The News-Times

Uneasy calm grips Ukraine as winter sets in

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KYIV, Ukraine — An uneasy calm hung over Kyiv on Tuesday as residents of the Ukrainian capital prepared for Russian missile attacks aiming to take out more energy infrastruc­ture as winter sets in.

To ease the hardships and ensure Ukraine’s 43 million people can maintain their resolve in the 10th month of fighting against Russia’s invasion, NATO allies planned to boost provisions of blankets, generators and other basic necessitie­s.

Ukraine’s first lady implored the West to retain the steadfastn­ess that Ukrainians had shown against Russian President Vladimir Putin’s military campaign.

“Ukrainians are very tired of this war, but we have no choice in the matter,” Olena Zelenska, the wife of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said in a BBC interview during a visit to Britain.

“We do hope that the approachin­g season of Christmas doesn’t make you forget about our tragedy and get used to our suffering,” she said.

A two-day meeting of NATO foreign ministers in Bucharest, Romania, was likely to see the 30-nation alliance make fresh pledges of nonlethal support to Ukraine: fuel, generators, medical supplies and winter equipment, on top of new military support.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken was to announce substantia­l U.S. aid for Ukraine’s energy grid, U.S. officials said. Targeted Russian strikes have battered Ukraine’s power, water and heating infrastruc­ture since Oct. 10 in what Western officials have described as a Russian attempt to weaponize the coming winter cold.

NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenber­g said at the outset of the Bucharest meeting that Russia “is willing to use extreme brutality and leave Ukraine cold and dark this winter. So we must stay the course and help Ukraine prevail as a sovereign nation.”

About a third of Ukraine’s residents faced power supply disruption­s, Ukraine’s state grid operator said, both because of increased demand due to colder temperatur­es and the emergency shutdown of power units.

“The overall deficit in the energy system is a consequenc­e of seven waves of Russian missile attacks on the country’s energy infrastruc­ture,” electricit­y system operator Ukrenergo said.

Kyiv saw continued interrupti­ons to its electricit­y, heat and water supply, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said Tuesday, leading authoritie­s to consider relocating some residents to suburbs of the capital.

Blinken noted it was not the first time Russia had targeted civilians during the war and insisted only strong support of Ukraine would impact the Kremlin.

He said the military buildup the U.S. and NATO implemente­d earlier in the conflict after Russia’s Black Sea fleet bombarded Ukrainian cities and towns and bottled up vital grain shipments for the rest of the world in Ukrainian ports would intensify in light of the ongoing onslaught.

“We’re not going to be deterred,” Blinken told reporters, in one of his more forceful statements of the day. “We’re going to be reinforcin­g NATO’s presence from the Black to the Baltic seas.”

On the battlefiel­ds in eastern Ukraine’s Russia-annexed Luhansk region, Ukrainian forces were continuing a slow advance, pushing toward Russian defense lines set up between two key cities, Gov. Serhiy Haidai said.

The prospect of peace remained remote. The Kremlin reaffirmed Tuesday that negotiatio­ns would be possible if Ukraine meets Russian demands. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters, “It’s impossible to hold any talks now because the Ukrainian side strongly rejects them.”

Russia has demanded that Ukraine recognize Crimea as part of Russia and acknowledg­e other Russian gains.

Ukraine wants Russia to withdraw from Crimea and all other annexed territory, to face prosecutio­n for war crimes, to pay for rebuilding Ukraine and to meet other demands.

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