Russia Ukraine war live: Drones cut power to Crimea as Germa…

Navalny supporters chant outside funeral service in Moscow

The power supply to large swathes of Crimea has been severed as the region was bombarded by drone attacks overnight.

It comes a day after the Ukrainian military sank a Russian warship off the coast of occupied Crimea using sea drones, the latest embarrassing blow to Moscow’s naval forces.

Odesa-based media outlet Dumskaya said locals reported hearing explosions and the sounds of active air defence on the peninsula that was illegally annexed by Russia in 2014.

The attacks left the Moldavanka district and part of the city centre without power, it reported on its Telegram channel.

Meanwhile, the German defence minister has said the country’s allies are “not angry or upset” after details of high-level military discussions were leaked to Russian media.

Boris Pistorius described the incident, which included German military officers saying British forces were “on the ground” in Ukraine helping launch missiles at Russia, as an “individual mistake”.

“They are not angry or upset with Germany because they know that we have rules and that things like this can happen,” the German defence minister said.

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Ukraine downs 38 Russian drones overnight in fierce battle with Russia

Ukraine downed at least 38 drones fired by Russia overnight, the Ukrainian Air Force said in a morning update.

At least 42 Shahed-type attack drones were fired by Russia, it added.

Russian forces fired five S-300 anti-aircraft guided missiles using the occupied parts of Ukraine’s Donetsk oblast and also fired drones from the illegally occupied Crimea, the air force said.

Several drones were also fired from the Kursk oblast and the Russian port city of Primorsko-Akhtarsk in southern Krasnodar Krai.

Ukraine’s Air Force said it activated mobile fire groups and anti-aircraft missile units over various parts of Ukraine. Several explosions were also reported overnight in the Ukrainian cities of Odesa and Khmelnytskyi.

Arpan Rai6 March 2024 06:22

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Russia says it is considering putting a nuclear power plant on the moon with China

Russia and China are considering putting a nuclear power plant on the moon from 2033-35, Yuri Borisov, the head of Russia’s space agency Roscosmos said on Tuesday, something he said could one day allow lunar settlements to be built

Borisov, a former deputy defence minister, said that Russia and China had been jointly working on a lunar programme and that Moscow was able to contribute with its expertise on “nuclear space energy”.

“Today we are seriously considering a project – somewhere at the turn of 2033-2035 – to deliver and install a power unit on the lunar surface together with our Chinese colleagues,” Borisov said.

“Solar panels would not be able to provide enough electricity to power future lunar settlements, he said, while nuclear power could.“This is a very serious challenge…it should be done in automatic mode, without the presence of humans,” he said of the possible plan.

Borisov spoke also of Russian plans to build a nuclear-powered cargo spaceship. He said all the technical questions concerning the project had been solved apart from finding a solution on how to cool the nuclear reactor.

“We are indeed working on a space tugboat. This huge, cyclopean structure that would be able, thanks to a nuclear reactor and a high-power turbines…to transport large cargoes from one orbit to another, collect space debris and engage in many other applications,” Borisov said.

Lydia Patrick6 March 2024 06:00

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Olena Zelenska declines White House’s State of the Union address invite

Ukraine’s first lady Olena Zelenska has declined the White House’s invitation to attend the 7 March State of the Union address, reported The Washington Post.

A White House official said that the Ukrainian official’s decision was likely influenced by “schedule conflicts”, adding that the seating plan is typically finalised towards the end of the planning process.

The report added that the initial seating plan for the top leaders included Jill Biden alongside Olena Zelenska and Yulia Navalnaya, the widow of Alexei Navalny.

Sources aware of the development said the seating arrangement at the address was aimed to present a powerful image of both women being symbolic representation against the Russian leader Vladimir Putin.

Arpan Rai6 March 2024 05:34

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Ukraine’s small but lethal weapon lifting morale

Uncrewed, remote-controlled boats have been around since the end of World War II. Late last century, technological innovations broadened their potential uses.

Ukraine claims it is the first country to set up a specific unit dedicated to producing them. Yemen-based Houthis have also deployed armed unmanned surface vessels as suicide drone boats that explode upon impact.

The 2-year-old Ukraine conflict has become a laboratory for new military technology, and naval drones are set to become an essential part of the combat toolbox in 21st-century warfare.

Unmanned vessels — also called drone boats or maritime drones — have had a broad range of applications for years. They have been employed for scientific research, search and rescue operations, surveillance and coastal patrols.

Read the full story here…

Lydia Patrick6 March 2024 05:00

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Russia scrambles warplane to escort French military planes crossing Black Sea

Russia scrambled an Su-27 fighter jet to escort two French fighter jets and a reconnaissance plane over the Black Sea, the Russian Defence Ministry said, according to the state-run TASS news agency.

It claimed the escorting was done to “prevent them from violating the Russian state border”.

The ministry claimed that after the Russian fighter approaching the foreign military aircraft made a U-turn and left the airspace over the Black Sea.

France has not issued a comment on claims from the Russian Defence Ministry.

Arpan Rai6 March 2024 04:47

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Video appears to show moment Ukraine sinks $65m Russian warship off Crimea

Ukraine has claimed it had sunk another Russian warship in the Black Sea using high-tech sea drones.

Kyiv’s military intelligence agency said a special operations unit destroyed the large patrol ship Sergey Kotov overnight with Magura V5 uncrewed vessels that are designed and built in Ukraine and laden with explosives.

Ukraine said the cost of the sunken patrol ship, which was hit near the Kerch Strait, was $65m (£51.2m).

A video posted on social media appears to show the moment the Sergey Kotov was hit.

Russian authorities have not confirmed the claim.

Video appears to show moment Ukraine sinks $65m Russian warship off Crimea

Ukraine on Tuesday (5 March) claimed it had sunk another Russian warship in the Black Sea using high-tech sea drones. Kyiv’s military intelligence agency said a special operations unit destroyed the large patrol ship Sergey Kotov overnight with Magura V5 uncrewed vessels that are designed and built in Ukraine and laden with explosives. Ukraine said the cost of the sunken patrol ship, which was hit near the Kerch Strait, was $65m (£51.2m). A video posted on social media appears to show the moment the Sergey Kotov was hit. Russian authorities have not confirmed the claim.

Arpan Rai6 March 2024 04:33

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White House says Zelensky is not asking for troops, but weapons

Ukraine’s war-time leader Volodymyr Zelensky has not sought foreign troops on the battlefield but weapons and aid, the White House said yesterday.

Answering a question on France’s suggestion of Western boots on the ground in Ukraine, John Kirby, the White House’s national security council coordinator for strategic communications, said the US does not intend to send troops to fight the Russian invasion in Ukraine.

“He’s [Joe Biden] also been very clear since the very beginning of this war: There’s not going to be US troops on the ground fighting inside Ukraine. And you know what? President Zelensky isn’t asking for that. He’s just asking for the tools and capabilities,” Mr Kirby said at a regular press briefing last night.

Mr Zelensky has “never asked for foreign troops to fight for his country”, Mr Kirby said. “He – he and his troops want to do that. But they need the tools, and that’s what we need to help with,” he said.

Arpan Rai6 March 2024 04:31

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Drone attacks on Crimea continue, power outage reported

Crimea remained under relentless drone attacks overnight, leaving the region without power, reported Ukrainian news website Ukrainska Pravda.

Locals reported hearing explosions and sounds of active air defence on the illegally annexed peninsula, reported Odesa-based media outlet Dumskaya.

The attacks left the Moldavanka district and part of the city centre without power, it reported on its Telegram channel.

This comes just a day after the Ukrainian military said it fired sea drones that hit and sank a Russian Black Sea Fleet patrol ship off occupied Crimea in an overnight attack.

Ukraine’s GUR military intelligence agency said a special unit called Group 13 had fired Magura V5 maritime drones at the Sergey Kotov near the Kerch Strait, which connects the Sea of Azov to the Black Sea.

It said on the Telegram messaging app that the vessel had sustained damage to the stern, starboard and port sides, at an estimated cost of $65m.

Arpan Rai6 March 2024 04:18

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EU head office proposes plans to boost defense, joint procurement in face of Russian invasion

Top European Union officials on Tuesday outlined ambitious plans to boost its defence industry at an unprecedented pace as the bloc seeks to respond to the threat posed by Russia’s war on Ukraine.

“After decades of underspending, we must invest more on defence, but we need to do it better and together,” said EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell.

“A strong, resilient, and competitive European defence industry is a strategic imperative.”

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has exposed glaring weaknesses in Europe’s arms manufacturing capacities that were neglected in the wake of the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall and the promise of a peace dividend in Europe.

So when Kyiv was badly in need of the most elementary ammunition to stave off Russian forces, European nations were caught out, unable to deliver what was asked and even promised.

“Our defence spending goes to too many different weapon systems, primarily bought from outside the EU,” said EU Commission Vice President Margrethe Vestager.

With defence budgets in EU member states rising, “we should invest better, which largely means investing together, and investing European.”Under the proposals, the 27 member states will be invited to buy at least 40% of defence equipment together and make sure that 35% of the defence value represents internal trade by 2030.

While production is improving, the EU had aimed to be making 1 million artillery shells annually by now but is only making around half that figure. Officials now say that production could reach 1.4 million shells per year by the end of December.

Lydia Patrick6 March 2024 04:00

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On sending Taurus missiles to Ukraine, Germany says no political decision made

Germany’s defence minister Boris Pistorius has said intercepted high-ranking military call shows there’s clearly no political decision on deploying German Taurus missiles on Ukraine’s battlefield.

“They always mentioned during all that phone call, there is no political decision – neither by the chancellor (Olaf Scholz) nor by me to deploy Taurus to Ukraine,” Mr Pistorius said at a news conference.

Audio leaked to Russian media divulged a top-secret call involving German air force officers, which has since been authenticated by Berlin, suggested British soldiers were “on the ground” in Ukraine, helping Kyiv’s forces fire long-range Storm Shadow missiles.

During the conversation, Lt Gen Ingo Gerhartz, the head of the German air force, describes how the UK and Ukraine work to deploy Storm Shadow missiles against targets behind Russian lines.

Mr Pistorius said Germany’s allies are not upset after the scandal surrounding the call recorded by the Russians. The defence minister said he informed his partners in Washington and London on Monday that it was an individual mistake.

“They are not angry or upset with Germany because they know that we have rules and that things like this can happen,” said Pistorius.

Arpan Rai6 March 2024 03:39

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