March 27, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news

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'We too mean business': Russian civilian reacts to Putin's latest nuclear strategy
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What we covered here

  • At least two people were killed in Russian missile strikes Monday against the eastern city of Sloviansk in the Donetsk region, Ukrainian officials said.
  • Several explosions were reported in the occupied southern city of Melitopol on Monday, and a Mariupol police chief’s car was blown up, says Russian state media.
  • German Leopard 2 tanks have been delivered to Ukraine,?Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Monday. Ukraine also said it received British Challenger main battle tanks.
  • The Kremlin dismissed Western criticism over its plans to station nuclear weapons in neighboring Belarus. The US said there are no indications Russia will use nuclear weapons.
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British tank arrivals and 2 dead in Russian strikes. Here are the latest headlines

Ukraine's Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov and Commander of the Air Assault Forces Maksym Myrhorodskyi pose for a picture in front of?British?Challenged 2 main battle?tank, US Stryker and Cougar armoured personnel carriers and German Marder infantry fighting vehicle in an unknown location in?Ukraine, in this handout picture released Monday, March 27.

It’s past midnight in Kyiv, where multiple explosions were reported. They were initially heard in Obolon and Sviatoshynskyi residential districts Monday night, according to Vitaliy Klitschko, the city’s mayor.

“Preliminarily, there are no casualties,” he said.?

The city’s air raid sirens were activated ahead of the explosions, the Kyiv region military administration said on Telegram.

“The danger in the adjacent region to the capital city remains! Air defense forces are on the alert,” the post from the Kyiv region military administration read.?

Here are the latest developments:

  • British tanks arrive in Ukraine: Ukraine has received its first British main battle tanks, along with other donated Western-made armored vehicles, Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov announced Monday. “Today, I had the honor to test the newest addition to our armored units together with the commander of the Airborne Forces, Major General Maksym ‘Mike’ Myrhorodskyi, and our paratroopers,” Reznikov said in a Facebook post.?
  • Zelensky visits Zaporizhzhia and Dnipro regions and meetings with UN nuclear agency chief: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday visited the region of Zaporizhzhia, which remains partially occupied by Russia. He stopped by a military hospital and met with Rafael Grossi, the chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and members of the military. Zelensky also accused Russia of nuclear blackmail over its control of one of Ukraine’s Nuclear Power Plants (NPP).
  • Wagner chief visits Bakhmut again as heavy fighting continues in city’s central districts: The head of Russia’s Wagner private military company, Yevgeny Prigozhin, paid another visit to the front lines inside the eastern city of Bakhmut, according to video geolocated by CNN. The video was uploaded Monday and was filmed by Russian journalist Alexander Simonov. It’s unclear exactly when it was shot.
  • Two people were killed and several injured in Russian strike in Sloviansk: Ukrainian authorities have concluded search and rescue operations on the site of Russian missile strikes in Sloviansk, Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of the Donetsk region military administration, told national broadcasters on Monday. At least two people were killed and 32 were injured in the strike on the eastern city in the Donetsk region.?
  • Belarus opposition leader says Russia’s nuclear weapons decision “violates international security”: Russia’s decision to station tactical nuclear weapons in neighboring Belarus “aims to subjugate Belarus and violates its constitution,” said Belarus opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya in an interview with CNN’s Jim Sciutto on Monday. Germany also described Russian President Vladimir Putin’s nuclear weapons decision as “irresponsible“ and “escalatory.” German Foreign Office spokesperson Andrea Sasse said the announcement was a “further attempt at nuclear intimidation from Russia.”

Explosions reported in Kyiv late Monday night, mayor says

Multiple explosions were reported in Kyiv, Ukraine, late Monday night (local time), the city’s mayor, Vitaliy Klitschko, said on his official Telegram channel.?

In the Sviatoshynskyi residential district, fire and rescue services are responding to the scene of a building fire, Klitschko said.?

“Preliminarily, there are no casualties,” he said.?

The city’s air raid sirens were activated ahead of the explosions, the Kyiv region military administration said on Telegram.

“The danger in the adjacent region to the capital city remains! Air defense forces are on the alert,” the post from the Kyiv region military administration read.?

Ukraine to take part in US-led Summit for Democracy, Zelensky says

Ukraine is taking part in the US-led Summit for Democracy, President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his nightly address Monday.?

Zelensky did not provide additional details on his country’s participation.

“I am thankful to everyone who helps our country protect freedom,” he concluded.

Zelensky accuses Russia of radiation blackmail after tour of Zaporizhzhia and Dnipro

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky, center, visits a missile-damaged area of Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine, Monday March 27, 2023.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenksy thanked the secretary general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) for his support and accused Russia of nuclear blackmail over its control of one of Ukraine’s Nuclear Power Plants (NPP). The accusations come after Zelenksy visited the regions of Zaporizhzhia and Dnipro.

“I met with IAEA head Rafael Grossi. The topic is clear: the security of our energy industry, our nuclear plants. First of all, the Zaporizhzhia NPP, which Russia still uses for radiation blackmail of the world,” Zelensky said in his nightly address from Dnipro on Monday. “No other terrorist has reached such depths in his cynicism, in which Russia constantly seeks and finds a new bottom.”

Zelensky said Russia’s occupation of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant threatened global security.?

“I am grateful to our partners, grateful to Grossi for understanding this and for supporting Ukraine in the relevant issues,” Zelensky said.?

Zelensky’s meeting with Grossi came ahead of his visit to Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant later in the week.

Zelensky met with frontline soldiers, visited a military hospital in Zaporizhia and saw the impact of Russian shelling in Marhanets and Nikopol. He also held a Cabinet meeting in Dnipro.?

“I have just held a meeting of the Staff — for the first time away, in Dnipro. Right here — in the strategic city of the center of our country, after visiting Marhanets and Nikopol, Zaporizhzhia, the frontline positions of our warriors in the Zaporizhzhia region,” he said. “The commanders of the operational areas reported the actual situation.”

“Every commander understands that the enemy must be held accountable for every attack on our cities and villages, on our people. For Slovyansk, for Kostiantynivka and Druzhkivka, for Avdiivka and Toretsk, for all the pain of Ukrainians — and not only during the full-scale war, but also since 2014,” he said.

Russia fails to gain votes on a UN Security Council proposed resolution to investigate Nordstream attacks

In this photo provided by Swedish Coast Guard, the release of gas emanating from a leak on the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline in the Baltic Sea on September 28, 2022. A fourth leak was detected in the undersea gas pipelines linking Russia to Europe, after explosions were reported earlier that week in suspected sabotage.

Russia failed to gain enough votes on Monday at the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) for its proposed resolution to investigate attacks on the Nordstream pipeline.?

Only three countries voted in favor of the proposed resolution, with 12 countries abstaining.

At least nine votes in favor were needed to pass the proposed resolution; however, the United States would still have been able to veto the move if it chose to.

US Ambassador Robert Wood told the UNSC that the US had nothing to do with the attack on the pipelines. He also questioned why Russia would attempt to pass the resolution after most UNSC members had expressed discontent towards the idea.

Vassily Nebenzia, Russian ambassador to the UN, said the truth will not be uncovered and urged the need for accountability.

Zelensky visits frontline city of Nikopol, his office says

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited the frontline city of Nikopol, in the Dnipropetrovsk region, on Monday, according to his office.

Nikopol is on the bank of the Dnipro river and sits across from Enerhodar, where the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant is located.

The city is constantly shelled by Russian forces from across the river.?

2 people were killed and 32 injured in Russian strike in Sloviansk, Ukraine official says

Ukrainian authorities have concluded search and rescue operations on the site of Russian missile strikes in Sloviansk, Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of the Donetsk region military administration, told national broadcasters on Monday.

At least two people were killed and 32 were injured in the strike on the eastern city in the Donetsk region.?

“Those whose home was destroyed are provided with the list of possible temporary dwelling places, offered to evacuate,” he added.

Belarus opposition leader: Russia’s nuclear weapons decision "violates international security"

Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, speaks during a session at the Congress centre during the World Economic Forum (WEF) annual meeting in Davos on January 19, 2023.

Russia’s decision to station tactical nuclear weapons in neighboring Belarus “aims to subjugate Belarus and violates its constitution,” said Belarus opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya in an interview with CNN’s Jim Sciutto on Monday.

Discussing the situation in Ukraine, Tsikhanouskaya called Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko “a full accomplice in the war” and the one who “fulfills all the orders of Putin.”

She also claimed that Lukashenko can’t take credit for the fact that Belarusian troops haven’t been sent to Ukraine.

“It’s a call of people of Belarus who are against this war and our soldiers who don’t have anti-Ukrainian moods,” she went on. “They don’t want to kill or to be killed on the battlefields for the ambitions of these two leaders.”

According to Tsikhanouskaya, Lukashenko is “responsible for crimes of aggression against Ukraine and has to be called a sponsor of terrorism.”?

The opposition leader noted that Belarus is “overlooked at the moment” due to the conflict in Ukraine and “not all the politicians understand the role of Belarus in regional peace and security.”

She emphasized that people of Belarus “are fighting not only against Lukashenko’s regime but also against hybrid occupation of Russia in Belarus.”

Ukraine receives first British tanks and other armored vehicles

Ukrainian military personnel receive armored maneuver training on German-made Leopard 2 battle tanks at the Spanish army's training centre of San Gregorio in Zaragoza on March 13, 2023.?

Ukraine has received its first British main battle tanks, along with other donated Western-made armored vehicles, Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov announced Monday.

“Today, I had the honor to test the newest addition to our armored units together with the commander of the Airborne Forces, Major General Maksym ‘Mike’ Myrhorodskyi, and our paratroopers,” Reznikov said in a Facebook post.?

He specified that they received Challengers (main battle tanks) from the United Kingdom, Strykers (infantry fighting vehicles) and Cougars (infantry mobility vehicles from the mine-resistant ambush-protected family) from the United States, and Marders (infantry fighting vehicles) from Germany.

Reznikov went on to thank Ukrainian allies for their continued support.

He added that the “new equipment will keep good company with its ‘brothers’ on the battlefield.”

Chancellor Olaf Scholz said Germany had also delivered sought-after German Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine.

“Germany and the Netherlands have jointly delivered howitzers and ammunition and are just preparing, together with Denmark, to deliver Leopard 1 main battle tanks to support Ukraine,“ Scholz said, adding that Germany had “just now delivered“ also the “very modern” tanks.

Some background: The arrival of the Leopard 2 tanks comes after months of debate. German officials wavered on sending the tanks to Ukraine, saying they were waiting for the US to send its own M1 Abrams to Kyiv.

President Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly pleaded for countries to stop arguing about sending the tanks.

“We have talked hundreds of times about the shortage of weapons,” he said during a virtual appearance at the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos in January. “We cannot go only on motivation.”

Correction:?An earlier version of this post incorrectly stated the origin of the tanks that arrived Monday in Ukraine.

White House: US posture unchanged but monitoring closely since Putin's nuclear weapon announcement

The American “strategic deterrence posture” towards Russia remains unchanged after Russian President Vladmir Putin announced plans to station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus.

On Saturday, Putin told Russian state television that Russia would complete the construction of a special storage facility for tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus by the beginning of July.

Since Putin’s announcement, the US has not observed signs of any specific movement of nuclear weapons or intent to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine, according to National Security Council coordinator for strategic communications John Kirby.

“We’re continuing to monitor this very, very closely,” he went on. “And still, we have seen nothing that would cause us to change our strategic deterrence posture.”

Ukraine says it repelled 41 Russian attacks in Bakhmut, Avdiivka, and Mariinka

Ukraine says it has repelled 41 attacks by Russian forces in the Donetsk areas of Bakhmut, Avdiivvka, and Mariinka in the past 24 hours, the military’s General Staff said in an evening update.?

“The enemy is focusing its main efforts on conducting offensive actions on the Lyman, Bakhmut, Avdiivka and Mariinka directions,” the update also said. “The most fierce fighting continues for Bakhmut, Avdiivka and Mariinka.”

Moscow’s armies continued their assaults in the city of Bakhmut, according to the Ukrainian military. Russian forces are also putting pressure on Bakhmut’s suburb Ivanivske and on locations where supply lines into Bakhmut pass.?

Ukraine hasn't forgotten about annexed Crimea

While the fury of conflict echoes across the?eastern Donbas region, a very different war is being waged in?Crimea: one of night-time explosions, sabotage and disinformation.

Reclaiming Crimea may seem like an unlikely quest for?Ukraine?but it is putting considerable effort into making?Russia’s?occupation as uncomfortable as possible. And the Russians are going to great lengths to fortify the peninsula, which they illegally annexed from Ukraine in 2014.

That includes hiring legions of workers to build fortifications and trenches.

The Ukrainian military has been carrying out?attacks in Crimea?with two goals: harass the Russian Black Sea fleet and disrupt vital Russian supply lines.

Satellite imagery in February showed a substantial Russian build-up of equipment and armor at several points across northern Crimea.

Few details have emerged about Ukrainian strikes in Crimea. Only occasionally does unofficial social media video provide clues about what has been hit. And only occasionally do normally circumspect Ukrainian officials refer to any actions in Crimea.

But last week Ukraine’s Main Intelligence reported that explosions in the Crimean town of?Dzhankoi?were due to a strike against Russian Kalibr cruise missiles being transported via rail. It said the strike served to “demilitarize Russia and prepare the Crimean peninsula for de-occupation.”

Any Ukrainian offensive to “de-occupy” and reclaim Crimea is distant at best. Just this week, the deputy head of Russia’s Security Council, Dmitry Medvedev, warned that Russia would use “absolutely any weapon” should Ukraine try to retake Crimea.

But the Russians are taking no chances. Satellite imagery shows extensive defensive fortifications such as trenches close to or in Crimea, near the town of Armiansk, for example.

Germany: Putin's plan to station nuclear weapons in Belarus is?"irresponsible" and "escalatory"

Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a joint press conference at the Kremlin on September 9, 2021 in Moscow, Russia.

Germany described Russian President Vladimir Putin’s announcement that Russia will station nuclear weapons in Belarus as “irresponsible“ and “escalatory.”

German Foreign Office spokesperson Andrea Sasse said the announcement was a “further attempt at nuclear intimidation from Russia.”

At the same news conference, German government spokesman Steffen Hebestreit said?the announcement is “always also part of a propagandistic approach.” ?

“These are escalatory steps that are now being continued by the Russian side, at least rhetorically,” he said. “The cause, the responsibility for this conflict lies solely in Moscow.”

More background: Putin announced on Saturday Russia’s plan to station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus. The country neighbors Russia and is one of its closest allies, helping the country launch its initial invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Belarus has had no nuclear weapons on its territory since the early 1990s, when it agreed to transfer all Soviet-era weapons of mass destruction to Russia. Putin said on Saturday that Russia will maintain control over any tactical nuclear weapons stationed in Belarus.

The US State Department told CNN it would “continue to monitor the implications” of Russia’s plan but would not adjust its nuclear weapons strategy.

“We have not seen any reason to adjust our own strategic nuclear posture nor any indications Russia is preparing to use a nuclear weapon,” the US State Department said in a statement to CNN on Saturday.

Zelensky meets with UN nuclear watchdog chief during visit to Zaporizhzhia

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday visited the region of Zaporizhzhia, which remains partially occupied by Russia.

He stopped by a military hospital and met with the chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and members of the military.

Earlier Monday, Zelensky announced the visit to Zaporizhzhia and posted a picture on Telegram, along with the message, “I am honored to be here today, next to our military.”

“I am thankful to each of our warriors for defending Ukraine, our sovereignty, our cities, and our children,” he added. “We will definitely win.”

During his visit to the military hospital, Zelensky commended the work of the doctors and nurses and thanked them for their service.

“You are the ones who save lives,” Zelensky said, according to his office. “I want to thank you on behalf of all of us, on my own behalf, for your very important and powerful work.”

The Ukrainian president also met with IAEA Director Rafael Grossi who is also visiting the region to get a first-hand assessment of “the nuclear safety & security situation at the facility,” Grossi tweeted earlier.

Grossi reported a “rich exchange” with Zelensky on the protection of the plant and its staff, and said in a tweet that the president showed him the recent damage to the Dnipro hydroelectric station.

The dam is “an essential part of the system that sustains the nuclear safety of the [Zaporizhzhia] nuclear power plant,” Grossi said in a tweet.

See Grossi’s tweet about his meeting with Zelensky:

Wagner chief visits Bakhmut again as heavy fighting continues in city's central districts, according to video?

The head of Russia’s Wagner private military company, Yevgeny Prigozhin, paid another visit to the front lines inside the eastern city of Bakhmut, according to video geolocated by CNN.

The video was uploaded Monday and was filmed by Russian journalist Alexander Simonov. It’s unclear exactly when it was shot.

The river runs north and south through the city’s eastern outskirts.

In the video, a fighter wearing a balaclava says “the enemy is 150-180 meters to the Northwest away from us….every private house is a fortification, every five-nine story building is a fortress.”

The fighter says that on the previous day, Wagner had raided northern Bakhmut and claimed that they’d killed more than 30 Ukrainian soldiers. CNN cannot verify the claim.

“We are moving forward, Bakhmut is going to fall and we will have the victory,” he says.

Prigozhin says, “We are riding through the front line. We are looking at what we could do better, do faster.”

One of the fighters says that they are at school number five in Bakhmut. CNN has geolocated the video to that location, in the southern part of central Bakhmut.

Later, Prigozhin says from another location that he is at a cemetery in the nearby town of Soledar, and adds, “We bury the bodies of Ukrainians that we weren’t able to hand over. We take pictures, and number them in order to hand them over later.”

Prigozhin has paid several visits to Bakhmut and its immediate surroundings in recent weeks.

What both sides are saying: Both Ukrainian and Wagner officials acknowledge street-by-street fighting in the city, with the Ukrainians claiming that they have stabilized the situation in Bakhmut.

Wagner says it now controls all of a metallurgical plant known as AZOM on the northern edge of the city.

Video shows hundreds of graves at cemetery reserved for Wagner fighters in southern Russia

Social media video geolocated by CNN shows long rows of freshly dug graves at a cemetery in the southern Russian region of Krasnodar reserved for fighters of the Wagner mercenary group.

A woman can be heard in one of the videos saying it’s the cemetery where all the “Wagnerites” are buried, and claimed that the graves are all from the end of 2022 and the first months of 2023, but CNN cannot independently verify that.

The video shows dozens of long rows of graves — all with the same floral tribute — and is one of several to have been recently filmed at the cemetery near the city of Goryachy Klyuch. There are two cemeteries in the area that now contain Wagner graves.

Some background: The burial of Wagner fighters in the area has sparked a dispute. Earlier this month, Sergey Belopolsky, the mayor of Goryachy Klyuch, banned the further burial of Wagner fighters. Then, Krasnordar Gov. Veniamin Kondratiev overturned the ban after complaints from the head of Wagner, Yevgeny Prigozhin.

UN nuclear watchdog chief will visit the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant this week

Members of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) expert mission, led by IAEA Director-General Rafael?Grossi, center, meet with journalists at the Russian-controlled?Zaporizhzhia?nuclear power plant, Ukraine, on September 1.

The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Rafael Grossi, is expected to visit the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) in Ukraine this week.

In a statement released Saturday, the IAEA quoted Grossi as saying he wanted to see “how the situation has evolved since September and to talk to those operating the facility.”

Grossi also said the situation at the plant remains “precarious” despite an IAEA presence at the site for seven months, according to the statement.

He continues to work on a proposal to protect the plant, the statement said further.

It's mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know

The Kremlin said it will press on with plans to store nuclear weapons in Belarus, after Western leaders criticized Russian President Vladimir Putin’s intentions as “dangerous and irresponsible.”

Meanwhile, there have been strikes in the Donetsk region and the battle for Bakhmut is intensifying.

Here are the latest developments:

  • Nuclear weapons: The Kremlin said on Monday that Western criticism “cannot affect” Moscow’s plans to station tactical nuclear weapons in its neighboring ally, Belarus, despite widespread condemnation from NATO and Lithuania. “Obviously, such a reaction cannot affect Russia’s plans,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters Monday. The US has said there are no indications Russia will use nuclear weapons.
  • Strikes in Sloviansk: Russian missile strikes in the eastern city of Sloviansk in the Donetsk region killed at least two people and injured another 29, including one child, according to a regional military official. Further south, Ukrainian and Russian forces reported explosions in the occupied city of Melitopol.
  • Battle for Bakhmut: Russian and Ukrainian forces are caught in “the most intense phase” of the battle for control of Bakhmut, according to a top Ukrainian official. It comes as the Russian mercenary group Wagner says it captured a metal plant near the besieged city.
  • Mariupol assassination attempt: There was an assassination attempt against Mikhail Moskvin, the police chief in the occupied city of Mariupol on Monday, according to Russian news agency TASS. Moskvin survived the attack, after his car exploded a few meters away from him, TASS reported.

2 killed in Sloviansk missile strike, Ukrainian authorities say

Aftermath of strike in Sloviansk, Ukraine, on March 27.

Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of the Donetsk regional military administration, has updated the casualty figures from Monday’s missile strike in the eastern city of Sloviansk.

“As of 13:00, there are 2 dead, 29 wounded in Sloviansk,” he posted on Facebook, noting the developments in local time.

Kyrylenko said earlier that a number of high-rise buildings and offices had been damaged or destroyed.

City authorities said there’s one child among the injured.

Western criticism won't affect Russia’s plans to station nuclear weapons in Belarus, says Kremlin

The Kremlin has maintained its position on storing nuclear weapons in neighboring Belarus, after Western leaders condemned Russian President Vladimir Putin’s plans as “dangerous and irresponsible.”

Putin announced Saturday that Moscow plans to station tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus, which is among Russia’s closest allies. It helped Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, allowing the Kremlin’s forces to enter the country from the north.

The statement from Putin over the weekend prompted strong reaction in the West. NATO said it is “vigilant” and “closely monitoring the situation,” and Lithuania called for new sanctions against Russia.

The US has downplayed the move, saying there are no indications Russia will use nuclear weapons.

25 wounded in Sloviansk missile strike, Ukrainian authorities say

Aftermath of strike in Sloviansk, Ukraine, on March 2

At least one person was killed and 25 wounded in Russian missile strikes on Monday against the eastern city of Sloviansk, according to Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of the Donetsk regional military administration.

A number of high-rise buildings and offices were damaged or destroyed by the missile strikes at around 10:30 a.m. local time, Kyrylenko said, adding that two S300 missiles were used.

“In addition, at the same time [the town of] Druzhkivka was hit by a missile attack — two S300 missiles hit the Druzhkivka orphanage and almost completely destroyed it,” Kyrylenko said.?

There are “currently no casualties in Druzhkivka,” he said.

It’s not known whether the orphanage was occupied.

One killed in Russian shelling of Sloviansk, Zelensky says

Russian bombardments killed one person in the city of Sloviansk in the Donetsk region on Monday, according to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Zelensky posted video of the aftermath of the attack, showing widespread damage and two fires. It is unclear whether rockets or missiles were used.

Assassination attempt against Mariupol police chief, says Russian state media

There was an assassination attempt against the police chief in the occupied city of Mariupol on Monday, according to Russian news agency TASS.

Mikhail Moskvin is alive, TASS reported, citing the security services of the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic, which administers Mariupol.

TASS said that Moskvin’s car exploded a few meters away from him.

The news comes after Ukrainian officials said that the car of a top Russian commander was blown up in a central area of the city’s Primorskyi district.

Battle for Bakhmut enters "most intense phase," says top Ukrainian official

Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi walks in a trench at a position north of the capital Kyiv, Ukraine, on March 29, 2022.

Russian and Ukrainian forces are caught in “the most intense phase” of the battle for control of Bakhmut, where both sides are caught in a grueling stalemate as Moscow strives to capture the city after failing to make major gains elsewhere.

Oleksandr Syrskyi, the commander of Ukraine’s land forces, has made decisions “aimed at strengthening” Kyiv’s forces on the ground to “deter and defeat the enemy,” according to the Ministry of Defense.

The ministry said that Syrskyi “took a number of measures to resolve problematic issues that impede the effective performance of combat missions.”

The exact status of the battle for the city is unclear after unverified claims that Russia’s private military group Wagner has made gains in Bakhmut, despite suggestions from Ukrainian officials that Moscow is running out of power.

Serhii Cherevatyi, spokesman for the Eastern Grouping of the Armed Forces, said on Sunday that Ukraine has “enough forces to hold the front line.”

An aerial view of Bakhmut,in the Donetsk region, Ukraine, Sunday, March 26, 2023. (AP Photo/

Cherevatyi also said that the intensity of Russian attacks had declined. On Saturday, he said there had been 18 separate attacks attempting to advance in the Bakhmut area, compared to up to 50 in the recent past. But the same dense shelling continued, he said.

The Institute for the Study of War said in its latest battlefield assessment that attempts from Wagner to break through Ukrainian defenses in the eastern cities of Bakhmut and Avdiivka have “so far failed.”

Russian commander's car explodes in occupied Mariupol, Ukrainian officials say

The car of a top Russian commander was blown up in the occupied southern port city of Mariupol on Monday morning, Ukrainian officials said.

“According to preliminary information, the car of one of the occupiers’ commanders exploded,” Mariupol’s city council said.

The council said the blast occurred in a central area of the city’s Primorskyi district. It did not name the Russian officer or say whether the explosion caused any casualties.

Russia is yet to comment.

Explosions rock Russian-occupied city of Melitopol

Both Ukrainian and Russian officials have reported explosions Monday morning in the occupied city of Melitopol in Ukraine’s southern Zaporizhzhia region.

Social media video and images showed thick smoke rising in the middle of the city, which is a hub for Russian occupying forces nearly 100 kilometers (62 miles) from the front lines.

Vladimir Rogov, a Russian-appointed official in the occupied part of the Zaporizhzhia region, said it was “loud” in the city around 8:15 a.m. local time.

Rogov said “the air defense system worked” but he also posted video of emergency services working at the site of a strike. He said “information about casualties and damage is being clarified.”

The local Russian-appointed administration said a building in central Melitopol “was partially destroyed.”

“According to preliminary information, four people were injured and several buildings were damaged,” it said.

Rogov said the building struck was close to a college where classes were ongoing. But Fedorov said the building was occupied by Russian security forces.

Clearing land mines by hand, farmers in Ukraine risk their lives for planting season

Oleksandr Havriluk with some of the Russian anti-tank mines he dug up in his fields using a metal detector.

The first time Oleksandr Havriluk returned to his farm after it had been stormed and occupied by Russian troops, tears rolled down his face when he saw what they had left behind.

His farm buildings were almost completely destroyed, millions of dollars worth of heavy machinery had been left in ruins, and last year’s wheat harvest had been incinerated.

But the most pressing problem for Havriluk were the land mines which had been buried across his 12 square miles of surrounding fields.

Now, the 69-year-old is digging them up by hand, in a desperate effort to clear some of his fields before planting season begins in early April.

So far, Havriluk says he has removed around 20 mines from his fields in Valika Komyshuvaha, close to the city of Izium, using only a metal detector he purchased himself.

“You go, you find it, take a stick, tap it to determine the size, and then you dig it up,” he said. “And then you pick it up gently and take it out.”

The work is dangerous, he admits, but he adds, “I don’t have any other choice.”

Read more here.

Authorities urge residents to evacuate eastern Ukrainian town as constant Russian attacks disrupt utilities

A residential building damaged by a Russian military strike is seen in Avdiivka, Ukraine, on March 20.

Authorities in the Ukrainian town of?Avdiivka?— located in the eastern Donetsk region — are urging people to evacuate as critical resources like mobile service and electricity are disrupted by Russian shelling, a top regional official said.

Starting Sunday, the town’s utilities will be shut off as “more and more of the town is shelled and destroyed daily,” Vitalii Barabash, the head of Avdiivka military administration, said in a Telegram post.

The regional leader said mobile coverage for the town will be shut off, too. He also cautioned that people will not be able to charge their phones, because in the coming days there will be nobody to service the generators or run the mobile tower.

“That’s why you need to move out, you need to get ready for this. Especially those with children,” he said, “Real life shows that basements will not save you at the rate they are hitting the town with airstrikes now. Soon, I think Avdiivka may become a second?Marinka?— that is, nothing of the town will remain.”

About Avdiivka:?The town is located just north of Donetsk city, a large metropolitan area.

The industrial town, home to a large smelting plant, has been shelled persistently since the Russian invasion began. However, in recent weeks Russian ground?attacks in the area have intensified.

Some Ukrainian officials have said the town could become a second Bakhmut, the mostly abandoned city where Ukrainian and Russian forces have fought for weeks to what is, at this moment, a bloody stalemate.

Barabash has said in previous updates that?civilian evacuations from the town are perilous, with a “road of?death” leading out of town that’s monitored by Russian troops who “immediately open fire.”

CNN’s Svitlana Vlasova contributed to this report.

Analysis: With plan for tactical nukes in Belarus, Putin is scaring the world to distract from his problems

Vladimir Putin says he plans to deploy tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus, the neighboring ally from which he staged part of his February 2022 invasion of Ukraine. When the Russian president uses the word “nuclear” the world pays attention and that appears to be a major reason why he said it.

As usual with Putin, the world should read the fine print and check the context. The weapons Putin plans to move to Belarus are not strategic nuclear weapons, those giant intercontinental ballistic missiles that, if fired, could end life on earth.

Tactical nuclear weapons are smaller, but powerful, and can be used on the battlefield. Putin has been threatening the possibility of nuclear war for the past year, especially when his military operation in Ukraine is faltering.

That could help to explain the context of Putin’s announcement. He’s a man with a lot of problems right now. Russian forces are bombarding Ukrainian cities from the air, but their ground war is not making much headway.

Aside from several new trade agreements with China, Putin didn’t get much out of his?summit with Chinese leader Xi Jinping. If anything, Russia now appears to be China’s junior partner.

Then there’s the International Criminal Court and the?arrest warrant?it has issued for Putin.

Now, about that fine print: Putin is blaming his decision on the other side, saying he made it in response to the United Kingdom supplying Ukraine with anti-tank ammunition that contains depleted uranium.

That, Putin charges, is a dangerous escalation. The UK denies this, explaining that the ammunition is used only for conventional purposes.

Putin says Russia already is constructing a storage facility for the tactical nukes that will be ready by July. He gave no specific date on which the tactical weapons would arrive.

What’s more, he notes, Russia already has 10 aircraft capable of carrying nuclear weapons, as well as several short-range Iskander missile systems that could carry nuclear weapons.

Significantly, the Russian leader said he will not transfer control of the tactical nuclear weapons to Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, who has been requesting the weapons for a long time.

Read the full analysis here.

How US troops in Germany are training Ukrainians to save one another on the battlefield

For US troops, the training is nothing new: Applying tourniquets, clearing someone’s airway, recognizing signs of traumatic brain injuries.

But to the Ukrainian troops receiving it, the training is literally a matter of life or death on the battlefield in the?war against Russia.

US troops have been providing critical medical instruction and combat casualty care to Ukrainians at Grafenwoehr Training Area in Germany for almost a year, in between other significant training on weapon systems. And while it may not be as high profile as that on tanks,?Patriot missile systems, or combined arms tactics, it could arguably have an even more immediate impact on the battlefield.

Ballard and Capt. Christina Whitler, the field artillery squadron physician assistant, were among the medics on-site last May as Ukrainians were training on M777 Howitzers. It’s typical for medics to be present at a range during training, and hoping to be as useful as possible, Whitler told CNN she spoke with a Ukrainian leader on the ground to see what else they might need.

The answer was clear: More medical training.

Read the full story here.

Russia claims 3 people injured in explosion caused by Ukrainian drone in Russia's Tula region?

Russia says a Ukrainian drone caused an explosion that wounded three people in the country’s Tula region, about 140 miles south of Moscow, Russian state news agency Tass reported Sunday.?

According to Tass, “two young men received fragmentation wounds and one more person was slightly hurt. Three apartment blocks and four household structures were damaged.”?

Ukraine has not commented on the incident so far, and CNN has not been able to independently verify Moscow’s claim.

Wagner in "full control" of AZOM plant in Bakhmut, Russian state media says

Russia’s private military group?Wagner?has taken “full control” of the AZOM metallurgical plant in the north of the city of Bakhmut, according to video posted by Russian state media and verified by CNN.

CNN cannot independently verify RIA’s claim and has reached out to the?Ukrainian Ministry of Defense?for comment but is yet to receive a response.

Bakhmut has become a focal point of Russia’s invasion, with Moscow pressing hard to capture the city after failing to make major gains elsewhere.

The exact status of the battle for the city is unclear, but if confirmed Wagner’s claims would suggest Russia has made gains despite positive signals from Ukraine this week.

On Thursday one of Kyiv’s top generals said Russian forces are?depleted in Bakhmut and a Ukrainian counteroffensive could soon be launched.

Read more here.

England hands Ukraine defeat on emotional night at Wembley Stadium

The sight of Ukrainian flags flying along Wembley Way — the road approaching the iconic Wembley Stadium — took on extra significance Sunday as Ukraine faced England in its Euro 2024 qualifier.

While the horrors of war continue to cast a shadow over its country, here was the Ukrainian men’s national team facing one of the best sides in the world on the global stage.

Win or lose, the Ukrainian players wanted to put on a show for its fans and offer those back home 90 minutes of respite.

However, the team knew it needed something of a miracle to beat England at Wembley and one was not forthcoming.

Ranked 21 places higher than Ukraine, England had too much quality on the pitch and its experience shone through.

Goals from England men’s all-time record goalscorer Harry Kane and Bukayo Saka was all it needed as the 2-0 victory earned another three points in its qualifying campaign.

Read more here.