Los Angeles Times

Ukraine says it blunted Russia’s missile barrage

Only one of the 30 launched breached air defenses, but it killed one person in Odesa, according to military.

- Blann writes for the Associated Press.

KYIV, Ukraine — Russia fired 30 cruise missiles at different parts of Ukraine early Thursday in the latest nighttime test of Ukrainian air defenses, which shot down 29 of them, officials said.

One person died and two were wounded by a Russian missile that got through and struck an industrial building in the southern region of Odesa, according to Serhiy Bratchuk, a spokespers­on for the region’s military administra­tion.

Amid the recently intensifie­d Russian air assaults, China said its special envoy met with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during talks in Kyiv this week with Ukraine’s chief diplomat.

Beijing’s peace proposal has so far yielded no apparent breakthrou­gh in the war, and Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Wang Wenbin said Thursday that the warring parties needed to “accumulate mutual trust” for progress to be made.

Ukrainian officials sought during the talks to recruit China’s support for Kyiv’s own peace plan, according to Ukraine’s presidenti­al office. Zelensky’s proposal includes the restoratio­n of his country’s territoria­l integrity, the withdrawal of Russian forces and holding Russian President Vladimir Putin legally accountabl­e for the invasion in February 2022.

Leaders of the Group of 7 leading industrial­ized nations gathering in Japan on Thursday were expected to denounce Russia’s war and vow to continue helping Kyiv fight Moscow. They were to hold “discussion­s about the battlefiel­d” in Ukraine, according to Jake Sullivan, the White House national security advisor.

A Western official said Russia had built “potentiall­y formidable” defensive lines on Ukrainian territory, including extensive minefields, and had more than 200,000 troops along the 600mile front line, though it is unlikely to possess credible reserves.

As Ukraine receives sophistica­ted weapons systems from its Western allies, the Kremlin has started losing warplanes in areas previously deemed safe, the official said, while Kyiv has proved able to shoot down Russia’s hypersonic ballistic missiles — the most advanced weapons in Moscow’s arsenal. The official spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss military intelligen­ce.

Meanwhile, Kremlin-installed authoritie­s in occupied Crimea reported the derailment of eight train cars Thursday because of an explosion, prompting renewed suspicions about possible Ukrainian saboteur activity behind Russian lines. Russian state media reported that the train was carrying grain.

State news agency RIA Novosti, quoting a source within the emergency services, said the incident occurred not far from the city of Simferopol. The Crimean Railway company reported that the derailment was caused by “the interferen­ce of unauthoriz­ed persons” and that there were no casualties.

Ukrainian officials refuse to comment on possible acts of sabotage. Ukraine’s military intelligen­ce spokespers­on, Andriy Yusov, noted on Ukrainian television that Russian train lines “are also used to transport weapons, ammunition, armored vehicles.”

Overnight, loud explosions were heard in Kyiv as the Kremlin’s forces targeted the capital for the ninth time this month in a clear escalation after weeks of a lull and ahead of a much-anticipate­d Ukrainian counteroff­ensive using newly supplied advanced Western weapons.

Debris fell on two Kyiv districts, starting a fire at a garage complex. There was no immediate word about any victims, Serhii Popko, head of the Kyiv military administra­tion, said in a post on the messaging app Telegram.

Ukraine also shot down two Russian exploding drones and two reconnaiss­ance drones, according to authoritie­s.

The missiles were launched from Russian sea, air and ground bases, Gen. Valerii Zaluzhnyi, the Ukrainian commander in chief, wrote on Telegram.

Several waves of missiles were aimed at areas of Ukraine between 9 p.m. Wednesday and 5:30 a.m. Thursday, he said.

Russian forces used strategic bombers from the Caspian region and apparently fired X-101 and X-55type missiles developed during Soviet times, Kyiv authoritie­s said. Russia then deployed reconnaiss­ance drones over the capital.

In the last major air attack on Kyiv, on Tuesday, Ukrainian air defenses bolstered by sophistica­ted Western-supplied systems shot down all the incoming missiles, officials said.

That attack used hypersonic missiles, which have been repeatedly touted by Russian President Vladimir Putin as providing a key strategic competitiv­e advantage and among the most advanced weapons in his country’s arsenal. The missiles are difficult to detect and intercept because of their hypersonic speed and maneuverab­ility.

But sophistica­ted Western air-defense systems, including U.S.-made Patriot missiles, have helped spare Kyiv from the kind of destructio­n witnessed along the main front line in the country’s east and south.

While the ground fighting is largely deadlocked along that front line, both sides are targeting other territory with long-range weapons.

The city of Bakhmut and the surroundin­g area in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk province have been the focus of the most intense fighting. A Ukrainian military official claimed Thursday that the army had advanced up to more than a mile there over the previous day.

At the same time, Yevgeny Prigozhin, the millionair­e owner of Russia’s Wagner Group, the private military contractor whose troops have spearheade­d the battle, claimed that Russian army units had retreated from their positions north of the city. Prigozhin is a frequent critic of the Russian military.

At least seven Ukrainian civilians were killed, including a 5-year-old boy, and 18 people were wounded over the previous 24 hours, Zelensky’s office said.

Also, two people were wounded in a drone attack in Russia’s southern Kursk region, which borders Ukraine, the regional governor reported Thursday.

In a Telegram post, Roman Starovoit claimed that Ukrainian forces had dropped an explosive device from a drone on a sports and recreation complex.

 ?? Andrii Marienko Associated Press ?? EMERGENCY workers transport the body of a resident who was killed in the Kharkiv region in northeaste­rn Ukraine. Russia has intensifie­d its air assaults, deploying hypersonic missiles in a recent major attack on Kyiv.
Andrii Marienko Associated Press EMERGENCY workers transport the body of a resident who was killed in the Kharkiv region in northeaste­rn Ukraine. Russia has intensifie­d its air assaults, deploying hypersonic missiles in a recent major attack on Kyiv.
 ?? Ukrainian Police Press Office ?? SOPHISTICA­TED Western-supplied weapons systems have bolstered Ukraine’s air defenses. Above, a Russian rocket that was shot down in the Kyiv region.
Ukrainian Police Press Office SOPHISTICA­TED Western-supplied weapons systems have bolstered Ukraine’s air defenses. Above, a Russian rocket that was shot down in the Kyiv region.

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