Albuquerque Journal

Ukraine says recent attack came from Belarus

Missiles launched from Belarusian airspace hit wide swath of territory

- BY AMY CHENG, JULIAN DUPLAIN, DAVID L. STERN AND ROBYN DIXON

Russia fired nearly 50 missiles at areas in western and northern Ukraine early Saturday and launched airstrikes from Belarus for the first time, Ukrainian officials said, as Moscow’s war entered a fifth month and President Biden headed to Germany for a summit with Group of Seven leaders.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko held their own meeting on Saturday at Putin’s summer residence near St. Petersburg, where they discussed increasing weapons shipments to Belarus, including nuclear weapons.

The barrage of missiles struck a wide swath of territory as Ukrainian forces struggled to hold on to the eastern city of Lysychansk, Kyiv’s last foothold against a Russian onslaught in the Luhansk region.

A military base near the western Ukrainian town of Yavoriv was hit by four Russian missiles fired from the Black Sea, regional governor Maksym Kozytskyy said. He said two other missiles were intercepte­d. Details of casualties were not immediatel­y known, but at least 35 people were killed in a similar attack on Yavoriv in March. Missile strikes were also reported on Chernihiv and Zhytomyr in the north, with a total of 48 missiles launched, according to Ukrainian presidenti­al adviser Mykhailo Podolyak.

Ukrainian military intelligen­ce said 12 missiles were fired from Russian Tu-22M3 bombers flying over Belarus. It was the first time, the Ukrainians said, that Belarusian airspace has been used for such an attack. A Telegram channel monitoring Belarusian military activity, Belarusian Gayun, also said that missiles were launched from Belarusian territory.

Ukraine charged that the strikes from Belarusian airspace reflected a deliberate effort by the Kremlin to “draw Belarus into the war in Ukraine as a direct participan­t.”

Belarus’s Lukashenko is a longstandi­ng and loyal ally of Putin, and allowed Russian troops and materiel to remain in his country after joint exercises in February. Those troops, tanks and other equipment were then used in Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

Putin told Lukashenko that Russia would hand Iskander M missile systems to Belarus in coming months, adding the missile was capable of carrying convention­al and nuclear warheads.

“As we agreed with you — you raised this matter — our decision has been made. Over the next few months we will send Belarus the Iskander-M tactical missile systems which can use both ballistic and cruise missiles, both in convention­al and nuclear rendition,” Putin said according to Interfax. He added that the two countries must ensure their security.

Lukashenko urged Putin to also equip Belarusian warplanes to carry nuclear warheads. The Belarusian leader raised the issue of Belarus hosting nuclear weapons late last year.

“I am not saying that you will move nuclear munitions there tomorrow,” Lukashenko said, but added it was important to be ready in case of a NATO attack.

Ukraine claimed late last month that Russia had already deployed Iskander M missiles in Belarus.

In eastern Ukraine, Serhiy Haidai, the regional governor of Luhansk, announced the retreat of Ukrainian troops from Severodone­tsk amid mounting casualties. The remaining soldiers will be relocated to new, fortified locations, he added. Ukraine’s “profession­al, tactical retrograde” should not be taken as a sign of defeat, a senior U.S. official said, because Russia has made only incrementa­l gains while a large number of its troops have been killed.

Five miles south of Severodone­tsk, Ukrainian defenders have been digging trenches around Lysychansk this week to seal the city to everyone but military and humanitari­an rescue missions. Russian forces have tried to enter Lysychansk from the south, Haidai said in a Telegram post Saturday, injuring at least two children in recent days.

As Russian troops threaten to seize control of the entire Luhansk region, Biden is set to confer with leaders of the Group of Seven advanced industrial nations at a summit scheduled to start Sunday in the Bavarian Alps.

When the G-7 leaders met in March, there was an unpreceden­ted consensus on an unconditio­nal need to back Ukraine.

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