Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Ukraine live briefing: Situation in east is ‘difficult,’ says Ukraine’s deputy defense minister – The Washington Post

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Sunday night dismissed Russias fortifications along a 900-mile-long front line that military experts say is slowing Ukraines offensive, saying there are no such fortifications or reserves that will stop Ukraine.

We have no lost positions, Zelensky said in his nightly address. Only liberated ones. Ukrainian forces continued to make limited gains in at least four sectors, the Institute for the Study of War think tank said in an analysis. Ukraines deputy defense minister said the situation in eastern Ukraine is difficult, with Russia conducting hot battles in the region.

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Monday during a trip to Beijing that he welcomes China playing a role toward a just and durable peace in Ukraine. He added that he and European leaders received assurances from China that it will not provide lethal assistance to Russia in the invasion.

Heres the latest on the war and its ripple effects across the globe.

Last month, anti-corruption investigators said they caught Vsevolod Knyazyev, chief justice of the countrys Supreme Court, receiving a payment of about $450,000 as part of a $2.7 million bribery scheme. This is huge. This is not an ordinary judge in a local court taking a bribe its the highest judge in the system, said Tetiana Shevchuk, a lawyer with the Anti-Corruption Action Center, an anti-graft watchdog in Kyiv.

Loveday Morris and Emily Rauhala contributed to this report.

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Ukraine live briefing: Situation in east is 'difficult,' says Ukraine's deputy defense minister - The Washington Post

UN complains Russia blocks aid workers from area of Ukraine dam collapse; Moscow says it’s unsafe – The Associated Press

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) The Kremlins spokesman said Monday that U.N. aid workers who want to visit areas ravaged by the recent Kakhovka dam collapse in southern Ukraine cant go there because fighting in the war makes it unsafe.

The United Nations rebuked Moscow on Sunday for allegedly denying aid workers access to Russian-occupied areas where residents are stranded amid devastating destruction.

The U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Ukraine, Denise Brown, said in a statement that her staff were engaging with both Kyiv and Moscow, which control different parts of the area, in a bid to reach civilians in need. They face a shortage of drinking water and food and a lack of power.

Brown urged Russian authorities to act in accordance with their obligations under international humanitarian law and let them in.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov didnt explicitly admit that Russia had blocked U.N. access, but told a conference call with reporters that Ukrainian attacks made a visit too risky.

There has been constant shelling, constant provocations, civilian facilities and the civilian population have come under fire, people have died, so its really difficult to ensure their security, Peskov said.

His comments came amid varying accounts by survivors of the quality of assistance that Russia is providing in areas it controls. The dam lies on the Dnieper River, which forms the front line between Russian and Ukrainian forces on the eastern and western banks, respectively.

Many evacuees and residents accuse Russian authorities of doing little or nothing to help. Some civilians said that evacuees were sometimes forced to present Russian passports if they wanted to leave.

On the Ukrainian side, rescuers are braving Russian snipers as they rush to ferry Ukrainians out of Russia-occupied flood zones.

Ukraines Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko said Monday that the death toll resulting from the dam collapse had risen to 18 14 from drowning and four from gunshot wounds sustained during evacuation. A further 31 people were missing, he said.

Ukraines presidential office said Monday that the Kherson region affected by the flooding had endured 35 Russian attacks over the previous 24 hours.

Exclusive drone photos and information obtained by The Associated Press indicate that Moscow had the means, motive and opportunity to blow up the dam, which was under Russian control, earlier this month.

The explosion occurred as Ukraine mustered for a counteroffensive. Kyivs forces have intensified attacks along the 1,000-kilometer (600-mile) front line recently.

Some analysts saw the dam breach as a Russian effort to thwart Ukraines counteroffensive in the Kherson region.

The U.K. Defense Ministry said Monday that Russia had recently redeployed several thousand troops from the banks of the Dnieper to buttress its positions in the Zaporizhzhia and Bakhmut sectors, which reportedly have seen heavy fighting.

The move likely reflects Russias perception that a major Ukrainian attack across the Dnieper is now less likely following the dams collapse, the ministry said in a tweet.

Ukrainian forces have advanced up to 7 kilometers (4 miles) into territory previously held by Russia, she said. Russias Defense Ministry didnt confirm losing any ground to the Ukrainian forces.

In response to increased attacks by the occupiers, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Monday in his nightly address that Ukrainian soldiers were moving forward in some directions, defending their positions in some directions.

We have no lost positions. Only liberated ones, he asserted.

It wasnt possible to independently verify battlefield claims by either side.

Russia is also pursuing offensive actions, according to Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar.

Russia has concentrated a significant number of its military units, and particularly airborne assault troops, in Ukraines east, she said. They are stepping up Moscows offensive around Kupiansk in Ukraines northeastern Kharkiv province and Lyman in the eastern Donetsk province, Maliar said on Telegram.

Ukrainian forces may have put their counteroffensive operations on hold as they review their tactics, according to the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank.

It noted that Kyiv has not yet committed the majority of its available forces to counteroffensive operations and has not yet launched its main effort.

Russia attacked south and southeast Ukraine overnight with cruise missiles and self-exploding drones, Ukraines air force reported Monday. Four Kalibr missiles and four Iranian-made Shahed drones were shot down, it said.

According to regional officials, the southern province of Odesa and the southeastern Dnipropetrovsk region were targeted by the attack. No casualties or damage were immediately reported.

Three civilians were wounded by artillery fire in the Beryslav district of the Kherson province Monday, local officials said. A 64-year-old woman was in critical condition, according to their Telegram post. At least five residential buildings, two private residences and an administrative building sustained damage.

Officials in Russias southern Belgorod region, which borders Ukraine, said Monday morning that seven people, including a child, were wounded in Ukrainian drone attacks over the previous 24 hours.

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Associated Press writer Elise Morton contributed from London.

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Follow APs coverage of the war in Ukraine at https://apnews.com/hub/russia-ukraine

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UN complains Russia blocks aid workers from area of Ukraine dam collapse; Moscow says it's unsafe - The Associated Press

Badly Damaged Russian Ka-52 Attack Helicopter Flies Without Its Tail Over Ukraine – Yahoo News

KA-52 tail lost ukraine

Its fair to say that the Ka-52 Hokum attack helicopter has become something of a signature weapon on the Russian side in the conflict in Ukraine. Reflecting the mixed results of the Kremlins war more generally, the Ka-52 has sustained heavy losses, shown some apparently problematic flying characteristics when heavily loaded with weapons, and performed some very ill-advised stunts. Meanwhile, it has also borne the brunt of the close air support missions now being flown in an effort to blunt the Ukrainian counteroffensive. And for one Ka-52 crew, the helicopters unique configuration very likely saved their lives during one, apparently recent mission.

A video that began to circulate on social media today shows a Ka-52 flying at a relatively low level, with its tail torn apart, the remnants of the vertical fin dangling precariously from the rear. A photo of the helicopter after landing reveals how that part of the empennage was twisted around to more than 90 degrees but somehow remained attached.

The video seems to have been shot from the cockpit of the Ka-52s wingman, or another accompanying helicopter. While we cant be sure where the video was taken, or when, it seems almost certain it was in southeastern Ukraine, with what looks like part of the Black Sea coastline visible at the start.

As well as the wrecked tail, several items can be seen falling away from the Ka-52 right at the start of the video, apparently stores jettisoned by the crew, but they could potentially also be other parts of the tail assembly that fell away.

There have been claims that the crews jettisoning of external stores in particular, the fuel tanks is what led to the tail damage in the first place, with one of these tanks said to have been thrown back up into the slipstream and impacted the tail. Its not possible to tell, looking at this video, whether thats the case, although the fact that four items are apparently jettisoned suggests that drop tanks (carried in pairs) and rocket pods were discarded. That could also suggest that the issue with the tail emerged before the decision was taken to jettison stores.

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However, poor separation of stores is certainly an issue that can lead to potentially very hazardous impacts on an aircraft.

The front end of the helicopter seems to have been damaged, too, with a suggestion that the windshield was torn off, or at least some part of the forward fuselage also appears to be missing.

All in all, it seems just as likely that the Ka-52 fell victim to Ukrainian air defenses, which managed to get a hit on the airframe, although without causing enough damage to knock it out of the sky.

Whatever the case, the two-man crew of the attack helicopter has reason to be grateful for the design of their aircraft. One of the key features of the Ka-52 is its unconventional coaxial main rotor arrangement, obviating the need for a tail rotor.

In almost any other helicopter, this level of damage to the tail assembly would be an extremely serious event.

In a conventional helicopter, the tail rotor is mounted at the end of the tail boom. Since the tail rotor provides torque to counteract the main rotors (which are rotating either clockwise or counterclockwise), if it stops functioning, the helicopter will begin spinning in the opposite direction of the main rotor. In the best-case scenario, the pilot will then enter an autorotation and perform an emergency running landing. In the worst case, it will lead to a crash or even a mid-air breakup. The lower and slower a helicopter is flying when it loses its tail rotor, the less likely it is that the pilot will be able to recover at all.

With that in mind, a coaxial main rotor in which there are two sets of main rotors, one above the other, one turning clockwise and one counterclockwise makes a good deal of sense for an attack helicopter, which will likely spend much of its time low and slow. But there are also major tradeoffs to this configuration.

While coaxial main rotors are a trademark of the Kamov design bureaus naval helicopter designs, they also retained them for the (primarily) land-based Ka-50/52 series. These helicopters also have other unusual survivability features, including a crew rescue system.

Often described as being fitted with ejection seats, the Ka-52 actually doesnt have true ejection seats, but instead, a crew extraction system, which doesnt rely on rockets to punch the seats out of the cockpit, but instead to drag them out.

In the Ka-52, the crew extraction system first jettisons the main rotor blades using a series of explosive bolts. The cockpit canopy glass is then jettisoned, and two rocket assemblies are launched out of the cockpit. Each rocket assembly is connected via a lanyard to one of the Zvezda/Tomilino K-37-800M seats, which is then pulled out of the cockpit before a parachute is deployed. The system can be operated at speeds from zero to 189 knots, and also at zero altitude.

So far, we have seen surprisingly few conclusive examples of Ka-52 crew using the crew extraction system during the war in Ukraine, although the number of losses suggests that it has likely been used on various other undocumented occasions, successfully or otherwise.

https://twitter.com/clashreport/status/1621951537474928641?s=20 https://twitter.com/_davemorrison/status/1576891537190842369?s=20

As it is, we dont know for sure why a Ka-52 was left flying over Ukraine with its tail assembly shredded, although we can say with some certainty that, had they been flying another helicopter type, the crew in question are far less likely to have made it back to their base.

Contact the author: thomas@thedrive.com

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Badly Damaged Russian Ka-52 Attack Helicopter Flies Without Its Tail Over Ukraine - Yahoo News

Ukraine retakes some villages but its forces face minefields and more airstrikes. – The New York Times

BLAHODATNE, Ukraine After months of preparation and bolstered by hundreds of donated tanks, armored vehicles and howitzers, Ukraine has notched small successes in the first week and a half of a counteroffensive to drive Russian forces from southern Ukraine.

In fierce fighting on the plains, the military said it had broken through a first line of Russian defenses and reclaimed seven villages.

The fruits of their labor could be seen on a visit with the Ukrainian military to one of those villages, Blahodatne, on Thursday as well as the daunting challenges that lie ahead.

Ukraine has yet to commit the bulk of its reserves, including troops trained in Europe over the winter and spring, and equipped with weaponry from NATO countries, meaning it can bring still more force to bear. But with each step forward, its soldiers become more vulnerable removed from the safety of their own trenches, closer to Russian artillery, maneuvering through minefields and unprotected from airstrikes.

Ukraine is engaged in two main thrusts southward, where it has broken through most deeply in the string of small villages that includes Blahodatne, where the soldiers were diving for cover on Thursday.

For Ukrainian soldiers with the 68th Scout Brigade who entered the villages, the sweetness of liberating land was tempered by the panorama of ruin that greeted them and what came next: a relentless bombardment from Russian forces.

They are attacking with rockets, howitzers, mortars, helicopters and drones, Sgt. Serhiy Gubanov said in an interview while taking cover in a basement as explosions boomed outside.

Its the complete collection of intense experiences, he said.

Maria Varenikova contributed reporting from Konstantinople, Ukraine.

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Ukraine retakes some villages but its forces face minefields and more airstrikes. - The New York Times

‘Massive’ Overnight Drone Attack on Kyiv Ukrainian Officials – The Moscow Times

Russian forces launched a major drone assault on Kyiv overnight and attacked several other regions, Ukrainian officials said on Tuesday, but there were no reports of casualties.

"New massive air attack on the capital," wrote the Kyiv City Military Administration, adding that it was the first attack on the Ukrainian capital in 18 days to use Iranian-made Shahed explosive drones.

Russiahad launched a wave of aerial attacks on critical Ukrainian infrastructure over the winter months but those cruise missile and drone strikes have become less frequent.

The Ukrainian air force said on Tuesday it had downed a total of 32 attack drones out of 35 launched byRussia's forces.

In the western city of Lviv, drones hit "critical infrastructure," the head of the regional administration, Maksym Kozytski, wrote on Telegram, without giving further details.

The military administration of Zaporizhzhia said the southern city and its surroundings had been the target of a "massive attack" aimed at civilian infrastructure.

Ukraine has recently bolstered its air defense systems with Western-supplied weapons and the number of Russian missiles and drones breaking through has diminished.

But the spokesman for Ukraine's air forces, Yuriy Ignat, said that newly supplied systems were still insufficient to cover the whole country.

"Air defense systems are deployed where they are most needed, protecting large cities, infrastructure facilities, nuclear power facilities and the front line," he said on local television.

"There is a lack of air defense capabilities to put it mildly to cover a country like Ukraine, like Israel has done."

Three Iranian-made drones were also shot down over the southern region of Mykolaiv, Governor Vitaliy Kim said on Telegram.

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'Massive' Overnight Drone Attack on Kyiv Ukrainian Officials - The Moscow Times