Some Russian military units suffering heavy losses in Ukraine have been forced to return home or to Belarus to resupply, placing additional pressure on Russia’s already strained logistics, the British Defense Ministry said in an assessment Wednesday.
The problems demonstrate the difficulties Russia is having reorganizing its units in forward areas within Ukraine, the assessment says. Moscow will likely continue to compensate for its reduced ground-force capability “through mass artillery and missile strikes,” the assessment says.
President Joe Biden also spoke with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Wednesday, informing him the United States intends to provide the Ukrainian government with another $500 million in aid, the White House said.
Russia this week announced plans to dial back its military activity in and around Kyiv, but Ukraine authorities say the city continues to be battered by artillery assaults. Russian military leaders have said forces would focus on “liberating” the breakaway Luhansk and Donetsk territories in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.
“Russia’s stated focus on an offensive in Donetsk and Luhansk is likely a tacit admission that it is struggling to sustain more than one significant axis of advance,” the British assessment says.
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Latest developments
►Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, have reached out to their Russian counterparts who have “not answered and they have not replied with a willingness to do so,” Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said.
►Poland announced steps to end all Russian oil imports by year’s end. Earlier this week Poland banned coal imports.
►Over 4 million refugees have now fled Ukraine, about 10% of the population, a United Nations refugee agency says.
►No significant breakthrough took place in peace talks with Ukraine, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday.
►Ukraine asked Norway for long-range weapons to protect Ukraine’s battered cities.
Biden pledges $500 million more worth of aid in call with Zelenskyy
President Joe Biden pledged an additional $500 million in aid to Ukraine in a phone call Wednesday with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as peace talks between Russia and Ukraine have failed to produce a breakthrough.
The White House confirmed the additional “direct budgetary aid” after Biden spoke to Zelenskyy for about an hour in a call that concluded shortly after noon ET. The infusion of new assistance is on top of $2 billion the U.S. has committed to Ukraine since Biden became president.
Zelenskyy updated Biden on the status of Ukraine’s negotiations with Russia, according to the White House. It comes as the Biden administration has expressed skepticism about Russia’s stated plans to reduce military forces near the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv.
The two leaders also discussed how the U.S. is “working around the clock” to fulfill security requests by Ukraine, the White House said, and efforts with allies to identify additional assistance needed by the Ukrainian government.
Zelenskyy said in a tweet they discussed their assessment of “the situation on the battlefield and the negotiating table” as well as defense support, a package of new sanctions on Russia and financial and humanitarian aid.
– Joey Garrison
US official: Tension escalates between Putin, Russian military leaders
U.S. intelligence officials have determined that Russian President Vladimir Putin is being misinformed by his advisers about Russian forces’ performance in Ukraine, according to a U.S. official. The official, who spoke to the Associated Press on condition of anonymity Wednesday to discuss the recently declassified intelligence finding, said Putin has felt misled by the Russian military, leading to tension between the sides. The official did not detail evidence of how U.S. intelligence made the determination.
The findings demonstrate a “clear breakdown in the flow of accurate information” to Putin, and show that Putin’s senior advisers are “afraid to tell him the truth,” the official said.
Biden hopes to meet with Trevor Reed’s parents
President Joe Biden said Wednesday that he hopes to meet with the parents of Trevor Reed, a former U.S. Marine who has been imprisoned in Russia since 2019, while the couple is in Washington.
“I’m going to see if I can get to see them,” Biden told reporters. “They’re good people. We’re trying to work that out.”
The White House said it’s not clear when the meeting might take place.
Reed’s parents are demonstrating outside the White House to raise awareness of the case. Reed was visiting his girlfriend in Russia in August 2019 when he was arrested on charges of assaulting a police officer. He was sentenced to nine years in prison.
Reed has said he was intoxicated the night before his arrest after attending a birthday party. As Reed and his girlfriend drove home the next morning, Reed became nauseated and got out of the car on a busy street.
According to Moscow police, after Reed was detained he grabbed the arm of a police officer driving the vehicle to the station and swerved the car to enter the lane of oncoming traffic. Reed and his family have disputed that account, pointing to video evidence that does not show the vehicle swerving.
In a statement Tuesday, the Reed family said their son has recently started a hunger strike to protest a lack of medical care for possible tuberculosis while in confinement.
— Joey Garrison
US astronaut returns to earth in Russian capsule
NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei landed in a Soyuz capsule in Kazakhstan after a U.S. record 355 days at the International Space Station. Vande Hei returned alongside the Russian Space Agency’s Pyotr Dubrov, who also spent the past year in space, and Anton Shkaplerov. Wind blew the capsule onto its side following touchdown, and the trio emerged into the late afternoon sun one by one.
Vande Hei, the last one out, grinned and waved as he was carried to a reclining chair out in the open Kazakh steppes.
“It’s beautiful out here,” said Vande Hei, who planned to return immediately to Houston with a team of NASA doctors and other staff.
Kremlin says no breakthroughs – and Crimea is off the table
No significant breakthrough took place in talks with Ukraine aimed at ending Russia’s invasion, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Wednesday. Negotiators for the two countries met for about three hours Tuesday in Istanbul, Turkey. Russia then said its military was scaling back operations around the capital of Kyiv – but U.S. and Ukrainian officials say missile attacks on the city continue unabated.
Peskov said the Kremlin will not discuss issues that are “substantially on the negotiating table.” He said social media postings by representatives of Ukraine, including those not involved in the talks, do not contribute to successful negotiations.
“No one has stated that the parties have advanced. Who has stated that the parties have advanced?” Peskov said, adding that none of the officials involved in the talks had described them as positive.
Peskov also dismissed a Ukrainian proposal to negotiate the status of the Crimean Peninsula over the next 15 years. “Crimea is part of the Russian Federation,” Peskove said.
Estonia wants to rebuild Ukraine with funds for Russian energy
Estonia wants Europe to help build Ukraine – with the money Europe is set to pay Russia for its energy. The funds should be deposited in a bank to Ukraine “to make an immediate impact and make Russia pay for what has been done,” Estonian Foreign Minister Eva-Maria Liimets said Wednesday.
But there is also concern that Russia could reject any delayed payment and sell to other nations. European Union leaders have been unable to impose sanctions on Russian energy exports, fearing that such a move could hurt member states heavily reliant on Moscow’s fossil fuel supplies.
Liimets also stressed the importance of the EU’s commitment to cut its fossil fuel supplies from Russia by two-thirds before the end of the year, saying “the price of military action for Russia must be very high.”
Estonia, with a population of about 1.5 million people, shares a border with Russia and was a part of the Soviet Union until declaring its independence 1991. Estonia became a member of NATO in 2004.
Ukraine envoy: Demilitarization of Russia ‘well underway’
The demilitarization of Russia is “well underway,” Ukraine’s U.N. Ambassador Sergiy Kyslytsya told the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday as the conflict in Ukraine entered its second month. Russian President Vladimir Putin has claimed his invasion sought only the “demilitarization and de-Nazification” of Ukraine. But according to Kyslytsya, Russian forces have lost over 17,000 military personnel, over 1,700 armored vehicles and almost 600 tanks in the invasion.
Russia announced Tuesday that it would scale back military operations near Kyiv, Ukraine’s capital. But Ukrainian military officials said they distrust Russia’s announced withdrawal, and American officials remained skeptical.
Inside one convoy’s frantic trek to rescue refugees in Ukraine
USA TODAY rides with Ukrainians in a convoy out of their war-ravaged homeland, crossing the border to Moldova. Some will stay there, hoping for a quick end to the war and a safe return home. Others are headed further west into the European Union, which is offering assistance and work permits to some Ukrainian refugees. Salam Aldeen, 39, drives one of the buses taking women and children to safety. Aldeen is also the founder of the international rescue nonprofit Team Humanity, which organized the convoy. Read more here.
“The ones with cars have left on their own,” Aldeen says. “That leaves the poor people.”
– Trevor Hughes
Ukraine war will have global food impact not seen since WWII
Ukraine and Russia together produce 30% of the world’s wheat supply. They contribute to 20% of the global maize supply, and 75 to 80% of the sunflower seed oil.
Now, the war in Ukraine is threatening the global food supply, the U.N. food chief warned Tuesday. He said the global impact will be the most severe the world has seen since World War II, and that the invasion has created “a catastrophe on top of a catastrophe.”
Many farmers from Ukraine, sometimes referred to as “the breadbasket of the world,” have left their farms and are fighting Russian soldiers amid already high food prices.
David Beasley, executive director of the U.N. World Food Program, told the U.N. Security Council on Tuesday that his agency had already begun cutting rations because of rising food, fuel, and shipping costs for millions of families around the world.
– Celina Tebor
Contributing: The Associated Press