MOSCOW 鈥 Russian President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday chaired a new committee tasked with boosting the delivery of weapons and supplies for his country's troops in Ukraine.
Speaking during the inaugural session of the coordination council he created last week, Putin said Russia is facing 鈥渘ew serious challenges,鈥 and needs to 鈥済ain higher tempo in all areas.鈥
Putin told the meeting's participants via video link to make sure that gear provided for troops is "modern, convenient and efficient.鈥
Russian news reports have said many of the army reservists who were called up as part of a mobilization ordered by Putin did not receive basic supplies such as medical kits and flak jackets and had to procure them on their own.
Russian authorities have acknowledged the deficiencies and vowed to quickly fix the flaws.
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KEY DEVELOPMENTS:
- Ukraine woman searches for answers
- as West mulls rebuilding plan
- for more energy unity
- Germany, EU launch work on
- EXPLAINER: sow fear and panic, cause few deaths
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OTHER DEVELOPMENTS:
ZAGREB, Croatia 鈥 U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has accused Russia and its president of acting 鈥渙utside the circle of civilized human behavior鈥 during the war against Ukraine and pledged the United States and its allies will stand behind the Ukrainian people 鈥渦ntil victory is won.鈥
鈥淓ight months into Russia鈥檚 own provoked unjustified war against Ukraine, the deaths, displacements and destruction continue,鈥 Pelosi said at a summit in Croatia of parliamentary speakers from some 40 countries. 鈥淚n the last two weeks alone, Putin has launched a further campaign of horror, unleashing swarms of drones against cities visible from the streets, designed to terrify and to kill.鈥
The summit in Zagreg, Croatia, on Tuesday took place under the Crimea Platform, an initiative Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy launched last year to denounce Russia鈥檚 annexation of the Crimean Peninsula in 2014.
Russian President Vladimir Putin last month illegally annexed four other regions of Ukraine.
The United States and key Western allies have accused Russia of using Iranian-made drones to attack civilians and power plants in Ukraine. Iran has denied it is supplying Russia with the explosive-laden missiles but the distinctive triangle-shaped drones have been seen in the skies over Ukrainian towns.
鈥淧utin is also targeting and destroying Ukraine鈥檚 power stations seeking to deprive Ukrainians of heat and power as winter approaches,鈥 Pelosi said. 鈥淯sing rape, kidnapping and other atrocities, kidnapping of children, as a weapon of war, is outside the circle of civilized human behavior. Attacking civilian infrastructure is a war crime.鈥
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KYIV, Ukraine 鈥 A senior Ukrainian official has asked citizens staying abroad not to return to Ukraine for the winter to conserve power from facilities Russian forces have heavily damaged.
Deputy Prime Minister Irina Vereshchuk made the appeal on Ukrainian TV on Tuesday, saying, 鈥淲e need to survive the winter, but, unfortunately, the networks will not survive鈥 increased demand.
Vereshchuk said 鈥渢he threat of shelling, cold and hunger remains鈥 eight months after the Russian invasion forced millions of Ukrainians to flee their homes.
鈥淭o return now is again to expose yourself, your children, all your vulnerable relatives, who may be either sick or with limited mobility,鈥 she said, urging citizens to return in the spring to help restore previously occupied regions that are again in Ukraine's control.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said that Russian troops destroyed 30% of Ukraine鈥檚 power plants. Ukraine is conducting rolling power outages for at least four hours a day.
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MOSCOW 鈥 The Kremlin has insisted that its warning of a purported Ukrainian plan to use a 鈥渄irty bomb鈥 radioactive device should be taken seriously, and criticized the West for shrugging it off.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the Western dismissal of the Russian warning is 鈥渦nacceptable in view of the seriousness of the danger that we have talked about.鈥
Speaking in Tuesday鈥檚 conference call with reporters, Peskov added that 鈥渨e again emphasize the grave danger posed by the plans hatched by the Ukrainians.鈥
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu told his British, French, Turkish and U.S. counterparts Sunday that Ukrainian forces were preparing a 鈥減rovocation鈥 involving a radioactive device 鈥 a so-called dirty bomb. Britain, France, and the United States rejected that claim as 鈥渢ransparently false.鈥
A dirty bomb uses explosives to scatter radioactive waste in an effort to sow terror. Such weapons don鈥檛 cause the devastating destruction of a nuclear explosion, but could expose broad areas to radioactive contamination.
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BERLIN 鈥 Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki says Europe needs to build a new, strong security architecture in the political and economic spheres if it wants to prevail over Russia.
鈥淓urope is much stronger than Russia, but the fact that it hasn't been able to stop (Russian President Vladimir) Putin yet only proves that it is to some extent, or it was, a paper tiger,鈥 Morawiecki said.
He spoke Tuesday at a conference of leaders and experts discussing a 鈥渘ew Marshall Plan鈥 for the rebuilding of Ukraine.
Morawiecki added that if Europe does not win the war 鈥渨e risk more than just losing Ukraine and its security, we risk marginalizing the entire continent.鈥 He said that 鈥渋t is our 鈥榯o be or not to be鈥 moment."
Morawiecki also said Russia should pay Ukraine war reparations. The Russian Federation assets and those of its oligarchs frozen around the globe are a 鈥渉uge pot of gold to be taken and dedicated for Ukraine鈥檚 reconstruction," he said.
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KYIV, Ukraine 鈥 Ukraine鈥檚 state nuclear energy company says while Moscow has accused Kyiv of preparing to detonate a dirty bomb, the opposite may be true.
The Energoatom company said Tuesday that Russia鈥檚 military has carried out unauthorized work at the occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant. The secret construction work is going on at the dry spent fuel storage facility and could trigger a nuclear incident, the statement said.
There are 174 containers at the facility, each of which contains 24 assemblies of spent nuclear fuel, said Energoatom. Destruction of these containers as a result of an explosion would lead to a radiation accident and radiation contamination of several hundred square kilometers of the adjacent territory, it added.
The company called on the U.N. atomic agency to 鈥渁ssess provocative and threatening actions and statements of the Russian side as soon as possible.鈥
A dirty bomb uses explosives to scatter radioactive waste in an effort to sow terror. Such weapons don鈥檛 have the devastating destruction of a nuclear explosion but could expose broad areas to radioactive contamination.
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BERLIN 鈥 Ukraine鈥檚 prime minister says his country still needs more weapons and ammunition to win the war against Russia.
Denys Shmyhal told reporters at a conference on Ukraine鈥檚 reconstruction in Berlin on Tuesday that Kyiv has received good support so far with weapons and training of soldiers.
But he said: 鈥淲e need more weaponry, we need more ammunition to win this war.鈥
Shmyhal added that 鈥渨e need tanks from our partners, from all of our partners; we need heavy armored vehicles, we need additional artillery units, howitzers.鈥
Ukraine and its allies have been coordinating military assistance in the so-called 鈥淩amstein format,鈥 named after the U.S. air base in Germany where a first meeting on the issue was held earlier this year.
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KYIV, Ukraine 鈥 A Ukrainian official says that Ukrainian guerrillas have staged several explosions in a Russia-held southern city.
Ivan Fedorov, the mayor of the city of Melitopol who is now in Ukraine-controlled territory after spending time in Russian captivity, said that a car bomb exploded Tuesday near an office building that houses the headquarters of the Federal Security Service, Russia鈥檚 top security agency, and a local television company.
The Moscow-appointed administration in Melitopol said five people were injured by the explosion.
Fedorov said that Ukrainian resistance fighters also staged seven other explosions in the city overnight.
Melitopol is in the Zaporizhzhia region, part of which was captured by the Russian military early in the invasion. It was annexed by Russia last month along with three other regions of Ukraine.
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MOSCOW 鈥 The Kremlin-backed head of the Russian region of Chechnya has called for wiping out entire cities in Ukraine in retaliation for Ukrainian shelling of Russia鈥檚 territory.
Authorities in Russia鈥檚 Kursk and Belgorod regions that border Ukraine have repeatedly reported Ukrainian shelling that damaged infrastructure and residential buildings.
Ramzan Kadyrov, the regional leader of Chechnya, previously sent troops from the region to fight in Ukraine. He said Tuesday that Russia's response to the alleged Ukrainian attacks has been too subdued.
鈥淥ur response has been too weak,鈥 Kadyrov said in a statement posted on his messaging app channel. 鈥淚f a shell flies into our region, entire cities must be wiped off the face of the Earth so that they don鈥檛 ever think that they can fire in our direction.鈥
Kadyrov has repeatedly made hawkish statements urging the Kremlin to intensify the war in Ukraine.
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KYIV, Ukraine 鈥 Ukraine鈥檚 presidential office said Tuesday that at least seven civilians have been killed and three others have been wounded in the latest Russian shelling of the eastern Donetsk region.
The attacks came as the Russians pressed their offensive on the strategically placed towns of Bakhmut and Avdiivka and also shelled other areas in the Donetsk region, which is part of Ukraine鈥檚 industrial heartland of Donbas.
As part of its attacks over the past 24 hours, the Russian military also again struck the cities of Nikopol and Marhanets facing the Russian-held Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant across the Dnieper, damaging residential buildings, a factory and water supply network.
In the Mykolaiv region, Russian shelling damaged residential buildings and a kindergarten.
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BERLIN 鈥 German and European Union leaders have gathered experts in Berlin to start work on a 鈥渘ew Marshall plan鈥 for the rebuilding of Ukraine.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Tuesday that the aim is to discuss 鈥渉ow to ensure and how to sustain the financing of the recovery, reconstruction and modernization of Ukraine for years and decades to come.鈥
Scholz, who co-hosted the meeting with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, said he鈥檚 looking for 鈥渘othing less than creating a new Marshall plan for the 21st century 鈥 a generational task that must begin now.鈥 That was a reference to the U.S.-sponsored plan that helped revive Western European economies after World War II.
Von der Leyen said the World Bank puts the cost of damage to Ukraine so far at 350 billion euros ($345 billion).
She said that, in addition to longer-term help, 鈥淯kraine needs fast rehabilitation right now as we speak鈥 as Russia targets Ukrainian electricity and other infrastructure ahead of the onset of the winter. She called those 鈥減ure acts of terror.鈥
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy emphasized that point in a video address from Kyiv. He said that Ukraine has a $17 billion 鈥渇ast recovery鈥 plan to repair damage to hospitals, schools, transport and energy infrastructure among other things, but 鈥渁s of now we haven鈥檛 received a single cent for the implementation of the fast recovery plan.鈥
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COPENHAGEN, Denmark 鈥 Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr St酶re said Tuesday that 鈥渢he messages from the Russian leadership indicate that Russia is steering toward a long-term break with the West.鈥
鈥淎n isolated Russia is bad news,鈥 Gahr St酶re said. 鈥淚t is disturbing that today there is so little contact and direct communication with Russia. It weakens the possibility of finding a negotiated end to the war.鈥
In a speech to the Norwegian parliament, Gahr St酶re said that after Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 28, 鈥渨e clearly see how much is at stake.鈥
Russian President Vladimir Putin "takes high risks. And the willingness to take risks seems to increase in line with bad news from the battlefield,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e are now in the most demanding security political situation since World War II.鈥
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BERLIN -- Germany鈥檚 president has arrived in Kyiv for his first visit to Ukraine since Russia鈥檚 invasion began eight months ago.
President Frank-Walter Steinmeier said after arriving Tuesday that 鈥渋t was important to me in this phase of air attacks with drones, cruise missiles and rockets to send a signal of solidarity to Ukrainians,鈥 German news agency dpa reported.
Steinmeier plans to meet President Volodymyr Zelenskyy during his visit.
The German president, whose position is largely ceremonial, made it to Ukraine at his third attempt.
In April, he hoped to visit with his Polish and Baltic counterparts, but said his presence 鈥渁pparently 鈥 wasn鈥檛 wanted in Kyiv.鈥 Steinmeier has been criticized in Ukraine for allegedly cozying up to Russia during his time as foreign minister.
Last week, a planned trip was put off because of security concerns.
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