Los Angeles Times

Ukraine launches more drones and missiles at Russia

Moscow says it foiled attacks as Kyiv aims to press its campaign across the border.

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Russian air defenses downed dozens of Ukrainian drones in occupied Crimea and southern Russia on Friday, officials said, as Kyiv pressed its strategy of targeting the Moscow-annexed peninsula and taking the 22month war beyond Ukraine’s borders.

Air-raid sirens wailed in Sevastopol, the largest city on the Crimean peninsula, and traffic was suspended for a second consecutiv­e day on a bridge connecting Crimea, which Moscow seized illegally a decade ago, with Russia’s southern Krasnodar region. The span is a crucial supply link for Russia’s war effort.

The Russian Defense Ministry said its defenses intercepte­d 36 drones over Crimea and one over Krasnodar, part of an emerging pattern of intensifie­d Ukrainian aerial attacks in recent days.

A Ukrainian Neptune anti-ship missile also was destroyed over the northweste­rn part of the Black Sea, the ministry said.

The developmen­ts came after three people were injured Thursday night by other Ukrainian rocket and drone attacks on the Russian border city of Belgorod and the surroundin­g region, said Belgorod Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov. He posted photograph­s on Telegram of an apartment building with some shattered windows and damaged cars.

On Dec. 30, Ukrainian attacks on Belgorod killed 25 people, officials there said.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has pledged to strike more targets on the Crimean peninsula and inside Russian border regions this year. The goal is to unsettle Russians as President Vladimir Putin seeks another six years in power in a March 17 election.

A Ukrainian attack on military facilities in Crimea on Thursday affected a command center and the peninsula’s air defense system, according to a spokespers­on for Ukraine’s southern joint forces, Nataliia Humeniuk.

She said the Russian military recently relocated its Crimean launch sites for Shahed drones.

It was not possible to verify either side’s claims.

Following a drone strike deep inside Russia last year,

Zelensky said Ukraine had developed a weapon that can hit targets 400 miles away. He said last month that Kyiv plans to produce 1 million drones, which have become a key battlefiel­d weapon.

Other Ukrainian officials said the country aims to manufactur­e more than 10,000 attack drones this year with a range of hundreds of miles, as well as more than 1,000 longerrang­e drones that can hit targets well behind the front line and inside Russia.

Both sides are raising the stakes of their long-range warfare as soldiers remain bogged down on the wintry battlefiel­d. The British Defense Ministry said Friday that “ground combat has continued to be characteri­zed by either a static front line or very gradual, local Russian advances in key sectors.”

The Kremlin, meanwhile, has acquired ballistic missiles from North Korea and fired at least one of them into Ukraine on Saturday, the White House said Thursday. Russia also is seeking close-range ballistic missiles from Iran, National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said.

British Defense Secretary Grant Shapps said Pyongyang would pay a high price for supporting Russia, although he didn’t say in what way, and he accused Putin’s government of violating a United Nations embargo on arms shipments to and from North Korea.

“The world has turned its back on Russia, forcing Putin into the humiliatio­n of going cap in hand to North Korea to keep his illegal invasion going,” Shapps said on X, formerly Twitter.

Asked about the developmen­t, Ukrainian Air Force spokesman Yurii Ihnat said in televised comments Friday that he couldn’t immediatel­y confirm the use of the North Korean-supplied missiles. Russian officials have refrained from commenting on previous U.S. claims that North Korea has supplied ammunition to Moscow.

Ukraine said it stopped 21 of 29 Russian Shahed drones launched late Thursday and early Friday. The assault injured two people, including a 14-year-old.

Ukraine should conduct “an escalating campaign of airstrikes on targets far behind the front lines throughout occupied Ukraine and inside Russia itself,” according to Mykola Bielieskov, a research fellow at Ukraine’s National Institute for Strategic Studies.

 ?? Telegram channel of Russia Emergency Situations Ministry ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS EXTINGUISH burning cars after Ukraine’s shelling in Belgorod, Russia, last week.
Telegram channel of Russia Emergency Situations Ministry FIREFIGHTE­RS EXTINGUISH burning cars after Ukraine’s shelling in Belgorod, Russia, last week.

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