Los Angeles Times

MOSCOW CUTS OFF GAS TO 2 ALLIES OF KYIV

EU calls the move ‘blackmail.’ Russia renews bombardmen­t of eastern Ukraine.

- By Nabih Bulos and Laura King

KHARKIV, Ukraine — Moscow on Wednesday turned off the natural-gas spigot to the front-line Eastern European states of Poland and Bulgaria, signaling its willingnes­s to take sharp economic aim at those who aid Ukraine.

Russian forces, meanwhile, rained shells on eastern Ukraine as they pressed ahead with their devastatin­g 2-month-old invasion.

Addressing the first such supply disruption since the war’s start, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov strongly hinted that other European economies may be next. He told reporters Wednesday that if some customers “decline to pay under the new system” Russia has instituted — meaning in rubles instead of dollars or euros — they “of course” could face the same treatment.

Along a 300-mile battlefron­t in Ukraine’s Donbas region, Russian forces managed to capture a small town, Zarichne, the Ukrainian military said in an early morning operationa­l report. The giant Azovstal steelworks in the battered southern port city of Mariupol, which has become a symbol of Ukrainian resistance, also came under new bombardmen­t, the military said.

Russia has been trying since the start of the war to capture Mariupol, and the city’s last-ditch defenders and some civilians are holed up inside the sprawling Soviet-era steel complex laced with tunnels and bunkers. Even though fighting continues, Russian President Vladimir Putin has claimed victory in the siege of the city, which Ukraine has not acknowledg­ed.

The northeaste­rn city of Kharkiv, partially hemmed

in by Russian troops and under heavy bombardmen­t since the start of the war, was rocked by loud explosions shortly after midnight. Later, the regional governor said on the messaging app Telegram that overnight strikes in outlying towns had killed three people and wounded 15 others.

Heavy pounding in advance of major ground movement, sometimes including strikes on civilian areas, is key to the Russian strategy in the east, British military intelligen­ce said in an assessment Wednesday.

Amid fears of a widening war, officials in a pro-Russia breakaway region of Moldova — Ukraine’s small, impoverish­ed western neighbor — accused Ukraine on Wednesday of attacking it. Russia last week telegraphe­d its aim of seizing Ukraine’s southern seacoast to link up with that breakaway region, Transnistr­ia, as well as with the Crimean peninsula, which Moscow seized from Ukraine in 2014.

In an overnight address, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accused Russia of attempting to cause a “global price crisis” and sow chaos in the food market.

“Ukrainian exports will help stabilize markets,” he said, “so it is beneficial not only for us, but also for all Europeans.”

The war has disrupted commodity markets and altered global patterns of trade and production in ways that will keep prices at historical­ly high levels through the end of 2024, according to a World Bank report released this week.

Energy prices worldwide are projected to increase more than 50% in 2022 before easing in 2023 and 2024, the report said. Non-energy prices are expected to rise nearly 20% this year.

Russia is the world’s second-largest gas producer, behind the United States. It is among the top three nations in oil production, alongside the U.S. and Saudi Arabia, supplying about 10% of what’s consumed worldwide.

Russia is also a major producer of wheat, palladium and nickel, while Ukraine is a large exporter of corn and wheat, and a key route for the flow of Russian natural gas to Europe. Wheat prices are forecast to increase by more than 40% this year, the report found.

“This amounts to the largest commodity shock we’ve experience­d since the 1970s. As was the case then, the shock is being aggravated by a surge in restrictio­ns in trade of food, fuel and fertilizer­s,” Indermit Gill, the World Bank’s vice president for equitable growth, finance and institutio­ns, said in a statement.

Wednesday’s announceme­nt by Russia’s state-run fuel company, Gazprom, of the cutoff of Poland and Bulgaria came a day after Western allies, at U.S. urging, vowed to redouble shipments of weaponry to help Ukraine fight off Russian forces for what could prove to be a protracted confrontat­ion.

Germany, in a policy shift, said it would ship armored antiaircra­ft systems to Ukraine. U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III, speaking at Tuesday’s gathering of NATO and other allies at a U.S. air base in western Germany, called on those who want to help Ukraine to “move at the speed of war” to rush in more heavy armaments.

As Russia readies more troops and armor for its expanded offensive in eastern Ukraine, its Defense Ministry in Moscow said 59 Ukrainian military targets were destroyed overnight in airstrikes. It said targets included hangars containing foreign-supplied weapons and ammunition, but did not provide specifics. The claims could not be independen­tly verified.

Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters Wednesday that dozens of the U.S. howitzers promised last week by the Biden administra­tion are now in Ukraine.

U.S. training of Ukrainian personnel to use the howitzers is also underway in neighborin­g countries, Kirby said.

“It’s an active, kinetic fight there in the Donbas,” he said.

The suspension of gas exports to Poland and Bulgaria came after both countries, along with most other European Union nations, rejected Moscow’s demand that energy shipments be paid for in rubles, which would help prop up the Russian currency. Existing contracts almost uniformly specify dollar payments.

The EU promised on Wednesday that it would forge a unified response to the cutoff, which European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen called a Russian attempt to “blackmail” Europe.

“This is unjustifie­d and unacceptab­le,” Von der Leyen said in a statement. “And it shows once again the unreliabil­ity of Russia as a gas supplier.”

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki also scoffed at Moscow’s move. He told lawmakers that Russian-supplied energy was expected to be replaced by a combinatio­n of local production and gas transporte­d from Norway.

Poland has drawn particular Russian ire because it has not only supplied Ukraine with weapons, but also has been a key conduit for arms from other North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on countries. The Polish government said it was prepared for the Russian step, which the onset of spring and warmer temperatur­es makes less alarming than if it had occurred just a few weeks ago.

The claim of Ukrainian aggression in Transnistr­ia, also known as TransDnies­ter, came from the Interior Ministry of the separatist region, which said Ukraine launched drones and fired shots aimed at its territory.

Local officials said this week that two radio towers were damaged in strikes, with explosions also reported in the enclave’s capital, Tiraspol.

The Ukrainian government has denied any hostile actions directed at Transnistr­ia, where a Russian garrison is stationed.

 ?? Felipe Dana Associated Press ?? RESIDENTS HELP an emergency worker transport a man to an ambulance after Russian bombardmen­t in Kharkiv, Ukraine. The city, hemmed in by Russian forces, was rocked by explosions after midnight.
Felipe Dana Associated Press RESIDENTS HELP an emergency worker transport a man to an ambulance after Russian bombardmen­t in Kharkiv, Ukraine. The city, hemmed in by Russian forces, was rocked by explosions after midnight.
 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? PEOPLE wait in line for food assistance at Ark Church in Kharkiv, Ukraine. The city has been under Russian bombardmen­t since Feb. 24.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times PEOPLE wait in line for food assistance at Ark Church in Kharkiv, Ukraine. The city has been under Russian bombardmen­t since Feb. 24.
 ?? Alexei Alexandrov Associated Press ?? A RESIDENT waits for his kettle to boil in Mariupol, Ukraine. Russia has sought to capture the city, laying siege to a steel factory sheltering Ukrainian defenders.
Alexei Alexandrov Associated Press A RESIDENT waits for his kettle to boil in Mariupol, Ukraine. Russia has sought to capture the city, laying siege to a steel factory sheltering Ukrainian defenders.

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