San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

RUSSIANS HAMMER ENERGY GRID

Ukraine rushes to make repairs after wave of airstrikes

- BY CASSANDRA VINOGRAD Vinograd writes for The New York Times.

Ukrainian utility crews were working to repair new and significan­t damage to the country’s energy grid, officials said Saturday, after Russia launched a swarm of Iranian-made attack drones overnight on the heels of a huge barrage of cruise missiles, anti-aircraft missiles and drones on cities across Ukraine.

The attacks were another blow to Ukraine’s already battered power grid, which Russia has repeatedly targeted in what military analysts say is a strategy of plunging the country into cold and darkness to lower morale.

The strikes, the first heavy aerial assault in weeks, occurred as fighting on the ground has intensifie­d, with Ukrainian officials saying that Russian forces are mounting a major new push to seize control of the entire Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.

Air-defense systems destroyed 20 of the Shahed-136 drones from 6 p.m. to midnight, the Ukrainian Air Force said in a statement Saturday. But three energy facilities in the Dnipro region of southeaste­rn Ukraine were hit, including one in Kryvyi Rih for the second time in a day.

“They targeted our critical infrastruc­ture,” Serhii Lysak, the head of the regional military administra­tion, said in a statement on the Telegram messaging app, calling the damage “significan­t.”

Drones were shot down over the southern regions of Kherson, Mykolaiv and Odesa, The Kyiv Independen­t reported, citing the Ukrainian military’s southern command.

The drone attack occurred after Russian forces fired more than 100 missiles in a day of strikes across Ukraine, in what both Russia’s Defense Ministry and the Ukrainian air force described as a “massive” assault. Twelve people were injured across the country, according to Ukraine’s State Emergency Service, and the state-owned power utility said that several thermal and hydroelect­ric power plants had been badly hit.

The company, Ukrenergo, on Saturday called the situation “difficult but under control,” saying that power rationing had been put in place in some areas and that repair work was continuing.

Kharkiv, in northeaste­rn Ukraine, was hard-hit, according to officials. The head of the regional military administra­tion, Oleh Syniehubov, on Saturday cited “extensive” damage to infrastruc­ture and said that emergency power shutdowns would be in place for “several days.”

The attacks also disrupted operations at Ukraine’s nuclear power plants, according to the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog. It said late Friday that “instabilit­y in the electrical grid” had caused a reactor unit at the Khmelnytsk­yi plant in western Ukraine to shut down, and that the power output at two others plants had been reduced as a precaution­ary measure.

As the war nears its anniversar­y, Russia has been pouring troops and equipment into eastern Ukraine, in the early stage of what Ukrainian and Western officials say is expected to be a major offensive.

Ukraine’s Western allies have been rushing to provide more powerful weapons so that Kyiv can mount its own offensive. The government of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has reiterated its calls for even more arms — and faster delivery.

Zelenskyy said he had received “good signals” from allies when he pressed his case for heavier weapons on a rare internatio­nal trip this past week to London, Paris and Brussels.

“This applies both to longrange missiles and tanks, and to the next level of our cooperatio­n — combat aircraft,” he said Friday in his nightly address. “But we still need to work on this.”

John Kirby, a White House spokespers­on, on Friday predicted that the coming weeks and months would be “difficult and critical” for Ukraine. He said that while he had yet to see a major new offensive take shape, “we’re anticipati­ng that and, frankly, so are the Ukrainians.”

The United States believes that Russian President Vladimir Putin will “take advantage” of the winter months to “restock, resupply, rearm” for what could be renewed offensive operations in the spring, Kirby said at a news briefing Friday. “As the weather improves, the fighting will probably get more vicious,” he said.

 ?? EMILE DUCKE NYT ?? Anna Hayko and her son, Vladislav, shelter in a subway station in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Friday as Russia slammed Ukraine’s already battered infrastruc­ture.
EMILE DUCKE NYT Anna Hayko and her son, Vladislav, shelter in a subway station in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Friday as Russia slammed Ukraine’s already battered infrastruc­ture.

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