The Hamilton Spectator

Kremlin accuses Ukrainian saboteurs of attack inside Russia

Kyiv denied claim, warned Moscow could use to justify stepping up attacks

- SUSIE BLANN

KYIV, UKRAINE The Kremlin on Thursday accused Ukrainian saboteurs of crossing into western Russia and firing on villagers. Ukraine denied the claim and warned that Moscow could use the allegation­s to justify stepping up its own attacks in the ongoing war.

The exact circumstan­ces of the reported attack in the Bryansk region were unclear, as was the strategic purpose of such an assault. The regional governor said two civilians were killed. If confirmed, it would be another indication following drone attacks earlier this week that Kyiv may be intensifyi­ng pressure against Moscow by exposing Russian defensive weaknesses, embarrassi­ng the Kremlin and sowing unease among Russian civilians.

Russian President Vladimir Putin blamed Ukrainian “terrorists” for the incursion, claiming that they deliberate­ly targeted civilians, including children in “yet another terror attack, another crime.”

“They infiltrate­d the area near the border and opened fire on civilians,” Putin said during a video call. “They saw a civilian vehicle with civilians, with children in it, and they fired on them.”

The alleged incursion came just days after Putin ordered the Federal Security Service to tighten controls on Russia’s border with Ukraine. While Russian war hawks have expressed dismay with what they see as Putin’s reluctance to declare martial law and launch a sweeping mobilizati­on of soldiers, the Russian leader’s comments Thursday did not appear to signal any such moves.

Putin blamed the attack on “neoNazis” and said it confirmed that Russia did the right thing by invading Ukraine. “I repeat again: They will not succeed, and we will finish pushing them out,” he said.

When he ordered the invasion, the Russian leader vowed to “denazify” Ukraine, alleging falsely that radical neo-Nazi groups dominate the country led by a Jewish president. Kyiv and its western allies dismissed his assertion as a bogus cover for an unprovoked act of aggression.

Ukraine’s military intelligen­ce representa­tive, Andrii Cherniak, saw the Russian claims as evidence that Moscow is facing an uprising among its own disgruntle­d people.

“This was done by the Russians; Ukraine has nothing to do with it,” he told The Associated Press.

A group calling itself the Russian Volunteer Corps claimed it crossed the border into Russia in a video that also urged Russians to rebel. The group’s statement did not explain what actions it took or what specific objectives it wanted to achieve. The Russian Volunteer Corps described itself as “a volunteer formation in the Armed Forces of Ukraine.” It was not immediatel­y clear if it has any ties with the Ukrainian military.

‘‘ I repeat again: They will not succeed, and we will finish pushing them out.

RUSSIAN PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People who were evacuated from the front-line city of Bakhmut listen to the authoritie­s at a temporary housing centre in Shakhtersk, Russiancon­trolled Donetsk region, eastern Ukraine, on Thursday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People who were evacuated from the front-line city of Bakhmut listen to the authoritie­s at a temporary housing centre in Shakhtersk, Russiancon­trolled Donetsk region, eastern Ukraine, on Thursday.

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