December 14, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news | CNN

December 14, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news

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Teen makes harrowing journey from Ukraine to Carnegie Hall
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What we covered here

  • Ukrainian air defense forces shot down 13 Iranian-made drones over Kyiv, President Volodymyr Zelensky said, following a barrage of Russian strikes on the capital. The state energy operator said none of its power infrastructure was damaged.
  • The Biden administration is finalizing plans to send an advanced long-range air defense system to Ukraine to help counter Moscow’s attacks, US officials told CNN.
  • Russia cannot “defeat the NATO bloc” in Ukraine without using nuclear weapons, a Russian commander said. The Kremlin has not publicly responded to his comments. 
  • Russian strikes on critical infrastructure in Ukraine have put the physical and mental health of “almost every child” in the country “at desperate risk,” UNICEF has said.
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Russia publicizes installation of intercontinental missile ahead of "Strategic Forces Day"

This video still shows a "Yars" ballistic missile loaded into a silo launcher in the Kaluga region.

In a further sign of the importance it attaches to its strategic nuclear deterrent, the Russian military has loaded a “Yars” ballistic missile into a silo launcher in the Kaluga region.

The Ministry of Defense released video to mark the event, just ahead of Russia’s “Day of Strategic Missile Forces.”

It said that an “intercontinental ballistic missile of the Yars complex was loaded into a silo launcher at the Kozelsky missile formation in the Kaluga region.”

“The importance of this operation lies in the fact that the missile will be on combat duty as planned. The Motherland will receive another sample of nuclear missile weapons, which will allow us to solve any tasks at the strategic level,” said Alexei Sokolov, commander of the Kozelsky missile formation, in a video shared by the ministry together with the statement.

Patriot defense system: The announcement of Russia’s intercontinental missile installation comes after reports that the Biden administration is finalizing plans to send an advanced long-range air defense system to Ukraine to help counter Moscow’s attacks.

It's Wednesday night in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know.

Local residents gather near a building destroyed by a Russian drone attack in Kyiv on December 14.

The Biden administration is finalizing plans to send an advanced long-range air defense system to Ukraine to help counter Moscow’s attacks, US officials told CNN.

Here are some of the latest developments:

  • “Saboteurs” take out utility substation in Russian-occupied city: The Russian-appointed head of the occupied city of Berdyansk in southern Ukraine said more than 10,000 customers are without electricity after Ukrainian “saboteurs” blew up a substation.
  • Russian citizen indicted in smuggling case: The US Justice Department released an indictment that said Russian citizen Vadim Konoshchenok was arrested in Estonia last week after attempting to smuggle 20 cases of US-made sniper rifle ammunition into Russia in late November.
  • Moscow targets Kyiv: President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukraine’s air defense shot down “all 13” drones used to strike the capital on Wednesday. The assaults were “aimed at the critical infrastructure of the region and capital,” according to a local official.
  • American included in prisoner swap: An American named as 35-year-old Suedi Mureksezi was part of a 65-person prisoner swap in Ukraine on Wednesday, according to the Ukrainian presidential office.
  • “Children are facing a bleak winter”: Russian strikes on critical infrastructure in Ukraine have put the physical and mental health of almost all seven million children in the country “at desperate risk,” UNICEF warned Wednesday.
  • Russian commander cites nuclear weapons: Russia can’t “defeat the NATO bloc” in Ukraine without using nuclear weapons, Commander Alexander Khodakovsky of the Russian militia in the eastern Donetsk region said on state television.

Ukraine's security service carries out more raids on Orthodox Church premises suspected of being pro-Moscow

The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) said Wednesday it had carried out searches of premises belonging to a branch of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in nine regions — finding Russian passports, propagandist literature and “passes of the occupiers.”

Part of the church in Ukraine — which split earlier this year — remains loyal to the Moscow Patriarchate (MP). 

“The Security Service completed counter-intelligence (security) measures at UOC (MP) facilities in Zakarpattia, Chernivtsi, Rivne, Volyn, Mykolaiv, Sumy, Lviv, Zhytomyr and Kherson regions,” the SBU said. 

It said it found Russian passports, St. George’s ribbons — which are popular among pro-Russian separatists — symbols of the banned pro-Russian party “Opposition Platform For Life” and “manuals for spreading enemy propaganda through the faithful” on the territory of the dioceses.

In addition, intelligence officers found books by Ivan Ilyin, who is often called “Putin’s philosopher,” it said.

In the village of Chornobaivka in Kherson region, the SBU said it had discovered passes of the pro-Russian occupiers during the inspection of the church premises.

It said photographs of Russian documents “on ensuring cooperation with the military commissariats of the Russian Federation” were found in the diocese of the Lviv region.

The SBU also said it had found a monk with a Russian passport and contacts in the Russian Federation on the territory of one of the monasteries of the Rivne region in western Ukraine.

The Lviv diocese said in a statement on Facebook that the SBU had inspected premises and that “no anti-Ukrainian items and literature were found.”

The SBU has stepped up a campaign of raids against parts of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in recent weeks.

Kremlin says any US Patriot missiles possibly sent to Ukraine would "certainly" be targets for Russian forces

The Army test fires a Patriot missile in 2019. The Patriot missile defense systems are designed to counter and destroy incoming short-range ballistic missiles, advanced aircraft and cruise missiles.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said that if US Patriot missiles are sent to Ukraine, they would be legitimate targets for Russian forces.

But he added that the US plan had not been confirmed.

Peskov was asked by CNN if he held the same view as former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, who has said that the missiles “would immediately become a legitimate target of our armed forces.”

“Certainly,” Peskov responded, in remarks later picked up by official Russian news agency TASS. But he added, “I would refrain from comment for now, though, because these are just media reports.”

CNN reported exclusively Tuesday that the Biden administration is finalizing plans to send the Patriot missile defense system to Ukraine, with a decision possibly announced as soon as this week, according to two US officials and a senior administration official.

The Pentagon’s plan still needs to be approved by Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin before it is sent to President Joe Biden for his signature. The three officials told CNN that approval is expected.

It is not clear how many missile launchers will be sent, but a typical Patriot battery includes a radar set that detects and tracks targets, computers, power generating equipment, an engagement control station and up to eight launchers, each holding four ready-to-fire missiles. 

Once the plans are finalized, the Patriots are expected to ship quickly in the coming days and Ukrainians will be trained to use them at a US Army base in Grafenwoehr, Germany, officials told CNN.

Russian officials have repeatedly said that all Western systems sent to Ukraine — including the HIMARS anti-air defenses — will be targeted.

Ukrainian authorities have been seeking Patriot batteries for months but have not confirmed that the US has agreed to dispatch them. On Wednesday, President Volodymyr Zelensky said only that a meeting of the military’s General Staff had talked about the “protection of the sky.”

CNN’s Barbara Starr contributed reporting to this post.

Russia slams arrest of citizen in Estonia who the US says attempted to smuggle ammunition

The detention of Russian citizen Vadim Konoshchenok in Estonia at the request of the United States is “unacceptable,” according to Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Yevgeny Ivanov, who vowed that there will be a response.

The US Justice Department released an indictment Tuesday that said Konoshchenok was arrested in Estonia last week after attempting to smuggle 20 cases of US-made sniper rifle ammunition into Russia in late November.

According to the indictment, Konoshchenok was also stopped by police at the Estonian border with thousands of additional US-made bullets, as well as “semiconductors and other electronic components,” some of which were controlled by the US government “for reasons of anti-terrorism.”

Konoshchenok, who the Justice Department believes is an officer for the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB), is one of a group of seven people indicted, including five Russian citizens and two US citizens. Four of the seven remain at large.

Ivanov told Russian state media RIA Novosti on Wednesday that “we will not tolerate this, this is not the first time this has happened, this is an unacceptable practice — the detention of our citizens abroad, and every time we will respond to this.”

He added the Russian side “so far has no information, except for some statements; so far no papers have been seen.”

According to the 16-count indictment, the defendants were associated with two Moscow companies that worked with the FSB to purchase and smuggle sanctioned items — including semiconductors and other electronic equipment — from the US to the Russian military.

An embassy staff member in Estonia visited Konoshchenok on Wednesday, the Russian diplomatic mission in Tallin told state media RIA Novosti.

According to RIA, the Russian diplomatic mission also said that Konoshchenok has a lawyer and “denies accusations of illegal activity.”

“The Estonian court has to make a decision on his possible deportation to the United States within the next 60 days,” according to the statement.

CNN’s Holmes Lybrand contributed reporting to this post.

Negotiations with Russia to end war should be left to Ukrainian President Zelensky, White House official says

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky makes a surprise visit to Kherson on November 14.

US National Security Council special coordinator for communications John Kirby told CNN Wednesday that any discussions on whether it’s time to negotiate with Russian President Vladimir Putin for an end to the war in Ukraine should be left “to President Zelensky, not the United States,” while acknowledging that initial assessments that the war could end by year’s end seem unlikely. 

He continued: “And both sides are still in violent fighting in the Donbas, particularly in and around Bakhmut – a small area comparatively speaking to some of the other battles of Ukraine over the last nine months, but very intense fighting– and the Russians are in defensive positions all throughout the South, while the Ukrainians continue to try to press. So, there is active fighting going on right now, we would expect that that would continue for some time going forward.”

Kirby said that while military analysts have suggested winter freezes may cause a lull in skirmishes as conditions become less ideal for fighting in the air and on the ground in Ukraine, “we have no expectation that the fighting will stop in the winter months to come.” 

Ukrainian security services arrest alleged Kherson collaborator

The Ukrainian Security Services (SBU) said the owner of a fleet of buses in Kherson has been arrested for providing transportation to Russian troops while the region was occupied.

The SBU said in a statement that the man “provided buses to transport occupiers from Crimea to Kherson” in southern Ukraine.

It said more than 50 buses were used to transport occupying troops.

The man had later tried to leave Ukraine for Moldova but was detained as he attempted to cross the border.

“In exchange for cooperation, the enemy promised not to interfere in his business,” it said.

Security Services disclose raids: The SBU also said that it carried out raids on premises of two banned pro-Russian political parties in Ukraine: the Communist Party and “Rus Yedyna.”

The raids took place in Kyiv, Dnipro and Kryvyi Rih. The SBU said that “weapons, St. George ribbons [frequently used by pro-Russian separatists] and flags of the aggressor country were found. In addition, warehouses with pro-Kremlin literature, propaganda leaflets with the symbols of the totalitarian regime of the USSR and ‘manuals’ of Russian propagandists were found.”

The SBU alleged that “Communist Party officials planned to use the whole ‘arsenal’ of propaganda tools to conduct agitation and mass events in support of the enemy in case of capture of Kyiv and Dnipropetrovsk region.”

In recent weeks, the SBU has also stepped up raids against parts of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church seen as sympathetic to Russia.

Ukrainian "saboteurs" knocked out power substation in occupied territory, pro-Russian officials says

The Russian-appointed head of the occupied city of Berdyansk in southern Ukraine said more than 10,000 customers are without electricity after Ukrainian “saboteurs” blew up a substation.

Alexander Saulenko, the acting head of the administration of Berdyansk, said “the explosion of a transformer substation carried out by Ukrainian saboteurs” had taken place Tuesday night. The official said the explosive device had been planted.

Berdyansk is on the Sea of Azov, in Zaporizhzhia region.

On Monday night, a key bridge for the resupply of Russian armed forces in Melitopol — also in Zaporizhzhia — was targeted according to both Ukrainian and Russian sources. 

The bridge connects the main part of the city of Melitopol to a suburb. 

Ukraine’s strikes in the area: Kyiv’s attacks deep in occupied territory in Zaporizhzhia have grown in recent weeks.

On Tuesday, the Ukrainian military reported that Ukrainian strikes destroyed the command post of the Russian 58th Combined Arms Army in Melitopol, and further strikes against Enerhodar, Tokmak, and Hulyaipole cumulatively wounded 150 personnel and destroyed three artillery installations.

One Russian military blogger suggested this week that the tactic in Zaporizhzhia is reminiscent of targeting carried out by the Ukrainians against Russian forces in Kherson before the Ukrainian military advanced there last month.

Russian shelling hits Kherson regional administration building

Smoke and debris rises as the Kherson Regional State Administration building is hit by Russian shelling in Kherson, Ukraine, in this still image from video released December 14.

Russian strikes hit the regional administration building in Kherson on Wednesday morning, amid a wave of fatal shelling on the southern Ukrainian region.

The attack took place at 11 a.m. local time and “the Russians fired at the center of the Kherson with multiple rocket launchers,” the deputy head of Ukraine’s Presidential Office said on Telegram.

“The shells hit the building of Kherson Regional Military Administration – two floors were damaged,” Kyrylo Tymoshenko added.

There were no casualties.

Video posted by the Kherson regional military administration shows the damage inside and outside the building.

Another video on social media clearly documents the administration building being struck, with a large plume of grey smoke rising from it.

On Tuesday, Kherson was shelled 42 times, according to Yarsolav Yanushevych, head of the Kherson regional military administration.

The targets on Tuesday included a yacht club, a college, a school and residential buildings. One person was killed and one was injured.

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

Ukrainian air defense forces warded off Russian strikes aimed at key infrastructure in Kyiv on Wednesday, as the country grapples with heat and electricity supply issues amid a harsh winter season.

Here are the latest developments:

  • Moscow targets Kyiv: President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukraine’s air defense shot down “all 13” drones used to strike the capital on Wednesday. The assaults were “aimed at the critical infrastructure of the region and capital,” according to a local official.
  • American included in prisoner swap: An American named as 35-year-old Suedi Mureksezi was part of a 65-person prisoner swap in Ukraine on Wednesday, according to the Ukrainian presidential office.
  • ‘Children are facing a bleak winter’: Russian strikes on critical infrastructure in Ukraine have put the physical and mental health of almost all seven million children in the country “at desperate risk,” UNICEF warned Wednesday.
  • Russian commander cites nuclear weapons: Russia can’t “defeat the NATO bloc” in Ukraine without using nuclear weapons, Commander Alexander Khodakovsky of the Russian militia in the eastern Donetsk region said on state television Tuesday. 
  • Brittney Griner reacts to Paul Whelan: Brittney Griner is “heartbroken” that Paul Whelan is still detained in Russia, her agent, Lindsay Kagawa Colas, told CNN’s Anderson Cooper Tuesday. Colas said Griner is thinking about how she can help people detained overseas.
  • Zelensky thanks EU for support: Zelensky thanked the European Union on Tuesday for its $19 billion aid package “to get through this winter,” as well as an additional $1 billion pledged by dozens of countries during a donor conference in France earlier in the day.

Kremlin says no proposals received for Christmas and New Year ceasefire

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends an annual end-of-year news conference in Moscow, Russia, on December 23, 2021.

Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov was asked by reporters on Wednesday whether Russia is considering a truce for the Christmas and New Year holidays.

Peskov said Moscow has not received proposals for a possible ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia for the holiday period, adding that “this topic is not on the agenda.”

His comments were made on a regular briefing call, amid a barrage of fresh Russian strikes on Kyiv.

American included in 65-person prisoner swap in Ukraine

64 soldiers of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, who fought in the Donetsk and Luhansk areas and participated in the defense of the city of Bakhmut, will return home from captivity.

An American was part of a 65-person prisoner swap in Ukraine on Wednesday, according to the Ukrainian presidential office.

The American was named as 35-year-old Suedi Mureksezi.

“He was captured by the occupiers in June in Kherson city allegedly “for participation in pro-Ukrainian rallies,” Andrii Yermak, head of the Office of the President, said.

Fifty-nine of the prisoners were “representatives of the Armed Forces of Ukraine,” while five others were from the territorial defense, the Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War in Ukraine said.

Four were officers and the rest were part of the “rank and file,” it said, adding that the oldest person in the swap was 57 and the youngest was 19.

“The vast majority” of those captured were from frontline areas such as Bakhmut, Soledar, Zaitseve and other places in Donetsk and Luhansk, the Coordination Headquarters added.

Ukrainian children's physical and mental health "at desperate risk" as war drags on, says UNICEF

A child on a swing outside a residential building damaged by a missile on February 25, in Kyiv, Ukraine.

Russian strikes on critical infrastructure in Ukraine have put the physical and mental health of “almost every child” in the country “at desperate risk,” UNICEF warned Wednesday.

As the war approaches the ten-month mark, temperatures continue to drop and residents are left without sustained access to electricity, heating and water, the almost seven million children in Ukraine face not only extreme cold, but are also unable to get access to education and healthcare, UNICEF said in a statement.  

“Beyond the immediate threats the freezing conditions bring, children are also deprived of the ability to learn or stay connected with friends and family, putting both their physical and their mental health at desperate risk.”  

Damaged health facilities may be unable to provide critical services, while malfunctioning water systems “raise the already extremely high risks of pneumonia, seasonal influenza, waterborne diseases and Covid-19,” UNICEF said.  

Furthermore, a “bleak winter will also likely worsen the psychosocial situation for children, who are already facing a looming mental health crisis,” UNICEF said, with an estimated 1.5 million children at risk of depression, anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorders and other mental conditions.  

“The harsh winter, combined with a loss of income and the energy and socioeconomic crisis triggered by the war are devastating to the well-being of children and families,” UNICEF said. It added that the situation is “especially acute” for the 6.5 million people, including 1.2 million children, who are currently displaced within Ukraine.  

Moscow has unleashed a wave of strikes in recent months that has destroyed about 40% of Ukraine’s power production, “further exposing families to harsh winter conditions, impacting livelihoods, and increasing the likelihood of additional large population movements,” UNICEF said.

“The rules of war are clear – children and the essential civilian infrastructure they rely on to survive must be protected,” said Russell. 

No energy infrastructure facilities damaged in Kyiv following drone attacks, says state energy supplier

Ukraine’s state energy supplier said none of its power infrastructure in Kyiv was damaged on Wednesday morning, following a wave of drone attacks across the city.

“Thanks to the brilliant work of air defense forces, energy infrastructure facilities were not damaged – all 13 UAVs were shot down,” Ukrenergo said in a statement.

The company also gave a brief update on the energy supply situation nationwide.

In the east of the country repairs are slow and getting more dangerous to undertake “due to almost daily shelling,” it said.

“Energy facilities are constantly damaged. Repair works are slowing down due to the danger to the lives of repairmen.”

Russia has unleashed a barrage of strikes targeting critical infrastructure in Ukraine in recent months, leaving millions of residents without access to heat and electricity amid a harsh winter season.

Pope suggests buying fewer Christmas presents and donating to Ukraine instead 

Pope Francis speaks as Prefect of the Pontifical House, Monsignor Leonardo Sapienza, left, looks on during the weekly general audience on December 14, at Paul-VI hall in The Vatican.

Pope Francis has suggested buying fewer presents at Christmas this year and donating the proceeds to Ukraine instead, as Russia’s invasion approaches the ten-month mark.

“They are suffering so much, so so much,” Francis added, citing the cold weather and the lack of food and medicine.

“It’s good to celebrate this Christmas.

“But let’s spend less, have a more humble Christmas with more humble presents and send what we save to the people in Ukraine.”

Zelensky says "all 13" drones were shot down in Kyiv strikes

President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukraine’s air defense shot down “all 13” drones used to strike Kyiv on Wednesday, as Moscow launched a barrage of attacks on the capital.

“This morning terrorists started with 13 Shaheds … All 13 were shot down by our Ukrainian air defense. Well done. I am proud. Dear citizens, we thank the air defense, and do not forget about the sirens,” Zelensky said.

The assaults were “aimed at the critical infrastructure of the region and capital,” according to Oleksii Kuleba, the head of Kyiv regional military administration.

Russia has targeted power facilities across Ukraine in recent months, using missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), or drones, in an attempt to wipe out the country’s energy infrastructure amid a grueling winter season.

"For Ryazan": Message on downed drone appears to reference alleged air base attack

Parts of a drone with "For Ryazan" written in Russian on it are seen at the site of a building damaged by a drone attack in Kyiv on Wednesday.

A drone launched by Russian in assaults on Kyiv Wednesday carried the message “For Ryazan” — an apparent reference to an alleged Ukrainian attack last week on an air base inside Russian territory.

The message was seen in a video posted to Telegram by a Kyiv municipal TV channel.

Last week, Russian officials claimed Ukrainian drones carried out strikes on two air bases and an air field in Russia, with satellite imagery and photographs indicating some damage was done to Russian military planes at one base in the western Ryazan region.

The Ukrainian Defense Ministry has offered no official comment on the explosions, and the Ukrainian government has not acknowledged adding long-range attack drones to its arsenal. However, a top Ukrainian official last week tweeted a cryptic message hinting at the possibility that Kyiv was indeed behind the attacks.

Kyiv attacks: Serhii Popko, head of Kyiv’s military administration, said the number of Russian drones taken out by Ukrainian air defenses over the capital region on Wednesday had climbed to 13.

Popko said “two waves” of drones were launched toward the city, but did not specify the total number of devices.

Fragments of one of the downed drones hit an administrative building and four more residential buildings were “slightly damaged,” he said. No casualties were reported.

Drone attacks were launched from Sea of Azov, Ukrainian Air Force says 

The Russian drones that targeted Kyiv in a series of attacks on Wednesday morning were “strike UAVs flying from the east coast of the Sea of Azov,” the Ukrainian Air Force said.

The inland Sea of Azov is located between mainland Ukraine to the north, Crimea to the west and Russia’s Kuban region to the east.

Ukraine’s air defense forces shot down multiple Iranian-made drones as Kyiv came under a barrage of Russian attacks that damaged buildings, the capital’s military administration said earlier.

Attacks from Russian missiles and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), or drones, over the past two months have destroyed key infrastructure across Ukraine.

Kyiv air defenses shoot down another drone

Ukraine’s air defense forces shot down one more Iranian-made “Shahed” drone over the Kyiv region in the early hours of Wednesday, the city’s military administration said on Telegram — taking the total to 11. 

Earlier, Kyiv’s Mayor Vitali Klitschko reported that 10 Russian drones had been taken out. 

Two administrative buildings in the city’s Shevchenkivskiy district and a home in the village of Vyshneve were damaged in the attacks, according to Kyrylo Tymoshenko, deputy head of the Ukrainian President’s office. 

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US DOJ charges 5 Russian and 2 US nationals with conspiring to violate sanctions by smuggling equipment to Russian military
Exclusive: US finalizing plans to send Patriot missile defense system to Ukraine
After meager rations in a Russian penal colony, Brittney Griner is welcomed back to the US with a Christmas tree and barbecue