The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Sweeping attack rocks Ukraine's power sector

It could be sign of possible escalation

- By Hanna Arhirova and Jim Heintz

Russia unleashed one of its most devastatin­g attacks against Ukraine’s electric sector on Friday, an aerial assault it said was retaliatio­n for recent strikes inside Russia and which could signal an escalation of the war just days after President Vladimir Putin cemented his grip on power in a preordaine­d election.

Many Ukrainians were plunged into darkness across several cities, at least five people were killed, and damage to the country’s largest hydroelect­ric plant briefly cut off power to a nuclear plant that has been a safety risk throughout the war.

Russia fired off more than 60 exploding drones and 90 missiles in what Ukrainian officials described as the most brutal attack against its energy infrastruc­ture since the full-scale war began in early 2022.

Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city, sustained the most damage, officials said, and the attack came a day after Russia had fired 31 missiles into the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been urging Western allies for weeks to provide it with additional air-defense systems and ammunition, a period in which $60 billion in U.S. aid has been held up by divisions in Congress.

“With Russian missiles, there are no delays, like with aid packages to our state,” Zelenskyy said. “It is important to understand the cost of delays and postponed decisions.”

Russia’s defense ministry called Friday attacks “strikes of retributio­n.”

Ukraine has increased shelling of Russia’s Belgorod region along its northeast border and has launched drone strikes targeting Russian oil refineries and other energy facilities.

Ukraine’s latest strike inside Russia on Friday killed one and injured at least three, according to local officials.

Putin has described Ukrainian attacks on Belgorod and other regions as an effort to frighten residents and derail the highly orchestrat­ed election that ended Sunday. And he vowed to strike back.

The day after he declared victory, Putin said Russia would seek to create a buffer zone inside eastern Ukraine to help protect against long-range strikes and cross-border raids.

Russia has made progress on the battlefiel­d in recent months against exhausted Ukrainian troops struggling with a shortage of manpower and ammunition along the front line.

When Putin invaded in 2022, he called it a “special military operation,” and his officials have mostly eschewed the word “war.” But in a change of rhetoric Friday that may herald

a new escalation, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said “when the collective West became a participan­t in this on the side of Ukraine, for us it already became a war.”

In the winter of 2022-23, Russia targeted Ukraine’s energy infrastruc­ture, causing frequent blackouts across the country. Many in Ukraine and the West expected that Russia might repeat this strategy this winter, but Russia instead focused its strikes on Ukraine’s defense industries.

While launching the strikes, Russia has combined sophistica­ted ballistic and cruise missiles with waves of cheap Iranian-made Shahed drones in a bid to oversatura­te and weaken Ukrainian air defenses.

Volodymyr Kudrytskyi, head of the national utility Ukrenergo, described Friday’s barrage as the largest assault on Ukraine’s energy infrastruc­ture since the full-scale war began.

“This attack was especially dangerous because the adversary combined different means of attack, kamikaze drones, ballistic and cruise missiles,” he said.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this photo provided by the Telegram Channel of Ukraine’s Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal, smoke and fire rise over the Dnipro hydroelect­ric power plant after Russian attacks in Dnipro, Ukraine, on Friday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this photo provided by the Telegram Channel of Ukraine’s Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal, smoke and fire rise over the Dnipro hydroelect­ric power plant after Russian attacks in Dnipro, Ukraine, on Friday.

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