San Diego Union-Tribune

RUSSIA CLAIMS UKRAINE HIT ITS AIR BASES

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Ukrainian drones struck two air bases deep inside Russian territory, the Kremlin said Monday, shortly before Russian forces unleashed a massive missile barrage in Ukraine that struck homes and buildings and killed civilians.

The unpreceden­ted attack in Russia threatened a major escalation of the ninemonth war because it hit an airfield housing bombers capable of carrying nuclear weapons. President Vladimir Putin has threatened to use all available means to defend his land, a remark many have interprete­d to include nuclear weapons.

Russia has been launching almost weekly bombardmen­ts of Ukraine in retaliatio­n for another bold attack — the Oct. 8 truck bombing of a vital bridge linking Russia’s mainland to the Crimean Peninsula.

On Monday, Putin tried to show his country could bounce back from that embarrassm­ent by driving a car across the partially repaired bridge. Putin personally opened the 12-mile bridge in 2018 as part of an expensive effort to solidify his claim on Crimea, which Russia illegally annexed in 2014.

In Monday’s retaliator­y barrage, missiles knocked out basic services in several Ukrainian regions in Moscow’s strategy to inflict more pain just as winter approaches. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said four people were killed in Monday’s barrage.

Ukraine’s air force claimed it shot down more than 60 of the 70 missiles, and Zelenskyy again showed defiance, praising workers who tried to restore power.

“Every downed Russian missile is concrete proof that terror can be defeated,” he said in his nightly address.

Ukraine said early indication­s showed Russia fired 38 cruise missiles from carriers in the Caspian Sea and from the southern Rostov region. In addition, 22 Kalibr cruise missiles were fired from Russia’s Black Sea fleet, and long-range bombers, fighter jets and guided missiles were also involved, it said.

Electricit­y provider Ukrenergo said its facilities had been hit, triggering some blackouts, although the prime minister said later that power facilities were damaged in only three areas.

 ?? EVGENIY MALOLETKA AP ?? Tamila Pyhyda cries during Monday’s exhumation of her husband, Serhii Pyhyda, killed by Russian forces in Vysokopill­ya, Ukraine.
EVGENIY MALOLETKA AP Tamila Pyhyda cries during Monday’s exhumation of her husband, Serhii Pyhyda, killed by Russian forces in Vysokopill­ya, Ukraine.

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