Putin orders nuclear drills, Russia captures Ukrainian villages
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Ukrainian authorities report Russian strikes targeting energy facilities in Sumy and Kharkiv
Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered nuclear weapons drills near Ukraine, Moscow said Monday, in response to “threats” from Western officials to deploy Nato troops to Ukraine.
The announcement came as Russian forces said they captured two villages in the war-battered regions of Donetsk and Kharkiv in eastern Ukraine, where outgunned and outmanned Ukrainian troops have struggled to hold the line.
Russian officials in the border region of Belgorod meanwhile announced that Ukrainian attack drones had killed six people and wounded over 30, including several children.
Putin has upped his nuclear rhetoric since ordering his army into Ukraine in 2022, warning in February there was a “real” risk of nuclear war.
The defence ministry gave no date for the drills, but said they would involve the air force, navy and troops stationed near Ukraine.
It said they were aimed at ensuring Russian territorial integrity in the face of Western “threats.”
Putin warned the West in March that a direct conflict between Russia and the US-led Nato military alliance would mean the planet was one step away from World War Three but said hardly anyone wanted such a scenario.
The Kremlin specified that the exercises were a response to statements by French President Emmanuel Macron and British officials.
Russia has in recent days hit out at Macron for telling The Economist magazine he was “not ruling anything out” in the West’s response to the conflict in Ukraine, including sending troops to the country.
It has also blasted UK Foreign Secretary David Cameron for saying Kyiv has the right to strike targets inside Russia.
Ukraine and its Western backers say the war is an imperial-style land grab by a corrupt dictatorship. Western leaders have vowed to work for a defeat of Russian forces in Ukraine, while ruling out any deployment of Nato personnel there.
Russia will have to increase its missile arsenal to deter the West.
‘Dangerous rhetoric’
“They are talking about the readiness and even the intention of sending armed contingents to Ukraine -- that is, in fact, to put Nato soldiers in front of the Russian military,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
“This is a completely new round of escalating tensions. It is unprecedented and requires special measures,” he added.
Peskov singled out “dangerous rhetoric” issued by Macron, who said the question of sending troops to Ukraine would “legitimately” arise if Russia broke through Ukrainian front lines and Kyiv made such a request.
Macron made similar statements in February.
Ukrainian forces have been dependent on Western military aid to battle Russia but Nato has said it will not send troops into Ukraine.
Russia’s defence ministry said troops from the Southern Military District, which borders Ukraine and includes the occupied Ukrainian territories will take part in the drills.
“During the exercise, a set of measures will be taken to practise the preparation and use of non-strategic nuclear weapons,” it said in a statement.
Non-strategic nuclear weapons, also known as tactical nuclear weapons, are designed for use on the battlefield and can be delivered via missiles.
Deadly Belgorod attack
In Russia’s frontier Belgorod region -- under attack for months -- governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said two moving vans and a passenger car “came under attack by Ukrainian kamikaze-drones.”
“Unfortunately, six people died at the scene from their wounds as a result of the explosion,” he said, adding that 35 others were wounded in the attack near the village of Berezyovka -- some 30 kilometres from the Ukraine border.
Local authorities said the vehicles belonged to a meat production facility.
Gladkov said two children were among the wounded and that one man was in “serious condition” and undergoing surgery.
He published an image of a bus with blown windows and a damaged roof.
Belgorod has come under an increasing number of fatal Ukrainian drone and missile attacks.
Moscow has been making steady gains in eastern Ukraine and stepped-up aerial attacks and shelling on border regions.
The defence ministry said its units had “liberated the village of Kotlyarivka in the Kharkiv region” and the “village of Soloviove in the Donetsk People’s Republic”.
Kyiv said overnight Russian strikes had targeted energy facilities in the northern Sumy region and northeastern Kharkiv region -- both of which have seen increased attacks for weeks.
Hundreds of thousands of homes were temporarily left without power in the aftermath of the strikes, the Ukrainian energy ministry said.
The interior ministry said Russian shelling had hit school facilities at night in the village of Zolochiv in the north-eastern Kharkiv region, wounding at least one person.
Source: Agencies