Rome News-Tribune

Odesa pounded by missiles as Russia hits Ukraine ports

- By Laura King, Jaweed Kaleem and Sarah Parvini

LVIV, Ukraine — Russia’s ambitions to overtake southern Ukraine appeared to grow Tuesday as authoritie­s reported the use of hypersonic missiles on the Black Sea city of Odesa.

Ukraine said firefighte­rs were battling blazes in Odesa early Tuesday after seven missiles struck targets including a shopping center and a warehouse, killing at least one person and injuring five. Video posted on Facebook by the Ukrainian army showed rescue groups surrounded by smoking rubble.

Sergey Bratchuk, a spokesman for the Odesa regional military, said in an update that a separate strike by three Kinzhal hypersonic missiles had also hit “tourism” locations in Odesa.

The Kinzhal is more destructiv­e than convention­al missiles because its speed — several times that of sound — enables it to better evade anti-missile systems. Its use on Odesa could not be verified, though Russia first claimed to unleash the new weapons in March on targets in western Ukraine.

Pentagon analysts have noticed an uptick in Russian manpower and sorties by fight jets deployed in Ukraine since Monday.

A senior defense official said Tuesday an estimated 2,000 additional Russian troops were moved into the battlefiel­d, probably by air. He could not say what part of the country they were deployed to but noted most Russian offensive attacks remain concentrat­ed in the Donbas region and the ports of Mariupol and Odesa.

Air sorties, which have averaged 200 to 300 per day, totaled more than 300 in the last 24 hours, the official said.

Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters that he could not cite “any evidence” that Russia used hypersonic missiles in its attack on Odesa, as Ukrainian officials have claimed. But he noted Moscow has already fired the weapon in this war and that Russian forces are running through their precision guided missiles “at a pretty fast clip.”

Also Tuesday, U.S. officials sounded the alarm over their ability to continue supplying weapons to Ukraine. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III wrote

Congress earlier this week to urge lawmakers approve up to $40 billion in weapons and other aid for Ukraine before the current $3.5-billion package is depleted.

State Department spokesman Ned Price said Tuesday the final $100 million in that package runs out next week.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, meanwhile, called on world powers to break a Russian blockade of his nation’s ports.

Citing the key role that Odesa, in the southwest near Moldova, plays in the global agricultur­al trade, Zelenskyy said in a video address that shortages of grain exports were bound to get worse if attacks continued and Western powers did not put an end to the Russian blockade of Ukrainian ports. Nations around the world depend heavily on grain from the fertile Black Sea region, which some call the “breadbaske­t of Europe.”

“For the first time in decades there is no usual movement of the merchant fleet, no usual port functionin­g in Odesa. Probably this has never happened in Odesa since World War II,” Zelenskyy said.

“Without our agricultur­al exports, dozens of countries in different parts of the world are already on the brink of food shortages. And over time, the situation can become downright terrible.”

Ukraine is “sitting on 8 billion euros’ worth (about $8.4 billion) of wheat” that cannot be exported amid the war and Russia’s blockade of Black Sea ports, the president of the European Investment Bank, Warner Hoyer, said Tuesday.

“They are sowing like crazy right now, and they will expect probably a good harvest, maybe 70% of last year’s harvest, in a couple of months,” Hoyer said. “And then what to do with it?”

In a report released this month, the European Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t predicted a greater economic slowdown and more inflationa­ry pressure in its regions as a result of the war. The bank’s research suggests that Ukraine’s economy will shrink 30%.

On the other side of Ukraine, in the southeast, officials said Tuesday that Russian attacks continued to hit the port city of Mariupol, where dramatic scenes have unfolded in the last week of civilians rescued from a vast steelworks where they and a group of fighters were sheltering.

Petro Andryushch­enko, an adviser to the mayor, said on Telegram that he believed 100 people remained in the Azovstal steel complex’s undergroun­d tunnels. Andryushch­enko said that the area was still under fire Tuesday.

The situation in the plant has been hard to ascertain even for Ukrainian authoritie­s, who in earlier days said they believed all or most civilians had been evacuated.

Mariupol, under near-total Russian control, was the site Monday of a Russian military observatio­n of Victory Day, a Russian holiday marking the Soviet triumph over Nazis during World War II.

Some analysts had predicted that Russian President Vladimir Putin, who presided over a highly orchestrat­ed celebratio­n in Moscow complete with military marches and music, would use the occasion to declare all-out war on Ukraine. Instead, he lashed out against the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on and the U.S., saying Russia was responding to “aggression” by Western powers.

In Mariupol, Andryushch­enko said that while Russian troops held celebrator­y exercises in the city, “no excitement or joy on the street was particular­ly noticeable . ... Something went wrong with the holiday because Mariupol is Ukraine, not Moscow.”

With Moscow having declared victory over Mariupol — which would give it one piece of a desired land corridor linking Russian, Crimea and western Ukraine — and military gains somewhat stalled along the eastern Donbas battlefron­t, American and British military analysts say attacks on Odesa and the west could increase as a way to lure Ukrainian firepower from the east.

In the nation’s northeast around Kharkiv, which has been under near-daily assault since the beginning of the war but remains in Ukrainian control, a local leader said Tuesday that bodies were still being recovered from attacks in March.

Regional administra­tor Oleh Sinegubov said in a Telegram post that dozens of bodies were found in Izyum in the rubble of a residentia­l building that collapsed under missile fire in March. Izyum is about 75 miles from Kharkiv, which is the second-largest city in Ukraine.

“This is another horrible war crime of the Russian occupiers against the civilian population,” Sinegubov said.

Air-raid sirens were also reported to have sounded Tuesday in Luhansk and Dnipro.

Luhansk Gov. Serhiy Haidai said on social media that the region was hit with Russian attacks 22 times over the last day.

“The Russians fired en masse on all possible routes out of the region,” Haidai said.

Zelenskyy, who since March has received various Western leaders eager to show their support for Ukraine, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., hosted the foreign ministers of Germany and the Netherland­s on Tuesday.

 ?? Oleksandr Gimanov/afp/getty Images ?? A man walks past fragments of missiles in front of the shopping and entertainm­ent center in the Ukrainian Black Sea city of Odessa on Tuesday, destroyed after Russian missiles strike late Monday.
Oleksandr Gimanov/afp/getty Images A man walks past fragments of missiles in front of the shopping and entertainm­ent center in the Ukrainian Black Sea city of Odessa on Tuesday, destroyed after Russian missiles strike late Monday.
 ?? Oleksandr Gimanov/afp/getty Images ?? Rescue workers walk past debris and cars under ruins in front of the shopping and entertainm­ent center in the Ukrainian Black Sea city of Odessa on Tuesday.
Oleksandr Gimanov/afp/getty Images Rescue workers walk past debris and cars under ruins in front of the shopping and entertainm­ent center in the Ukrainian Black Sea city of Odessa on Tuesday.

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