Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Ukraine: Russia using more deadly weapons

Zelenskyy calling for even stronger EU sanctions

- By David Keyton and John Leicester

Ukrainian and British officials warned Saturday that Russian forces are relying on weapons able to cause mass casualties as they try to make headway in capturing eastern Ukraine and fierce, prolonged fighting depletes resources on both sides.

Russian bombers have likely been launching heavy 1960s-era anti-ship missiles in Ukraine, the U.K. Defense Ministry said. The Kh-22 missiles were primarily designed to destroy aircraft carriers using a nuclear warhead. When used in ground attacks with convention­al warheads, they “are highly inaccurate and therefore can cause severe collateral damage and casualties,” the ministry said.

Both sides have expended large amounts of weaponry in what has become a grinding war of attrition for the eastern region of coal mines and factories known as the Donbas, placing huge strains on their resources and stockpiles.

Russia is likely using the 6.1-ton anti-ship missiles because it is running short of more precise modern missiles, the British ministry said.

It gave no details of where exactly such missiles are thought to have been deployed.

As Russia also sought to consolidat­e its hold over territory seized so far in the 108day war, the U.S. Defense Secretary said Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine “is what happens when oppressors trample the rules that protect us all.”

“It’s what happens when big powers decide that their imperial appetites matter more than the rights of their peaceful neighbors,” Lloyd Austin said during a visit to Asia. “And it’s a preview of a possible world of chaos and turmoil that none of us would want to live in.”

A Ukrainian governor accused Russia of using incendiary weapons in a village in the eastern province of Luhansk, southwest of the fiercely contested cities of Sievierodo­netsk and Lysychansk.

While the use of flamethrow­ers on the battlefiel­d is legal, provincial Gov. Serhii Haidai alleged the overnight attacks in Vrubivka caused widespread damage to civilian facilities and an unknown number of victims.

“At night, the enemy used a flamethrow­er rocket system — many houses burnt down,” Haidai wrote on Telegram on Saturday.

His claim could not be immediatel­y verified.

Sievierodo­netsk and neighborin­g Lysychansk are the last major areas of Luhansk remaining under Ukrainian control.

Haidai said Russian forces destroyed railway depots, a brick factory and a glass factory.

The Ukrainian army said Saturday that Russian forces also were to launch an offensive on the city of Sloviansk in Donetsk province, which together with Luhansk makes up the Donbas.

Moscow-backed rebels have controlled self-proclaimed republics in both provinces since 2014, and Russia is trying to seize the territory still in Ukrainian hands.

Also, during a visit to Kyiv by the European Union’s top official, Ukrainian President Volodymr Zelenskyy called for a new round of even stronger EU sanctions against Russia.

Zelenskyy called for them to target more Russian officials, including judges, and to hamper the activities of all Russian banks, including gas giant Gazprom’s bank.

He spoke during a brief media appearance with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen at the heavily guarded presidenti­al office compound in Ukraine’s capital.

The pair discussed Ukraine’s aspiration­s for EU membership. Zelenskyy, speaking through a translator, said Ukraine “will do everything ” to integrate with the bloc.

Von der Leyen said the EU’s executive arm was “working day and night” on an assessment of Ukraine’s eligibilit­y as an EU candidate.

The goal is to have the review ready to share with the bloc’s 27 existing members by the end of next week.

Zelenskyy and some EU supporters want Ukraine admitted to quickly.

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