Russia has concentrated more than 100,000 soldiers in the northeast Kupyansk area to try and break Kyiv’s defenses, according to a spokesperson for Ukraine’s military.
Russia launches strikes on Odesa, 24 hours after Kerch Bridge attack
From CNN's Sebastian Shukla, Alex Marquardt, Scott McWhinnie and Josh Pennigton
A CNN team on the ground heard air raid sirens around 2 a.m. local time and saw air defenses operating across the city of Odesa. They also heard four large explosions.
CNN
Explosions were heard in the city of Odesa in southern Ukraine early Tuesday, about 24 hours after an apparent Ukrainian attack on the Kerch Bridge that connects the annexed Crimean Peninsula with mainland Russia.
A CNN team on the ground heard air raid sirens around 2 a.m. local time and saw air defenses operating across the city, followed by four large explosions. Subsequently, it heard four additional explosions and a string of anti-aircraft fire in the port vicinity.
Searchlights were seen coming from the direction of Odesa’s port. The crew captured an object on fire falling out of the sky as well as one large explosion, followed by a large bang.
CNN is not able to confirm where the strikes landed or what were the targets.
Serhiy Bratchuk, a spokesperson for the Odesa military administration, said the Ukraine air defense was repelling a Russian air attack.
“Odesa: Air defense combat work is underway,” Bratchuk said in a Telegram post Tuesday.
Oleh Kiper, head of Odesa’s region’s military administration, said Russia was using drones.
He urged residents to stay in shelters until the air raid sirens ended. At around 4:16 a.m. local time, he posted that the air alert was over for the Odesa region.
Travel “resumed using the opposite direction on the rightmost lane,” Russian Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin said on his Telegram page on Tuesday shortly after midnight local time.
A Ukrainian security official earlier on Monday claimed Kyiv’s responsibility for an attack on the bridge linking the annexed Crimean peninsula to the Russian mainland — a vital supply line for Russia’s war effort in Ukraine and a personal project for President Vladimir Putin.
Khusnullin said officials worked out a temporary solution for organizing traffic on the bridge, saying “the span was additionally tested before making a decision on the possibility of traffic re-opening.”
A video was circulated on social media — that CNN can not independently verify — shows two vehicles crossing the bridge during nighttime.
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Russia pulled out of a critical grain deal. Here's everything you need to know
From CNN staff
Turkish-flagged bulker TQ Samsun, the last ship to leave Ukraine under the U.N.-brokered Black Sea grain deal, is seen in the Black Sea, north of Bosphorus Strait, off Istanbul, Turkey on Monday, July 17.
Mehmet Emin Caliskan/Reuters
Russia has withdrawn from a deal that allows Ukraine to safely export grain to the global market. The decision is being widely criticized as Ukrainian officials urge other leaders to continue the deal without Russia.
The key Crimean bridge linking the annexed peninsula to Russia was hit by two strikes early Monday.
The Black Sea grain deal:
What to know about the deal: The agreement, brokered last year by Turkey and the United Nations, allowed Kyiv to export grain from its ports and navigate safe passage through the Black Sea after Moscow blockaded docks in the region. The deal had been renewed three times, but Russia has argued that it has been hampered in exporting its own products. Over the weekend, Russian President Vladimir Putin indicated that he would not renew the pact, saying that its main purpose — to supply grain to countries in need — had “not been realized.”
What Ukraine is saying: Ukraine wants some version of the deal to continue even without Russia. The head of the Ukrainian Grain Association urged the international community to “find the leverage” to keep moving grain. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he sent official letters to Turkey’s president and the United Nations secretary general with a proposal on how to continue the initiative.
Consequences: Wheat and corn prices on global commodities markets jumped Monday after Russia pulled out of the deal. The collapse of the pact threatens to push up food prices for consumers worldwide. In addition to wheat exports, Ukraine is among the world’s top three exporters of barley, maize and rapeseed oil, according to agricultural data firm Gro Intelligence. It is alsoby far the biggest exporter of sunflower oil, according to the United Nations.
Global reaction: Western officials criticized Moscow’s decision to withdraw from the deal. The White House said Russia’s withdrawal from the plan will worsen food insecurity around the world and urged Russia to reverse its decision. The United Kingdom called the decision a “blatant attempt to harm the most vulnerable as part of its illegal war.” The European Union’s top diplomat Josep Borrell described Russia’s decision as “completely unjustified, weaponizing, the hunger of the people.” France called on Russia to “stop blackmailing global food security.”
The Kerch Bridge:
Key Crimean bridge attacked: A source from Ukraine’s security service (SBU) said the attack on the Kerch Bridge, which killed a couple and injured their daughter, was a joint operation of the SBU and Ukraine’s naval forces. The Kremlin claimed two Ukrainian seaborne drones struck the bridge, though it did not provide evidence for the allegation. The Ukrainian Minister of Digital Transformation later said the bridge was struck by “naval drones.” Putin called it a “terrorist attack” and directed his country’s authorities to investigate.
Why is the bridge important?: The $3.7 billion Kerch Bridge is strategically important because it links Russia’s Krasnodar region with the Crimean Peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russia from Ukraine in 2014. It was the physical expression of Putin’s objective to take over Ukraine and bind it to Russia forever and serves as a vital supply line for Moscow’s war effort in Ukraine.
Other developments:
The eastern front: Russian forces are redeploying around the embattled city of Bakhmut to try and stop Kyiv’s offensive, a top Ukrainian general said. Oleksandr Syrskyi, the commander of the land forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, said conditions on the eastern front are “challenging.” Russia has also concentrated more than 100,000 soldiers in the Kupyansk area, a Ukrainian official said.
The southern front: Ukraine says it is advancing along the southern front, despite Russian airstrikes and a large concentration of landmines, according to the commander of the Tavria Joint Forces. Brig. Gen. Oleksandr Tarnavskyi said Monday. He added that Russian forces had been battering Ukrainian forces, but said the soldiers under his command were firing back.
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Ukrainian foreign minister questions whether Kerch Bridge can be considered civilian infrastructure
From CNN's Josh Pennington and Mohammed Tawfeeq
A satellite image provided by Maxar Technologies shows damaged parts of the bridge connecting the Russian mainland and the Crimean peninsula over the Kerch Strait on Monday, July 17.
Maxar Technologies/AP
Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba challenged whether the Kerch Bridge, which was attacked early Monday, could be considered civilian infrastructure when he said it’s mainly used for military purposes.
A Ukrainian security official earlier on Monday claimed Kyiv’s responsibility for an attack on the bridge linking the annexed Crimean peninsula to the Russian mainland — a vital supply line for Russia’s war effort in Ukraine and a personal project for President Vladimir Putin.
The nearly 12-mile crossing is the longest in Europe and holds huge strategic and symbolic importance for Moscow.
UN-appointed human rights experts call for the immediate release of imprisoned US journalist Gershkovich
Gershkovich stands behind a glass wall of an enclosure for defendants before a court hearing to consider an appeal against his detention, in Moscow, Russia, on June 22.
Evgenia Novozhenina/Reuters/FILE
UN-appointed human rights experts called for the immediate release of imprisoned US journalist Evan Gershkovich on Monday, according to a release on the UN website.
Mariana Katzarova, Special Rapporteur on human rights in Russia and Irene Khan, Special Rapporteur on the right to freedom of opinion and expression, responded to Gershkovich’s arrest and detention while on a reporting trip in the city of Yekaterinburg, Russia.
The Special Rapporteurs lodged an appeal over Gershkovich’s arbitrary arrest with the Russian authorities on June 12 and called for his immediate release, the UN website said. No response has been received to date.
CNN’s Jennifer Hansler contributed to this report.
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Ukrainian defense minister thanks US for supplying cluster munitions
From CNN's Maria Kostenko and Mohammed Tawfeeq
Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov on Monday discussed several topics with US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, including the situation on the battlefield and the needs of the Ukrainian Army in regard to weapons and equipment.
Reznikov thanked Austin and the US “for the supply of cluster munitions.”
The US has confirmed it sent cluster munitions to Ukraine as part of a new military aid package. The munitions arrived in Ukraine July 14, according to the Pentagon.
CNN first reported earlier in July that President Joe Biden’s administration was strongly considering approving the transfer of the controversial weapons to Ukraine, whose forces have been struggling to make major gains in a weeks-long counteroffensive.
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Zelensky: Russia does not have the "right to destroy the food security of any nation"
From CNN's Maria Kostenko and Mohammed Tawfeeq
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks at a press conference during NATO Summit in Vilnius, Lithuania on July 12.
Beata Zawrzel/NurPhoto/Getty Images
Ukraine’s president on Monday blasted Russia’s decision to pull out of the Black Sea grain deal, saying, “no one has the right to destroy the food security of any nation.”
Russia said it was suspending its participation in a crucial deal that allowed the export of Ukrainian grain, once again raising fears over global food supplies.
The deal — originally brokered by Turkey and the United Nations a year ago — ensured the safe passage of ships carrying grain from Ukrainian ports in the midst of Russia’s invasion. So far the deal has allowed for the export of almost 33 million metric tons of food through Ukrainian ports, according to UN data.
Zelensky said throughout the course of the war, Russia “destroyed navigation freedom in the Black and Azov seas” and attacked Ukrainian ports and grain terminals.
“The only possible consequence of this is the destabilization of food markets and social chaos in the countries critically dependent on food imports. Ukrainian food is basic security for four hundred million people,” the president said.
Zelenksy said the deal should keep operating without Russia. He said he sent official letters to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres with a proposal to continue the initiative.
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Ukraine can export grain without Russia if provided international support, grain association president says
From CNN’s Niamh Kennedy and Isa Soares Tonight staff
The international community needs to “find the leverage” to move grain from Ukraine to the global market without Russia, the head of the Ukrainian Grain Association said Monday.
Nikolay Gorbachov said he is “sure that Ukraine can export grain without Russia” if it is provided “international support.” It comes after Russia withdrew from the Black Sea grain deal.
“The international community, developed countries have to find the leverage how to move grain from Ukraine to the world market,” the president told CNN. According to Gorbachov, this support could come from the Turkish fleet or insurance guarantees from companies.
Gorbachov refuted Russian President Vladimir Putin’s claims that Ukraine has not fulfilled a vital part of the grain deal in ensuring grain is exported to poorer countries, calling it “manipulation.”
Although 60% of grain exported from Ukraine moves through European ports, it “doesn’t mean that Europe absorbs this grain as a final consumer,” he said, adding that Ukrainian grain feeds about 200 million people outside the country.
Gorbachov maintained that Ukraine’s status as one of the world’s leading grain producers should drive countries to intervene sooner rather than later.
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Ukrainian foreign minister holding "urgent consultations" at UN over grain deal
From CNN's Maria Kostenko
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba addresses the opening session on the first day of the Ukraine Recovery Conference at InterContinental London O2 on June 21, in London, England.
Henry Nicholls/WPA Pool/Getty Image
The Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba says he’s holding “urgent consultations” at the United Nations following Russia’s withdrawal from the Black Sea Grain Initiative.
“On [Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s] instruction, I am holding urgent consultations with partners at the UN in New York on our next steps following Russia’s withdrawal from the Grain Initiative,” Kuleba tweeted Monday. “Russia puts global food security in jeopardy. We do our utmost to preserve the Black Sea grain corridor.”
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Ukraine says it's advancing along the southern front, despite Russian strikes and landmines
From CNN's Maria Kostenko and Vasco Cotovio
Ukraine says it is advancing along the southern front, despite Russian airstrikes and a large concentration of landmines, the commander of the Tavria Joint Forces, Brig. Gen. Oleksandr Tarnavskyi, said on Monday.
Tarnavskyi said Russian forces had been battering Ukrainian forces, but said the soldiers under his command were firing back.
“Artillery units of the Ukrainian Defense Forces in the Tavria sector completed 1,412 firing missions,” he said. “Over the past day, the enemy attacked our positions 16 times and carried out 650 shelling attacks.”
Tarnavskyi added that 25 units of Russian military armor had been destroyed, along with three ammunition depots.
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Russia's decision to withdraw from Black Sea grain deal is "unconscionable," US secretary of state says
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken talks to reporters in the press briefing room at the State Department Harry S. Truman headquarters building on July 17, in Washington, DC.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken called Russia’s withdrawal from the Black Sea grain deal “unconscionable” and said the agreement should be “restored as quickly as possible.”
The top US diplomat said Monday that the deal should not have been necessary in the first place, and only became so after Russia launched its war in Ukraine.
Blinken said the Ukrainians, the US and others will look to see if there are “any other options” to transit grain safely through the Black Sea onto the market, such as by rail and by road, but said there are challenges in trying to find alternatives.
“The challenge is this: if Russia is ending this initiative and sending a message that grain cannot and other food products cannot leave Ukraine unimpeded, even if there are other options, I think it will likely have a profound chilling effect on the ability to pursue them, as other countries, companies, shippers, etc., will be very concerned about what happens to their ships and to their personnel if Russia is opposing any export of food products from Ukraine,” Blinken said.
“The whole point of this was to have a voluntary agreement that involved all of the relevant parties that was endorsed by the United Nations to make sure there was safety, security, predictability, in moving food out of Ukraine into places that were desperately in need of it,” he said.
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Crimean bridge was struck by "naval drones," Ukrainian minister says
From Maria Kostento and Vasco Cotovio
This video grab shows the section of a road split and sloping to one side following an alleged attack on the Crimea Bridge, that connects the Russian mainland with the Crimean peninsula across the Kerch Strait, on July 17.
Stringer/Reuters
The Kerch Bridge was struck by “naval drones,” the Ukrainian Minister of Digital Transformation Mykhailo Fedorov said on Telegram on Monday.
“Today the Crimean bridge was blown up by naval drones,” Fedorov said.
The key bridge links the annexed Crimean peninsula to the Russian mainland and serves as a vital supply line for Moscow’s war effort in Ukraine.
The minister also said design of the equipment as well as production facilities would be kept under secrecy. “It is better to act, not to reveal photos of our own production facilities and to supply the Defense Forces,” Fedorov said. “Production has already increased by over 100 times in some categories compared to last year.”
“We need even more drones. And there will be more,” he added.
Earlier Monday, a source in Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) told CNN the attack was a joint operation of the SBU and Ukraine’s naval forces. The source spoke on condition of anonymity because they had not received authorization to speak on the record.
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Russia has assembled more than 100,000 soldiers in the Kupyansk area, Ukrainian official says
From CNN's Maria Kostento and Vasco Cotovio
A residential building destroyed during the bombardment by Russian aircraft in the village of Kupyansk-Vuzlovyi, Ukraine on June 28.
Sofiia Bobok/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images/FILE
Russa has concentrated more than 100,000 soldiers in the Kupyansk area to try and break Kyiv’s defenses, Serhii Cherevatyi, Ukrainian Deputy Commander for Strategic Communications of the Eastern Military Grouping, said on Monday.
He added Russian forces are “putting everything into breaking through our defense. Our soldiers are standing firm in defense.”
Cherevatyi said the Russian push in the area was to try and achieve some success after Ukraine seized the momentum around Bakhmut.
“(Russians) need to show at least some success, so they have put maximum effort into this area, doing everything they can and cannot, to show offensive actions,” he said.
Cherevatyi went on to say Russian forces remained on the back foot in Bakhmut, adding their casualties were increasing.
“The enemy’s losses are already approaching those that were at the peak of the fighting with the Wagner,” he said. “The Russians are continuously renewing their combat staff, sending paratroopers there first and foremost in the hope of stopping our offensive.”
“We are being very cautious and deliberate in order to preserve our forces and people as much as possible,” he added.
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Pope's Ukraine peace envoy is traveling to Washington this week, Vatican says
From CNN's Sharon Braithwaite in London
Cardinal Matteo Zuppi presided over Celebration of Mass during the 77th CEI General Assembly, in Vatican City, on May 25.
Massimo Valicchia/NurPhoto/Getty Images
Pope Francis’ Ukraine peace envoy Cardinal Matteo Zuppi is heading to Washington, DC, for a three-day visit this week as part of a peace mission for Ukraine, the Vatican said on Monday.
“We inform you that from 17 to 19 July 2023, Card. Matteo Maria Zuppi, Archbishop of Bologna and President of the Italian Episcopal Conference, accompanied by an Official of the Secretariat of State, will travel to Washington as Envoy of the Holy Father Francis,” the Vatican said in a statement.
At the end of June, Zuppi paid a visit to Moscow that was “aimed at identifying humanitarian initiatives, which can open paths for the achievement of peace,” the Vatican had said in an official communiqué.
Zuppi met with top officials during the visit including Yuri Ushakov, Russian presidential aide, and Maria Lvova-Belova, Russian commissioner for children’s rights.
“During the talks, the humanitarian aspect of the initiative was strongly emphasized, as well as the need to be able to achieve the much-desired peace,” the Vatican had said, adding that Zuppi also had a “fruitful” meeting with Patriarch of Moscow Kirill.
On June 5 and June 6, Zuppi traveled to Kyiv to talk with Ukrainian authorities about “the possible ways to achieve a just peace and support gestures of humanity that contribute to easing tensions.”
In May, Pope Francis appointed Zuppi to lead a peace mission in Ukraine to help address tensions in the conflict.
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Traffic on Kerch Bridge will resume on September 15, official says
From CNN's Josh Pennington and Vasco Cotovio
Traffic on the Kerch Bridge, which links the annexed Crimean peninsula to the Russian mainland, will resume in one lane only on September 15, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin said.
Two strikes were reportedly carried out around 3 a.m. local time Monday (8 p.m. ET Sunday), damaging part of the bridge, according to Telegram channel Grey Zone, which supports the Wagner mercenary group led by Yevgeny Prigozhin.
A source in Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) told CNN this attack was a joint operation of the SBU and Ukraine’s naval forces. The source spoke on condition of anonymity because they had not received authorization to speak on the record.
Khusnullin said that ferries for civilian and commercial transportation will be available. The railway bridge is operating as normal.
CNN’s Alex Stambaugh, Brad Lendon and Christian Edwards contributed reporting to this post.
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Putin calls Crimea bridge strike a "terrorist attack" and urges Russian authorities to investigate incident
From CNN's Katherina Krebs and Vasco Cotovio in London
Russian President Vladimir Putin during the Future Technologies Forum in Moscow on July 13.
Alexander Kazakov/AFP/Getty Images
Russian President Vladimir Putin has called a Ukrainian strike on the Kerch Bridge a “terrorist attack.” The key bridge links the annexed Crimean peninsula to the Russian mainland and serves as a vital supply line for Moscow’s war effort in Ukraine.
The Russian president called on his country’s authorities, including the FSB, to investigate the incident and asked for measures to secure the “strategically important transport facility” from future strikes.
“It is necessary to comprehensively assess the damage caused and start restoration work as quickly as possible,” he added.
Putin said that there will be a Russian response to the strike. “The Ministry of Defense is preparing relevant proposals,” he said during a meeting with officials.
Putin also claimed there was no military significance to hitting the bridge.
“This is a senseless crime from the point of view of no significance since the Crimean bridge has long not been used for military transport and brutal since innocent civilians have been killed,” he said.
Russian Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin said Monday that the supports of the Kerch straight bridge were not damaged by the blast. Divers were completing the inspection of the bridge and the decision on the possibility of launching car traffic will be made within two hours, he claimed.
Earlier Monday, a source from Ukraine’s security service (SBU) said that an attack on the Crimean Bridge was a joint operation of the SBU and Ukraine’s naval forces. The source spoke on condition of anonymity because they had not received authorization to speak on the record.
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US ambassador to UN meets with Ukrainian foreign minister in New York City
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
USA Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield speaks during the press encounter along with the ambassadors of UK, France, Albania, Ukraine ahead of the Security Council meeting at UN Headquarters on June 23.
Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket/Getty Images
US Ambassador to the United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield met with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba in New York City on Monday.
“Ambassador Thomas-Greenfield expressed continued solidarity with the Ukrainian people and commended them for courageously defending their country against Russia’s war of aggression,” Evans said. “She reiterated the United States’ commitment to a comprehensive, just, and lasting peace in Ukraine, rooted in the principles of the UN Charter, and to stand by Ukraine for as long as it takes.”
In a statement earlier Monday, the White House warned that Russia’s decision to suspend participation in the Ukraine grain deal “will worsen food insecurity and harm millions of vulnerable people around the world” and urged Russia to “immediately reverse its decision.”
Belarus State Border Committee said on Monday that a Ukrainian reconnaissance drone was intercepted on Sunday in the Bragin district of the Gomel region, according to a statement published by the agency.
According to the agency, the border guards used an electronic gun and forcibly landed the drone on the water. The incident is being investigated.
Some background: Ukraine shares a 1,000-kilometer (621-mile) frontier with Belarus, a country that has played a key role in aiding Russia’s attack.
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Ukraine acknowledges "difficult" conditions in the east and says Russia is redeploying forces around Bakhmut
From Maria Kostenko and Vasco Cotovio
A Ukrainian infantry soldier catches a ride to a fighting position near Kupyansk, Ukraine, after being treated due to shrapnel wounding on the back during an attack, on July 12.
Daniel Carde/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
A top Ukrainian general has acknowledged his country is facing “difficult” conditions on the eastern front and said Russian forces are redeploying around the embattled city of Bakhmut to try and stop Kyiv’s offensive.
Syrskyi went on to say conditions on the eastern front were “challenging.”
“The operational situation in the eastern sector remains difficult,” Gen. Syrskyi went on to say. “At the same time, the enemy launched an offensive in the Kupyansk direction, aiming to defeat our troops in the Kupyansk area and continue the offensive deep into our combat formations.”
“Amid such challenging conditions, I visited the combat brigades of our grouping and met with unit commanders to adjust our plans and resolve problematic issues on the spot,” he added.
More on the front lines: On Sunday, Ukraine’s Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar said the positions on both sides are “changing dynamically” along the eastern front as fighting there has “somewhat escalated.”
“In Bakhmut itself, we are shelling the enemy, and the enemy is shelling us,” she added.
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Western leaders condemn Russia's decision to withdraw from grain deal
From CNN staff
Commercial vessels including vessels that are part of the Black Sea grain deal wait to pass the Bosphorus strait off the shores of Yenikapi during a misty morning in Istanbul, Turkey, on October 31, 2022.
Umit Bektas/Reuters
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tweeted on Monday “strongly” condemning Russia’s move to withdraw from the Black Sea grain deal despite efforts from the UN and Turkey.
The United Kingdom called the decision a “blatant attempt to harm the most vulnerable as part of its illegal war.”
A spokesperson for the UK’s foreign office said they are monitoring the situation. “By unilaterally forcing the collapse of the BSGI, Russia has used food as a weapon and is preventing grain reaching those who need it most,” the spokesperson said.
Dutch Foreign Minister Wopke Hoekstra called Russia’s decision “utterly immoral” on Twitter.
The European Union’s top diplomat Josep Borrell and the president of the EU Council Charles Michel have also condemned Russia’s decision not to extend the crucial Black Sea grain deal.
“I am so sorry to say that today Russia has refused to prolong this deal and this is something very serious that will create a lot of troubles for many people around the world. We, from our side, will do everything we can through our solidarity lanes in order to make available the Ukrainian grain for the people who eat from it,” Borrell said Monday, speaking to the media arriving at the European Union–Latin America and Caribbean meeting in Brussels.
The Black Sea grain deal “is very important, especially for the most vulnerable countries, because this agreement, together with the European solidarity lanes, is helping to make sure that the most vulnerable countries have access to the grains and to the fertilizers they need for the people, for the population,” Michel said.
“That’s why we fully support all the efforts of Antonio Guterres to make sure that the continuity of this agreement will be guaranteed,” he added.
President of the European Parliament Roberta Metsola also voiced her concern over Russia’s decision.
“For us, it is extremely worrying. What we have seen with the ongoing provision by Ukraine — notwithstanding the fact that it is under daily bombing attacks — is the possibility for Ukrainian grain to continue to feed the world,” Metsola said.
Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said that the “blame is on Russia’s side. This is all Russia’s fault. I think is extremely severe, very damaging, in many ways: damaging to Ukraine, damaging to African and Middle East countries. It’s a very bad signal coming from Russia.”
France and Germany have also come out condemning Russia’s suspension its participation in the grain deal, saying it sends out a “bad message” to countries grappling with the food security crisis.
Earlier on Monday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters that Russia is allowing the deal to expire at 5 p.m. ET on Monday, effectively severing its participation in the UN-brokered arrangement.
“France condemns the suspension by Russia of its participation in the Black Sea grain initiative. Russia is solely responsible for blocking shipping in this maritime area and is imposing an illegal blockade on Ukrainian ports,” the French foreign ministry said in a statement Monday.
France called on Russia to “stop blackmailing global food security “and reverse its decision to exit the deal.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz also strongly criticized the decision, highlighting its negative impact on countries hit by “higher prices.”
Speaking to reporters at the European Union–Latin America and Caribbean summit, Scholz stressed Russia’s withdrawal sends a “bad message” to the rest of the world.
“Everyone will understand exactly what’s behind it: an act which has a lot to do with Russia not feeling responsible for good coexistence in the world,” the German leader said.
Meanwhile, the director general of the World Trade Organization Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said Monday she was “deeply disappointed” with Russia’s decision, tweeting that she shared the UN chief Antonio Guterres’ regret and concern. “Black Sea trade in food, feed & fertilizer is critical to the stability of global food prices. Sad to say that poor people & poor countries are hardest hit. Let’s keep hope alive on renewal,” she said in a tweet.
CNN’s Eve Brennan, Catherine Nicholls, Olga Voitovych, Sharon Braithwaite, James Frater, Niamh Kennedy, and Chris Stern contributed to this reporting.
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UN chief deeply disappointed in Russian decision to withdraw from grain deal
From CNN’s Vasco Cotovio in London
The United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he is “deeply disappointed” that his proposals to address obstacles to Russian exports of food and fertilizer products went “unheeded, and expressed “regret” that Moscow decided to withdraw from the grain deal.
Guterres explained the agreement had helped lower food prices by more than 23% since the beginning of the war.
“Ultimately, participation in these agreements is a choice, but struggling people everywhere and developing countries don’t have a choice,” he said. “Hundreds of millions of people face hunger and consumers are confronting a global cost of living crisis and they will pay the price.”
“In the US we are already seeing a jump in wheat prices this morning,” he added.
Guterres concluded by saying he was aware certain obstacles had “remained in the foreign trade of Russian food and fertilizer products,” but said he had written a letter to Russian President Vladimir Putin outlining solutions to those hurdles, as well as the benefits Russia had reaped from the deal.
Guterres said that despite today’s decision, the UN “will not stop our efforts to facilitate the unimpeded access to global markets for food products and fertilizers from both Ukraine and the Russian Federation, I particularly want to recognize the efforts of the government of Turkey in this regard.”
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Collapse of Black Sea grain deal poses a massive threat that could bring higher food prices and more hunger
From CNN's Anna Cooban
Wheat and corn prices on global commodities markets jumped Monday after Russia pulled out of a crucial deal allowing the export of grain from Ukraine. The collapse of the pact threatens to push up food prices for consumers worldwide and tip millions into hunger.
The White House warned that Russia’s decision “will worsen food insecurity and harm millions of vulnerable people around the world.”
“The Black Sea Grain Initiative has been critical to bringing down food prices around the world, which spiked as a result of Russia’s brutal and unprovoked invasion of Ukraine,” Adam Hodge, a spokesperson for the US National Security Council, said in a statement.
The Black Sea deal — originally brokered by Turkey and the United Nations in a year ago — ensured the safe passage of ships carrying grain from Ukrainian ports. So far the deal has allowed for the export of almost 33 million metric tons of food through Ukrainian ports, according to UN data.
The collapse of the deal is likely to have repercussions far beyond the region.
Before the war, Ukraine was the fifth-largest wheat exporter globally, accounting for 10% of exports, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
Read the full story here and learn more about the deal below:
CNN’s Rob Picheta, Hanna Ziady, Mick Krever, Anna Chernova and Priscilla Alvarez contributed reporting.
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Zelensky says "everything" must be done to keep Black Sea grain corridor open
“Even without Russia, we must do everything possible so that we can use this Black Sea corridor,” he said according to his spokesperson Sergiy Nykyforov.
Zelensky went on to suggest Ukraine could continue grain exports without Russian support.
“We are not afraid. We have been approached by companies who own vessels,” he explained. “They said they are ready to continue grain deliveries if Ukraine ships out and Turkey lets them through.”
In withdrawing from the pact, the Russian Foreign Ministry said Monday that its government was removing guarantees for safe navigation in the Black Sea.
There are alternative routes for Ukrainian grain and oilseed exports by rail through eastern Europe, but they can’t readily cope with the volume that Ukraine wants to export.
“I have instructed our Ministry of Foreign Affairs, after the official signal from the Russian Federation, to prepare our official signals to the United Nations and to Turkey so that they can answer back to me as to the President of Ukraine that they are ready to continue our initiative,” Zelensky added.
CNN’s Rob Picheta, Mick Krever and Anna Chernova contributed reporting to this post.
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White House warns Russia's decision to pull out of grain deal will worsen food insecurity
From CNN's Priscilla Alvarez
The White House warned Monday that Russia’s decision to suspend participation in the Ukraine grain deal “will worsen food insecurity and harm millions of vulnerable people around the world” and urged Russia to “immediately reverse its decision.”
The Russian government on Monday said that it is allowing a deal, known as the Black Sea Grain Initiative, that allows the export of Ukrainian grain to expire. The agreement, brokered by Turkey and the United Nations in July 2022, is officially set to expire on Monday afternoon. The deal allowed Ukraine to export grain from its ports and navigate safe passage through the Black Sea, to Turkey’s Bosphorus Strait.
“More than half of the 32 million metric tons of grain and foodstuffs shipped through the Initiative has gone to developing countries, including some of the most food insecure regions of the globe. And every shipment under the Initiative has contributed to reducing hardship in the world’s poorest countries, since bringing grain to world markets lowers food prices for all,” Hodge said.
Some context: The rate of exports made under the deal had started to tail off in recent months; UN figures show that May and June were the two months with the fewest metric tons exported since August 2022.
“Preventing this grain from getting to markets will harm people around the world, and indeed we are already seeing a spike in global wheat prices as a result of Russia suspending its participation in the Initiative. We urge the Government of Russia to immediately reverse its decision,” he added.
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Crimea bridge supports not damaged by explosion, Russian deputy prime minister says
From CNN's Katharina Krebs in London
The supports of the Kerch straight bridge, linking Russia to Crimea, were not damaged by Monday’s blast, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Marat Khusnullin said.
“According to a preliminary assessment, the supports of the Crimean bridge were not damaged,” Khusnullin told Russian journalists on Monday.
Divers are currently completing the inspection of the bridge and the decision on the possibility of launching car traffic will be made within two hours, he added.
Some background: A source from Ukraine’s security service (SBU) said the attack on the Kerch Bridge, which killed a couple and injured their daughter, was a joint operation of the SBU and Ukraine’s naval forces.
The $3.7 billion Kerch Bridge is strategically important because it links Russia’s Krasnodar region with the Crimean Peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russia from Ukraine in 2014. It was the physical expression of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s objective to take over Ukraine and bind it to Russia forever.
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It's mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know
From CNN's staff
The key Crimean Bridge linking the annexed peninsula to Russia was hit by two strikes early Monday. According to a source, Ukraine’s security service and naval forces carried out the attack, which left two people dead.
Meanwhile, the Kremlin is allowing the Black Sea grain deal to expire — a move fiercely criticized by Western leaders.
Here are the latest developments:
Bridge attack:
What we know: A source from Ukraine’s security service (SBU) said the attack on the Kerch Bridge, which killed a couple and injured their daughter, was a joint operation of the SBU and Ukraine’s naval forces.
An official investigation: The Kremlin claimed two Ukrainian seaborne drones struck the bridge, though it did not provide evidence for the allegation. Russia’s foreign ministry said it had opened an official investigation into what it called a “terrorist act.”
Why is the bridge important?: The $3.7 billion Kerch Bridge is strategically important because it links Russia’s Krasnodar region with the Crimean Peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russia from Ukraine in 2014. It was the physical expression of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s objective to take over Ukraine and bind it to Russia forever.
How extensive is the damage?: Rail traffic continued to operate on Monday. A widely circulating video, which appears to have been captured from a train passing on the parallel rail bridge, shows significant damage to one of the bridge’s road spans. Russian state media RIA Novosti and TASS reported that rail traffic continued to operate with delays. Prominent Russian military blogger Boris Rozhin said ferries will transport cars that are now unable to cross the bridge, adding that he expects repairs to take a considerable amount of time.
2022 attack: The bridge was severely damaged on October 8 last year when a fuel tanker exploded and destroyed a large section of the road. Earlier this month, Ukraine’s Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar made what appeared to be the clearest admission yet that Ukrainian forces were responsible for the October attack.
The grain deal:
Black Sea grain deal suspended: The Russian government is allowing the Black Sea grain deal to expire, saying on Monday “it has been terminated.” The agreement, brokered last year, allowed Kyiv to export grain from its ports and navigate safe passage through the Black Sea after Moscow blockaded docks in the region and impeded export — exacerbating a global food crisis.
“Utterly immoral”: Western officials criticized Moscow’s decision to withdraw from the deal. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen tweeted the bloc “is working to ensure food security for the world’s vulnerable,” while Dutch Foreign Minister Wopke Hoekstra called the decision “utterly immoral.” When asked, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov denied that the termination was related to Ukraine’s claimed strike on the Crimean Bridge.
Elsewhere:
Putin’s slams counteroffensive: Putin painted the Ukrainian counteroffensive as “unsuccessful” in an interview with a pro-Kremlin journalist published Sunday. Ukraine acknowledges the campaign has been characterized by tough fighting and limited progress but insists it does not feel under pressure by Western allies to deliver quick results as it does the hard work of driving Russian forces out of its territory.
On the front lines: Ukraine reported fierce battles in the east, with the two sides swapping fighting positions and Russia going on the offensive in some areas.
Zelensky marks 9 years since MH17: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Monday marked nine years since a Russian surface-to-air missile was used to shoot down Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over eastern Ukraine, killing all 298 passengers and crew. “This tragedy caused by the aggressor will never be forgotten. The invading state, the terrorist state, will be held fully accountable for all crimes committed in Ukraine,” he added.
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Russia removes Black Sea safe navigation guarantees
From CNN's Katharina Krebs in London
The UN-chartered vessel MV Valsamitis is loaded to deliver 25,000 tonnes of Ukrainian wheat to Kenya and 5,000 tonnes to Ethiopia, at the port of Chornomorsk, east of Odesa on the Black Sea coast, on February 18, 2023.
Oleksander Gimanov/AFP/Getty Images
In withdrawing from the Black Sean Grain Initiative, the Russian Foreign Ministry said Monday that its government was removing guarantees for safe navigation in the Black Sea.
The Foreign Ministry said that the Russian government objects to the further extension of the deal and officially informed the Turkish and Ukrainian sides on Monday, adding that the UN secretariat was also notified.
“Contrary to the declared humanitarian goals, the export of Ukrainian food was almost immediately transferred to a purely commercial basis and until the last moment was aimed at serving the narrowly selfish interests” of Kyiv and the West, the statement read, using the Russian name for the Ukrainian capital.
The ministry also stressed that the Russia-UN Memorandum did not function as planned. “We are forced to state that none of the five systemic tasks envisaged by the Russia-UN Memorandum have been fulfilled,” the statement read.
According to the ministry, Russia would be ready to consider restoring the “deal” only if the West fulfills its obligations and actually withdraws Russian fertilizers and food from the sanctions.
What the UN says: A United Nations official has confirmed to CNN that the UN office in Istanbul, Turkey, has received written notice from Russia that they are ending participation in the Ukraine grain deal.
“The Secretary-General will not stop his efforts to facilitate the unimpeded access to global markets for food products and fertilizers from both Ukraine and the Russian Federation to preserve global food security,” the UN official said.
CNN’s Alex Marquardt in Odesa, Ukraine contributed to this report.
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UK slaps new sanctions on Russia for forced deportation of Ukrainian children
From CNN’s Catherine Nicholls in London
The UK has imposed 14 new sanctions on Russian individuals in response to the forced deportation of Ukrainian children, according to a statement from the UK’s Foreign office.
The sanctions were enacted against officials including Ksenia Mishonova, commissioner for Children’s Rights in the Moscow Region, and Sergey Kravtsov, minister of education of Russia.
The UK’s Foreign Secretary, James Cleverly, said Monday: “In his chilling program of forced child deportation, and the hate-filled propaganda spewed by his lackeys, we see Putin’s true intention — to wipe Ukraine from the map.”
“Today’s sanctions hold those who prop up Putin’s regime to account, including those who would see Ukraine destroyed, its national identity dissolved, and its future erased,” Cleverly added.
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Wheat prices jump 3% after Russia announces end to grain deal
From CNN’s Anna Cooban
A combine harvester cuts wheat in a field near Novosofiivka village, Mykolaiv region, Ukraine, on July 4.
Anatolii Stepanov/AFP/Getty Images
The cost of wheat rose 3% to $6.80 a bushel, following the Russian government’s announcement that it is terminating the Black Sea grain deal with Ukraine.
The benchmark wheat contract — the contract for a particular product that most traders of that item will look to in order to price their own contracts — hiked early Monday, according to the Chicago Board of Trade.
Futures prices are still down 52% from their all-time high hit in early March 2022.
The agreement brokered by the United Nations and Turkey with Moscow and Kyiv in June 2022 allowed for the safe passage of grain exports from southern Ukraine into the global market.
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US aid agency head arrives in Ukraine
From CNN's Olga Voitovych
Samantha Power, the administrator of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), arrived in Ukraine on Monday.
US Ambassador Bridget Brink greeted her at a rail station, as seen in a video Power posted on Twitter.
The US has remained a staunch ally of Ukraine since the Kremlin launched its invasion in February 2022, donating billions of dollars worth of military aid and imposing sanctions on Russia in an attempt to squeeze its economy.
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Why is the Crimean bridge so important to Russia?
From CNN's Lauren Kent
A train moves along the Crimean Bridge, a section of which was damaged by an alleged overnight attack, on July 17.
Alexey Pavlishak/Reuters
The key Crimean bridge linking the occupied peninsula to Russia was hit by two strikes early Monday, according to multiple reports. Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU) and naval forces were responsible for the attack, according to a source.
The Kerch Bridge is strategically important because it links Russia’s Krasnodar region with the Crimean Peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russia from Ukraine in 2014.
It also has huge symbolic importance for Russia, which built the 12-mile bridge — the longest in Europe — at a cost of around $3.7 billion. It was the physical expression of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s objective to take over Ukraine and bind it to Russia forever.
The day it opened, Putin led a triumphant convoy over the bridge. Ukrainians revile the structure, which stands as a reminder of Russian occupation.
In October, the bridge was partially destroyed when a fuel tanker exploded and damaged a large section of the road. The Kremlin was quick to blame Kyiv and Putin alleged that it was an act of “sabotage” by Ukrainian security services. Moscow was quick to repair the bridge following that explosion.
The bridge is a critical artery for supplying Crimea with both its daily needs and supplies for the military, in addition to fuel and goods for civilians. Russian military convoys have regularly used the bridge to aid their full-scale invasion of Ukraine — carrying vehicles, armor and fuel.
If the Russian military’s use of the bridge is hampered, its supply lines to forces in southern Ukraine would become more tenuous.
Russia has used the Crimean railroads to ferry supplies to forces in Kherson and several rail hubs in both Crimea and Kherson have been attacked by long-range Ukrainian rockets. Rail traffic across the bridge continued to operate on Monday, albeit with delays, according to video on social media, a Russian official and Russian state media.
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UN confirms Russia is terminating its participation in Ukraine grain deal
From CNN's Alex Marquardt in Odesa, Ukraine
A UN official arrives to inspect the 'Chola Treasure' anchored in Istanbul, Turkey, on October 11, 2022.
Yasin Akgul/AFP/Getty Images
A United Nations official has confirmed to CNN that the UN office in Istanbul, Turkey, has received written notice from Russia that they are ending participation in the Ukraine grain deal, officially called the Black Sea Grain Initiative.
The agreement allowed for the safe passage of grain exports from southern Ukraine to the global market after Russian forces barricaded ports in the region and exacerbated a widespread food crisis.
“The Secretary-General will not stop his efforts to facilitate the unimpeded access to global markets for food products and fertilizers from both Ukraine and the Russian Federation to preserve global food security,” the UN official said.
A United Nations official later told CNN that the organization sees Russia’s decision as “pretty final,” adding that the focus for Ukraine’s grain was now on exporting via land routes, road and rail.
The Russian government on Monday said that it’s allowing a deal struck to allow the export of Ukrainian grain to expire, saying “it has been terminated.” The agreement, brokered by Turkey and the United Nations in July 2022, was officially set to expire at 5 p.m. ET on Monday (midnight local in Istanbul, Kyiv, and Moscow). The deal allowed Ukraine to export grain from its ports and navigate safe passage through the Black Sea, to Turkey’s Bosphorus Strait.
A crew member prepares a grain analysis by members of the Joint Coordination Center (JCC) onboard the Barbados-flagged ship 'Nord Vind' coming from Ukraine and anchored in Istanbul, Turkey, on October 11.
Yasin Akgul/AFP/Getty Images
The UN official said that their main concern was the inevitable human suffering that will result from the deal’s termination: “There is simply too much at stake in a hungry and hurting world.”
The initiative has allowed for the export of nearly 33 million metric tons of foodstuffs from Ukraine. The World Food Programme has shipped more than 725,000 tons to support humanitarian operations – relieving, the official said, hunger in some of the hardest hit corners of the world, including Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Sudan and Yemen.
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Russia says Black Sea grain deal with Ukraine "has been terminated"
From CNN's Anna Chernova
Bulk carrier ARGO I is docked at the grain terminal of the port of Odesa, Ukraine, on April 10.
Bo Amstrup/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP/Getty Images
The Russian government is allowing the Black Sea grain deal to expire, saying on Monday “it has been terminated.”
The agreement, brokered by Turkey and the United Nations in July 2022, was officially set to expire at 5 p.m. ET on Monday (midnight local in Istanbul, Kyiv, and Moscow). The deal allowed Ukraine to export grain from its ports and navigate safe passage through the Black Sea, to Turkey’s Bosphorus Strait.
The Russian government has formally informed Turkey, Ukraine and the United Nations that it is allowing the deal to expire, foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova told state media RIA Novosti on Monday.
When asked, Peskov denied that Russia’s decision to allow the deal to lapse was related to Ukraine’s claimed strike on the Crimean Bridge on Monday, which connects mainland Russia to the peninsula.
Key background: The Black Sea grain deal imposed measures for the safe export of grain from Ukrainian ports after Russia launched its invasion and barricaded docks in the region.
The key deal helped stabilize global food prices and brought relief to countries in the Global South that rely on Ukrainian exports.
But Russian President Vladimir Putin told his South African counterpart on Saturday that “the relevant Russia-UN memorandum to remove obstacles to the export of Russian food and fertilizers still remain unfulfilled,” according to the Kremlin.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken last week accused Russia of using the grain deal “as a weapon.”
CNN’s Radina Gigova and Sophie Tanno contributed reporting.
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Ukraine's security service responsible for Crimean Bridge attack, source says
From CNN's Victoria Butenko
A source from Ukraine’s security service (SBU) said Monday that an attack on the Crimean Bridge linking the peninsula with Russia overnight was a joint operation of the SBU and Ukraine’s naval forces.
The source spoke on condition of anonymity because they had not received authorization to speak on the record.
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Russian foreign ministry blames Ukraine for Crimea bridge "attack"
From CNN's Olga Voitovych
Russian investigators work at the scene on the section of a road sloping to one side following an alleged attack on the Crimea Bridge across the Kerch Strait, in this still image taken from video released on July 17.
Investigative Committee of Russia/Reuters
Russia’s foreign ministry on Monday held the Ukrainian government responsible for an “attack” on the bridge connecting the Russian mainland to occupied Crimea, echoing claims from other senior officials in Moscow.
“Today’s attack on the Crimean bridge was carried out by the Kyiv regime,” Maria Zakharova said on her Telegram channel. “This regime is a terrorist one and has all the signs of an international organized criminal group.”
The Kremlin said earlier that it had opened an official investigation into what the Russian Investigative Committee calls “a terrorist act committed by the special services of Ukraine.”
Kyiv has not responded directly to the allegations, but the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) hinted that the Ukrainian government was responsible.
In a statement on Telegram, threaded to an October 2022 post referring to a previous attack on the Crimean Bridge last year, the SBU said: “Nightingale, my dear brother, The bridge has gone to sleep again. And once… Twice!”
CNN’s Mick Krever contributed reporting.
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Russia blames Ukrainian seaborne drones for Crimea bridge attack and opens investigation
From CNN's Olga Voitovych and Mick Krever
The Kremlin claimed two Ukrainian seaborne drones struck the Crimea bridge connecting the peninsula to Russia on Monday, though it did not provide evidence for the allegation.
Moscow has opened an official investigation into what the Russian Investigative Committee calls “a terrorist act committed by the special services of Ukraine.”
A couple traveling by car was killed and their daughter was injured in the incident, Russian authorities said earlier.
“At 3.05 a.m., two Ukrainian unmanned water-surface drones carried out an attack on the Crimean bridge,” the National Antiterrorism Committee of the Russian Federation said in a statement.
“As a result of the terrorist act, the road component of the Crimean bridge was damaged. Two adults were killed and one child was injured.”
The Russian Investigative Committee said that it had “opened a criminal case” into the incident, under legislation relating to terrorism.
“According to investigators, on the night of July 16-17, one of the sections of the Crimean bridge was damaged as a result of a terrorist act committed by the special services of Ukraine.”
“The necessary expert examinations have been commissioned as part of the criminal case. Investigators are identifying persons from among the Ukrainian special services and armed formations involved in the organization and execution of this crime.”
Ukrainian authorities have not responded to the accusations.
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No damage to Crimean bridge railway track, Russia-backed official says
From CNN's Olga Voitovych and Mick Krever
Rail traffic across the Crimean bridge continues to operate albeit with delays after an apparent attack halted road traffic on the structure early Monday, a Moscow-backed official said.
Russian state-run news agencies RIA Novosti and TASS also reported that rail traffic on the bridge is continuing to operate with delays.
The nearly 12-mile bridge, also known as the Kerch Bridge, is the longest in Europe and carries both road and rail traffic between the annexed Crimean peninsula and Russia. It also serves as a vital logistical node for Moscow’s military in its war against Ukraine.
The bridge was hit by strikes early Monday, killing two people, according to multiple reports.
A widely circulating video of significant damage to one of the bridge’s road spans appears to have been captured this morning from a train passing on the parallel rail bridge.
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Russia-backed official blames Ukraine for "attack" on Crimean bridge
From CNN's Olga Voitovych and Mick Krever
A screengrab from a video shows damage to the Crimea bridge on Monday, July 17.
Telegram via @grey_zone
A Moscow-appointed official in occupied Crimea on Monday blamed Ukraine for an “attack” on the bridge connecting the peninsula to Russia.
The key bridge was hit by strikes early Monday, according to multiple reports. Two people were killed in the incident, a Russian regional governor said earlier.
Cryptic message: Kyiv has not claimed direct responsibility for the alleged attack but the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) posted an opaque hint on social media that its government was behind the damage.
Some context: Last October, a huge blast partially damaged the bridge, causing parts of it to collapse. Earlier this month, Ukraine’s Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar made what appeared to be the clearest admission yet that Ukrainian forces were responsible for the October attack.
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A deadly incident has been reported on the key bridge linking Crimea with Russia. Here's what we know
From CNN staff
An “emergency incident” has been reported on the Crimean bridge, halting traffic on the only link between the annexed peninsula and Russia, a Moscow-backed official said Monday.
Sergey Aksenov, the Russia-appointed head of Crimea, did not specify the nature of the incident, but multiple Telegram channels reported strikes on the bridge.
CNN is unable to verify the reports.
Here’s what we know so far:
What Russian officials say: Vyacheslav Gladkov, the governor of Russia’s southwestern Belgorod region, said a couple traveling by car was killed and their daughter was injured in the incident. Russia’s Transport Ministry said the bridge had sustained damage to its spans — the lengths between the support piers — and is being inspected by officials. The ministry did not mention the extent of the damage.
What other reports say: Two strikes were allegedly carried out on the bridge around 3 a.m. local time, damaging part of the structure, according to the Telegram channel Grey Zone, which supports the Wagner mercenary group. Explosions were heard around 3:04 a.m. and 3:20 a.m. local time, Grey Zone and popular Crimean blogger TalipoV Online Z said on Telegram. At least two people were killed and another wounded, Russian Telegram channel Baza posted. Videos posted on Telegram by Baza, Grey Zone and other Crimean news outlets appeared to show part of the bridge collapsed and a damaged vehicle. Russian state media reported Monday there has been an “emergency incident” that had stopped traffic.
What Ukraine says: A spokesperson for Ukraine’s defense intelligence said damage to the bridge could create logistical difficulties for Russian forces, but stopped short of claiming responsibility for the incident. “As for the reasons for this [damage], we do not comment. I can only quote the chief of Ukrainian Defense Intelligence, Kyrylo Budanov, who said ‘the Crimean bridge is an unstable structure,’” spokesperson Andrii Yusov told public broadcaster Suspilne.
2022 attack: The bridge was severely damaged on October 8 last year when a fuel tanker exploded and destroyed a large section of the road. Earlier this month, Ukraine’s Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar made what appeared to be the clearest admission yet that Ukrainian forces were responsible for the October attack. “273 days ago, (we) launched the first strike on the Crimean bridge to disrupt Russian logistics.” Maliar posted on Telegram on July 9, as she listed Ukrainian achievements since the start of Russia’s invasion.
Why the bridge matters: The nearly 12-mile structure, also known as the Kerch Bridge, is the longest in Europe and carries both road and rail traffic. It also serves as a vital logistical node for Moscow’s military in its war against Ukraine. The bridge holds huge strategic and symbolic importance for Russia, which built the structure at a cost of around $3.7 billion after Moscow illegally annexed Crimea in 2014. It was the physical expression of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s objective to take over Ukraine and bind it to Russia forever.
Crimea’s significance: Ukrainian officials, including President Volodymyr Zelensky, have long stated their goal of recapturing Crimea but rarely comment directly on actions in the peninsula. “We cannot imagine Ukraine without Crimea. And while Crimea is under the Russian occupation, it means only one thing: the war is not over yet,” Zelensky told CNN earlier this month.
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Crimean bridge damage will cause logistical problems for Russian forces, Ukrainian official says
From CNN's Olga Voitovych
A boat sails next to the Crimean bridge connecting Russia with the peninsula across the Kerch Strait, in Crimea, on July 17.
Stringer/Reuters
The destruction of part of the Crimean bridge could create logistical difficulties for Russian forces, a spokesperson for Ukraine’s defense intelligence said Monday.
Spokesperson Andrii Yusov told Ukrainian public broadcaster Suspilne that Russia has been using the bridge “as a major logistics hub for moving forces and resources deep into the territory of Ukraine,” and “any logistical problems are additional complications for the occupiers, which create potential advantages for the Ukrainian defense forces.”
However, Yusov stopped short of claiming Ukrainian responsibility for the incident.
Some context: The bridge linking annexed Crimea to Russia was hit by two strikes early Monday, according to multiple reports. Two people were killed in the incident, a Russian regional governor said. Ukrainian officials, including President Volodymyr Zelensky, have long stated their goal of recapturing Crimea but rarely comment directly on actions in the peninsula.
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2 killed in Crimean Bridge incident, Belgorod governor says
From CNN's Olga Voitovych and Alex Stambaugh
A couple traveling by car was killed and their daughter was injured in the incident on the Crimean Bridge Monday, the governor of Russia’s southwestern Belgorod region said.
Belgorod Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov said the family is from Novooskolsky district of Belgorod, which borders Ukraine’s Kharkiv region, and he has instructed local authorities to notify their relatives.
The girl has injuries of “medium severity” and has been placed under medical supervision, Gladkov said.
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Russian Transport Ministry reports damage to Crimean bridge
From CNN's Josh Pennington and Alex Stambaugh
This picture shows the Crimean bridge connecting the Russian mainland with the peninsula across the Kerch Strait, Crimea, on July 17.
Stringer/Reuters
The Russian Ministry of Transport said Monday that the Crimean bridge has sustained damage to its spans and is currently being inspected by officials.
The spans on a bridge are the lengths between the support piers.
The ministry did not mention the extent of the damage to the bridge.
Earlier Monday, the Moscow-appointed head of Crimea Sergey Aksenov said an “emergency incident” occurred on the bridge, bringing traffic to a halt.
Multiple Telegram channels have reported strikes on the bridge, however there has been no official confirmation.
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Crimean bridge hit by 2 strikes, reports say
From CNN's Josh Pennington and Alex Stambaugh
An armed ship sails next to Crimean bridge connecting the Russian mainland with the peninsula across the Kerch Strait, Crimea, on July 17.
Stringer/Reuters
The key Crimean bridge linking the annexed peninsula to Russia was hit by two strikes early Monday, according to multiple reports.
The governor of Russia’s Krasnodar, Veniamin Kondratiev, said on Telegram a crisis center has been formed to coordinate emergency services and rescue those stuck in traffic on the approach to the bridge.
Two strikes were reportedly carried out on the bridge around 3 a.m. local time, damaging part of the structure, according to pro-Wagner Telegram channel Grey Zone.
Explosions were heard around 3:04 a.m. and 3:20 a.m. local time, Grey Zone and Crimean blogger TalipoV Online Z said on Telegram.
CNN is unable to verify the reports. CNN has reached out to the Moscow-appointed head of Crimea Sergey Aksenov.
Videos posted on Telegram by Russian news outlet Baza, Grey Zone and other Crimean media appeared to show part of the bridge collapsed and a vehicle damaged.
According to initial reports, at least two people were killed and another wounded, Baza posted on Telegram.
Russian state media reported on Monday there has been an “emergency incident” that halted traffic, however there has been no official confirmation of recent strikes on the bridge.
Emergency responders and law enforcement have been dispatched to the scene, Aksenov said on Monday morning.
Russia-backed official Elena Elekchyan said Crimea is well supplied with fuel, food and industrial goods and that local warehouses have all necessary supplies, Oleg Kryuchkov, an adviser to Aksyenov, said on Telegram Monday.
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It's early morning in Crimea. Here's what you need to know
From CNN staff
A Moscow-backed official in annexed Crimea said early Monday that an “emergency incident” has been reported on the Crimean bridge, halting traffic on the only link between the peninsula and Russia.
Sergey Aksenov, the Russia-appointed head of Crimea, did not specify the nature of the incident.
Last October, a huge blast partially damaged the bridge, causing parts of it to collapse.
Earlier this month, Ukraine’s deputy defense minister made what appeared to be the clearest admission yet that Ukrainian forces were responsible for the October 8 attack.
Here are some other key developments surrounding Russia’s war in Ukraine:
Putin’s remarks: Russian President Vladimir Putin painted the Ukrainian counteroffensive as “unsuccessful” in an interview with a pro-Kremlin journalist published Sunday. Ukraine acknowledges the campaign has been characterized by tough fighting and limited progress but insists it does not feel under pressure by Western allies to deliver quick results as it does the hard work of driving Russian forces out of its territory.
On the front lines: Ukraine reported fierce battles in the east, with the two sides swapping fighting positions and Russia going on the offensive in some areas. Outside the long-contested city of Bakhmut, Ukraine’s military has reported slow but steady progress. In southern Ukraine, heavy Russian attacks wounded multiple people in the Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions on the weekend, Ukrainian officials said.
Grain deal on the brink: The crucial agreement that allows the export of grain from Ukrainian ports is set to expire Monday unless Russia agrees to an extension. The deal will end at midnight July 17 into July 18 Istanbul time (5 p.m. ET on Monday), a UN spokesperson said. The Kremlin has voiced displeasure with the pact, objecting in particular to the way international sanctions affect its own exports.
Cluster bombs in focus: Putin said Ukraine using cluster munitions should be considered a “crime,” and vowed to retaliate if Kyiv uses the ones recently supplied by the US. But Putin’s own forces have been using the controversial weapons throughout the course of the war, according to Ukraine, the United Nations and a CNN investigation from last year. Read more about both countries’ use of the controversial bombs here.
US ammunition running low: The United States is running low on ammunition from its own stockpile as the country works to help Ukraine defend itself against Russia, according to US national security adviser Jake Sullivan. President Joe Biden’s administration, upon taking office, found that overall stocks of the NATO standard ammunition used for artillery rounds “was relatively low,” Sullivan told CNN.
F-16s debate: Sullivan confirmed Sunday the US will allow European countries to start training Ukrainian pilots to use F-16 fighter jets, after reports that Europe was still awaiting formal approval. The US has not yet said it will supply Kyiv with the planes, however. Two US lawmakers offered differing perspectives on whether that constitutes “slow-rolling” the process to Ukraine’s detriment.
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"Emergency incident" on Crimean bridge, Russia-backed official says
From CNN's Josh Pennington and Alex Stambaugh
This picture shows the Crimean bridge connecting the Russian mainland with the peninsula across the Kerch Strait, Crimea, on July 17.
Stringer/Reuters
An “emergency incident” has been reported on the Crimean bridge, halting traffic on the only link between the annexed peninsula and Russia, a Moscow-backed official said Monday.
Sergey Aksenov, the Russia-appointed head of Crimea, did not specify the nature of the emergency incident.
Aksenov urged residents and those traveling to and from Crimea to choose an alternative land route.
Some context: Earlier this month, Ukraine’s Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar made what appeared to be the clearest admission yet that Ukrainian forces were responsible for an attack last October on the bridge.
The attack disrupted major transport links between Russia and Crimea, which Moscow has controlled since it seized the peninsula in 2014. It also hit Russia’s military effort in Ukraine and represented a psychological blow for Moscow and a major propaganda victory for Kyiv.
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Russian shelling kills at least 1 in Kharkiv, Ukrainian officials say
From CNN's Mariya Knight and Kostan Nechyporenko
At least one person was killed and three others were injured after Russia shelled Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region on Sunday, Ukrainian authorities said.
The Ukrainian Prosecutor General’s Office said the victims were all employees of an industrial enterprise in the Osnoviansky district of Kharkiv that was targeted in the attack.
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The Black Sea grain deal is set to expire Monday if Russia refuses to renew
From CNN's Radina Gigova
Harvester works on a wheat fields near ongoing Ukrainian counter-offensive in Prymorske, Ukraine on July 5, 2023.
Amadeusz Swierk/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
A crucial deal that allows the export of grain from Ukrainian ports in the Black Sea is set to expire Monday unless Russia agrees to an extension.
The grain deal will end at midnight July 17 into July 18 Istanbul time (5 p.m. ET on Monday), according to Ismini Palla, the chief UN media and communications officer for the Black Sea Grain deal.
The last ship to travel under the deal left the port of Odesa early on Sunday, Palla said.
The deal was brokered by Turkey and the United Nations in July 2022, after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine and blockaded ports.
Russian President Vladimir Putin told South African President Cyril Ramaphosa in a phone conversation Saturday that the deal has not met its objectives.
Though Russia has renewed the deal three times, it has repeatedly complained about international sanctions that hinder its own shipments of fertilizers and grain.
In some previous negotiations on the deal, Putin has maintained a hard line until shortly before a deadline and then ultimately agreed to remain in the pact.
Some context: Under the deal, grain ships are able to navigate through a safe corridor in the Black Sea under the direction of Ukrainian pilots, and then pass through the Bosporus Strait — an important shipping corridor in northwest Turkey — in order to reach global markets. It has proven vital for stabilizing global food prices and bringing relief to the developing countries who rely on Ukrainian exports.
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What we know about Russia's use of cluster munitions in Ukraine
From CNN's Radina Gigova and Maria Kostenko
Despite saying Ukraine using cluster munitions is a “crime” — and vowing to retaliate if Kyiv uses the ones recently supplied by the US — Russian President Vladimir Putin’s forces have been using the controversial weapons throughout the course of the war, Ukraine and the United Nations have said.
Ukraine’s Prosecutor General’s Office has launched a number of investigations on Russia’s use of cluster bombs since the very beginning of the war.
Here’s what those probes and reports from international organizations have revealed so far:
Ukrainian claims: In a statement on March 27, 2022, the Prosecutor General’s Office said Russia has used cluster munitions on civilian targets in the eastern Dnipropetrovsk region, and the regional prosecutor’s office has launched “criminal proceedings over violation of the laws and customs of war.”
According to the investigation, Russian forces used cluster bombs in an attack on the region’s Kryvyi Rih district, the prosecutor’s office said in a Telegram post.
In a Telegram post May 11, the Zaporizhzhia regional military administration said Russian forces “massively attacked (the town of) Malokaterynivka with multiple rocket launchers, where 8 people were injured by cluster munitions.” Three of those wounded were ambulance workers who were responding to a call.
CNN is not able to independently verify the Ukrainian claims.
Reports from outside organizations: Cluster munitions have also been used on civilian targets in the northeastern Kharkiv region, a CNN investigation found last year.
The report documented how a Russian general who oversaw atrocities in Syria led the cluster bombings on Ukraine’s second-largest city.
The UN and affiliated organizations have also published reports on the issue.
In a statement on March 30, 2022, the UN rights chief at the time, Michelle Bachelet, said credible reports indicated Russia had already used cluster munitions in populated areas of Ukraine “at least two dozen times,” just over a month after the invasion was launched.
In a report published August 25 last year the UN-partnered Cluster Munition Monitor civil society group said Russian forces had “repeatedly” used cluster munitions since the start of the war.
Ukraine’s use of the weapons: The same report by the Cluster Munition Monitor group found that Ukrainian forces had also used cluster munitions “several times” and “mostly” in populated areas.
Ukraine has acknowledged its previous use of the weapons, saying it was using the bombs to defend its territory.
Ukrainian and US officials have said the cluster munitions provided by the US won’t be used in heavily populated areas, even if those areas are occupied by Russian forces, and that Kyiv will make efforts to sweep areas it bombs with the munitions for unexploded ordnance.
Cluster munitions have killed at least 215 civilians and injured 474 people overall since the start of the war, according to the monitoring group’s report.
CNN’s Uliana Pavlova contributed reporting to this post.
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Fighting positions changing for both sides along the eastern front, Ukrainian official says
From CNN's Maria Kostenko and Radina Gigova
Hanna Maliar attends a ceremony at St Sophia in Kyiv, Ukraine on June 23.
Positions on both sides are “changing dynamically” along the eastern front as fighting there has “somewhat escalated,” a Ukrainian official said.
Russia has been “actively advancing” near the city of Kupyansk in the northeastern Kharkiv region for two days in a row, Maliar said. “We are on the defense,” she added.
Further south along the eastern front, Maliar said Ukrainian forces are gradually moving forward around Bakhmut and there are “daily advances on the southern flank” of the long-contested city.
On Bakhmut’s northern flank, Ukrainian forces are trying to hold their positions, while Russian forces continue to attack, Maliar said.
“In Bakhmut itself, we are shelling the enemy, and the enemy is shelling us,” she added.
And south of Bakhmut, Russian forces are also on the offensive in areas surrounding the towns of Avdiivka and Marinka, Maliar said.
“Our defenders continue to effectively hold them back. Hot battles continue with no change in positions,” she said.
It is not possible for CNN to immediately verify claims of territorial gains or losses by either side.
Here are the areas each side controls in southern and eastern Ukraine:
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US gives "green light" to European countries to train Ukrainians on F-16s, Biden official says
The decision cements a stark turnaround for President Joe Biden, who said earlier this year that he did not believe that Ukraine needed the F-16s. One of the main issues Kyiv’s ground forces have faced as their counteroffensive gets underway is Russian air power holding them back. Russia still maintains air superiority, which makes it difficult for ground forces to advance.
In May, Biden had informed G7 leaders that the US would support a joint effort with allies and partners to train Ukrainian pilots on fourth generation aircraft, including F-16s, though it was unclear at the time when that training would star.
The US-made jet has air-to-air refueling capabilities and is compatible with most NATO weapons already being supplied to Ukraine. Despite first entering production in the 1980s, it has gone through several upgrades, making it more advanced and versatile than any jet Ukraine currently has in its fleet, and a fierce rival for most Russian aircraft, with the exception of newer models that Moscow has hesitated to deploy in Ukraine.
Sullivan noted Sunday that European allies have said they need several weeks to prepare training abilities and that the US would meet whatever timeline they set out.