Ukraine’s parliament will vote on a new law banning religious organizations “affiliated with centers of influence” in Russia, President Volodymyr Zelensky said.
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Our live coverage for the day has ended. Follow the latest Ukraine news here or read through the updates below.
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US senators to get classified briefing on Ukraine next Wednesday amid push for more aid
From CNN's Manu Raju
US senators will get a classified briefing on Ukraine next Wednesday, according to a Senate aide.
The briefing comes as the administration is pushing for $37 billion more in aid to Ukraine, which could be folded into a year-end omnibus bill that must be approved before a Dec. 16 deadline to fund the government.
It’s still uncertain whether the administration will get a deal on a giant omnibus package or have to settle on a stop-gap resolution to fund federal agencies at last year’s levels — something the Pentagon has warned against.
Background on the funding: The Ukraine funding request is spread across four US government departments, according to a fact sheet shared last month with CNN. The funding would “ensure Ukraine has the funding, weapons, and support it needs to defend itself, and that vulnerable people continue to receive lifesaving aid,” according to a letter Office of Management and Budget Director Shalanda Young sent to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. It also addresses the critical food and energy shortages caused by Russia’s invasion, she said.
The breakdown, according to the fact sheet, runs like this:
$21.7 billion for the Department of Defense that will be spent on “equipment for Ukraine, replenishment of Department of Defense stocks, and for continued military, intelligence and other defense support.”
$14.5 billion for the State Department for “direct budget support to Ukraine, critical war time investments, security assistance, to strengthen global food security, and for humanitarian assistance,”
$626 million for the Department of Energy “for nuclear security support to Ukraine and for modernizing the Strategic Petroleum Reserve”
$900 million for the Department of Health and Human Services “to provide standard assistance health care and support services to Ukrainian parolees.”
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Ukrainian officials warn of tough months ahead but say country can avoid a national blackout
From CNN's Julia Kesaieva
Several Ukrainian officials have warned that the country faces a tough winter but can prevail in the face of Russian missile attacks on its infrastructure.
Maksym Tymchenko, Chief Executive Officer of DTEK, a major power company, said that he was confident that there was no chance “for the Russians to plunge Ukraine into darkness.”
Yet, there was a power generation deficit and issues with electricity transmission, he told the Kyiv Security Forum on Friday.
In the capital, he said, the company was trying to introduce “rolling controlled blackouts: 3-4 hours of electricity supply, followed by 4 hours break. This situation will continue, we hope, until next week only, if there are no further attacks. But we are prepared for further attacks.”
He said all six of DTEK’s power stations had been attacked, some of them several times. As of Friday, he said, the company has managed to bring them all back to the grid.
The problem, though, was with connections and transmission, Tymchenko said.
“Transformers, sub-stations, high-voltage transformers: these are what we’ve been in deficit of, and what we appeal to our international partners for. Some of the equipment is already on the way to Ukraine,” he said.
Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko said that last week that Kyiv faced an almost total blackout. “There was no heat and water supply. And about 4,000 employees of utility companies worked day and night to restore them.”
Ukraine’s Defense Minister, Oleksii Reznikov, told the forum that the months ahead would be difficult.
He added: “The enemy still has significant resources, but there are more and more signs that he needs a pause at any cost.”
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Russian legislator says EU risks its energy security by imposing price caps, state media reports
From CNN's Uliana Pavlova
Russian legislator Leonid Slutsky claimed to Russian state media on Friday that the European Union is jeopardizing its energy security for the sake of US interests and is violating the laws of the market by imposing price caps on Russian oil.
“The European Union is putting its energy security at risk. They didn’t set a ceiling but hit the bottom again. And for what? To satisfy the ambitions of their overseas partners. But the Europeans can’t wait for help from them,” Slutsky told TASS.
The European Union approved a price cap on Russian oil at $60 a barrel, an EU official with knowledge of the situation told CNN on Friday.
The plan needs the agreement of all EU states.
Slutsky also said that Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak had previously clearly outlined Moscow’s position.
“No price restrictions are acceptable. There will be no oil supplies to countries under the terms of the price ceiling, even if it is more profitable,” Slutsky said.
In October, Putin said that Russia would not supply energy resources to those countries that would set limits on their prices.
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Skies have been quieter over Ukraine — but the country is still scrambling to repair infrastructure
From Tim Lister, Josh Pennington and Julia Kesaieva
Cars ride past anti-tanks equipment in Kyiv on December 1.
(Efrem Lukatsky/AP)
The skies above Kyiv and regional centers across Ukraine have been unusually quiet for the last week. No Russian missile or drone attacks of any consequence have been registered since Nov. 23, when nearly 70 air-launched cruise missiles were fired at targets across Ukraine.
According to Ukraine’s air force spokesman Yurii Ihnat, one reason may be that Russia has run out of Iranian-made Shahed attack drones.
Despite the sharp decline in attacks on power infrastructure in Ukraine, the state energy company Ukrenergo is struggling to bring damaged facilities back online.
Oleksii Kuleba, head of Kyiv region military administration, said Friday that emergency power outages continue in the Kyiv region.
“Overloading of the power system leads to new emergency shutdowns,” he said.
Vitali Klitschko, Kyiv’s mayor, says the city is bracing itself for new attacks and adopting contingency measures.
“In case of new enemy attacks on the critical infrastructure of Ukraine and the complete absence of electricity supply as a result, some retail chains, markets, shops and shopping malls will continue to operate in the capital,” he said on Telegram Friday.
While tram services would be halted by an electricity shutdown, Klitschko said, “all bus fleets of the capital are provided with the necessary fuel and have automatic energy sources.”
He said metro stations would again be available as shelters and would provide an internet connection, electricity, drinking water and sanitary facilities.
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Ukraine foreign minister urges a decision on Patriot missile system
From CNN’s Matthew Chance and Mick Krever in Kyiv
Ukraine’s foreign minister told CNN in an exclusive interview that the “time has come” for a decision on whether to provide his country with the Patriot missile defense system.
“We began our conversation about Patriots in the very beginning of the war – even actually before the war,” Dmytro Kuleba told CNN in Kyiv. “But now time has come to make decisions.”
The US is considering sending the Patriot missile defense system to Ukraine to support their air defense capabilities against incoming Russian attacks, a senior US defense official told reporters Tuesday. NATO’s Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg said on Thursday it is still “too early” to make a conclusion on Poland’s call to move the Patriot air-defense system, offered by Germany to Ukraine.
Kuleba also said that he does not have a “single doubt that we will get through this winter.”
Kuleba said that he had spoken with his American and German counterparts about the missile defense system.
“I will not conceal that it would be a huge help. It would really help us to defend the country and to minimize the price we are paying for surviving during the winter,” he added.
CNN’s Ellie Kaufman, Barbara Starr and Xiaofei Xu contributed reporting to this post.
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European Union approves Russian oil price cap at $60 a barrel, according to EU official
From CNN’s Chris Liakos in London
An oil tanker is moored at the Sheskharis complex, part of Chernomortransneft JSC in Novorossiysk, Russia, in October.
(AP/File)
The European Union approves a price cap on Russian oil at $60 a barrel, an EU official with knowledge of the situation told CNN on Friday.
The plan, which stops all EU countries from setting more than $60 a barrel, needs the agreement of all EU states.
President of the European Commission Ursula von Der Leyen said on Friday the bloc and other G7 partners will have a “full import ban” on Russian seaborne oil starting Dec. 5.
In a video statement posted on Twitter, von der Leyen said the price cap has three objectives.
Von der Leyen said the price cap will directly benefit developing and emerging economies and will be adjustable over time so that “we can react to market developments.”
“Together with our partners, we stand united and firm in our opposition to Russia’s atrocious war,” von der Leyen concluded.
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Plans appear to be underway for evacuation of Russian-held towns in Zaporizhzhia region
From CNN's Tim Lister and Julia Kesaieva
Despite denials from Russian-appointed officials in the southern region of Zaporizhzhia, there appear to be plans to evacuate civilians from several towns that are occupied by Russian forces.
The preparations come as Ukrainian forces step up targeting of Russian weapons and ammunition stocks behind the front lines.
One Zaporizhzhia community group posted the image of a notice in the town of Vasylivka, which is Russian-held and close to the only crossing point between Russian-claimed and Ukrainian-held territory.
The notice, in Russian, says: “Administration of Vasylivka district warns! Due to the preparations to possible evacuation of the residents of the city and the district, and ensuring safety to the citizens, the relevant measures are being prepared.”
It also asks people to register with the local military administration.
Ivan Fedorov, the Ukrainian mayor of occupied Melitopol, claimed on his Telegram account that Russian forces in Vasylivka were becoming anxious and had “hidden behind civilians as human shields.”
Further behind the front lines, Fedorov said that Russian forces “have started some fuss in recent days” and were “developing rapid activity — withdrawing equipment, conducting rotation, bringing in mobilized soldiers.”
Fedorov said on Telegram that population censuses were underway in two towns “as if to prepare for evacuations.” But he cautioned that the move might be a disinformation campaign.
Fedorov also mentioned two explosions at Russian headquarters and barracks in the towns of Myrne and Yasne, though gave no further details.
He also claimed that near Terpinnia, a strike by the Ukrainian military killed or wounded “dozens” of Russian soldiers.
CNN is unable to verify the claim. No images or video have emerged from the area.
The Ukrainian military said Friday that in some parts of occupied Zaporizhzhia, “the enemy is strengthening its advanced positions and conducting defense” while launching artillery barrages along several parts of the front line.
But it added that “the enemy continues to suffer losses,” with a strike against a concentration of Russian troops near the village of Kamianske that left 100 people wounded.
There is no way to verify the claim.
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Top Ukrainian official says letters with explosives and animal parts are aimed at "sowing fear"
From CNN’s Matthew Chance and Mick Krever in Kyiv, Ukraine
A local fire engine and police car are seen with some diplomatic cars in front of Ukraine's embassy in Budapest on December 2.
(Attila Kisbenedek/AFP/Getty Images)
Ukraine’s foreign minister told CNN in an exclusive interview that a series of letters containing explosives or animal parts are meant to terrorize Ukrainian diplomats around the world.
Kuleba said that there had been 17 cases of embassies receiving either letter bombs, false bomb letters, or letters containing animals parts, like the eyes of cows and pigs.
CNN has been shown an image of one of the letters containing what officials said was the eyeball of a pig inside a padded envelope.
“It started with an explosion at the embassy of Ukraine in Spain,” he said. “But what followed this explosion was more weird, and I would even say sick.”
Asked who he thought was behind the letters, he said, “I feel tempted to say, to name Russia straight away, because first of all you have to answer the question, who benefits?”
Investigators have not made any statement about any person or group behind the letters.
Kuleba added that he thought that Russia was either directly responsible, or someone “who sympathizes [with] the Russian cause and tries to spread fear.”
“The conclusion will be made by investigators, but I think these two versions make most of the sense,” he said.
A Ukrainian embassy staff member in Madrid was slightly injured Wednesday after handling an envelope that exploded in his hands, according to the Kubela’s spokesperson, Oleg Nikolenko.
Ukraine has put all embassies and consulates abroad under enhanced security measures. This week, Ukrainian embassies in Hungary, the Netherlands, Poland, Croatia, Italy, Austria, the consulates general in Naples and Krakow, and the consulate in Brno have received bloody packages containing animal eyes, Nikolenko said on Facebook.
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Ukraine says it has carried out more special forces operations in Zaporizhzhia region
From CNN's Tim Lister
Ukraine’s military says its special forces are carrying out operations behind enemy lines in the Zaporizhzhia region.
The Special Operations Forces said it identified a Russian electronic warfare system in occupied territory.
“Our warriors passed the coordinates of the enemy EW to friendly artillery units, which destroyed the enemy complex,” it said.
In a Telegram statement, it said the electronic warfare complex in the city of Polohy had been used to interfere with both the communications of the Ukrainian military and “to suppress mobile communication in the settlement. Thus, they actually cut off the townspeople from communication with the outside world.”
The Special Operations Forces said it had also destroyed an S-300 missile complex that had fired on a maternity hospital in the town of Vilniansk.
On Thursday, the Ukrainian military claimed that some Russian troops were withdrawing from their positions in occupied parts of Zaporizhzhia and that the Russians were preparing the evacuation of “the personnel of the occupation administrations” in the region.
The military’s General Staff said that Russian units had left the settlements of Mykhailivka, Polohy and Inzhenerne.
What the Russians say: The Russian-appointed head of the occupied part of Zaporizhzhia, Yevgeniy Balitskiy, denied the Ukrainian claims on Friday.
He said these were “the fantasies of the propaganda machine in Kyiv. … Borders of Zaporizhzhia region are well protected, not a single meter of land has been given to the enemy.”
But Balitskiy added that “our cities are bombarded daily,” saying there had been an artillery strike on the transformer substation in Tokmak, which is near Polohy.
The ISW’s analysis: In its commentary on the situation in Zaporizhzhia, the Institute for the Study of War said Thursday that “Russian military movements in Zaporizhzhia oblast may suggest that Russian forces cannot defend critical areas amidst increasing Ukrainian strikes on Russian force concentrations and logistics.”
“The potential withdrawal from Polohy is particularly notable as the settlement lies at a critical road junction, and Russian forces would likely have a harder time defending Tokmak from potential Ukrainian operations without control of that junction,” it added.
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Ukrainian officials hope freezing weather will aid troops' mobility in Luhansk
From Tim Lister and Julia Kesaieva
Ukrainian officials say they are hoping the weather will get colder in the Luhansk region — and freeze the mud that has been impeding the progress of troops.
Serhiy Hayday, head of Luhansk region military administration, said that “as the weather is changing, winter is taking its toll. I hope temperatures below zero will help our military.”
Hayday told Ukrainian television that muddy conditions had affected the mobility of units along a frontline that has become largely static.
Ukrainian forces are probing along frontlines that run north-south through Kharkiv and Luhansk from the Russian border to the industrial belt of towns such as Kreminna and Rubizhne.
Hayday said Ukrainian troops are close to Kreminna, just “a few kilometers from the city.”
“There are indications that the Russians realize they will not hold Kreminna. They are constructing a second and rather strong line of defense near Starobilsk. The town of Rubizhne cannot be a strong fortress, because the Russians have destroyed 50% of the city. Therefore, they will not hold the defense there for a long time,” he said.
“However, it will not be an easy walk for our military, as the occupiers brought a huge amount of equipment and manpower to the area.”
Hayday also said that Ukrainian strikes continued on Russian positions behind the frontlines.
“Russian barracks, places of accumulation of equipment, ammunition depots are constantly exploding in the enemy’s rear. Russian units that were transferred from Kherson region are now concentrated around Starobilsk; they are setting up the line of defense there,” he said.
Hayday said there were a variety of Russian units in Luhansk — newly mobilized Russian units, convicts, as well as Chechen and Buryati fighters, and claimed that “a huge number of additional checkpoints appear even on small roads that are set up to catch deserters.”
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Ukraine says its embassy in Spain received a bloody package
From Al Goodman, Pau Mosquera in Madrid and Eve Brennan in London
Police cordon off the perimeter outside the Ukrainian embassy in Madrid after a bloody package arrived at the embassy, in Madrid, Spain, on December 2.
(Violeta Santos Moura/Reuters)
The Ukrainian Embassy in Madrid received a “bloody” package on Friday, similar to those recently received at other Ukrainian diplomatic institutions, Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson Oleh Nikolenko said Facebook.
The receipt of a suspicious package at the embassy prompted an immediate evacuation but a Spanish police bomb squad determined the package did not contain explosives, Spain’s Interior Ministry press office said in a statement.
Ukraine has put all embassies and consulates abroad under enhanced security measures after a series of incidents involving threatening packages, letter bombs and vandalism at its diplomatic missions. This week Ukrainian embassies in Hungary, the Netherlands, Poland, Croatia, Italy and Austria, along with several Ukrainian consulates, have received bloody packages, containing animal eyes, Nikolenko said Friday on Facebook.
It was the second evacuation of the Ukrainian Embassy in Madrid this week, just two days after a letter bomb detonated when an embassy employee was handling it. He was slightly injured, Spanish officials said.
That was among a spate of letter bombs that were received in recent days at the Spanish prime minister’s official compound, the United States Embassy in Madrid and other high-profile Spanish addresses, Spanish officials said.
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IAEA chief hopes for agreement on protecting Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant by end of year
From CNN's Tim Lister and Sharon Braithwaite
Rafael Grossi, Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) attends the IAEA's Board of Governors meeting at the agency's headquarters in Vienna, Austria, on November 16.
(Joe Klamar/AFP/Getty Images)
The director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency said he hopes to reach an agreement with Russia and Ukraine on protecting the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant by year’s end.
In an interview with Italian newspaper La Repubblica published on Friday, the head of the UN nuclear watchdog, Rafael Grossi, said, “My commitment is to reach a solution as soon as possible. I hope by the end of the year.”
“I know that [Russian] President [Vladimir] Putin is following the process, and I do not rule out another meeting with him soon, as well as with Ukrainian President [Volodymyr] Zelensky.”
Grossi has been trying to get Ukraine and Russia to agree to a format for a demilitarized zone around the plant, which has been damaged by various forms of weapons fire several times.
“Russia is not against an agreement and the principle of protecting the plant,” Grossi added.
As for the Ukrainian side, Grossi said, “The withdrawal of armaments from the plant is what, understandably from their point of view, the Ukrainians are demanding. And it would still be part of the overall agreement.”
Regarding the current status of the plant, Grossi said that “right now the plant has electricity to ensure the operation of cooling and emergency systems,” but “some nodes of the electricity grid that supply it are being attacked periodically, with surgically precise strikes.”
Asked who was responsible for those strikes, Grossi said, “It is not my job to assign responsibility. For me the important thing is to avoid a nuclear accident and reach the agreement, not to be a judge.”
He also spoke about three other nuclear plants in Ukraine: Rivne, South Ukraine and Khmelnytskyi.
“A few days ago, they too lost external power supply. And the Ukrainian authorities have made a formal application to have a permanent IAEA presence at these plants as well, as in Zaporizhzhia. In this way the agency’s staff will be stationed throughout Ukraine and will be vigilant that the nuclear power plants are not used by anyone as weapons of blackmail in the conflict,” Grossi said.
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Germany will send more anti-aircraft tanks to Ukraine
From CNN's Chris Stern
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz condemned Russian airstrikes against civilian infrastructure in Ukraine during a phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin Friday.
Scholz also urged Putin to find a diplomatic solution “as soon as possible” during the one-hour conversation devoted to the ongoing “Russian war of aggression against Ukraine and its consequences,” German government spokesperson Steffen Hebestreit said.
The chancellor stressed Germany’s determination to support Ukraine in ensuring its defense capability against Russia, he added.
Germany plans to supply Ukraine with seven more Gepard anti-aircraft tanks and an additional, 100,000 first aid kits, according to a list of arms deliveries published by the German government.
The chancellor and the Russian president also discussed the global food crisis precipitated by the invasion of Ukraine and highlighted the important role of the recently extended grain agreement under the aegis of the United Nations.
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Russia is firing dummy missiles to exhaust Ukraine’s air defenses, Ukrainian military says
From CNN’s Sarah Dean in London
Colonel Mykola Danyliuk points at a dud warhead imitating a nuclear part of a Kh-55SM strategic cruise missile, during a news conference in Kyiv, Ukraine, on December 1.
(Viacheslav Ratynskyi/Reuters)
The Ukrainian military says Russia is now using nuclear-capable missiles fitted with non-explosive warheads in a bid to exhaust Ukraine’s air defenses.
Mykola Danyliuk, a representative of the Ukrainian armed forces research unit, shared these updates at a Thursday briefing held at a site where missile fragments — from what Ukraine says is a Russian Kh-55 cruise missile — were on show.
Pointing to a fragment on stage, Danyliuk said, “I would also like to add that even a missile without a warhead, a missile with a warhead like this, poses a great threat because of its kinetic energy and fuel. This is evidenced by… the impact of a Kh-55 missile into a residential building.”
“This exact fragment was a compartment of the warhead. So, this is a substitute for a thermo-nuclear guided charge, which is used in Kh-55 missiles,” he said.
Danyliuk said tests on this Kh-55 missile did not show abnormal levels of radioactivity, “which means it didn’t have contact with nuclear elements.”
On Nov. 26, the British Ministry of Defense said in its daily intelligence update that “Russia is likely removing the nuclear warheads from ageing nuclear cruise missiles and firing the unarmed munitions at Ukraine.”
“This improvisation highlights the levels of depletion in Russia’s stock of long-range missiles,” the British Defense Ministry said.
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It's past 3 p.m. in Kyiv. Here's the latest on Russia's invasion of Ukraine
By CNN staff
If you are just joining us, here are the latest developments in Russia’s war in Ukraine so far on Friday.
Ukraine claims Russians are withdrawing from their positions in Zaporizhzhia: The Ukrainian military claims that some Russian troops are withdrawing from their positions in the southern region of Zaporizhzhia and that the Russians are preparing the evacuation of “the personnel of the occupation administrations.”
CNN is unable to confirm the claims made by the General Staff.
A Ukrainian leader alleges that a census is underway in parts of the same region: The Ukrainian mayor-in-exile of the city of Melitopol claims that Russia has begun conducting a census in parts of occupied territory in Zaporizhzhia in preparation for “evacuation.”
Kremlin warns Washington’s refusal to accept annexed regions as part of Russia complicates possible Putin-Biden talks: The fact that Washington doesn’t recognize annexed Ukrainian regions as part of Russia would complicate any possible talks between US President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin, Kremlin Spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Friday. The illegal annexations followed sham referendums in the four regions.
Biden and Macron have different views on engaging with Putin: US President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday demonstrated a united front in addressing the ongoing war in Ukraine, but offered divergent answers over their willingness to speak with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Biden told reporters during a joint White House news conference with Macron that he “has no immediate plans” to contact Putin, but added that he’s prepared to speak with the Russian leader if he’s looking for a way to end the war in Ukraine. Meanwhile, Macron said that once Ukraine sets conditions for a peace agreement, he’s willing to talk with Putin, and told ABC’s “Good Morning America” earlier Thursday that he intends to speak to the Russian president in the coming days.
Russia told US about Brittney Griner’s transfer to penal colony weeks after she was moved: The Russian government formally told the US Embassy last week about Brittney Griner’s transfer to a remote penal colony, weeks after the wrongfully detained WNBA star had been moved, according to the Biden administration. Separately, the Kremlin said on Thursday that any details of prisoner swap discussions with the United States will not be publicly disclosed and that Moscow is not planning to engage with the Biden administration before the end of the year, according to Russian state media.
New law would ban religious groups in Ukraine associated with Russia: Ukraine’s parliament will vote on a new law that would ban the operation of religious organizations “affiliated with centers of influence” in Russia, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Thursday, in an effort to prevent an “opportunity to manipulate” Ukrainians.
Electricity supplies are being restored in Kherson: The southern Ukrainian city was left without power due to Russian shelling early Thursday, a local official said.
Russians advance in Bakhmut: Social media videos indicate that Russian troops in the areas around Bakhmut in the eastern Donetsk region are taking heavy casualties, even as they take some territory, especially south of the city.
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Putin tells Germany's Scholz Western states' position on Ukraine is "destructive"
From CNN's Radina Gigova and Anna Chernova
Russian President Vladimir Putin told German Chancellor Olaf Scholz in a phone call on Friday that the position of Western states on Ukraine is “destructive” and that Germany should reconsider its approach, according to a statement by the Kremlin.
“Attention has been drawn to the destructive line of Western states, including Germany, pumping up the Kyiv regime with weapons, training the Ukrainian military. All this, as well as comprehensive political and financial support for Ukraine, leads to the fact that Kyiv completely rejects the idea of any negotiations,” reads the statement.
“In addition, this stimulates radical Ukrainian nationalists to commit more and more bloody crimes against the civilian population,” the Kremlin claimed.
Putin “called on the German side to reconsider its approaches in the context of the Ukrainian events,” according to the Kremlin.
During the call, the Kremlin said that the Russian military “had long refrained from targeted missile strikes against certain targets on the territory of Ukraine, but now such measures have become a forced and inevitable response to Kyiv’s provocative attacks against Russian civilian infrastructure.”
This “Russian civilian infrastructure” includes, according to the Kremlin, the Crimean bridge, energy facilities, as well a “terrorist act” against the Nord Stream and Nord Stream 2 gas pipelines, which requires “a transparent investigation with the participation of Russian specialized structures.”
Swedish and Danish authorities have been investigating four holes in the Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines which link Russia and Germany via the Baltic Sea. Both pipelines have been flashpoints in an escalating energy war between European capitals and Moscow since the February invasion of Ukraine.
Western nations have previously said that the leaks, which were first discovered on September 26, were likely the result of sabotage. Denmark last month said a preliminary investigation had shown they were caused by powerful explosions.
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More than 80,000 generators delivered to Ukraine
From CNN's Victoria Butenko
Ukraine has received more than 80,000 generators in recent weeks, Ukrainian member of parliament Yaroslav Zheleznyak said on Telegram on Friday.
“82,124 power generators and 3,075 power transformers were imported into Ukraine from November 9 to November 30,” he said. “Also, 266,596 power banks and accumulators were imported over the same period.”
Zheleznyak is the assistant head of the parliamentary committee on finance, taxes and import policy.
His notes comes as a number of countries said they would donate power generators to Ukraine to help the country have heating for the winter following Russian strikes against energy infrastructure.
This week the United States government pledged more than $50 million dollars in equipment to support Ukraine’s electrical system. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Wednesday that the equipment – generators, transformers and spare parts – would be arriving in Ukraine “not in a matter of months, but in a matter of days, or weeks.”
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Ukrainian embassies abroad targeted by letter bombs and threats
From CNN's Eve Brennan and Lindsay Isaac
Spanish policemen stand next to an Ukrainian flag while securing the area after a letter bomb explosion at the Ukraine's embassy in Madrid, Spain, on November 30.
(Oscar del Pozo/AFP/Getty Images)
Ukraine has put all embassies and consulates abroad under enhanced security measures after a series of incidents involving threatening packages, letter bombs and vandalism at its diplomatic missions. This week Ukrainian embassies in Hungary, the Netherlands, Poland, Croatia, Italy, Austria, the consulates general in Naples and Krakow, and the consulate in Brno have received bloody packages, containing animal eyes, Oleh Nikolenko, spokesperson for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Ukraine said Friday on Facebook.
“The packages were “soaked in a liquid of a characteristic colour and had a corresponding smell. We are examining the meaning of this message,” he wrote.
On Wednesday, a package sent to the Ukrainian Embassy in Madrid, addressed to the country’s ambassador to Spain, Serhiy Pohoreltsev, exploded upon opening.
“We have reason to believe that there is a well-planned campaign of terror and intimidation of Ukrainian embassies and consulates. Unable to stop Ukraine on the diplomatic front, they are trying to intimidate us,” Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said.
He called on foreign governments to guarantee maximum protection of Ukrainian diplomatic institutions in accordance with the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations.
In addition to the suspicious packages, Nikolenko reported other incidents including vandalism of the entrance to the Ukrainian ambassador’s residence in the Vatican.
Czech police evacuate consulate: Czech police tweeted Friday that the Ukrainian Consulate in Brno, a city in the southeast of Czech Republic consulate and its immediate surroundings, including a kindergarten were evacuated. After investigating the package, the police said it did not contain any explosives, adding that they had no information to indicate people at the consulate or within its vicinity were at any danger.
“Initial analysis suggest the package contained animal tissue. A detailed analysis of will be conducted in laboratories now,” the police tweeted.
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The Kremlin warns Washington's refusal to accept annexed regions as part of Russia complicates possible Putin-Biden talks
From Anna Chernova and Radina Gigova
Russian President Vladimir Putin, center, with Ukrainian separatist regional leaders Vladimir Saldo, left, Yevgeniy Balitsky, second left, Leonid Pasechnik, right, and Denis Pushilin, second right, seen during the annexation ceremony of four Ukrainian regions at the Grand Kremlin Palace, September 30, in Moscow, Russia.
(Getty Images)
The fact that Washington doesn’t recognize annexed Ukrainian regions as part of Russia would complicate possible talks between US President Joe Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin, Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Friday.
In September, Moscow illegally declared four Ukrainian regions to be Russian territory: Luhansk and Donetsk – home to two Russian-backed breakaway republics where fighting has been ongoing since 2014 – as well as Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, two areas in southern Ukraine that had been occupied by Russian forces since shortly after the invasion began.
The illegal annexations followed sham referendums in these southern and eastern regions. Russian troops have since withdrawn from a swathe of the Kherson region, including the regional capital Kherson city.
Here’s some background: On Thursday, Biden told reporters during a joint White House news conference with French President Emmanual Macron that he “has no immediate plans” to contact Putin, but added that he’s prepared to speak with the Russian leader if he’s looking for a way to end the war in Ukraine. Biden also clarified that Putin has not done so yet.
“He’s just miscalculated across the board,” Biden said of Putin following his bilateral meeting in the Oval Office with the French president. “And so the question is … how does he get himself out of the circumstances in? I’m prepared, if he’s willing to talk, to find out what he’s willing to do, but I’ll only do it in consultation with my NATO allies. I’m not going to do it on my own.”
Peskov said Moscow has always been open to negotiations to ensure its interests but Putin’s initiative to discuss security guarantees with the US, NATO and the OSCE “was not reciprocated.”
On Thursday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov echoed those remarks, saying that Moscow “never avoids contacts” but there haven’t been “substantial ideas” when it comes to a possible meeting between Biden and Putin.
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People with reduced mobility to be evacuated from Kakhovka, says Russian-installed administration
From CNN’s Sarah Dean
Some people with reduced mobility will be evacuated from the Russian-occupied town of Kakhovka on the east bank of the Dnipro river, Russian-installed authorities said on Friday.
“On Saturday, December 3, the evacuation of bedridden and disabled citizens from Kakhovka to one of the boarding houses of the Henichesk district begins,” the Russian-installed administration said via its Telegram channel.
Earlier this week, Serhii Khlan, a member of Kherson regional council, told a news conference that pro-Russian administrators had left the east bank towns and set up an administration in the city of Henichesk, closer to Crimea.
“They defined it as the center of the occupation region, and now all supporters and collaborators are there,” he said.
He added that the bulk of Russian forces were positioned some 15 to 20 kilometers (9.3 to 12.4 miles) from the east bank of the river, but that personnel of the Russian security service (FSB) occupied observation posts close to the river, in towns like Kakhovka and Nova Kakhovka. They were exerting pressure on the remaining civilian population to leave, he said.
Khlan said that he expected people already in temporary accommodation would be forced to leave for Russia.
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New law would ban religious groups in Ukraine associated with Russia
From CNN's Radina Gigova
Ukraine's Security Service (SBU) servicemen check documents of visitors to Kyiv Pechersk Lavra monastery in Kyiv on November 22.
(Sergei Chuzavkov/AFP/Getty Images)
Ukraine’s parliament will vote on a new law that would ban the operation of religious organizations “affiliated with centers of influence” in Russia, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Thursday, in an effort to prevent an “opportunity to manipulate” Ukrainians.
“Unfortunately, even Russian terror and full-scale war did not convince some figures that it is worth overcoming the temptation of evil. Well, we have to create conditions where no actors dependent on the aggressor state will have an opportunity to manipulate Ukrainians and weaken Ukraine from within,” the Ukrainian president said in a statement.
“The National Security and Defense Council instructed the Government to submit to the Verkhovna Rada [Ukraine’s parliament] a draft law on making it impossible for religious organizations affiliated with centers of influence in the Russian Federation to operate in Ukraine,” he said.
Here’s some background: The proposed law comes after the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) raided a historic Orthodox Christian monastery in Kyiv, the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, on November 22 as part of an effort to counter suspected “subversive activities” by Russia’s special services.
The raid was aimed at preventing the “use of Ukrainian Orthodox Church premises for hiding sabotage and reconnaissance groups, foreign citizens, storing weapons,” SBU said.
“All bodies responsible for ensuring national security must intensify measures to identify and counter the subversive activities of Russian special services in the religious environment of Ukraine. And apply personal sanctions – the surnames will be made public soon,” Zelensky said on Thursday.
In his statement, Zelensky also said “a religious examination” of the Management Statute of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church will be conducted “for the presence of a church-canonical connection with the Moscow Patriarchate and, if necessary, to take measures provided for by law.”
These and other decisions are aimed at guaranteeing “Ukraine’s spiritual independence,” Zelensky said.
In May, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church officially broke allegiance with the Russian Orthodox Church and its leader Patriarch Kirill over the war, saying it considers the invasion “a violation of God’s commandment ‘Thou shalt not kill’.”
Kirill is a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin and has supported the war in Ukraine.
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Between 10,000 and 13,000 Ukrainian troops killed, says Zelensky adviser -- a number far lower than US estimates
From CNN’s Sarah Dean in London
Soldiers attend the farewell ceremony for senior sergeant Yuriy Chernenko in Lviv, Ukraine on November 24.
(Pavlo Palamarchuk/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)
Between 10,000 and 13,000 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed in the war in Ukraine, according to Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.
“We have official figures from the General Staff, official figures from the high command, and according to them we have between 10,000 and 12,500 to 13,000 killed,” Podolyak said speaking on national TV on Thursday.
On November 10, Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley said Russia has suffered more than 100,000 killed and wounded soldiers as a result of the war in Ukraine and that Kyiv is probably looking at similar numbers.
There is no confirmed number of troop casualties on either side for the war in Ukraine.
CNN has contacted the Ukrainian military for comment. However, Bohdan Senyk, head of the public relations department of the Armed Forces of Ukraine previously declined to confirm Ukrainian army losses.
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Russian military starts census in parts of Zaporizhzhia, Ukrainian mayor says
From CNN's Sarah Dean
Russia’s military has begun conducting a census in parts of occupied territory in the southern Zaporizhzhia region, according to the Ukrainian mayor-in-exile of the city of Melitopol.
Melitopol has been occupied by Russian forces since the early days of the invasion and analysts have suggested the next offensive front for Ukrainian forces was likely to be a thrust southward toward the city.
Fedorov added that hospitals in the cities of Tokmak and Mykhailivka were also “turned into military hospitals for Russian forces.”
“[Russians] are massively treating thousands of their wounded there,” Fedrov said. “Only one hospital in Melitopol city, an ambulance hospital, provides assistance to civilians.”
New Russian military bases had also been set up, he claimed, noting there were now “tens of thousands of Russian manpower in the territory of Melitopol.”
Last month, Fedorov highlighted difficulties civilians faced to leave the city.
It comes after the Ukrainian military claimed some Russian troops are withdrawing from their positions in the Zaporizhzhia region. CNN is unable to confirm the claims made by the General Staff.
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Russia told US about Brittney Griner's transfer to penal colony weeks after she was moved
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
Penal colony IK-2in the town of Yavas in Mordovia, central Russia, where Brittney Griner is being held, on November 19.
(Alexander Nemenov/AFP/Getty Images)
The Russian government formally told the US Embassy last week about Brittney Griner’s transfer to a remote penal colony, weeks after the wrongfully detained WNBA star had been moved, according to the Biden administration.
Biden and Macron diverge on willingness to engage with Putin
From CNN's Maegan Vazquez, Donald Judd, Betsy Klein and Sam Fossum
US President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron on Thursday demonstrated a united front in addressing the ongoing war in Ukraine but offered divergent answers over their willingness to speak with Russian President Vladimir Putin, relaying that they spent much their recent meeting discussing the invasion.
Biden told reporters during a joint White House news conference with Macron that he “has no immediate plans” to contact Putin, but added that he’s prepared to speak with the Russian leader if he’s looking for a way to end the war in Ukraine. Biden also clarified that Putin has not done so yet.
Macron said that once Ukraine sets conditions for a peace agreement, he’s willing to speak with Putin. The French leader told ABC’s “Good Morning America” earlier Thursday that he intends to speak with the Russian president in the coming days.
Ukraine claims some Russian units in Zaporizhzhia are withdrawing as it strikes ammunition and troop depots
From CNN's Tim Lister and Julia Kesaieva
A Russian service member sits near an automatic grenade launcher at a combat position on the left bank of the Dnipro river in the Zaporizhzhia region, Ukraine, on November 26.
(Alexander Ermochenko/Reuters)
The Ukrainian military claims that some Russian troops are withdrawing from their positions in the southern region of Zaporizhzhia.
It also says that the Russians are preparing the evacuation of “the personnel of the occupation administrations” in the Zaporizhzhia region.
In its daily update, the military’s General Staff said Russian units had left the settlements of Mykhailivka, Polohy and Inzhenerne, all towns south of the city of Zaporizhzhia. Front lines in the region run for 200 kilometers (about 124 miles) across rolling farmland. Geolocated footage posted on Wednesday shows the aftermath of strikes on buildings in Polohy.
The General Staff said that in the settlement of Burchak, the occupation authorities are conducting a census for the so-called voluntary evacuation of the population.
The Ukrainians appear to be repeating actions they undertook in Kherson — striking bridges, supply hubs and Russian troop concentrations behind the front lines. The General Staff said that in recent days strikes about half a dozen places had wounded more than 230 Russian soldiers and destroyed ammunition and equipment.
CNN is unable to confirm the claims made by the General Staff.
What could happen next: Analysts have suggested that the next offensive front for the Ukrainians is likely to be a thrust south toward the occupied city of Melitopol.
The General Staff said that elsewhere Russian forces continued to defend their positions in eastern Luhansk region using tanks, mortars and artillery to prevent further advances of Ukrainian forces.
Russian units were also shelling several settlements in recently liberated parts of Kherson region. But Brig. Gen. Oleksii Hromov claimed that last week Russian forces had accidentally fired on their own unit near the village of Tsukury in Kherson, killing 14 servicemen. CNN cannot verify the claim.
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Russian units appear to make some progress near Bakhmut in Donetsk, but suffer heavy casualties
From CNN's Tim Lister, Julia Kesaieva in Kyiv and Vasco Cotovio in Kramatorsk
Social media videos indicate that Russian troops in the areas around Bakhmut in the eastern Donetsk region are taking heavy casualties, even as they take some territory, especially south of the city.
Some videos from Ukrainian military drones show Russian troops in foxholes and trenches being targeted by explosive charges dropped from the drones. Other videos at ground level show the bodies of Russian soldiers littering the countryside.
One video shot by the Ukrainian military and published on Telegram shows different weapons systems being used in a coordinated attack on Russian positions, including 155 mm Howitzers and mortars. It appears from some videos that Russian positions have little protection and are exposed in open countryside.
Russian forces have been attacking the area around Bakhmut for months — and more recently have sent newly mobilized but less experienced units forward.
Some Russian units — including those affiliated with the Wagner group — appear to have made incremental progress, taking a string of small villages to the south of the city. On Thursday the Russian Ministry of Defense said that, “as a result of the offensive actions of the Russian troops, the settlement of Kurdiumivka of the Donetsk People’s Republic was completely liberated from the units of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.”
The Defense Ministry had previously announced the capture of three other settlements —but all are small villages.
What Ukraine says: Ukrainians say fighting continues in the area, and that during combat missions near Kurdiumivka, Ukrainian forces destroyed three ammunition depots, one mortar crew “and manpower of the enemy.”
Analysts say the Ukrainians are also clearly taking casualties as they are targeted by Russian artillery and tanks. The Ukrainian military has said that fighting continues in many areas close to Bakhmut but has not acknowledged losing any ground.
The Ukrainian National Guard said that over the past week, units had repelled enemy attacks in the Bakhmut and Avdiivka sectors of Donetsk and “destroyed ammunition depots, equipment and personnel of the enemy.”
Its spokesman said that in strikes near the northeastern outskirts of Bakhmut, “the enemy’s losses amounted to 79 servicemen, of which 46 were irrecoverable.
A CNN team in nearby Kramatorsk reported hearing heavy artillery exchanges for much of Thursday.
In its latest analysis, the Institute for the Study of War says that the Russian campaign around Bakhmut indicates “that Russian forces have fundamentally failed to learn from previous high-casualty campaigns concentrated on objectives of limited operational or strategic significance.”
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Kremlin says it will not engage with US on prisoner swap talks before end of year
From CNN's Uliana Pavlova and Tara John
The Kremlin said on Thursday that any details of prisoner swap discussions with the United States will not be publicly disclosed and that Moscow is not planning to engage with the Biden administration before the end of the year, according to Russian state media.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said the Kremlin considers it unnecessary to publicly disclose the details of prisoner swap negotiations between Russia and the US, state news agency TASS reported.
Power is being restored in Kherson after Russian strike
From CNN's Julia Kesaieva and Olga Voitovych
Electricity workers wearing bulletproof vests and helmets work to fix a destroyed high voltage power line on December 1, in Kherson, Ukraine.
(Chris McGrath/Getty Images)
Electricity supplies are being restored in the southern Ukrainian city of Kherson after it was left without power by Russian shelling early Thursday, a local official said.
Earlier Thursday, Yanushevych had said Kherson was without power in the wake of heavy Russian shelling.
“The voltage in the power grids has disappeared,” the local official wrote on Telegram, adding that energy company Khersonoblenergo was “already working to fix the problem.”
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Russia says its open to a "new start" in talks with the West but it won't be "business as usual"
From CNN's Radina Gigova and Anna Chernova
Russia would be ready to restart conversations with the United States and NATO on security guarantees, but so far Moscow hasn’t seen willingness on their part, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov claimed Thursday.
Lavrov reiterated that Russia is open to dialogue with Western partners as the security situation in Europe has deteriorated, but said it won’t be “business as usual.”
“If the West understands that it is better to develop neighborly relations based on mutually agreed foundations, we will listen to what the West would propose,” he said. “But it is clear that it needs to be a completely new start. Whether there is a chance of this new start in the near future, I don’t know. It is up to the West,” he added.
On a possible meeting with US President Joe Biden: Moscow “never avoids contacts,” Lavrov claimed, but there haven’t been “substantial ideas” when it comes to a possible meeting between Biden and Russian President Vladimir Putin.