Russia Admits ‘State of War’ Amid Massive Strikes on Ukraine

AFP/APP

Kyiv: Russia admitted two years into its invasion of Ukraine on Friday that it was “in a state of war” as it launched a massive wave of missile and drone attacks on its neighbor’s territory.

Russia fired almost 90 missiles and more than 60 Iranian-designed kamikaze drones, damaging dozens of energy facilities, including power stations, in what Ukrainian officials said was an attempt to cripple the country’s electricity and heating networks.

Russia said the wave of strikes was retaliation for a series of Ukrainian attacks on its border regions in recent weeks.

 At least five people were killed and more than 20 injured, according to Ukraine’s interior ministry and local officials.

“We are in a state of war,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in an interview with a pro-Kremlin newspaper published Friday.

The admission marks an escalation in the official language used to describe the conflict, which the Kremlin initially referred to as a “special military operation.”.

“Yes, it started as a special military operation, but as soon as this bunch was formed there, when the collective West became a participant on Ukraine’s side, for us it already became a war,” Peskov said.

“De jure (legally), it is a special military operation. But de facto, it has turned into a war,” he added.

Moscow often accuses the West of direct participation in the conflict by supplying Ukraine with weapons.

Calling the strikes “retaliation” for recent Ukrainian attacks, Moscow’s defense ministry said Friday it had targeted Ukraine’s “energy sites, military-industrial complexes, railway hubs, and arsenals.”

 “All of the objectives of the massive strike were achieved,” it said.                 

‘Largest on Record’

“This morning’s attack on Ukraine’s energy system was the largest on record,” Ukraine’s state-run power grid, Ukrenergo, said. 

“Dozens of power system facilities have been damaged,” including thermal and hydroelectric power plants as well as major and regional power lines, and blackouts have hit seven regions, it added.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky appealed once again on Friday for more Western arms, blasting political “indecision” that he said was costing Ukrainian lives.

Ukraine has struggled with shortages of both air defenses to protect its skies and ammunition on the ground, as a vital $60 billion military aid package is currently being held up in the US Congress.

“Russian missiles do not have delays, as do aid packages to our country. The ‘Shahed’ (drones) have no indecision, like some politicians. It is important to understand the cost of delays and postponed decisions,” he said.

“We need air defense to protect people, infrastructure, homes, and dams. Our partners know exactly what is needed. They can definitely support us. Life must be protected from these non-humans in Moscow.”

‘Under Control’

Ukraine’s air force said it shot down 37 of the 88 missiles fired overnight and 55 of the 63 drones.

The strikes left around 700,000 consumers without electricity in the northeastern Kharkiv region, governor Oleg Synegubov said.

“The goal is not just to damage, but to try again, like last year, to cause a large-scale failure of the country’s energy system,” said energy minister German Galushchenko.

Last winter, Russia launched a daily barrage of aerial attacks on Ukraine’s power grid, plunging millions into darkness and leaving them without heating in sub-zero temperatures for hours.

But the country’s energy network has largely held up this year.

Prime Minister Denys Shmygal said Friday: “The situation in the energy sector is under control.”

Emergency electricity was being supplied from Romania, Slovakia, and Poland, Galushchenko said.           

‘Extremely Dangerous Situation’

The strikes severed one of two power lines supplying the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power station, Europe’s largest nuclear power plant in southeast Ukraine, that was seized by Russian troops at the start of the war.

The plant has suffered multiple blackouts since the beginning of the war, falling back on emergency diesel generators and safety systems.

“In the event of their failure, a threat of a nuclear and radiation accident will emerge,” said Energoatom.

The main power line was later restored, it added.

A Russian missile also hit a trolleybus at the Dnipro hydroelectric station, officials said.

Photos on social media showed a fire raging on the dam and the burnt-out carcass of the vehicle.

Three people were killed in Zaporizhzhia, the city where the power station is located, Governor Ivan Fedorov said. He did not say whether it was in the strike on the dam.

The commander of Ukraine’s ground forces, Oleksandr Pavliuk, also said Friday that Russia could be preparing to launch a summer offensive and was building a group of more than 100,000 troops.

In Russia, a woman was killed and others wounded in a strike on Friday in Russia’s Belgorod, said the governor of the region along the border with Ukraine, where Kyiv has stepped up attacks.

And Moscow’s FSB security service said it had arrested seven pro-Ukrainian partisans in the capital, the latest in a flurry of similar cases.

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