Ukraine war latest: Zelensky calls on Nato to shoot down Putin’s missiles

Putin will be made to pay to rebuild Ukraine, says US secretary of state

Volodymyr Zelensky asked Nato states to shoot down Russian missiles to compensate for Kyiv’s defence deficit as he pushed Ukraine’s allies for more direct involvement in the war.

Reminding that Ukraine still awaits the delivery of American F-16 fighter jets to counter Russian forces, he said: “You can’t provide that right now? OK … returning to the planes that you have on the territory of neighbouring Nato countries: raise them up … shoot down targets, protect civilians.”

The call to accelerate aid and push so-called “red lines” of engagement in the conflict reflects the growing pressure that Ukrainian forces are under along more than 1,000km of front lines in the northeast, east and south of the country.

Meanwhile, Ukraine claimed that Russia has lost more than 1,500 soldiers in the past week in the grinding war in Kharkiv even as Vladimir Putin said Moscow has “no plans” to take Ukraine’s second city.

Russia has lost 1,572 soldiers in just the last seven days and 263 pieces of military equipment, including 75 drones, 66 army vehicles and eight tanks, the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine claimed. These numbers cannot be independently verified.

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It’s horrifying what’s happened to Ukrainians with disabilities during Russia’s war – we cannot abandon them

Comment: Reporting on the kidnapping and abuse of the most vulnerable in Ukrainian society makes one thing clear, writes Bel Trew: in war people with disabilities are the last to be remembered and the first to be left behind:

Used as human shields, starved or deprived of medicines, tortured, abducted, disappeared. These are the potential crimes that have been committed against people with disabilities since Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine, according to a new 18-month investigation by The Independent.

Alexander Butler21 May 2024 07:00

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Tory MP claims it is ‘extremely unlikely’ Ukraine will win against Russia

A Conservative former minister has claimed it is “extremely unlikely” that Ukraine will succeed against Russia, as he urged MPs to be realistic.

During a debate on Ukraine, Sir Edward Leigh argued that “America could’ve won this war by now” if it had armed Ukraine sufficiently.

Sir Edward said current resources are not enough for Ukraine to win, before revealing he is prepared to send UK troops to fight and put the UK’s economy on a war footing.

The Gainsborough MP said: “It is extremely unlikely, sadly, that Ukraine can win this war.”

Namita Singh21 May 2024 06:30

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Putin appoints another economist as deputy defence minister

President Vladimir Putin yesterday appointed former deputy economy minister Oleg Savelyev as a deputy defence minister, according to a published decree, in a further sign of his intention to improve the efficiency of Russia’s war economy.

Mr Putin sprang a surprise last week by removing defence minister Sergei Shoigu and replacing him with Andrei Belousov, an economist and former deputy prime minister.

The move was widely seen as aimed at getting more value from defence spending and cleaning up the defence ministry, which has been hit by a major bribery scandal.

Russian president Vladimir Putin speaks during a meeting with commanders of military districts at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, on 15 May 2024 (AP)

Mr Savelyev worked in the economy ministry from 2008 to 2014 and briefly served as a deputy to Belousov, who headed the ministry at the time.

After Russia’s annexation of Crimea, Mr Savelyev served as Minister for Crimean Affairs in 2014-2015. For the past five years, he has been an auditor for the Russian Accounts Chamber, overseeing state defence and security spending.

Namita Singh21 May 2024 06:15

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Zelensky asks Nato states to shoot down Russian missiles

Volodymyr Zelensky said he wanted his partners to be more directly involved in the war, but understood they were wary of antagonising Russia. He, however, added if countries could not supply the planes straight away, they could still fly them from neighbouring Nato states and shoot down Russian missiles.

“It’s a question of will,” he said. “But everyone says a word that sounds the same in every language: everyone is scared of escalation. Everyone has gotten used to the fact that Ukrainians are dying – that’s not escalation for people.”

He proposed that the armed forces of neighbouring Nato countries could intercept incoming Russian missiles over Ukrainian territory to help Kyiv protect itself.

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky speaks during an interview with AFP at the Presidential Office in Kyiv, on 17 May 2024 (AFP via Getty Images)

Russia has fired thousands of missiles and drones at Ukraine since the start of the wider conflict, and air defences are a priority for Kyiv.

“Russians are using 300 planes on the territory of Ukraine. We need at least 120, 130 planes to resist in the sky,” he said. Ukraine is waiting for the delivery of US-designed F-16s fighters to counter Russian forces, he said, as he asked the North Atlantic Alliance to compensate for the delay by hitting the targets.

“You can’t provide that right now? OK … returning to the planes that you have on the territory of neighbouring Nato countries: raise them up … shoot down targets, protect civilians.”

Namita Singh21 May 2024 06:14

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Pentagon vows to keep weapons moving to Ukraine as Kyiv faces a renewed assault by Russia

Defence secretary Lloyd Austin committed to keeping US weapons moving to Ukraine as Kyiv faces one of its toughest moments against a renewed assault by Russia.

Mr Austin and as many as 50 defence leaders from Europe and around the world met yesterday to coordinate more military aid to Ukraine as it tries to hold off a Russian offensive in the northeast while launching its own massive assault on the Russia-occupied Crimean Peninsula.

“We’re meeting in a moment of challenge,” Mr Austin said, noting that Russia’s new onslaught on Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, showed why the commitment was vital. Mr Austin vowed to keep US weapons moving “week after week”.

He told reporters the group spent a lot of time talking about Ukraine’s critical need for air defense systems, which he said are helping stave off the Russian attacks.“We’ll continue to push to ensure that Ukraine owns its skies and can defend its citizens and its civilian infrastructure far from the front lines,” he said after the meeting ended.

Namita Singh21 May 2024 06:00

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Zelensky pushes allies to step up aid

Western allies are taking too long to make key decisions on military support for Ukraine, president Volodymyr Zelensky told Reuters.

He also said he was pushing partners to get more directly involved in the war by helping to intercept Russian missiles over Ukraine and allowing Kyiv to use Western weapons against enemy military equipment amassing near the border.

The call to accelerate aid and push so-called “red lines” of engagement in the conflict reflect the growing pressure Ukrainian forces are under along more than 1,000km of front lines in the northeast, east and south of the country.

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky speaks during an interview with AFP at the Presidential Office in Kyiv, on 17 May 2024, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine (AFP via Getty Images)

He said the situation on the battlefield was “one of the most difficult” he had known since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022.

In recent weeks Moscow’s troops have made incursions into northeastern Ukraine, further testing Kyiv’s already stretched defences. At the same time, Russia has taken territory in the eastern Donbas region in sometimes fierce battles.

“A very powerful wave (of fighting) is going on in Donbas … No-one even notices that there are actually more battles in the east of the country, specifically in the Donbas direction: Kurakhove, Pokrovsk, Chasiv Yar.”

He added, however, that the situation north of Kharkiv was now “under control”, as he called again for faster military aid from the United States and other partners.

Namita Singh21 May 2024 05:45

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Russia claims control of Bilohorivka

The Russian military said yesterday that it had taken full control of the settlement of Bilohorivka in Ukraine’s Luhansk region, while Kyiv said fighting was going on in the area.

The Russian defence ministry said in a statement its forces had taken up better positions in the area.

Ukraine’s General Staff, in its late evening report on Facebook, did not directly deny the Russian report but said fighting was still going on around Bilohorivka, and added that Ukrainian forces had repelled three attacks in the nearby Siversk sector.

Earlier, the General Staff said Kyiv’s troops “have been holding back” Russian attacks near the village.

At least 5 people died and 16 injured following Russian shelling of a recreation center in Kharkiv region (EPA)

The Russian defence ministry added it had also been involved in fierce clashes in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region near Vovchansk, Starytsia and Hlyboke where it said troops had repelled two counter-attacks.

Russian forces earlier this month thrust into the Kharkiv region in what president Vladimir Putin said was an operation to create a buffer zone to protect Russian border regions.

President Volodymyr Zelensky told Reuters that the situation north of Kharkiv was now “under control”.

Namita Singh21 May 2024 05:30

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Ukraine war ‘needs to come to a stop’- Grant Shapps

Defence secretary Grant Shapps, speaking at defence questions, told the Commons: “We are very mindful of the situation in Ukraine and particularly in Kharkiv, where Russia are making, or trying to make, inroads.

“This is an existential battle for all civilised countries that believe in democracy and freedom and it is the case that we must ensure the world continues to keep up the efforts.

“It is not right for there to be pauses in our support and when there are, the sort of losses we’ve seen, I hope on a very temporary, and believe on a very temporary, basis, in Kharkiv around the villages to the north are an inevitable consequence of inaction.”

Mr Shapps later told MPs: “This bloody war is now killing up to 1,000 Russians a day, or causing casualties, and it needs to come to a stop.”

Alexander Butler21 May 2024 05:00

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Russian theatre director and playwright put on trial over play

A Russian court yesterday opened the trial of a theatre director and a playwright accused of advocating terrorism in a play, the latest step in an unrelenting crackdown on dissent in Russia that has reached new heights since Moscow sent troops into Ukraine.

Zhenya Berkovich, a prominent independent theatre director, and playwright Svetlana Petriychuk have been jailed for over a year. Authorities claim their play Finist, the Brave Falcon justifies terrorism, which is a criminal offence in Russia punishable by up to seven years in prison. Berkovich and Petriychuk have both repeatedly rejected the accusations against them.

Berkovich told the court that she staged the play in order to prevent terrorism, and Petriychuk echoed her sentiment, saying that she wrote it in order to prevent events like those depicted in the play.

Theater director Zhenya Berkovich, left, and playwright Svetlana Petriychuk are seen in a glass cage prior to a hearing in a court in Moscow, Russia, Monday, 20 May 2024 (AP)

The women’s lawyers have pointed out at court hearings before the trial that the play was supported by the Russian Culture Ministry and won the Golden Mask award, Russia’s most prestigious national theatre award. In 2019, the play was read to inmates of a women’s prison in Siberia, and Russia’s state penitentiary service praised it on its website, Petriychuk’s lawyer has said.

The case against Berkovich and Petriychuk elicited outrage in Russia. An open letter in support of the two artists, started by the independent Novaya Gazeta newspaper, has been signed by more than 16,000 people since their arrest. The play, the letter argued, “carries an absolutely clear anti-terrorist sentiment”.

Dozens of Russian actors, directors and journalists also signed affidavits urging the court to release the two from custody pending investigation and trial.

Namita Singh21 May 2024 04:26

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Watch: Tyson Fury clarifies claims judges sided with Oleksandr Usyk because of war in Ukraine

Tyson Fury clarifies claims judges sided with Oleksandr Usyk because of war in Ukraine

Alexander Butler21 May 2024 04:00

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