from Kyiv.
Mr Musk argued that Russia should be allowed to keep the Crimean Peninsula that it seized in 2014. The four regions Russia annexed following Kremlin-orchestrated “referendums” last month should hold repeat votes organised by the United Nations, he said.
US unveils new £500m Ukraine aid package
Tuesday 4 October 2022 20:10 , Liam James
The US has pledged an additional $625 million (£545m) in military aid to Ukraine, a package that includes additional advanced rocket systems credited with helping the country’s military gain momentum in its war with Russia.
President Joe Biden provided details on the latest package, which includes High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (Himars) artillery systems ammunition, and armored vehicles, in a call with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky. Vice President Kamala Harris joined the leaders on Tuesday’s call.
The White House said in a statement: “President Biden also affirmed the continued readiness of the United States to impose severe costs on any individual, entity, or country that provides support to Russia’s purported annexation.”
This round of military aid marks the first time the US has sent Himars to Ukraine since late July. The systems – the latest assistance includes four Himars and will bring the total number sent to Ukraine to 20 – have become a key tool in Ukraine‘s ability to strike bridges that Russia has used to supply its troops, enabling Ukrainian forces to make inroads in Russia-controlled regions.
Nuclear power plant chief won’t return after detention
Tuesday 4 October 2022 19:52 , Liam James
The head of the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant (ZNPP) in Ukraine who was recently detained in what Ukraine called a Russian act of terror and released, will not return to that job, the UN nuclear watchdog said on Tuesday.
“The IAEA understands that Mr [Ihor] Murashov is now with his family in territory controlled by Ukraine and will not be continuing with his duties at the ZNPP,” the International Atomic Energy Agency said in a statement.
“It is not yet clear who will replace him in this role.”
Mr Murashov was detained on Saturday as he was being driven to ZNPP. Energoatom, Ukraine’s energy regulator, blamed Russia and said the director’s detention jeopardised “the safety of operation of Ukraine and Europe’s largest nuclear power plant”.
IAEA experts have been present at the ZNPP for weeks after arriving for an inspection as attacks near the highly sensitive site escalated.
Putin may pin blame for Russian losses on new commander
Tuesday 4 October 2022 19:30 , Liam James
Vladimir Putin may try to pin the blame for future Russian losses in eastern Ukraine on a recently appointed commader, observers said.
Russian outlet RBK, citing sources within the Russian regime, reported on Monday that Lieutenant-General Roman Berdnikov had been installed as commander of the Western Military District, which had been operating in Kharkiv Oblast in recent months.
Russian forces have mostly been driven out of Kharkiv by a Ukrainian counteroffensive launched at the start of September. The loss of the key city of Lyman over the weekend has led to widespread criticism of the Russian commander in charge of the operation there, General Alexander Lapin.
The Institute for the Study of War said this criticism has served as a catalyst for wider breakdown within the Russian nationalist information space, so Mr Putin is likely to wish to divert criticism towards a new target in Mr Berdnikov to detract from this dissatisfaction.
Russian court fines Tik Tok over LGBT+ content
Tuesday 4 October 2022 19:08 , Liam James
A court in Russia has fined TikTok for failing to delete online LGBT+ material (Eleanor Sly writes).
Moscow’s Tagansky District Court issued a three million ruble (£44,000) penalty to the video sharing platform after it received a complaint from Russian regulators.
According to the case file, state communications regulator Roskomnadzor had complained about a video published on the platform earlier this year on the grounds that it breached Russian laws against promoting “LGBT, radical feminism and a distorted view on traditional sexual relations”.
The Russian government has been increasing efforts to enforce control over internet and social media in the country.
Tik Tok fined by Russian court for failing to delete LGBT+ content
Kremlin scorns ‘Western nuclear rhetoric’
Tuesday 4 October 2022 18:53 , Liam James
The Kremlin said it did not want to take part in Western “nuclear rhetoric” after a report that Russia was preparing to demonstrate its willingness to use nuclear weapons in its conflict with Ukraine.
The Times reported on Monday that Nato had warned members that Vladimir Putin was set to demonstrate his willingness to use nuclear weapons by carrying out a nuclear test on Ukraine’s border.
Russia was also reported to have moved a train thought to be linked to a unit of the defence ministry that was responsible for nuclear munitions.
A Nato official today told Reuters the alliance had not observed changes in Russia’s nuclear posture, while a Western diplomat, commenting on the Times report, said the had not warned allies about a nuclear threat from Russia.
When asked about the Times report, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Russia did not want to take part in what he cast as Western exercises in “nuclear rhetoric”.
“The Western media, Western politicians and heads of state are engaging in a lot of exercises in nuclear rhetoric right now,” Mr Peskov said. “We do not want to take part in this.”
Western speculation over Russia’s nuclear intentions spiked after a speech a fortnight back by Mr Putin in which he threatened to use atomic weapons to defend Russian territory.
Roger Waters claims he’s on Ukraine’s ‘kill list’
Tuesday 4 October 2022 18:30 , Liam James
Roger Waters has claimed he’s on Ukraine’s “kill list” in a recent interview (Megan Graye writes).
The Pink Floyd co-founder was discussing his recent statements regarding the ongoing war between Ukraine and Russia when he made the remark.
Recently, Waters wrote an open letter to Vladimir Putin and the first lady of Ukraine, Olena Zelenska, asking them for their commitment to help bring the war to an end.
Now, Waters claims he himself is under threat from Ukraine. “Don’t forget, I’m on a kill list that is supported by the Ukrainian government,” Waters said in an interview with Rolling Stone.
“I’m on the f***ing list, and they’ve killed people recently… But when they kill you, they write ‘liquidated’ across your picture. Well, I’m one of those f***ing pictures,” he claimed.
Roger Waters claims he’s on Ukraine’s ‘kill list’
Nato sees no change in Russia’s nuclear posture, says official
Tuesday 4 October 2022 18:12 , Liam James
Nato has not observed changes in Russia’s nuclear posture but is vigilant, an alliance official told Reuters today, commenting two weeks after Vladimir Putin escalated the war in Ukraine with a mobilisation and warnings of nuclear weapons use.
“We have not seen any changes in Russia’s nuclear posture, but Nato and allies remain vigilant,” the official said.
The official, who declined to be named, added that – as laid out in Nato’s new strategic concept in June – Russia’s expansion of “novel and disruptive dual-capable delivery systems, while employing coercive nuclear signalling” was a challenge to the defence alliance’s security and interests.
UK foreign secretary’s comments on Putin’s nuclear threat
Tuesday 4 October 2022 18:01 , Liam James
We reported earlier that UK foreign secretary James Cleverly had warned Vladimir Putin that there would be consequences for using nuclear weapons, as the Russian leader has threatened [16.10].
Here follow Mr Cleverly’s remarks in full. He was asked at a fringe event at the Conservative Party conference how Britain would respond to the use of tactical nuclear weapons by Russia.
He said: “It would inevitably be the case that the use of nuclear weapons by any country anywhere in the world would not go without a response.”
“I’m not going to discuss the nature or the threshold.”
Tuesday 4 October 2022 17:49 , Liam James
Maps presented by the Russian defence ministry on Tuesday appeared to show rapid withdrawals of Russian invasion forces from areas in eastern and southern Ukraine where they have been under severe pressure from a Ukrainian counteroffensive.
The ministry’s daily video briefing made no mention of any pullbacks, but on maps used to show the location of purported Russian strikes, the shaded area designating Russian military control was much smaller than the day before.
In northeast Ukraine, where Russia suffered a rout last month, its forces along a frontline running some 40 miles southward from Kupiansk along the River Oskil appeared to have retreated some 12 miles to the east, as far as the border of Luhansk province.
This would mean they had vacated the last remnants of Ukraine’s Kharkiv province – where Russia for several months maintained an occupation administration – but for a small patch between the town of Dvorichna and the Russian border.
In southern Ukraine’s Kherson province, Russia’s line of control on the right bank of the Dnipro river had shifted 15 miles southward on the map, to a line running westward from the riverside town of Dudchany.
Both areas are battlefields where Ukraine has been reporting advances, albeit without giving full details.
Biden and Zelensky call as new military aid for Ukraine expected
Tuesday 4 October 2022 17:30 , Liam James
Joe Biden was holding a phone call this afternoon with Volodymyr Zelensky, a White House official said.
The official did not provide details. The US president is expected to announce Washington’s next security assistance package for Ukraine as soon as today.
The Biden administration’s next security assistance package for Ukraine is expected to include four High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (Himars) launchers, munitions, mines and mine-resistant vehicles, two sources briefed on the $625m (£545m) package told Reuters on Monday.
Ukraine to join Spain-Portugal 2030 World Cup bid
Tuesday 4 October 2022 17:10 , Eleanor Sly
Ukraine is set to join Spain and Portugal in a combined bid to host the 2030 World Cup.
A person familiar with the project told The Associated Press on Tuesday that Ukraine is being added to the Spain-Portugal bid. The bid, which has been in the works for more than three years, is scheduled to be announced on Wednesday at UEFA headquarters in Nyon, Switzerland.
The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the announcement has not yet been made public.
Read more here:
Source: Ukraine to join Spain-Portugal 2030 World Cup bid
India’s Modi says ready to contribute to peace efforts in Ukraine
Tuesday 4 October 2022 16:40 , Eleanor Sly
India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi has told Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy that his country is ready to contribute to peace efforts in the ongoing conflict between Ukraine and Russia.
“He expressed his firm conviction that there can be no military solution to the conflict and conveyed India’s readiness to contribute to any peace efforts,” the Indian prime minister’s office said in a statement which came following a telephone conversation between Mr Modi and Mr Zelenskiy.
India is articulating its position against the Ukraine war more robustly to counter criticism that it has taken a soft stance on Russia. It is still yet to hold Moscow responsible either for the invasion or to change its policy on importing cheap oil and coal from Russia.
The statement read: The “Prime Minister emphasized the importance India attaches to the safety and security of nuclear installations, including in Ukraine.”
UK warns Russia over use of nuclear weapons
Tuesday 4 October 2022 16:10 , Eleanor Sly
Britain’s foreign minister James Cleverly, said on Tuesday said Russian President Vladimir Putin’s sequence of strategic errors must stop.
He added that the use of nuclear weapons would lead to consequences.
Tuesday 4 October 2022 15:45 , Eleanor Sly
Finance minister for the European Union have agreed to integrate the EU’s support payments to Ukraine into its 202 budget so that they are more structured and predictable, European Commission vice president Valdis Dombrovskis said.Speaking to journalists Mr Dombrovskis admitted this year’s EU payments to Ukraine far from regular – something which has worried Kyiv, which needs to regularly pay the salaries public workers and pensions.
The EU agreed to support Ukraine with €9bn (£7.85bn) in May.
However, it only made the first disbursement of €1bn in July. Reuters reports that Mr Dombrovskis said the next tranche of €5bn would be made by mid-October and the remaining €3bn in two instalments in November and December.
Finnish city removes last publicly displayed statue of Lenin
Tuesday 4 October 2022 15:20 , Eleanor Sly
A city in southeastern Finland on Tuesday removed the country’s last publicly displayed statue of Russian revolutionary leader Vladimir Lenin following pressure from residents in the wake of Russia’s war in Ukraine.
A group of construction workers in Kotka, a port city of 52,000 not far from the border with Russia, hoisted the statue into a truck and drove it away to a warehouse of a local museum.
City museum director Kirsi Niku told Finnish public broadcaster YLE that the bronze bust was designed and constructed by Estonian sculptor Matti Varik in the late 1970s on orders from Moscow.
Read more here:
Finnish city removes last publicly displayed statue of Lenin
Kremlin dismisses UK media report on Russian nuclear test
Tuesday 4 October 2022 14:52 , Eleanor Sly
The Kremlin has said that it did not want to take part in “nuclear rhetoric” spread by the west after a media report that Russia was preparing to demonstrate its willingness to use nuclear weapons in its conflict with Ukraine.
The Times newspaper wrote on Monday that the NATO military alliance had warned members that President Vladimir Putin was set to demonstrate his willingness to use nuclear weapons by carrying out a nuclear test on Ukraine’s border.
The UK newspaper also said Russia had moved a train thought to be linked to a unit of the defence ministry that was responsible for nuclear munitions.
When asked about the Times report, Dmitry Peskov, Kremlin spokesman, said Russia did not want to take part in what he cast as western exercises in “nuclear rhetoric”.
“The western media, western politicians and heads of state are engaging in a lot of exercises in nuclear rhetoric right now,” Mr Peskov said. “We do not want to take part in this.”
UK to extend the deployment of an air defence system in Poland
Tuesday 4 October 2022 14:20 , Eleanor Sly
The UK intends to extend the deployment of an air defence system in Poland, British defence minister Ben Wallace has revealed.
During his visit to the southern Polish city of Zamosc, Mr Wallace told reporters:
“I am pleased to announce that we will extend the current posting of our medium air defence… for another period to make sure that as Poland helps continue that logistical support to Ukraine it is safe in doing so.”
Frustration with Ukraine war spills out on Russian state TV
Tuesday 4 October 2022 13:50 , Eleanor Sly
Russia’s retreat from a key Ukrainian city over the weekend elicited outcry from an unlikely crowd – state-run media outlets that typically cast Moscow’s war in glowing terms.
A series of embarrassing military losses in recent weeks has presented a growing challenge for prominent hosts of Russian news and political talk shows scrambling to find ways to paint Ukraine‘s gains in a way that is still favorable to the Kremlin.
Frustration with the battlefield setbacks has long been expressed in social media blogs run by nationalist pundits and pro-Kremlin analysts. But it now appears to be spilling out on state TV broadcasts and the pages of government-backed newspapers.
Read more:
Frustration with Ukraine war spills out on Russian state TV
What’s Putin thinking? Tough to know for nuclear analysts
Tuesday 4 October 2022 13:35 , Eleanor Sly
Will President Vladimir Putin pull the nuclear trigger?
For Kremlin watchers trying to figure out whether the Russian leader’s nuclear threats are just bluffs, there is no more pressing — or tough — question.
For now, analysts cautiously suggest that the risk of Putin using the world’s biggest nuclear arsenal still seems low. The CIA says it hasn’t seen signs of an imminent Russian nuclear attack.
Read more here:
What’s Putin thinking? Tough to know for nuclear analysts
Russia backs Elon Musk for ‘looking for a peaceful’ solution to Ukraine war
Tuesday 4 October 2022 13:00 , Eleanor Sly
The Kremlin has praised Tesla boss Elon Musk for suggesting a possible peace deal to end the war in Ukraine.
In a Twitter poll posted on Monday, the Tesla boss suggested Ukraine permanently cede Crimea to Russia, that new referendums be held under UN auspices to determine the fate of Russian-controlled territory, and that Ukraine agree to neutrality.
That drew a furious response from Ukraine, with one diplomat even telling Musk to “f*** off”.
David Harding reports:
Russia backs Elon Musk for ‘looking for a peaceful’ solution to Ukraine war