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Ukraine targeted by massive attack on its energy sector

The Kremlin on Friday welcomed Donald Trump’s latest statement opposing kyiv’s use of American missiles against Russian territory. This comes in the wake of a new ‘massive’ Russian air attack against Ukraine.

Moscow also said the latest strikes were a response to kyiv’s firing of US-made ATACMS missiles two days earlier at a ‘military airfield’ in Taganrog, southwest Russia.

The outgoing American administration of Democrat Joe Biden only authorized the use of such missiles on Russian territory in November, after having long opposed it, despite repeated requests from kyiv.

In ‘total’ agreement with the Russian position

In an article published by Time magazine on Thursday, President-elect Trump, who is due to take office in January, said he was ‘strongly opposed’ to the idea. “We are only escalating this war and making it worse,” he said.

Trump’s latest statement ‘completely corresponds’ with the Russian position, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov reacted on Friday.

Moscow and kyiv are trying to gain support from the Republican against the backdrop of possible peace negotiations which could begin next year, after three years of Russian invasion of Ukraine which left tens of thousands dead on each side .

Donald Trump has already called for an ‘immediate ceasefire’ and negotiations to end the war, after his meeting a week ago with his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky and Emmanuel Macron in .

Surrender of Ukraine demanded

‘We don’t want a ceasefire, we want peace, once our conditions are met and all our objectives are achieved,’ Dmitri Peskov reacted coldly.

He considered that the ‘preliminary conditions for negotiations’ were not met, while Moscow is de facto demanding a surrender of Ukraine before negotiating the conditions of peace.

Widespread power outages

Moscow, whose forces are advancing in eastern Ukraine, is not easing its pressure on the civilian population by launching a new massive attack on its energy network in the morning, causing widespread power cuts in temperatures below. below zero.

‘In response to the use of long-range American weapons, the Russian armed forces carried out a massive attack on critical installations of the energy infrastructure’ of Ukraine, the Russian Defense Ministry said on Telegram.

Russia launched 94 ballistic and cruise missiles as well as 193 drones, the Ukrainian Air Force said. A total of 81 missiles and 80 drones were shot down by air defense and another 105 drones ‘were lost from radar and did not reach their targets’, according to the same source.

Zelensky calls for ‘a strong reaction’

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called on the social network

If Westerners ‘are afraid to respond or get used to terror, Putin sees this as permission to continue,’ he said. His head of diplomacy Andriï Sybiga called on the West to deliver ’20 air defense systems, NASAMS, HAWK and IRIS-T’ to Ukraine.

Damaged thermal power plants

After launching its invasion in February 2022, Russia regularly bombs Ukraine’s energy grid, plunging millions of people across the country into darkness in the middle of the winter season.

The twelfth massive attack against this sector since the start of the year, Friday’s strikes ‘seriously damaged the equipment of thermal power plants’, the DTEK group, the country’s main private energy supplier, said in a press release.

The national energy operator Ukrenergo announced the extension of power cuts across the country.

The strikes particularly affected the western regions of Ivano-Frankivsk and Ternopil, depriving half of the population of the latter of power, according to regional authorities.

Struggling on the front line

In addition to these attacks, Ukraine has been struggling for months on the front line, failing to stop the advances of Russia, which has an advantage in numbers of men, weapons and ammunition.

kyiv is also trying to mobilize its allies to hold on, while the arrival of Donald Trump at the White House raises fears of a reduction in American support.

French President Emmanuel Macron and Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, for their part, insisted on Thursday in Warsaw that peace in Ukraine could not be achieved at the expense of the Ukrainians. They discussed the potential sending of European troops to this country, to play a peacekeeping role in the event of a ceasefire agreement.

/ATS

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