Ukraine war latest: Kyiv refutes 'insane Russian propaganda' warning of Ukrainian plan to attack nuclear plant or use dirty bomb (2024)

Key points
  • Zelenskyy says Ukraine inflicting 'maximum damage' on Russian forces in Kursk
  • Kyiv refutes 'insane Russian propaganda' campaign warning of Ukrainian dirty bomb
  • Kyiv used Western rockets to destroy Russian bridge, says Moscow
  • Putin's forces capture territory in Donetsk - amid Ukrainian strikes on region
  • 'We could lose': Russian state TV commentators gloomy over Kursk
  • Sean Bell:Humiliated Putin will respond ruthlessly to Ukrainian masterstroke
  • Michael Clarke:Pokrovsk in real trouble as Russian troops advance
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  • Live reporting by Brad Young

14:16:30

US blocks UK from greenlighting Storm Shadow attacks on Russia

Washington is effectively blocking the UK from permitting Kyiv to fire Storm Shadow missiles inside Russia, the Times reports.

The UK has been waiting for US approval for over a month, a government source said.

The British government want Ukraine to use the weapons as they wish, but consensus is required between the US, France and another unnamed NATO country.

A government source stressed to the Times that the UK was not blaming the US for any delay.

Britain was the first country to publicly supply Kyiv with long-range cruise missiles.

While it has permitted the use of British tanks and other weapons on Russian soil, restrictions remain on the missiles.

A British source previously said Ukrainian troops are thought to have used British Challenger 2 tanks inside Kursk.

13:36:01

Ukrainian MP calls on West to untie army's hands in Russia

Ukraine's success in Kursk has shown the West it does not need to take an incremental approach to Russia, says Ukrainian MP Oleksiy Goncharenko.

Kyiv's allies need to approve the use of Western weapons to strike deep inside its territory, he said.

He added the incremental style of Western support has only drawn out the war.

"Watch the Russian reaction. For more than one week, for the first time since the Second World War, Russian territory is occupied. And what is the reaction? Just some mumbling from Putin," said Mr Goncharenko.

"I hope that this will help us to convince our allies that Ukraine is capable of big successes and to win this war, so finally our hands will be untied," he said, adding Ukraine needs permission to use the UK's Storm Shadow missiles deep into Russian territory.

"I think this incremental style is very, very bad."

He continued: "Russia only understands one language, the language of force, and Ukraine has shown it now."

12:49:26

Kyiv refutes 'insane Russian propaganda' campaign warning of Ukrainian dirty bomb

Kyiv has dismissed "insane Russian propaganda" alleging that Ukraine plans to carry out nuclear attacks.

Moscow has accused Ukraine - without providing any evidence - of gearing up to attack Kursk nuclear power plant and developing a "dirty bomb"; an explosive used to scatter radioactive waste.

The Russian defence ministry said Ukraine would blame Moscow and that it would respond harshly in the event of such an attack.

The allegations were "dangerous lies" and Ukraine officially denies them, said Ukrainian foreign office spokespersonHeorhii Tykhyi.

"We are witnessing another surge of insane Russian propaganda."

He continued: "Ukraine has neither the intention nor the ability to carry out any such actions. Russia must stop spreading dangerous lies.

"Ukraine has always been and remains a loyal member of the NPT (Non-proliferation treaty).

"We do not have any 'dirty bombs' and do not plan to acquire them."

Vladimir Putin made similar allegations shortly before launching the invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Then, in March the same year, Moscow alleged Ukraine was going to use a dirty bomb. Neither claims were borne out.

Russia also alleged a Ukrainiandrone dropped an explosive charge on a road outside the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Ukraine this morning.

Its Russian management posted an image to Telegram showing several men in IAEA jackets surrounding a dent in the road the width and depth of a pothole.

Both Russia and Ukraine have accused eachother of close calls with drones and rockets at the power plant since Russia occupied it.

11:52:31

Ukrainian forces 'strengthened' in Kursk, says Zelenskyy

Volodymyr Zelenskyy says Ukrainian forces have been "strengthened" in Kursk and the size of "stabilised" territory expanded.

He said there has been a "replenishment of the exchange fund for our state" - a phrase often used by Kyiv officials to refer to the number of captured prisoners of war to be swapped.

The president thanked his forces for taking Russian prisoners and "thereby bringing the release of our soldiers and civilians held by Russia closer".

11:05:55

Ukraine seeking to 'destabilise Russian elites' with Kursk offensive

Ukraine's offensive in Kursk will show the West that escalating attacks against Russia is "nothing to be afraid of", says a former foreign policy adviser to Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Igor Novikov says Kyiv is calling Russia's bluff and giving Ukraine a chance to avoid defeat by switching from "meat grinder" warfare to an asymmetrical one.

And putting Ukrainian troops on Russian soil has major psychological upsides, he added.

"The main goal of this is to destabilise the Russian elites. Russia is not a monolith. Obviously there's Putin on top, but there are many different power players there and hopefully this will awaken some of them to the fact that Putin has gone too far."

Turning to the Russian population, he says: "Now the war has come to them.

"It's a wake up call to them to think and seriously consider what they stand for and what their government stands for."

Back in Ukraine, the move has been "magical" for morale.

"People got really fatigued of this meat grinder-style war that had no bright light at the end of the tunnel.

"Now Russia's on the back foot and people are happy about it."

Mr Novikov says there can be "no victory against Russia" through conventional warfare.

"Russia is way bigger, has way more resources, and without full support from the West, like all-in kind of support, Ukraine would have lost eventually."

But asymmetrical warfare gives Ukraine a chance of avoiding defeat, he said.

"This offensive was going to put pressure on Putin. It's going to show the West that escalating against Russia is actually a winning strategy and nothing to be afraid of. That Russia is bluffing most of the time."

10:15:01

In pictures: Cars ablaze after Russian strike on Ukrainian city

We've more information on the Russian attack on Sumy city that we reported earlier this morning.

Pictures show approximately 10 cars ablaze after strikes outside several apartment buildings.

Some 41 explosions were recorded across the Sumy region, according to its regional military administration, caused by missiles, airstrikes, drones, tank shells and artillery.

"Russians continue to commit crimes against the civilian population of Sumy Oblast, directing rockets at residential buildings in populated areas," the Sumy administration posted on Telegram.

09:44:30

Analysis: Humiliated Putin will respond ruthlessly to Ukrainian masterstroke

Vladimir Putin will be feeling "angry and potentially humiliated" by Ukraine's surprise invasion of Kursk, says military analyst Sean Bell.

He will not accept any negotiations involving the occupied territory, despite Ukrainian ambitions, and will instead deal with it "ruthlessly", Bell said.

But for now, Putin has two choices: play to Ukraine's agenda and bolster Kursk's defences with some of his elite units from the frontline in the Donbas, or move fresh troops down from the Lithuanian border and up from Crimea.

"But none of those troops will be battle-hardened and you only have to look back to the Second World War, that Blitzkrieg worked because they had battle-hardened troops," said Bell.

"They will be no match for Ukrainian forces on the front foot."

He continued:"Ukraine probably didn't expect to get this far. They put a thousand soldiers in, probably 20 tanks, and then found they were rolling in almost unopposed and they've capitalised on that."

Ukraine also has two options: try to hold on to parts of Kursk and risk being defeated there, or eventually withdraw, leaving Putin guessing which part of Russia's longer border will be hit next and forcing him to reinforce it, thereby easing pressure on the frontline, Bell explained.

"It seems to be an absolute masterstroke," said the analyst.

"Momentum, initiative, is everything on the frontline and they've seized that.They've shown that Russia isn't in control of everything on their front foot. And just imagine the effect on morale of the troops on the frontline."

However it's important to note that Kyiv has seized just 0.003% of Russian territory, compared to the 20% of Ukraine controlled by Moscow, he added.

"Although people are talking about it being a bargaining chip in some sort of negotiation, I think that's really unlikely. Putin will not want to accept any form of negotiation around something like this. He is going to deal with it. He will deal with it ruthlessly. The question is when, and when does he ease pressure on the frontline?"

09:17:21

Kursk attack required for 'fair' peace talks, says Kyiv

A Ukrainian presidential adviser has said the Kursk incursion was required to convince Moscow to start "fair" peace talks.

Mykhailo Podolyak said Ukraine had no interest in occupying Kursk but it had to force Russia to start talks on Kyiv's terms.

"We need to inflict significant tactical defeats on Russia," Mr Podolyak said.

"In the Kursk region, we clearly see how the military tool is objectively used to convince the Russian Federation to enter into a fair negotiation process."

Senior Ukrainian officials have repeatedly said Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity should be fully respected in any peace agreement, while Vladimir Putin has demanded it give up a fifth of its territory and any aspirations to join NATO.

Former Russian president and deputy chairman of the Russian Security Council Dmitry Medvedev has also said Russia would continue to capture Ukrainian land after any truce.

08:56:46

Analysis: Kursk invasion turns war on its head

The Ukrainian invasion of Kursk has turned the "narrative of the war on its head", says security and defence editorDeborah Haynes.

Kyiv will be hoping that its capture of land and Russian prisoners of war will put pressure on Vladimir Putin should the time come for peace talks, resulting in land swaps, she said.

But the "jury is still out" on the impacts of "this stunning move".

Haynes said Ukraine is "hoping to draw Russian forces from frontline positions inside Ukraine".

"While there is evidence of that happening to a degree, there's also evidence, at least from Russian claims, that their troops in, for example, the east of Ukraine, are managing to gain ground."

What's the latest from inside Kursk?

"It looks as though they [Ukraine] are trying to sever the various routes into Kursk region," said Haynes.

Just as they destroyed bridges and roads in their own territory at the beginning of the war, Ukrainian forces are destroying Russian infrastructure to stop supplies reaching Moscow's soldiers in Kursk.

It is the same the military tactics that proved successful in pushing Russian forces out of northern Ukraine, said Haynes.

08:24:10

'Three civilians killed and 10 injured' in Russian attacks

Back across the border from Kursk, Russia has launched attacks on the Sumy region this morning.

The Ukrainian air force said Russia launched an Iskander-K missile attack and a KAB bomb airstrike against Sumy city.

Local authorities reported two civilians were injured, bringing the total wounded in Ukraine over the past day to 10.

Another three civilians have been killed in the same attacks: two in the Donetsk region and one in Kharkiv.

A child was among six people injured in an attack on the Kherson region.

In another update this morning, Ukraine's air force said its defences shotdown 14 Russian drones fired in an overnight attack over six Ukrainianregions in the south and centre of the country.

Ukraine war latest: Kyiv refutes 'insane Russian propaganda' warning of Ukrainian plan to attack nuclear plant or use dirty bomb (2024)
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