October 12, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news | CNN

October 12, 2022 Russia-Ukraine news

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Video shows aftermath of another deadly missile attack on Zaporizhzhia
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It's nighttime in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know.

The UN General Assembly overwhelmingly approved a resolution on Wednesday telling Russia its annexation of four Ukrainian zones is illegal and not valid.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called the result “historic” in a tweet. According to the final tally, 143 countries supported the resolution with five nations, including Russia, opposed and 35 member states abstaining.

Meanwhile, NATO defense ministers reaffirmed their commitment to support Ukraine with military aid following Russia’s recent wave of attacks.

Here are the latest headlines:

  • Ukraine says Russian forces continue assault: Russian forces in occupied Ukraine continue to launch offensive operations amid a much higher tempo of missile attacks, according to the Ukrainian military. In an update late Wednesday, the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces said enemy forces were “trying to conduct offensive actions at the Bakhmut and Avdiivka directions,” both in the eastern Donetsk region. Those attacks and others in Donetsk had been repelled, it said.
  • Attacks on civilians “reveal the malice of Putin’s war of choice,” US defense secretary says: US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said Russia’s recent attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure in Ukraine “reveal the malice of Putin’s war of choice.” Austin, who hosted a meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group in Brussels on Wednesday, said the “resolve” of allies and partners to help Ukraine has only solidified since the recent barrage of Russian attacks on civilians.
  • “No guarantee” that Europe will survive this winter, warns chief of Russian energy giant: The head of the Russian state-owned energy giant Gazprom has warned European countries of the consequences of weaning off energy from Russia. There was “no guarantee” that Europe would survive this winter season, based on its current gas reserves, Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller said. 
  • Ukraine says it has liberated more settlements in the Kherson region: Ukrainian forces liberated five more villages in Kherson, according to Yaroslav Yanushevych, head of the regional administration. The villages – Novovasylivka, Novohryhorivka, Nova Kamynka, Tryfonivka and Chervone – are relatively close together in a largely rural part of the region. 
  • External power to Zaporizhzhia power plant restored after morning outage, nuclear watchdog says: External power to the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant has been restored after it was lost on Wednesday morning following the shelling of a substation, Rafael Grossi, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), said in a tweet.

Western allies hail lopsided UN vote condemning Russia's attempted annexations in Ukraine

Western allies voiced their support Wednesday for Ukraine following the UN General Assembly’s condemnation of Russia’s attempted annexations of four regions in the war-torn country.

According to the final tally, 143 countries supported the motion that the annexations – announced last month by President Vladimir Putin – were illegal. Russia was one of the five countries in opposition while 35 member states abstained.

The German Foreign Office tweeted

The Italian Mission to the UN in New York tweeted:

Belgium’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs tweeted:

The Netherlands’ Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom Wopke Hoekstra tweeted

Norway’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs tweeted

Latvia’s mission to the UN tweeted:

Ireland’s mission to the UN tweeted:

UN General Assembly overwhelmingly condemns Russia's attempted annexations in Ukraine

The UN General Assembly (UNGA) overwhelmingly approved a resolution on Wednesday telling Russia its annexation of four Ukrainian zones is illegal and not valid.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called the resolution “historic” in a tweet and thanked the states that voted in favor.

During the assembly’s emergency special session on Ukraine, US ambassador to the UN Linda Thomas-Greenfield said the vote “is important not just to the future of Ukraine and the future of Europe, but to the very foundations of this institution.”

“After all, the UN was built on an idea: that never again would one country be allowed to take another’s territory by force,” Thomas-Greenfield added. 

The US diplomat said the resolution calls for peace and de-escalation, and “makes clear that we reject Russia’s attempted annexations. That we reject this affront to territorial integrity, to national sovereignty, to peace and security.”

She noted that “today it is Russia invading Ukraine. But tomorrow it could be another nation whose territory is violated. You could be next. What would you expect from this chamber?” 

“Our message Today is loud and clear: It does not matter if you, as a nation, are big or small, rich or poor, old or new. If you are a UN Member State, your borders are your own and are protected by international law. They cannot be redrawn by anyone else by force.” Thomas-Greenfield added. 

Canada will do "whatever it takes" to support Ukraine, defense minister says

Canadian Defence Minister Anita Anand reaffirmed the country’s commitment to support Ukraine, saying on Wednesday that Canada would continue to do “whatever it takes” to stand in solidarity with Kyiv.

Anand’s comments came after Canada earlier on Wednesday announced an additional $47 million in new military aid to assist Ukraine.  

Outlining what was in the aid package, Anand told Soares that there were three categories of aid: Military aid and equipment including winter clothes, training Ukrainian armed forces, and transporting aid from allies.     

“What I saw on the ground today in the meeting itself was incredible unity, collaboration, and cooperation,” she said speaking from Brussels, where NATO defence ministers met on Wednesday.

She went on to say that “each country is leveraging its own respective capacities.”  

Anand condemned Russia’s recent strikes across Ukraine attacking civilians and civilian infrastructure, calling them “war crimes.”  

On threats from Russia to the Arctic, she said Canada took this extremely seriously, and had already stepped up protection there to “ensure continental defense.”

German economy minister: Putin's attempt to destabilize Europe's economic order will fail

German Economy and Climate Minister Robert Habeck speaks at a news conference in Berlin on October 12.

German Economy Minister Robert Habeck said Wednesday that he is convinced Russian President Vladimir Putin’s attempt to destabilize Europe’s economic order will fail.

The minister also addressed Germany’s economic health, stating that the country “will have a decline in economic growth this year.” 

Comparing growth forecasts from April 2022, autumn 2022 and 2023, he said that Germany was forecast to have “negative growth, a recession.” 

“This autumn, we are forecasting 1.4% growth. In April this year, that figure was 2.2%. Next year, growth will stand at minus 0.4%, in other words negative growth, a recession,” he said.

He estimated that inflation in Germany will stand at 8% this year and at 7% next year.

France will provide Ukraine with air defense systems and weapons, Macron says  

France will send air defense systems, radars, missiles and weapons to Ukraine in the coming weeks to defend against missile and drone attacks, French President Emmanuel Macron said in an interview with broadcaster France 2 on Wednesday. 

Macron, whose comments come after Ukraine experienced a wave of Russian missile attacks, said the French supplies would specifically help defeat these kinds of threats. 

He added that France would deliver the hardware and the necessary training to Ukraine. Ukraine has specifically requested the weapons as a priority.

The French president said that this decision followed “an unprecedented phase of bombings” that struck Ukrainian cities and infrastructure. 

Without going into detail, Macron said France was providing military intelligence to Ukraine. 

Pressed on the success of international sanctions, Macron said that they were working. 

Macron also declared, “We are in a hybrid war.”

“We are not just using weapons on the ground but using weapons of information,” he said, adding that Russia was using a wide variety of approaches to wage the conflict, including: propaganda channels, paying for influence including on social media, weaponizing migration, blackmail and hunger. 

Questioned on nuclear risks in Ukraine, the French president confirmed that France’s nuclear doctrine would not automatically commit to a retaliatory strike, if Russia used nuclear weapons in Ukraine. 

The president also refused to brand Russia a “terrorist state” saying that such labels “have little consequences”. 

“There’s one state that’s declared war and that’s more than enough,” he said. 

"No guarantee" that Europe will survive this winter, warns chief of Russian state-owned energy giant

The head of the Russian state-owned energy giant Gazprom has warned European countries of the consequences of weaning off energy from Russia. 

There was “no guarantee” that Europe would survive this winter season, based on its current gas reserves, Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller said Wednesday. 

Speaking at the Russia Energy Week conference in Moscow, Miller claimed that gas in Germany’s underground storage will be enough only for between two and two and a half months.

The European gas storage levels is at around “90% full and we are top of the class in that respect,” Czech Minister for Industry and Trade Jozef Síkela said Wednesday, after a meeting of European Union energy ministers in Prague.

Some background: Europe’s energy crisis is deepening as Russia further limits exports of natural gas, forcing governments to spend billions to protect businesses and consumers from soaring bills as the region slides towards recession.

Ukraine says Russian forces continue assault operations, with one town hit by more than 300 shells Wednesday

Russian forces in occupied Ukraine continue to launch offensive operations amid the much higher tempo of missile attacks, according to the Ukrainian military.

In an update late Wednesday, the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces said enemy forces were “trying to conduct offensive actions at the Bakhmut and Avdiivka directions,” both in the eastern Donetsk region. Those attacks and others in Donetsk had been repelled, it said.

It said that parts of Dnipropetrovsk and Zaporizhzhia regions also came under attack, especially the town of Orikhiv.

Svitlana Mandrych, deputy head of Orikhiv, said a total of 324 shells had landed in the town on Wednesday

“We still have a night to survive ahead. Now we hear explosions again,” Mandrych said. 

The General Staff said Russian forces continued to use cruise missiles as well as drones and multiple launch rocket systems. Another 10 Iranian-made drones had been shot down Wednesday, it said.

It said the Ukrainian air force was again active — carrying out 27 strikes. 

Senior NATO official: Russian nuclear strike would ​"almost certainly​" trigger a "physical response"

A still image from a video released by the Russian Defense Ministry shows a Russian nuclear-powered submarine sailing during the military drill in the Chukchi Sea on September 16.

A Russian nuclear strike would ​”almost certainly​” trigger a “physical response” from ​Ukrainian allies and potentially from NATO, a ​senior NATO official said Wednesday​, according to a press officer.

Speaking to media representatives in Brussels covering the ongoing meeting of NATO defense ministers, the ​senior NATO official warned that any use of nuclear weapons by Moscow would have “unprecedented consequences” for Russia.

It would “almost certainly be drawing a physical response from many allies, and potentially from NATO itself,” the official said​, according to the press officer.

The official went on to say that Moscow was using its nuclear threats mainly to deter the alliance and other countries from directly entering its war on Ukraine.

Meanwhile, US President Joe Biden, who warned last week the risk of “nuclear Armageddon” was at its highest level in 60 years, said in an exclusive CNN interview Tuesday that threats emanating from Russia could result in catastrophic “mistakes” and “miscalculation,” even as he declined to spell out how precisely the United States would respond if Putin deploys a tactical nuclear device on the battlefield in Ukraine.

CNN’s Kevin Liptak contributed reporting to this post 

Allies need to help Ukraine rebuild an integrated air and missile defense system, top US general says

The US and its allies need to provide Ukraine with air defense systems in order for Ukraine to help defend its airspace against incoming attacks from Russian forces, Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said during a news conference after the Ukraine Defense Contact Group meeting in Brussels Wednesday.

“What needs to be done here by all the various countries that were at the conference today is chip in and help them rebuild and sustain an integrated air and missile defense system,” Milley said. 

The United States’ proposed plan: Milley laid out a plan where different air defense systems that several countries have, including Israel and Germany, should be given to Ukraine, and then the systems can be used together to protect Ukraine’s airspace. 

The execution of this strategy will be “quite complicated from a technical standpoint,” but Milley said it “is achievable.” 

When asked by a journalist when the air defense systems will arrive in Ukraine, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said, “the systems will be provided as fast as we can physically get them there.” 

Top US general calls Russia’s attack on civilian infrastructure a "war crime"

Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, called Russia’s attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure in Ukraine a “war crime” while speaking in a news conference after the Ukraine Defense Contact Group met in Brussels on Wednesday.

Milley added that while Ukraine’s citizens “have suffered greatly,” the country continues to “endure, and they are an inspiration to all.”

Attacks on civilians in Ukraine "reveal the malice of Putin’s war of choice," US defense secretary says

Workers in crater left by a missile strike the day before near Taras Shevchenko National University on October 11, in Kyiv.

US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said Russia’s recent attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure in Ukraine “reveal the malice of Putin’s war of choice.”

Austin, who hosted a meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group in Brussels on Wednesday, said the “resolve” of allies and partners to help Ukraine has only solidified since the recent barrage of Russian attacks on civilians.

Austin held the meeting to discuss how to continue to support Ukraine in battling Russia’s ongoing invasion of the country, with more than 50 countries participating.

Austin called the recent attacks a “grim preview” of a future where “appetites of aggressive autocrats outweigh the rights of peaceful states.”

Austin said the US and allies will “continue” to send capabilities, like High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS) systems, that have helped Ukraine in their counter-offensive against Russia. 

UN nuclear watchdog chief traveling back to Ukraine after discussing nuclear safety with Putin in Russia

Rafael Grossi, chief of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), is traveling back to the Ukrainian capital of Kyiv after meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin in St. Petersburg, where the two discussed issues related to nuclear safety.

“The work on the establishment of a nuclear safety & security protection zone around #Zaporizhzhya Nuclear Power Plant continues,” he added.

Grossi has repeatedly stressed in the past few weeks the urgent need to create a protection zone around the Europe’s largest nuclear plant in Zaporizhzhia, which has experienced frequent shelling in the past few months.

View Grossi’s tweet here:

Ukraine's weapons wish list includes multiple rocket systems, artillery and air defense as top priorities

Ukraine’s weapons wish list includes multiple launch rocket systems, artillery and air defense as current top weapons priorities, according to a handout provided to defense ministers participating in a Ukraine Defense Contact Group meeting hosted by US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin in Brussels on Wednesday. 

Ministers of defense from several countries are gathering to discuss weapons requirements and how the countries can continue to support Ukraine militarily as they battle Russia’s ongoing invasion of their country.

Under Multiple Launch Rocket Systems (MLRS), the handout states that Ukraine needs “additional NATO-standard MLRS systems and ammunition.” Under artillery, the handout states Kyiv needs more artillery for towed howitzers, self-propelled tracked howitzers and non-standard wheeled howitzers as well as large quantities of “additional 155mm, 152mm, and 122mm ammunition,” the handout states.  

The third priority is “air defense” including missiles for Ukraine’s current medium-range air defense systems, the S-300 and SA-11. The list also states Ukraine needs a “transition to Western-origin layered air defense systems” and “additional Western and Soviet-era SHORAD systems.” Ukraine has been asking for more air defense systems, but the need has become more urgent as Russia has increased its use of Iranian-made drones. 

Other priorities listed include radars, coastal defense, tanks and electronic warfare equipment.

Ukrainian prime minister calls for 25% cut in electricity use during peak hours to avoid outages

The Ukrainian government is appealing to people to reduce their electricity consumption to avoid blackouts — and wants peak demand reduced by 25%.

Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal appealed to citizens and businesses to reduce electricity consumption from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. in order to stabilize the power system, after damage caused by Russian missile attacks this week.

But to avoid power outages, he said, “it is necessary to achieve a deliberate reduction in electricity consumption from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. across Ukraine by 25%.”

Shmyhal asked that “external electric advertising and other energy-consuming devices” be turned off during the evening hours.

He also appealed to people to use gas and coal sparingly after turning on the heating. “The minimum indoor temperature this winter will be 16 degrees, and the average temperature will be 18 degrees,” he said. “This is a necessity and this is our contribution to victory.”

Ukraine says it has liberated more settlements in the southern region of Kherson 

Ukrainian soldiers patrol counterattack against Russian forces in the southern Kherson region, Ukraine, on October 7.

Ukraine says its forces have continued to advance in the southern region of Kherson, liberating five more villages in a slow push southwest. 

Yaroslav Yanushevych, head of the Kherson region administration, said Wednesday: “The Armed Forces of Ukraine liberated 5 more settlements in the Kherson region: Novovasylivka, Novohryhorivka, Nova Kamynka, Tryfonivka, Chervone.

The five villages are relatively close together in a largely rural part of the region. 

More on Ukraine’s offensive in Kherson: Last week, a senior Ukrainian official said Ukraine’s military had recaptured 2,400 square kilometers (more than 926 square miles) of territory in the Kherson region “since the beginning of the full-scale war.”

Ukrainian forces have been making steady progress in Kherson since beginning an offensive at the end of last month, and their successes have sparked rare criticism of Moscow’s war effort among pro-Russian figures.

Kherson is one of the four regions in Ukraine that Russia has claimed it is annexing in violation of international law.

Biden says he hasn't seen movement from Putin on Brittney Griner's release

President Joe Biden speaks with CNN's Jake Tapper during an interview in the Map Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on October 11.

US President Joe Biden says he hasn’t seen any movement from Russian President Vladimir Putin on the release of American women’s basketball star Brittney Griner.

“Not from Putin,” Biden said when questioned whether he’d seen any action on Griner’s case.

Speaking to CNN’s Jake Tapper on Tuesday, Biden said he’d be willing to meet Putin at the upcoming G20 summit in Indonesia if Putin was willing to discuss Griner’s release.

Biden told reporters Wednesday that recent Russian attacks on Ukrainian civilian infrastructure were brutal and “beyond the pale.”

What Russia is saying: A Kremlin aide responded to Biden saying that he has “no intention of meeting” with Russian President Vladimir Putin, saying on Wednesday that Moscow “never refuses negotiations and any useful international contacts,” according to state media RIA Novosti.

“We never repel an outstretched hand. If we feel and understand that a partner for one reason or another does not want to meet, we do not impose ourselves,” Putin’s foreign policy aide Yury Ushakov told reporters.

When asked if Putin would attend the G20 summit taking place in November in Indonesia, Ushakov said “there’s still plenty of time” to decide.

“As for G20… It’s still a long way to it, as well as to other meetings (international forums in November), there is still a lot of time. Let’s wait and see,” he said, according to the state media. 

Putin: Russia is not to blame for Europe’s energy crisis 

Russian President Vladimir Putin delivers a key speech during the plenary session of Russian Energy Week 2022 on October 12, in Moscow, Russia.

Russia is not to blame for Europe’s energy crisis, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday, adding that the European Union itself is to blame. 

“Ordinary Europeans are suffering. This year, their energy and gas bills have more than tripled. As in medieval times, the population began to stock up on firewood for the winter. What does Russia have to do with it?” Putin said during the plenary session at Russia’s Energy Week.

Putin blamed EU countries for making poor decisions in the energy sector when it comes to cooperation with Russia. 

“The European well-being of the last decades was largely based on cooperation with Russia. The consequences of the partial rejection of goods from Russia are already negatively affecting the economy and the residents of Europe,” he added.

Putin also said on Wednesday that Russia is ready to start gas supplies via a link on the Nord Stream 2 pipeline that remains operational but it is the EU’s decision if they want it.

Remember: Russia was a major oil and gas supplier for European countries. Moscow’s war in Ukraine has brought this European reliance under scrutiny.

Leak detected in pipeline carrying Russian oil to Germany assumed to be accidental not sabotage, operator says

Firefighters work in the field near the Druzhba pipeline where an oil leak was detected, near the village of Zurawice, Poland, on October 12.

A leak has been detected in the Druzhba pipeline which supplies crude oil from Russia to Germany, the pipeline’s operator PERN said in a statement on Wednesday.

PERN said the leak was first detected Tuesday evening and located on one of the two lines of the western section of the pipeline, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) from the Polish city of Plock. The operator said “pumping on the damaged line was immediately switched off” but supplies were still continuing to their German partners and they were now investigating what caused the damage.

A spokesperson for Germany’s finance ministry said that initial information from Polish Authorities showed it was “assumed that the damage was accidental, not sabotage” but said the incident was still being investigated.

The spokesperson confirmed there had been a pressure drop in the Druzhba pipeline on Tuesday but stressed that Germany’s supplies were still “guaranteed”. 

“The two refineries in Schwedt and Leuna are currently continuing to receive crude oil via the Druzhba pipeline ‘Friendship 1’ via Poland. These supplies have not been interrupted,” she added.

Some more context: The discovery of this leak comes as Europe is already on high alert after multiple leaks caused extensive damage to both Nord Stream pipelines in September.

Swedish authorities found that the damage in both pipelines had been caused by “detonations” and their investigation had strengthened their “suspicions of gross sabotage.”