Los Angeles Times

A ‘nuclear terrorism’ warning

Ukraine denounces Russia for a missile strike near a second major power plant.

- By Karl Ritter and Jon Gambrell Ritter and Gambrell write for the Associated Press.

KYIV, Ukraine — A Russian missile blasted a crater close to a nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine on Monday, not damaging its three reactors but hitting other industrial equipment in what Ukrainian authoritie­s denounced as an act of “nuclear terrorism.”

The missile struck within 325 yards of the reactors at the Pivdennouk­rainsk nuclear power plant near the city of Yuzhnoukra­insk in the Mykolaiv region, leaving a hole 61⁄2 feet deep and 13 feet wide, according to Ukrainian nuclear operator Energoatom.

The reactors were operating normally and no employees were injured, it said. But the proximity of the strike renewed fears that Russia’s nearly sevenmonth-long war in Ukraine might produce a radiation disaster.

This nuclear power station is Ukraine’s secondlarg­est after the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear power plant, which has repeatedly come under fire.

After recent battlefiel­d setbacks, Russian President Vladimir Putin threatened last week to step up Russian attacks on Ukrainian infrastruc­ture. Throughout the war, Russia has targeted Ukraine’s electricit­y generation and transmissi­on equipment, causing blackouts and endangerin­g the safety systems of the country’s nuclear power plants.

The industrial complex that includes the Pivdennouk­rainsk plant sits along the Southern Bug river about 190 miles south of the capital, Kyiv. The attack caused the temporary shutdown of a nearby hydroelect­ric power plant and shattered more than 100 windows at the complex, Ukrainian authoritie­s said. The U.N.’s Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency said three power lines were knocked offline but later reconnecte­d.

Black-and-white CCTV video released by Ukraine’s Ministry of Defense showed two large fireballs erupting one after the other in the dark, followed by incandesce­nt showers of sparks. A time stamp on the video read 19 minutes after midnight.

The ministry and Energoatom both called the strike “nuclear terrorism.” The Russian Defense Ministry had no immediate comment.

Russian forces have occupied the Zaporizhzh­ia nuclear plant, Europe’s largest, since early after the invasion. Shelling has cut off the plant’s transmissi­on lines, forcing operators to shut down its six reactors to avoid a radiation disaster. Russia and Ukraine have traded blame for the strikes.

The IAEA, which has stationed monitors at the Zaporizhzh­ia plant, said a main transmissi­on line was reconnecte­d Friday, providing the electricit­y it needs to cool its reactors. But the mayor of Enerhodar, where the Zaporizhzh­ia plant is located, reported more Russian shelling Monday in the city’s industrial zone.

While warning Friday of a possible ramping up of strikes, Putin claimed his forces had so far acted with restraint but warned “if the situation develops this way, our response will be more serious.”

“Just recently, the Russian armed forces have delivered a couple of impactful strikes,” he said. “Let’s consider those as warning strikes.”

As well as infrastruc­ture, Russian forces also continue to pound other sites. The most recent shelling killed at least eight civilians and wounded 22, Ukraine’s presidenti­al office said Monday.

Overnight, Russian forces struck Nikopol and Marhanets across the Dnieper River from the Zaporizhzh­ia plant, damaging dozens of buildings and cutting power supplies to some sections of the cities, the presidenti­al office said.

Russian strikes also hit Kramatorsk and Toretsk in the eastern region of Donetsk, it said.

The mayor of the Russian-occupied eastern city of Donetsk, meanwhile, said Ukrainian shelling had killed 13 civilians and wounded eight there.

Patricia Lewis, the internatio­nal security research director at the Chatham House think tank in London, said the attacks at the Zaporizhzh­ia plant and Monday’s strike on the Pivdennouk­rainsk plant indicated that the Russian military was attempting to take Ukrainian nuclear plants offline before winter.

“It’s a very, very dangerous and illegal act to be targeting a nuclear station,” Lewis said in an interview. “Only the generals will know the intent, but there’s clearly a pattern.

“What they seem to be doing each time is to try to cut off the power to the reactor,” she said. “It’s a very clumsy way to do it, because how accurate are these missiles?”

Power is needed to run pumps that circulate cooling water to the reactors, preventing overheatin­g and — in a worst-case scenario — a radiation-spewing nuclear fuel meltdown.

Other recent Russian strikes on Ukrainian infrastruc­ture targeted power plants in the north and a dam in the south. They came in the wake of a sweeping Ukrainian counteroff­ensive in the east of the country that reclaimed Russian-occupied territory in the Kharkiv region.

Analysts have noted that beyond recapturin­g territory, challenges remain in holding it. In a video address Monday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said crypticall­y of that effort, “I cannot reveal all the details, but thanks to the Security Service of Ukraine, we are now confident that the occupiers will not have any foothold on Ukrainian soil.”

The Ukrainian successes in Kharkiv — Russia’s biggest defeat since its forces were repelled from around Kyiv in the invasion’s opening stage — have fueled rare public criticism in Russia and added to the military and diplomatic pressure on Putin. The Kremlin’s nationalis­t critics have questioned why Moscow has failed to plunge Ukraine into darkness yet by hitting all of its major nuclear power plants.

 ?? THE PIVDENNOUK­RAINSK Planet Labs PBC ?? nuclear power plant in Ukraine is seen in a satellite image taken in May. A Russian missile strike near the reactors Monday renewed fears that the war could lead to a radiation disaster.
THE PIVDENNOUK­RAINSK Planet Labs PBC nuclear power plant in Ukraine is seen in a satellite image taken in May. A Russian missile strike near the reactors Monday renewed fears that the war could lead to a radiation disaster.

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