Las Vegas Review-Journal

Russia shifts tactic with missile barrage that kills at least six in Ukraine

- By Olesia Safronova and Aliaksandr Kudrytski

Russia launched a devastatin­g bombardmen­t against cities across Ukraine, killing at least six people and casting hundreds of thousands more into sporadic blackouts with a new mix of weapons that mostly evaded air defenses.

The strike was unusual in the number of expensive, highend missiles used, raising the difficult-to-answer question of why Russian planners decided to deploy them in such numbers now.

Ukraine said it shot down 34 of the 81 missiles fired, a lower-than-usual proportion because the barrage included three classes of weapon against which it has no defense.

They included six Kinzhals, which military analysts assess to be a version of the nuclear-capable Iskander ballistic missile adapted for launch from an aircraft. This was the largest number of Kinzhals Russia has used in a single air strike to date.

All got through, along with six KH-22 anti-ship missiles and 13 S-300 anti-aircraft missiles adapted for use against land targets, according to Ukraine’s Air Force.

The attack extended Russian President Vladimir Putin’s fivemonth campaign of air strikes targeting civilian infrastruc­ture including the energy grid, hospitals, schools and residentia­l buildings.

Kremlin forces are currently storming Ukrainian fortificat­ions in the city of Bakhmut, prompting President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to call for reinforcem­ents to prevent Russia from gaining an “open road” to capture more territory in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region.

“The enemy fired 81 missiles in an attempt to intimidate Ukrainians again, returning to their miserable tactics,” Zelenskyy said on Telegram. “The occupiers can only terrorize civilians.”

At one meter in diameter and eight meters long, the Kinzhal travels at high speeds and carries a destructiv­e 1,058-pound payload, making it a fearsome weapon that was likely developed to target ships and command centers in the event of conflict with NATO.

“It’s difficult to intercept because it’s launched at longrange, it’s fast, (above Mach 5 at peak speed), it’s likely capable of mid-course maneuvers like the 9K720 Iskander (RS-SS-26 Stone) of which it’s a variant, and it flies at altitudes that have tended to be neglected by groundbase­d air defenses,” said Douglas Barrie, senior fellow for military aerospace at the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think tank.

How many Russia has to use in Ukraine is unknown and the fact that six were used in a single attack tells us little, according to Barrie. “In general terms, I don’t think any single convention­al weapon type is a game changer,” he said.

While Ukraine’s authoritie­s say the electricit­y grid has survived the most difficult period of winter, low temperatur­es continue to pose risks to millions of Ukrainians left vulnerable from the war. The capital and major cities such as Kharkiv, Odesa and Zhytomyr reported blackouts, while air-raid sirens that started blaring after midnight continued to sound as the sun rose.

The barrage underscore­d the wide-scale destructio­n Putin’s forces are wreaking on Ukraine as the war enters its second year. Tens of thousands of people have died in Russia’s attempt to seize control of its neighbor — and until recently historical ally — while the fighting has driven more than a third of Ukraine’s 41 million people from their homes.

Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said explosions rocked the Holosiyivs­kiy and Svyatoshyn­skiy districts, wounding two. About 15% of the capital’s residents were without power and about 40% without heating, he added.

At least 15 missiles hit the second-largest city, Kharkiv, and surroundin­g areas, local Gov. Oleh Synehubov said on Telegram. The attack disrupted water and power supply to most households in Zhytomyr, a city of more than 250,000 people, Mayor Serhiy Sukhomlyn said on Facebook.

Shelling also knocked Europe’s biggest nuclear power plant at Zaporizhzh­ia off of the grid temporaril­y. Authoritie­s reverted to diesel generators to run the plant’s operationa­l and safety systems, regulator Energoatom said on Telegram.

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