Russia accuses Ukraine of trying to kill Putin
with Kremlin drone strike
Zelenskiy adviser denies Ukrainian involvement after
Kremlin says two attack drones were disabled by Russian defences
Russia-Ukraine
war – latest news updates
Pjotr Sauer
Wed 3 May
2023 14.01 EDT
Moscow has
accused Kyiv of staging a drone attack intended to kill the Russian president,
Vladimir Putin, in the Kremlin, and vowed to retaliate.
The Kremlin
said on Wednesday that two drones had been used in the attack, but that they
had been disabled by Russian defences.
In a
statement published on its website, the Kremlin stated it considered the attack
a planned terrorist act and an attempt on the life of the president of the
Russian Federation.
“Two
unmanned aerial vehicles were aimed at the Kremlin. As a result of timely
actions taken by the military and special services with the use of radar
warfare systems, the vehicles were put out of action,” the Kremlin press
service said. It said that debris from the drone “fell on the territory of the
Kremlin”.
“There were
no victims and material damage,” the Kremlin said, adding that “the Russian
side reserves the right to take retaliatory measures where and when it sees
fit”.
“The
president was not hurt as a result of the terrorist attack,” the Kremlin said.
Putin’s
spokesperson, Dmitry Peskov, said Putin was not in the Kremlin at the time of
the attack. Peskov added that Putin would spend the day at the Novo-Ogaryovo
state residence outside Moscow.
The
Ukrainian president, Volodomyr Zelenskiy, denied that Ukraine was involved in
the attack. He said: “We don’t attack Putin, or Moscow, we fight on our
territory and defend our towns and cities.”
“We leave
it to the tribunal,” Zelenskiy added.
The
Ukrainian president made his comments during a trip to Helsinki, where he also
said Ukraine would launch a counteroffensive against Russian forces soon.
Mykhailo
Podolyak, an adviser to the Ukrainian president, also denied Ukraine’s
involvement in the attack, saying it was the result of “local resistance
forces”.
“Ukraine
wages an exclusive defensive war and does not attack targets on the territory
of the Russian Federation,” Podolyak said in a tweet.
“[The]
emergence of unidentified unmanned aerial vehicles at energy facilities or on
Kremlin’s territory can only indicate the guerrilla activities of local
resistance forces. As you know, drones can be bought at any military store.”
Podolyak
added: “Something is happening in RF [Russia], but definitely without Ukraine’s
drones over the Kremlin.”
One
unverified video circulating on social media showed what appeared to be smoke
coming out of the Kremlin overnight. A second dramatic clip appeared to show
the moment one of the drones hit the rooftop of the Kremlin Senate, an
18th-century mansion within the grounds of the Kremlin that houses the
presidential administration, including Putin’s presidential office.
Several
senior officials swiftly called on Putin to take retaliatory action.
Former
Russian president Dmitry Medvedev said the overnight drone attack on the
Kremlin left Moscow with no options but to “eliminate” Zelenskiy and his
“clique” in Kyiv.
Vyacheslav
Volodin, the chair of the State Duma, said the “Kyiv regime” should be labelled
as terrorists and destroyed. “We will demand the use of weapons that can stop
and destroy the Kyiv terrorist regime,” he added.
Russia has
sustained a number of embarrassing drone attacks on its military bases and fuel
depots over the course of the fighting, including in occupied Crimea. In a
separate incident on Wednesday, a major fire at a fuel depot in southern
Russia’s Krasnodar region broke out as a result of what local authorities said
was a drone attack.
Ukraine
typically declines to claim responsibility for attacks on Russia or
Russian-annexed Crimea, though Kyiv officials have frequently celebrated such
attacks with cryptic or mocking remarks.
If Kyiv or
domestic opposition groups are responsible for the incident, it would once
again expose vulnerabilities in the heart of Russia’s centre of power.
Samuel
Bendett, a drone specialist with the Center for Naval Analyses in the US, said
the video of what appeared to be the second drone raid suggested the craft had
thin wings. That would point to an attack from a relatively sophisticated
operator, he said, although not necessarily a state actor, using a drone such
as a $9,500 (£7,500) Chinese-made Mugin-5.
Fixed-wing
drones have longer ranges and flight times than simple and cheap quadcopters,
and a craft such as a Mugin-5 can theoretically fly for seven hours at about
75mph (120km/h), making long-range operation possible.
Analysts
speculated the drone could also have been a Ukrainian-made UJ-22, which has a
similar speed and range, according to the manufacturer’s website, but the brief
footage and difficulty expanding to a clear image meant any firm identification
was impossible.
The US
secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said he has seen Kremlin reports of the
drone attack but “can’t in any way validate them”.
“We simply
don’t know,” Blinken told reporters. When asked about the US position on any
possible attacks by Ukraine on Russia, he said: “These are decisions for
Ukraine to make about how it is going to defend itself.”
The attack
at the Kremlin came days before the 9 May Victory Day parade that marks the
Soviet victory over Nazi Germany. The Victory Day parade in Red Square, which
is located next to the Kremlin, is a highly symbolic annual demonstration of
military might in Russia,NEWduring which Putin traditionally gives a speech.END
Before
Wednesday’s drone attack, several regions in Russia scrapped their parades amid
fears of Ukrainian strikes. The Kremlin said the parade would go ahead in
Moscow despite the incident.
Earlier in
the year, Russia installed missile systems designed to intercept aircraft and
incoming missiles on top of several defence and administrative buildings in
central Moscow.
“We’ll let
you know in due time,” Putin’s spokesperson Peskov said when asked if Putin
would return to the Kremlin on Thursday.
Additional reporting by Dan Sabbagh


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário