Russia attacks Ukraine
Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a “special
military operation” against Ukraine. Missile strikes followed.
By
ALEXANDER WARD, NAHAL TOOSI and PAUL MCLEARY
02/23/2022
10:11 PM EST
Updated:
02/24/2022 12:56 AM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/02/23/russia-invasion-ukraine-00011238
Russian
missiles struck airports, military positions and cities across Ukraine,
including the capital of Kyiv, early Thursday as Vladimir Putin launched the
most dangerous phase of his eight-year war.
Witnesses
and reporters heard blasts from Kharkiv in the east to Kyiv in the north to
Odessa in the south, signaling Russian’s sights are set far beyond the Donbas
region.
In a
statement, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his nation suffered
“strikes on military and other important defense facilities,” adding that
“border units are under attack, the situation in the Donbas has degraded.”
“This is an
unjustified, deceitful and cynical invasion,” he said.
Separately,
Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov added that the “enemy began intense
shelling of our units in the east, as well as military control centers and
airfields in other regions.”
CNN quoted
a Ukrainian government official who said the attack has already led to hundreds
of casualties, a figure POLITICO could not immediately verify.
Zelenskyy
spoke with Biden early Thursday morning local time. In a statement about the
call, Biden said “the United States and our Allies and partners will be
imposing severe sanctions on Russia.”
The strikes
on Ukraine followed Putin’s announcement of a “special military operation”
against Ukraine, during which he falsely claimed that two Moscow-backed
breakaway regions inside Ukraine were under attack by Kyiv’s forces.
Putin
declared: “I have declared a special military operation” for the
“demilitarization and de-Nazification of Ukraine.”
“This is
the red line that I have spoken of many times,” he continued, apparently
wearing the same red tie and speaking from the same office from which he gave
an address on Monday. “They have crossed it.” Putin vowed not to occupy the
country, but demanded that Ukrainian forces lay down their arms or bear
responsibility for “bloodshed.”
And in a
clear message to the United States and its allies, Putin warned foreign powers
not to interfere in his operation: “If you do, you will face consequences
greater than any you have faced in history. All relevant decisions have been
taken. I hope you hear me.”
His
pronouncement at 5:45 a.m. Moscow time — during a simultaneous U.N. Security
Council meeting in New York, at which Western nations pleaded for Putin to
exercise restraint and de-escalate — could spark the largest land war in Europe
since World War II, one that could result in the deaths of thousands of
Ukrainian and Russian troops and civilians, and spark a refugee crisis.
Putin
rebuked months of Western diplomatic entreaties to end the crisis sparked by
the amassing of Moscow’s nearly 200,000 troops on Ukraine’s border. Instead of
shaking American and European hands, the Russian president slapped them away,
pointing his forces toward the Ukrainian lands he has directed them to seize.
Zelenskyy
made an impassioned speech in the early hours of Thursday morning local time,
rallying his country in the national tongue before switching to Russian in an
appeal not to the Kremlin, but to Russian citizens. “Lots of you have relatives
in Ukraine, you studied in Ukrainian universities, you have Ukrainian friends,”
he said. “You know our character, our principles, what matters to us. Listen to
yourselves, to the voice of reason. The people of Ukraine want peace.”
Shortly
thereafter, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Gen. Mark Milley, the
Joint Chiefs chair, told different outlets the Russian assault could begin
before the sun rose in Kyiv on Thursday.
They were
right.
“The
prayers of the entire world are with the people of Ukraine tonight as they
suffer an unprovoked and unjustified attack by Russian military forces,”
President Joe Biden said in a statement released by the White House. “President
Putin has chosen a premeditated war that will bring a catastrophic loss of life
and human suffering. Russia alone is responsible for the death and destruction
this attack will bring, and the United States and its Allies and partners will
respond in a united and decisive way. The world will hold Russia accountable.”
Biden will
address the nation on Thursday morning after an emergency meeting with members
of the G7 at 9 a.m. on the Russia-Ukraine situation.
Western
leaders warned for weeks that the chances of getting Putin to turn back were
low amid intelligence reports that said he had, in recent weeks, sufficient
military forces along Ukraine’s border to invade “at any time.” Now they hope
that an escalating series of sanctions will prove strong enough to deter Russia
from pushing deeper into Ukraine.
“President
Putin gets a vote. And if his vote is for aggression, we’re fully prepared for
that,” Blinken told ABC News on Wednesday night shortly before the Russian
leader’s address.
For the
moment, Putin seems willing to withstand the crushing effects of those
penalties on his inner circle, his people and the Russian economy. He also
seems confident that his reconstituted military can overwhelm Ukraine’s professional
and civilian resistance, despite the injection into the country of U.S. and
NATO arms, ammunition and funding.
U.S.
lawmakers say the West must make Putin pay. “[T]he entire Post World War
international order sits on a knife edge. If Putin does not pay a devastating
price for this transgression, then our own security will soon be at risk,” Sen.
Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), a longtime Ukraine backer on the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, said in a statement.
The latest
Russian military moves sent markets reeling around the world. Oil prices
surged, with the benchmark Brent crude oil topping $100 a barrel for the first
time since 2014. Stock futures tumbled due to worries about the impact of
higher energy costs, while traders braced for a new round of sanctions against
Russia expected from the U.S. and its allies on Thursday.
The Russian
president, who first invaded and laid claim to pieces of Ukraine in 2014, has
long indicated he believes that Ukraine is a part of Russia.
“Modern
Ukraine was entirely created by Russia or, to be more precise, by Bolshevik,
Communist Russia. This process started practically right after the 1917
revolution, and Lenin and his associates did it in a way that was extremely
harsh on Russia — by separating, severing what is historically Russian land,”
he said earlier this week in a dark and meandering speech filled with
historical falsehoods.
It seems
clear that his goal is to further extend Moscow’s influence over former parts
of the Soviet Union, whose dissolution Putin has called the “greatest
geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century.”
How far his
desire to reclaim former glories will drive him during the conflict remains a
big question at the start of this new phase in the war. U.S. and European
officials, as well as analysts, assess that Russia will try to take eastern
Ukrainian lands up to the Dnieper river that roughly bifurcates the country.
And with varying levels of confidence, they suggest that Russia has designs to
capture Kyiv, not just attack it.
To date,
neither the U.S. nor any NATO country says it wants to send troops to assist
Kyiv — leaving Ukrainians largely on their own to fight against Moscow’s
troops. The U.S. and its allies intend to continue supplying the Ukrainians
with arms throughout the war.
Putin’s
goal appears to be to push back NATO to its pre-1997 posture, a demand roundly
rejected by Washington and its alliance allies. Biden has made clear that U.S.
troops in the region are not there to fight Ukraine’s war, but will defend
every inch of NATO territory.
The Kremlin
boss and his top aides sought to frame an invasion as a response to an
expanding alliance and a westward-leaning Ukraine. Kyiv’s desire to eventually
join NATO — emphasized passionately by Zelenskyy over recent weeks — was portrayed
in Moscow as an existential threat to Russia’s stability.
But Western
leaders repeatedly made clear that Kyiv had the right to set its own course and
not bow under pressure from its larger neighbor, even as they emphasized it
would take years before Ukraine could become NATO’s 31st member.
Now,
Ukraine is battling simply to remain a member of the international community.
“We will
defend ourselves. When you attack, you will see our faces, not our backs,”
Zelenskyy said in his speech hours before Russian troops attacked.
Sudeep
Reddy contributed to this report.
Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a “special
military operation” against Ukraine. Missile strikes followed.
By
ALEXANDER WARD, NAHAL TOOSI and PAUL MCLEARY
02/23/2022
10:11 PM EST
Updated:
02/24/2022 12:56 AM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/02/23/russia-invasion-ukraine-00011238
Russian
missiles struck airports, military positions and cities across Ukraine,
including the capital of Kyiv, early Thursday as Vladimir Putin launched the
most dangerous phase of his eight-year war.
Witnesses
and reporters heard blasts from Kharkiv in the east to Kyiv in the north to
Odessa in the south, signaling Russian’s sights are set far beyond the Donbas
region.
In a
statement, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his nation suffered
“strikes on military and other important defense facilities,” adding that
“border units are under attack, the situation in the Donbas has degraded.”
“This is an
unjustified, deceitful and cynical invasion,” he said.
Separately,
Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov added that the “enemy began intense
shelling of our units in the east, as well as military control centers and
airfields in other regions.”
CNN quoted
a Ukrainian government official who said the attack has already led to hundreds
of casualties, a figure POLITICO could not immediately verify.
Zelenskyy
spoke with Biden early Thursday morning local time. In a statement about the
call, Biden said “the United States and our Allies and partners will be
imposing severe sanctions on Russia.”
The strikes
on Ukraine followed Putin’s announcement of a “special military operation”
against Ukraine, during which he falsely claimed that two Moscow-backed
breakaway regions inside Ukraine were under attack by Kyiv’s forces.
Putin
declared: “I have declared a special military operation” for the
“demilitarization and de-Nazification of Ukraine.”
“This is
the red line that I have spoken of many times,” he continued, apparently
wearing the same red tie and speaking from the same office from which he gave
an address on Monday. “They have crossed it.” Putin vowed not to occupy the
country, but demanded that Ukrainian forces lay down their arms or bear
responsibility for “bloodshed.”
And in a
clear message to the United States and its allies, Putin warned foreign powers
not to interfere in his operation: “If you do, you will face consequences
greater than any you have faced in history. All relevant decisions have been
taken. I hope you hear me.”
His
pronouncement at 5:45 a.m. Moscow time — during a simultaneous U.N. Security
Council meeting in New York, at which Western nations pleaded for Putin to
exercise restraint and de-escalate — could spark the largest land war in Europe
since World War II, one that could result in the deaths of thousands of
Ukrainian and Russian troops and civilians, and spark a refugee crisis.
Putin
rebuked months of Western diplomatic entreaties to end the crisis sparked by
the amassing of Moscow’s nearly 200,000 troops on Ukraine’s border. Instead of
shaking American and European hands, the Russian president slapped them away,
pointing his forces toward the Ukrainian lands he has directed them to seize.
Zelenskyy
made an impassioned speech in the early hours of Thursday morning local time,
rallying his country in the national tongue before switching to Russian in an
appeal not to the Kremlin, but to Russian citizens. “Lots of you have relatives
in Ukraine, you studied in Ukrainian universities, you have Ukrainian friends,”
he said. “You know our character, our principles, what matters to us. Listen to
yourselves, to the voice of reason. The people of Ukraine want peace.”
Shortly
thereafter, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Gen. Mark Milley, the
Joint Chiefs chair, told different outlets the Russian assault could begin
before the sun rose in Kyiv on Thursday.
They were
right.
“The
prayers of the entire world are with the people of Ukraine tonight as they
suffer an unprovoked and unjustified attack by Russian military forces,”
President Joe Biden said in a statement released by the White House. “President
Putin has chosen a premeditated war that will bring a catastrophic loss of life
and human suffering. Russia alone is responsible for the death and destruction
this attack will bring, and the United States and its Allies and partners will
respond in a united and decisive way. The world will hold Russia accountable.”
Biden will
address the nation on Thursday morning after an emergency meeting with members
of the G7 at 9 a.m. on the Russia-Ukraine situation.
Western
leaders warned for weeks that the chances of getting Putin to turn back were
low amid intelligence reports that said he had, in recent weeks, sufficient
military forces along Ukraine’s border to invade “at any time.” Now they hope
that an escalating series of sanctions will prove strong enough to deter Russia
from pushing deeper into Ukraine.
“President
Putin gets a vote. And if his vote is for aggression, we’re fully prepared for
that,” Blinken told ABC News on Wednesday night shortly before the Russian
leader’s address.
For the
moment, Putin seems willing to withstand the crushing effects of those
penalties on his inner circle, his people and the Russian economy. He also
seems confident that his reconstituted military can overwhelm Ukraine’s professional
and civilian resistance, despite the injection into the country of U.S. and
NATO arms, ammunition and funding.
U.S.
lawmakers say the West must make Putin pay. “[T]he entire Post World War
international order sits on a knife edge. If Putin does not pay a devastating
price for this transgression, then our own security will soon be at risk,” Sen.
Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), a longtime Ukraine backer on the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, said in a statement.
The latest
Russian military moves sent markets reeling around the world. Oil prices
surged, with the benchmark Brent crude oil topping $100 a barrel for the first
time since 2014. Stock futures tumbled due to worries about the impact of
higher energy costs, while traders braced for a new round of sanctions against
Russia expected from the U.S. and its allies on Thursday.
The Russian
president, who first invaded and laid claim to pieces of Ukraine in 2014, has
long indicated he believes that Ukraine is a part of Russia.
“Modern
Ukraine was entirely created by Russia or, to be more precise, by Bolshevik,
Communist Russia. This process started practically right after the 1917
revolution, and Lenin and his associates did it in a way that was extremely
harsh on Russia — by separating, severing what is historically Russian land,”
he said earlier this week in a dark and meandering speech filled with
historical falsehoods.
It seems
clear that his goal is to further extend Moscow’s influence over former parts
of the Soviet Union, whose dissolution Putin has called the “greatest
geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century.”
How far his
desire to reclaim former glories will drive him during the conflict remains a
big question at the start of this new phase in the war. U.S. and European
officials, as well as analysts, assess that Russia will try to take eastern
Ukrainian lands up to the Dnieper river that roughly bifurcates the country.
And with varying levels of confidence, they suggest that Russia has designs to
capture Kyiv, not just attack it.
To date,
neither the U.S. nor any NATO country says it wants to send troops to assist
Kyiv — leaving Ukrainians largely on their own to fight against Moscow’s
troops. The U.S. and its allies intend to continue supplying the Ukrainians
with arms throughout the war.
Putin’s
goal appears to be to push back NATO to its pre-1997 posture, a demand roundly
rejected by Washington and its alliance allies. Biden has made clear that U.S.
troops in the region are not there to fight Ukraine’s war, but will defend
every inch of NATO territory.
The Kremlin
boss and his top aides sought to frame an invasion as a response to an
expanding alliance and a westward-leaning Ukraine. Kyiv’s desire to eventually
join NATO — emphasized passionately by Zelenskyy over recent weeks — was portrayed
in Moscow as an existential threat to Russia’s stability.
But Western
leaders repeatedly made clear that Kyiv had the right to set its own course and
not bow under pressure from its larger neighbor, even as they emphasized it
would take years before Ukraine could become NATO’s 31st member.
Now,
Ukraine is battling simply to remain a member of the international community.
“We will
defend ourselves. When you attack, you will see our faces, not our backs,”
Zelenskyy said in his speech hours before Russian troops attacked.
Sudeep
Reddy contributed to this report.
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