August 7, 2023 Russia-Ukraine news

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Ukraine says a woman has been detained in Zelensky assassination plot
02:45 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • At least five people were killed and more than two dozen injured after Russian missiles struck a residential building in Pokrovsk, a city in the eastern Donetsk region, Ukrainian officials said Monday. Separately, Russian strikes killed at least two people in the Kharkiv region and one person in the southern city of Kherson, officials said.
  • An alleged Russian informant was detained in connection to a plot to assassinate President Volodymyr Zelensky during a trip last month to the Mykolaiv region, Ukraine said Monday.
  • Ukraine is using unmanned vehicles to attack Russian targets by air and by sea. Early Monday, Russian air defenses shot down a drone southwest of Moscow, a regional governor said.
  • Weekend peace talks in Saudi Arabia ended with goodwill statements but no concrete announcements.
29 Posts

Orthodox priest sentenced to 5-year jail term for supporting Russia's invasion, Ukraine says

A priest with the Ukrainian Orthodox Church has been sentenced to five years in prison for a number of public statements in support of the Russian invasion, the Ukrainian Prosecutor General’s office said on Monday.

Print and electronic materials that contained pro-Russian propaganda intended for distribution were confiscated from the computer of the priest, who was head of the Tulchyn diocese, the statement said.

Some background: The church, despite the name, had traditionally been loyal to the Russian Orthodox Church, whose leader Patriarch Kiril has openly supported Moscow’s brutal invasion of Ukraine.

Splitting with Kiril, the leadership of the church denounced Russia’s attack, and in May 2022, declared its independence from Russia. Ukraine, however, has expressed concern about the loyalties of some of the priests.

Last month, Ukraine passed legislation moving its official Christmas holiday to December 25, further distancing itself from the traditions of the Russian Orthodox Church, which celebrates the holiday on January 7.

22 Ukrainian POWs released from Russia, Ukrainian official says 

After being held as prisoners of war, 22 Ukrainian military service members were released Monday, according to Andriy Yermak, head of the Office of the President.

The oldest of the soldiers is 54-years-old and the youngest is 23-years-old, Yermak said. 

“Each of the liberated soldiers will undergo physical and psychological rehabilitation, reintegration and be provided with the necessary treatment with the support of medical specialists,” he said. 

Yermak thanked the Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War and their team for assisting.

“We have to fulfill the President’s task and return all of our people,” he added.

Every time residential buildings are attacked it "hurts anew," Ukrainian first lady says after Pokrovsk strike

Rescuers work at a residential building was damaged during a Russian missile strike  in Pokrovsk, Ukraine, on Monday, August 7.

Russian shelling in parts of Donetsk region has continued for years, and every time residential buildings are hit it “hurts anew,” Ukrainian first lady Olena Zelenska said Monday — after Russian missiles hit residential areas in the eastern city of Pokrovsk.

What we know so far about the strikes: At least five people were killed and more than two dozen were injured in Monday’s strikes on the city, according to authorities. 

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia had launched two missiles that struck the residential building in the city and he vowed to hold Russia accountable for the attack.

Biden administration working on supplemental Ukraine funding request, US Army official says

The Biden administration is working on a supplemental funding request for Ukraine that will likely be ready for Congress to consider by this fall, Army acquisition chief Doug Bush said on Monday. 

CNN previously reported that the White House was not planning to ask Congress for new Ukraine funding before the end of the fiscal year at the end of September, pitting administration officials against some lawmakers and congressional staffers who were concerned that the funds could run out by mid-summer.

That funding shortfall does not appear to have happened, largely because the Pentagon previously overvalued the amount it had spent on weaponry to Ukraine by $6.2 billion.

More about the US’ funding for Ukraine: In December, Congress approved the administration’s request for an additional $48 billion to help arm Ukraine and combat the Covid-19 pandemic, $36 billion of which was specifically allocated for Ukraine.

The supplemental was meant to last through September 30, 2023. The administration requested this kind of additional funding to help support Ukraine four times last year, in March, May, September and December.

At least 2 civilians killed and 5 injured by strikes in Kharkiv region, Ukrainian official says

At least two civilians were killed and at least five others were injured in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region after Russian missiles hit private homes, Andrii Yermak, head of the Ukrainian Presidential Office, said Monday. 

It comes after Yermak said in an earlier post that at least five civilians were killed by Russian missile strikes in the city of Pokrovsk, in the Donetsk region. 

At least 5 killed after Russian missiles strike a residential building in Pokrovsk, Ukrainian minister says 

A view shows a building destroyed during a Russian missile strike in Pokrovsk, Ukraine, on August 7, 2023.

At least five people were killed and more than two dozen injured after Russian missiles struck a residential building in Pokrovsk, a city in the eastern Donetsk region, Ukraine’s Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko said Monday. 

Among the injured are 19 police officers, five rescuers and one child, Klymenko said in a Telegram message. “The rubble is being cleared,” he added. 

Earlier, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia had launched two missiles that struck a residential building in the city. 

A video accompanying his post showed residents and emergency teams trying to clear some of the rubble. A person on a stretcher was being moved into an ambulance. 

Zelensky vowed to hold Russia accountable for the attack.

This post has been updated with the latest toll from the attack on Pokrovsk, according to Ukrainian government officials.

China's attendance at Ukraine peace talks in Saudi Arabia was productive, US State Department says  

Representatives from China, the US, and Saudi Arabia attend talks to make a headway towards a peaceful end to Russia's war in Ukraine, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on August 6.

The US State Department called China’s attendance at a meeting for restoring peace in Ukraine hosted by Saudi Arabia over the weekend productive.

Miller said that Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Victoria Nuland and White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan met with China’s special envoy at the meeting to deliver that message as well.

Miller also noted that there is no particular nation “leading” the talks, as Russia has yet to show interest in peace negotiations with Ukraine, but that when the Russians did, it would be Ukraine leading.

China signaled that the peace talks went well: Earlier Monday, China said the two-day meeting, which took place in the Gulf kingdom’s port sea city of Jeddah, helped “to consolidate international consensus” on finding a peaceful solution to the conflict, Reuters reported, citing a Chinese foreign ministry statement. 

The talks brought together more than 40 nations, including Ukraine, the United States, European states, and the BRICS group of countries — perhaps none as closely watched as China, Russia’s most powerful ally. Kremlin officials said Russia had not been invited to the talks but was monitoring them, state media reported. 

First batch of US Abrams tanks officially approved for shipment to Ukraine

The first batch of Abrams tanks that the US is providing to Ukraine was approved for shipment over the weekend, and the tanks are on track to arrive in Ukraine by early fall, Army Acquisition Chief Doug Bush said on Monday. 

The US began training the Ukrainians on the tanks in May in Germany, CNN reported. The 31 tanks destined for Ukraine had been undergoing refurbishment and preparation for shipment for several months, and were officially approved to be transferred over the weekend.

The US dramatically accelerated the time it normally takes to ship the tanks by deciding earlier this year to transfer the older M1-A1 models instead of the more modern version of the tank.

Secretary of State Blinken reiterates US' support for Ukraine during talk with foreign minister 

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks to the media in New York on August 3.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke on Monday with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba about “developments in Ukraine’s counteroffensive efforts, recent conversations about a just and durable peace in Ukraine held in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, and long-term security arrangements between the two countries,” according to a readout from spokesperson Matt Miller.

Kuleba tweeted about the call and said he emphasized Ukraine’s need for long-range missiles.

Some more context: Ukraine’s Armed Forces Chief Gen. Valerii Zaluzhnyi said earlier Monday that he told his US counterpart that Ukrainian forces are step-by-step creating conditions for advancing in the south, where they have struggled to gain ground as heavy fighting continues.

Zaluzhnyi said he had told the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley that Ukraine’s defenses were steadfast and that “initiative is on our side.”

International peace talks in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, concluded this weekend without clear resolutions, but helped to “consolidate international consensus” on finding a peaceful solution to the war in Ukraine, China’s foreign ministry said Monday, Reuters reported. The meetings did not include representatives from Moscow.

Ukraine says it detained a woman in connection to a plot to assassinate Zelensky. Here's what we know so far

An alleged informant for Russia has been detained in connection to a plot to assassinate Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) said Monday.

The woman’s name has not been publicly released, but according to a statement from the SBU, she is from the southern Ukrainian region of Mykolaiv.

The SBU said the suspect had been “gathering intelligence” about Zelensky’s planned visit to Mykolaiv at the end of July, in order to plan a Russian airstrike to kill the president.

However, SBU agents prevented the attempted assassination after the agency obtained information about the “subversive activities of the suspect” and adopted additional security measures.

In monitoring the communications of the woman, the SBU established that she also had the task of identifying the location of electronic warfare systems and warehouses with ammunition of the armed forces.

She allegedly traveled around the territory of the district and filmed the locations of Ukrainian objects.

According to the investigation, the alleged informant was a resident of Ochakov in Mykolaiv region and a former salesperson in a military store.

This is not the first assassination attempt: Zelensky has faced several known attempts on his life since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of his country in February 2022. Russian special forces were tasked with eliminating the Ukrainian president at the start of the war.

In a profile published in April 2022, TIME magazine described how Russian troops had parachuted into Kyiv to kill or capture Zelensky and his family on February 24, the day after the war began.

Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said in March of last year that Zelensky had survived more than a dozen assassination attempts.

Jeffrey Judd Jones identified by family as one of 3 Americans killed recently while fighting in Ukraine  

Jeffrey Judd Jones

Jeffrey Judd Jones is one of the three Americans killed recently while fighting in Ukraine, according to a family statement provided to CNN by his father, Howard Jones.  

“Jeff’s family and friends are proud of Jeff’s contributions and sacrifice for the Ukrainian people,” the written statement read. 

The 48-year-old was killed by a mortar shell explosion on July 31, Jones said.

“Jeff had traveled to Ukraine twice to help the Ukrainian people, particularly the children. Jeff supported humanitarian efforts and then served on a volunteer medic team near the front in 2022 to add more purpose to his life,” Jones said in the written statement. 

He said his son was first injured in 2022 when an artillery round struck a building and he spent five days in a Ukrainian hospital. “Despite Jeff’s past experiences serving on the front, Jeff was determined to help the Ukrainians, so he returned to Ukraine in April 2023,” Jones said.

A resident of Perry, Georgia, Jeffrey Judd Jones served in the US Army and applied the skills he learned in the Airborne Division in Ukraine.

“Jeff’s family and friends will miss him dearly,” the statement adds.  

Apart from Jones, Andrew Webber was identified as another American killed recently while fighting in Ukraine, according to a family statement provided to CNN by his wife, DeeDee Cloyd Webber. 

A US State Department spokesperson told CNN that two Americans died in Ukraine on July 29 and another US citizen died on July 31. The State Department said it is in touch with their families and providing consular assistance. 

CNN’s Raenu Charles contributed reporting to this post.

Ukraine is creating conditions to advance in the south, commander tells top US general 

Ukraine’s Armed Forces Chief Gen. Valerii Zaluzhnyi said he told his US counterpart that Ukrainian forces are step-by-step creating conditions for advancing in the south, where they have struggled to gain ground as heavy fighting continues.

Zaluzhnyi said he had told the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, the top US general, that Ukraine’s defenses were steadfast and that “initiative is on our side.”

They also discussed Ukraine’s current needs “in armament and ammunition,” he added.

Putin says it is "necessary" for Russia to increase production of the latest types of weapons

Russian President Vladimir Putin holds a meeting with CEO of Rostec State Corporation Sergei Chemezov at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, on August 7.

Russian President Vladimir Putin met with the director general of Rostec, Sergey Chemezov, on Monday and spoke about skills shortages and rapidly rising wages among military industries, according to a Kremlin readout.

Putin said it was “necessary to increase the percentage of production of the latest types of weapons,” according to a transcript of the meeting. Chemezov said Rostec, the state-owned high-tech giant, was trying to find sufficient highly-skilled personnel.

Chemezov also spoke about the growth of wages at the company’s defense enterprises, which was 17.2% last year because many factories worked “both on weekends, and on holidays, and at night, and these days are paid, of course, at an increased rate.”

“The fulfillment of the state defense order for the last year, 2022, amounted to 99.5 percent. This figure is quite high. We have increased production volumes for all types of military products, which are massively used today in the special military operation,” Chemezov told Putin.

Putin also spoke about the need for Rostec to increase production of drones.

It was necessary to increase their production of UAVs “Kub” and “Lancet” even more, he said.

On August 3, Putin said at a meeting with industry leaders in the Kremlin that a combination of military spending and domestic demand was driving the Russian economy, with employment in manufacturing stable.

The Russian leader said that wage growth was due to labor shortages. He said Moscow needs to “attract people, to interest them in a higher level of wages. And this is already beginning to affect the position of small and medium-sized enterprises in a certain way.”

CNN’s Tim Lister and Anna Chernova contributed reporting to this post.

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

While Ukrainian officials have pledged to “return” the war to Russia, launching a series of strikes on Russian territory and naval assets in recent weeks, the situation on Ukraine’s southern front remains one of grueling attrition, with little territory being won or lost by either side.

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s Security Service revealed more information around an alleged Russian plot to assassinate President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Here are the latest developments:

  • Assassination plot: The Ukrainian Security Service said Monday that it had detained a Russian informant “who was preparing a Russian airstrike in the Mykolaiv region,” aiming to assassinate Zelensky while he was visiting the region in July. According to the investigation, the alleged perpetrator was a resident in southern Ukrainian and a former saleswoman in a military store. The woman has not been named.
  • Bridge strikes: Explosions hit two critical road bridges linking occupied Crimea with parts of the Kherson region under Russian control, Russian authorities said Sunday, as Ukraine continues to escalate its targeting of Russian infrastructure and territory. Kyiv has made it clear that it is seeking to cut off the annexed Crimean peninsula from land newly captured by Moscow in 2022.
  • Motherland statue: The Ukrainian government on Sunday removed the hammer and sickle symbol on a famous Soviet-era statue in Kyiv, replacing it with a trident – the Ukrainian coat of arms. The city’s 62-meter-tall “Motherland” monument dominates the capital’s skyline, and Ukrainian officials were keen to rid it of remnants of its Soviet past. On Monday, a Russian spokeswoman condemned the removal, claiming “Mother can not be renamed.”
  • Saudi peace talks: International peace talks in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, concluded this weekend without clear resolutions, but helped to “consolidate international consensus” on finding a peaceful solution to the war in Ukraine, China’s foreign ministry said Monday, Reuters reported. The meetings did not include representatives from Moscow.
  • Munitions draining: Russian forces used nearly half a million munitions in the last week alone on the Eastern front, Ukraine’s deputy defense ministry said Monday. Hanna Maliar said there had been “endless assaults” by the Russians, with more than 9,000 instances of shelling – up to about 8,000 the previous week. “This is continuous shelling, through which our soldiers have to pass,” Maliar said. Heavy fighting has also continued in the south, with few territorial gains for either side.
  • Air defenses: Zelensky said Sunday that air defense systems donated by the United States and Germany have returned “significant results”  in shielding Ukraine from aerial assaults. Western allies have donated a range of air defense systems to Ukraine, including the US-made Patriot systems. Zelensky said he was “grateful to every country, every leader” for helping Ukraine to defend its skies, just hours after a wave of Russian missiles hit Ukraine early Sunday.

Here’s the latest map of control:

Russia says it thwarted Ukrainian efforts to advance amid heavy fighting in the south

Ukrainian service members in Zaporizhzhia region, Ukraine, on July 31.

Both Ukrainian and Russian officials have spoken of heavy clashes along the front lines in southern Ukraine, with little territory being won or lost by either side.

It appears that Ukrainian efforts to take the village of Robotyne are yet to bear fruit, after weeks of fighting in the area.

The official Russian news agency RIA Novosti said that its reporters had visited the village, “where not a single whole house remained due to the unsuccessful assaults of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in the last 2 months.”

The reporters shot footage purporting to show wrecked Ukrainian armor in the immediate area.

RIA Novosti said on its Telegram channel that “every time the Russian military stops them on the approaches to [the village]. At the same time, the Armed Forces of Ukraine are constantly shelling the village, where there are still civilians.”

Other Russian sources have also published images and video of the wreckage of Ukrainian armor, purportedly in the Robotyne area.

For the last few days, the Russian Defense Ministry and unofficial Russian sources have said that Ukrainian attacks on the Robotyne area have been repelled, with one Russian military blogger saying that trenches in the area that had been occupied by Ukrainian troops were subsequently retaken.

The Russian appointed head of the occupied part of Zaporizhzhia, Yevgeny Balitsky, claimed that Russian forces had also repelled Ukrainian infantry groups that attempted to advance near Mala Tokmachka and Novopokrovka, villages a few miles southeast of the town Orikhiv.

CNN is unable to confirm the Russian claims; a scarcity of geolocated video makes independent assessment of the battlefield difficult.

Kremlin spokesperson clarifies comments on lack of democracy in Russia

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Monday that his recent remarks to The New York Times that Russia’s presidential election was not about democracy had been misinterpreted.

The New York Times published a story on Sunday quoting Peskov as saying: “Our presidential election is not really a democracy, it is costly bureaucracy,” adding that Russian President Vladimir Putin “will be re-elected next year with more than 90% of the vote.”

Peskov has since sought to clarify his meaning, telling the official TASS news agency: “​​The answer was the following: the level of consolidation around the president is absolutely unprecedented and it can be said already now that if he runs [for president], he will be reelected by an overwhelming majority, and the election — theoretically — only entail unnecessary spending.”

In 2020, Russian lawmakers approved changes to the constitution which made Putin eligible to serve for a further two terms, potentially allowing him to stay in power until 2036. Under the previous Russian law, Putin would have been required to step down as president in 2024, when his second consecutive term in office comes to an end.

Peace talks in Saudi Arabia helped build "consensus" on Ukraine, says China's foreign ministry

Representatives from China, the U.S., and Saudi Arabia attend talks to make headway toward a peaceful end to Russia's war in Ukraine, in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on August 6.

The international talks in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, over the weekend have helped “to consolidate international consensus” on finding a peaceful solution on the Ukraine crisis, China’s foreign ministry said on Monday, Reuters reported. 

China’s special envoy for Eurasian Affairs, Li Hui, “had extensive contact and communication with all parties on the political settlement of the Ukraine crisis … listened to all sides’ opinions and proposals, and further consolidated international consensus,” the foreign ministry told Reuters in a written statement.

The statement also said China will continue to strengthen dialog based on its 12-point peace proposal, and “accumulate mutual trust,” without going into specific details, according to Reuters. 

CNN has reached out to China’s foreign ministry. 

Some background: China’s comments come amid speculation over the nature and extent of its supposed alliance with Russia.

Chinese President Xi Jinping has met his counterpart Vladimir Putin in person 40 times since coming to power in 2012 – far more than any other world leader.

In recent years, the world’s two most powerful autocratic leaders have brought their countries even closer together in an ambition to challenge what they see as a world order inflicted by “American hegemony.”

But as the devastating war drags on, Beijing’s costly alignment has been compounded by fears that the protracted conflict could ultimately destabilize Putin’s grip on power.

Additional reporting from CNN’s Nectar Gan.

Russia condemns Ukraine's change of "motherland symbol" on Kyiv statue

Steeplejacks wave the Ukrainian flag after finishing installing the coat of arms of Ukraine on the shield of the 62 metre Motherland Monument in Kyiv, Ukraine, on August 6.

The Russian Foreign Ministry has condemned the replacement of the “motherland” symbol on a famous Soviet-era statue in Kyiv.

On Sunday, the Ukrainian government replaced the Soviet hammer and sickle symbol with a trident – the Ukrainian coat of arms – on the shield of the monument that dominates the capital’s skyline.

Workers remove a Soviet emblem from the shield of the 'Motherland' monument in Kyiv, Ukraine, on August 1.

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova responded on Telegram: “In Kiev, a trident was installed on the monument ‘Motherland.’

The Motherland Monument in Kyiv, Ukraine, on August 6.

The monument, a 102-meter tall (335 feet tall) statue that towers over the surrounding area, is made of steel. Its construction began in 1979. It depicted a woman holding a sword and a shield emblazoned with the Soviet hammer and sickle symbol.

Alleged Russian informant detained in Zelensky assassination plot, Ukraine security service says

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky holds a press conference during a NATO leaders summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, on July 12.

The Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) says it has detained a Russian informant “who was preparing a Russian airstrike in the Mykolaiv region during the visit of the President of Ukraine.”

The alleged informant “on the eve of the recent trip of the President of Ukraine to Mykolaiv region, was gathering intelligence about the planned visit,” the SBU said.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was in the region at the end of July.

The SBU said in a statement that the alleged conspirator “tried to establish the time and list of locations of the approximate route of the Head of State in the territory of the region.”

However, SBU agents had obtained information about the “subversive activities of the suspect” and adopted additional security measures.

In monitoring the communications of the woman, the SBU had established that she also had the task of identifying the location of electronic warfare systems and warehouses with ammunition of the armed forces.

According to the investigation, the perpetrator was a resident of Ochakov, southern Ukraine, and a former saleswoman in a military store on the territory of one of the military units of the region.

She allegedly traveled around the territory of the district and filmed the locations of Ukrainian objects.

The woman has not been named.

Russian forces used nearly half a million munitions last week along Eastern front, Ukraine says

The aftermath of Russian shelling in Lyman, Donetsk Region, Ukraine on July 29.

Russian forces have used nearly 500,000 munitions in the last week alone on the Eastern front, according to Ukraine’s deputy defense minister, who described the situation as “extremely difficult and tense.”

Hannah Maliar said on YouTube there had been “endless assaults” by the Russians, with more than 9,000 instances of shelling, compared to about 8,000 the previous week.

Russian forced executed several attacks in Donetsk and Luhansk fronts, describing the eastern front lines as the epicenter of hostilities. 

Maliar said the Kupyansk direction in the Kharkiv region was “probably the hottest” in fighting and that Russian forces were trying to regain positions they lost last autumn.

But she said repeated Russian efforts to break through Ukrainian defenses did not succeed.

Failed Russian efforts: There had also been intensive clashes in the forested areas to the east of Lyman and Russians had “desperately” tried to surround Avdiivka but failed, according to Maliar.

She said Russian forces risk losing their soldiers to “street fights” in those areas and don’t risk going there because they cannot advance.

Difficulties in the south: Ukraine’s armed forced on the main offensive directions of Melitopol and Berdiansk in the south faced quite difficult positions last week. Maliar said Russian forces were “mining positions” in what could be plans for an advance.

Positions attacked: The commander of Ukrainian forces in the south, Oleksandr Tarnavskyi, said late Sunday that Russian forces had attacked Ukrainian positions 21 times and carried out 608 shellings over the past day.

He said that Ukrainian artillery had carried out 1,344 firing missions in the same period and destroyed 21 units of enemy military equipment.

US and German air defense systems bringing "significant results" for Ukraine, Zelensky says

Volodymyr Zelensky speaks during a news briefing in Kyiv, Ukraine on July 19.

Air defense systems donated to Ukraine by the United States and Germany have achieved “significant results,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Sunday.

His address came hours after a wave of Russian missiles hit Ukraine early Sunday, targeting an important air base in the west of the country. 

Western allies have donated a range of air defense systems to Ukraine, including US-made Patriot batteries. Patriot interceptor missiles can hit high- and medium-altitude aircraft, cruise missiles and some ballistic missiles, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

Russian shelling kills woman in Kherson, military official says

Russian shelling killed a 59-year-old woman and wounded at least three others in Ukraine’s southern Kherson city, a military official said Monday.

In a Telegram post, Oleksandr Prokudin, head of the Kherson regional military administration, said a 93-year-old woman was among those hospitalized following the shelling of residential areas.

Russia’s targeting of residential areas comes after the United Nations warned in a statement last week about the impact of a “new wave of attacks” on civilians in Ukraine.

Russia shoots down drone in region near Moscow, governor says

Vladislav Shapsha attends a forum in Moscow, Russia, on October 20, 2022.

Russian air defenses shot down a drone southwest of Moscow, a regional governor said Monday.

In a Telegram post, Kaluga Gov. Vladislav Shapsha said the incident happened around 2:30 a.m. local time in the region’s Ferzikovsky district.

No injuries or damage were reported, he said.

The was no immediate comment from Ukraine over the reported attack.

Some context: A string of aerial drone strikes have peppered Russian cities, including Moscow, throughout the summer.

Though recent strikes on the Russian capital did not reportedly cause any injuries or fatalities, they have unsettled residents and created a sense that the scope of the conflict is drifting across the border. On Sunday, an attempted Ukrainian drone attack briefly halted traffic at an airport in Moscow, according to the city’s mayor.

Ukrainian strikes on Russian infrastructure are becoming more common. Here's what we know

Ukrainian strikes inside Russia and Moscow-controlled territory are an increasingly common feature of the war, and Kyiv has effectively served notice that the attacks will continue, with President Volodymyr Zelensky declaring the conflict is “returning to Russia.”

Here’s what we know about some of the recent attacks:

  • Sunday’s bridge strikes: Missiles rocked a pair of bridges linking occupied regions of Ukraine to the Crimean peninsula, which Moscow seized in 2014. Ukraine’s military said the strikes “hit two key routes of communication” for Russia. Kyiv has made it clear that it will prioritize cutting off the annexed peninsula from land newly captured since Moscow’s full-scale invasion of 2022.
  • Attacks at sea: Ukraine hit one of Russia’s largest oil tankers with a sea drone late Friday, within 24 hours of an attack on a naval base in Russia’s Black Sea port of Novorossiysk. The first assault left a Russian warship badly damaged. The attacks were carried out using an emerging Ukrainian tool: sea drones that can travel long distances and have proven difficult to defend.
  • Drones cross the border: A string of aerial drone strikes have also peppered Russian cities, including Moscow, throughout the summer. Though recent strikes on the Russian capital did not reportedly cause any injuries or fatalities, they have unsettled residents and created a sense that the scope of the conflict is drifting across the border. On Sunday, an attempted Ukrainian drone attack briefly halted traffic at an airport in Moscow, according to the city’s mayor.
  • Ukraine says more is coming: Ukraine on Saturday pledged there would be more attacks on Russian shipping in the Black Sea and another key bridge to Crimea — the structure linking the peninsula to mainland Russia, which Kyiv has also targeted on multiple occasions. Any explosions that happen on Russia’s ships or bridges in the region are “an absolutely logical and effective step,” the head of the Ukrainian Security Service said this week. If Russia wants such explosions to stop, he added, “they have the only option to do so — to leave the territorial waters of Ukraine and our land.”

Peace talks in Saudi Arabia end with goodwill statements but no concrete announcements

Delegations from various countries and organizations attending the Ukraine peace summit in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, agreed to continue working together toward “achieving lasting peace in the region,” Saudi state news reported Sunday, but no specific developments were revealed.

In statements Sunday, the head of Ukraine’s presidential office called the talks “productive” and “extremely honest and open,” while Russia’s deputy foreign minister dismissed the talks as “doomed” to prevent meaningful developments.

Some context: The lack of any concrete resolutions announced after the talks does not come as a surprise, as officials had tempered expectations.

The meetings — which did not include representatives from Russia — were seen mostly as a means for laying out future frameworks. They were also viewed as a venue to potentially win support for Kyiv’s peace proposals from beyond its core Western backers like the United States and United Kingdom: The meetings included representatives from developing countries and from world powers that have sought to project varying degrees of neutrality in the conflict, like China and India.

Ukraine and Russia remain publicly committed to prerequisites for direct negotiations that the other side finds unacceptable.

Ukraine's military confirms striking key Russian routes to Crimea

This picture shows the damaged Chonhar bridge following a strike.

Ukraine’s military has confirmed that it struck road bridges linking Crimea and Russian-occupied parts of southern Ukraine on Sunday.

The strikes “hit two key routes of communication” for Russia, the Chonhar bridge linking the Kherson region to Crimea and a smaller bridge to the peninsula from the Ukrainian town of Henichesk, the Armed Forces of Ukraine said on Telegram.

Russian-backed authorities and Russian state media had earlier reported that Kyiv was responsible for strikes on the bridges. The Russian-appointed head of occupied areas in the Kherson region accused Ukraine of using British-supplied Storm Shadow missiles in the attack.

Explosions hit road bridges between Crimea and occupied Ukraine

One of the bridges reportedly struck connected the Arabat Spit on Crimea's east coast to the city of Henichesk.

Explosions hit critical road bridges linking occupied Crimea with parts of Kherson region under Russian control, Russian authorities say, as Ukraine escalates its targeting of Russian infrastructure and territory.

The blasts came on the same day the Moscow mayor said a drone had been shot down approaching the city and soon after Ukraine struck one of Russia’s biggest oil tankers with a sea drone as well as carrying out an attack on a major naval base.

The Russian-appointed acting head of Kherson region, Vladimir Saldo, says the missiles that hit two bridges in Crimea Sunday were all Storm Shadows, an air-launched long-range missile supplied to Ukraine by the UK.

Saldo said the two bridges were used by civilian and not military traffic. A rupture to a gas pipeline running alongside the bridge had cut off supplies to 20,000 residents of the city of Henichesk in Kherson.

He added that no one was hurt and the bridge would reopen to traffic by the end of the day.

Read more here.

Russian bomb hits blood transfusion center in Kharkiv region, Zelensky says

Volodymyr Zelensky attends a press conference in Kyiv, Ukraine on July 11.

A Russian guided aerial bomb struck a blood transfusion center in Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region Saturday, according to President Volodymyr Zelensky.

He said on Telegram there are dead and wounded victims as a result of the attack, but did not provide any specific numbers.

Zelensky said the blood transfusion center is located in the Kupyansk community, where Russia has recently amassed troops on the eastern front line. A fire broke out at the center following the attack, he added.

CNN cannot independently verify reports about attacks on the front lines in Ukraine.

The area was liberated in a Ukrainian counteroffensive last fall.

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