Deadly round of Russian airstrikes hits Ukraine
For a second time in a week, Russia launched a deadly wave
of airstrikes across Ukraine, lobbing 18 missiles that killed two people.
Overnight, Russia targeted the southeastern railway hub city
of Pavlohrad with missile strikes, in addition to the two deaths, 40 other
people were injured, including several children, Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy said late Monday.
“Pavlohrad, Dnipropetrovsk region. Terrorists’ missiles
claimed the lives of two people, young guys. ...” Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address. “For every such attack, the Russian
invaders will receive our response.”
A huge crater had been blasted into the backyard of a house
that was strewn with debris on Pavlohrad's outskirts. Russia's defense ministry
said its forces struck with high-precision, long-range, air- and sea-based
missiles against “Ukraine’s military-industrial facilities," Reuters
reports.
An explosion in a Russian region bordering Ukraine caused a
freight train to derail Monday, the local governor said in a social media post,
adding there were no casualties.
Pictures shared on social media showed several tank
carriages laying on their sides and dark gray smoke billowing into the air at
the site of the derailment in the Bryansk region.
"An unidentified explosive device went off at the
136-kilometer mark on the Bryansk-Unecha railway line, derailing a freight
train," Bryansk Governor Alexander Bogomaz said in a post on the messaging
app Telegram.
Russian authorities say the region, which borders both
Ukraine and Belarus, has seen multiple attacks by pro-Ukrainian sabotage groups
in the 14 months since Russia invaded. On Saturday, the governor said four
civilians died after Kyiv shelled a village just across the border.
The site of the incident, as indicated by the governor, is
around 60 kilometers (37 miles) north of Russia's border with Ukraine.
He did not say who was responsible for the attack, Reuters
reports.
Both sides have denied targeting civilians since the Russian invasion on
Ukraine began in February 2022.
Separately, the governor of Russia's Leningrad region near
St. Petersburg said a power line had been blown up overnight and an explosive
device found near a second line.
Governor Alexander Drozdenko posted photos of destroyed
power lines and metal supports on his Telegram page Monday morning. He said
Russia's FSB federal security service was working on the site. He did not say
who he believed was responsible for the incident.
The White House said Monday it estimates that in just six
months Russia has suffered 100,000 casualties, including more than 20,000
people killed in the fight to advance in eastern Ukraine.
White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby
said the U.S. estimate is based on newly declassified American intelligence.
Kirby said most of these casualties have occurred during fierce battles in the
eastern Donetsk region, where Russia is encountering a tough Ukrainian defense.
Kirby said nearly half those killed since December are
members of the Wagner Group, a Russian paramilitary force. Many Wagner forces
convicts recently released from Russian prisons in exchange for fighting in
Ukraine.
Kirby said the Wagner forces were “thrown into combat and
without sufficient combat or combat training, combat leadership, or any sense
of organizational command and control.”
In a video posted on Telegram on Monday, Wagner head Yevgeny
Prighozin complained that his fighters were receiving only a third of 300 tons
of artillery shells needed a day for the stalled assault on Bakhmut.
"Three hundred tons a day is 10 cargo containers — not
a lot at all," said Prigozhin, who has often clashed with Russia's defense
establishment over, what he claims is, insufficient support for his fighters.
While Russia is struggling to encircle the eastern city of
Bakhmut, Ukrainian troops are still in control of a key supply route into
Bakhmut and have launched counterattacks forcing Russian troops to abandon some
positions, Colonel Generak Oleksandr Syrskyi, commander of Ukrainian ground
forces, said Monday, according to The Kyiv Independent.
However, Syrskyi wrote on Telegram Monday, the situation in
Bakhmut remains "quite difficult,” adding, “the enemy is unable to take
control of the city."
Ukraine said Monday its forces repelled more than 36 enemy
attacks on the part of the eastern front line that stretches from Bakhmut to
Maryinka, just west of Donetsk, Reuters reports.
Bakhmut is an important strategic landmark for Russia which
says that its capture would work as the springboard for further Russian
offensives in eastern Ukraine, Reuters reports.
Russia is also digging in, expecting an imminent Ukrainian
counteroffensive.
“Russia has constructed some of the most extensive systems
of military defensive works seen anywhere in the world for many decades,” the
British defense ministry said Monday in its daily intelligence update about
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
The report, posted on Twitter, said there is imagery that
shows that Russia “has made a particular effort” to strengthen the northern
border of occupied Crimea, “including with a multilayered defensive zone near
the village of Medvedevka.”
In addition, according to the ministry, Russia has dug
“hundreds of miles of trenches well inside internationally recognized Russian territory,
including in the Belgorod and Kursk regions.”
The trenches show that Russia is worried that Ukraine could achieve “a major breakthrough,” the ministry said. Some of the work, however, has “likely been ordered by local commanders and civil leaders in attempts to promote the official narrative that Russia is ‘threatened’ by Ukraine and NATO,” according to the report.
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