May 9, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news | CNN (2024)

Table of Contents
What we covered here Russian strikes, a killed journalist and other headlines you should know Top-level US diplomats accuse Russia of using hunger as a weapon of war against Ukraine French president mourns the death of journalist killed in Ukraine Civilians in Zaporizhzhia region are being evacuated further into Russian-held territory, Ukraine says Ukraine downed Russian missile with Patriot missile system, Pentagon says AFP journalist killed in eastern Ukraine, news agency says French National Assembly approves motion asking France and EU to list Wagner group as a terrorist organization Ukraine has what it needs to successfully retake territory, US secretary of state says Ukraine’s planned counteroffensive won’t be a decisive breakthrough, UK foreign secretary says It's 7:30 p.m. in Kyiv. Here are the latest developments as Russia's war in Ukraine continues US has seen no change in posture of Russian nuclear forces after recent saber-rattling, senior officials say Germany wants China to guarantee it won’t help Russia bypass EU sanctions The US announced a new $1.2 billion package for Ukraine. Here's what's in it European grain restrictions are "absolutely unacceptable," Zelensky says Russia is attempting to destroy values because it's afraid of Ukraine’s path to EU, bloc's chief says Russia has failed to capture Bakhmut, Ukraine’s Zelensky says It’s mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here’s what you need to know Wagner leader releases rant while Moscow celebrates Victory Day Wagner chief Prigozhin rails against Russian military, claiming his troops were “blatantly lied to” Europe must not be "intimidated" by Putin’s "show of force," German Chancellor Scholz says Analysis: Moscow's parade, intended to flaunt strength, instead reveals weakness Moscow considering US request for consular access to detained WSJ reporter Evan Gershkovich, Russian media says Analysis: Putin uses Victory Day to launch another scathing attack on the West Russia is sending “museum pieces” into war One tank and no flypast at toned down V-Day parade in Moscow In letter to Putin, North Korea's Kim Jong Un congratulates Russia on Victory Day Putin falsely equates Russian soldiers waging war in Ukraine to Red Army fight against Nazis Putin says Russia remembers the role US, UK and China played in World War II UN says no grain ships inspected for 2 days as Ukraine blames Russia for delays In Victory Day speech, Putin falsely claims West provoked the war in Ukraine Putin claims "true war" is being waged against Russia, despite having launched full-scale invasion of Ukraine Russia's Victory Day parade begins in Moscow's Red Square US ambassador to Ukraine criticizes Russia for overnight strikes EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen arrives in Kyiv Ukrainian Air Force says it shot down 23 Russian cruise missiles Ukrainian Eurovision duo launch fundraiser for premature war babies Ukraine shoots down more than a dozen cruise missiles over Kyiv, military says Russia has little to celebrate on its annual Victory Day as Ukraine war falters. Here's the latest US set to announce $1.2 billion aid package to Ukraine ahead of counteroffensive Russia launched its "most massive" attack with drones Monday, Kyiv mayor says Wagner forces in Bakhmut are receiving more ammunition, head of private military group says Russia-backed officials depart occupied city on Black Sea, Ukraine's military says Mariupol occupiers are mobilizing Russian citizens, city's exiled council claims "No way out for us": Civilians await evacuation as Ukraine increases pressure on frontline towns READ MORE READ MORE

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By Tara Subramaniam, Christian Edwards, Eliza Mackintosh, Aditi Sangal, Adrienne Vogt, Mike Hayes and Tori B. Powell, CNN

Updated 12:01 AM EDT, Wed May 10, 2023

May 9, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news | CNN (5)

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Here's what was different about Russia's Victory Day parade this year

02:27 - Source: CNN

What we covered here

  • Russia scaled back its annual Victory Day celebrations due to security concerns related to the war in Ukraine. President Vladimir Putin spoke briefly in Moscow’s Red Square where only one tank was on display during a toned-down parade.
  • Explosions rang out over Kyiv on Tuesday morning as Ukrainian air defenses intercepted cruise missiles fired by Russia, officials said. The Patriot missile defense system was used to down a Russian missile, the Pentagon said.
  • Ahead of a much-anticipated Ukrainian counteroffensive, authorities in Russian-occupied towns along the southern front are ordering the evacuation of thousands of civilians.
  • The USannouncedan additional $1.2 billion in aid to Ukraine, intended to bolster Kyiv’s air defenses and ammunition ahead of an expected counteroffensive.

45 Posts

Our live coverage of Russia’s war in Ukraine has moved here.

Russian strikes, a killed journalist and other headlines you should know

From CNN staff

All but two of the 25 cruise missiles fired by Russia overnight Tuesday were intercepted by the Ukrainian Air Force, officials said. According to the Pentagon, the Ukrainian military downed a Russian missile using the Patriot missile defense system.

Here are other headlines you should know:

Anticipated counteroffensive: There’s been recent rumors of a looming Ukrainian counteroffensiveagainst Russia. UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said Tuesday that the planned move won’t be a decisive breakthrough and that people shouldn’t expect a film-like counteroffensive because, he says, “the real world doesn’t work like that.” At a joint news conference with Cleverly, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he thinks Ukraine has the resources it needs to retake territory in the anticipated counteroffensive. Blinken’s comments come on the same day the US announcedan additional $1.2 billionin aid to Ukraine intended to bolster air defenses and keep up ammunition supplies.

Journalist killed near Bakhmut: Arman Soldin, a video journalist for Agence France-Presse was killed near the embattled city of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine on Tuesday, the French news agencysaid on Twitter.Soldin, who was a French citizen with Bosnian origins, was killed by rocket fire on the outskirts of the town of Chasiv Yar, near Bakhmut, AFP said, citing colleagues who witnessed the incident. He was with four colleagues at the time of the attack but the other journalists were not injured, the news agency said. French President Emmanuel Macron mourned Soldin’s death in a tweet on Tuesday.

Ukraine’s grain: Bridget A. Brink, the US ambassador to Ukraine, accused Russia on Tuesday of “again blocking ships from loading grain in Ukraine’s ports to feed people who need it around the world.” The US official referenced similar comments on the topic made by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken earlier on Tuesday, where he accused Russia of “using people’s hunger as a weapon in its war against Ukraine.

Top-level US diplomats accuse Russia of using hunger as a weapon of war against Ukraine

From Victoria Butenko, Richard Roth and Jen Deaton

Bridget A. Brink, the US ambassador to Ukraine, accused Russia on Tuesday of “again blocking ships from loading grain in Ukraine’s ports to feed people who need it around the world.”

The US official referenced similar comments on the topic made by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken earlier on Tuesday.

“The world shouldn’t need to remind Moscow every few weeks to stop using people’s hunger as a weapon in its war against Ukraine,” Blinken said, as quoted by Brink on Twitter.

Farhan Haq, UN deputy spokesman for the Secretary-General, said two inspections of ships did happen on Tuesday.

The news comes a day after the UN said there had been no ship inspections as part of the grain deal for two days. Ukraine on Monday accused Russia of effectively bringing the grain deal to a halt by not inspecting ships.

Some context: TheBlack Sea Grain Initiativeis an agreement between Ukraine and Russia, brokered by the UN and Turkey, that was established in July 2022 to guarantee safe passage for ships carrying grain and oilseeds — some of Ukraine’s most important exports.

Talks to extend the initiative are ongoing.The Black Sea grain deal was last extended on March 18 for 60 days, and is set to expire on May 18.

French president mourns the death of journalist killed in Ukraine

From CNN's Xiaofei Xu andDuarteMendonca

French President Emmanuel Macron mourned the death of Arman Soldin, a video journalist working for AFP who was killed in Ukraine.

“We share the pain of his family and all his colleagues,” a translation of Macron’s tweet read Tuesday.

Soldin was killed on Tuesday by rocket fire on the outskirts of the town of Chasiv Yar, near Bakhmut, AFP said, citing colleagues who witnessed the incident.

Sergiy Kyslytsya, Ukraine’s permanent representative to the UN, also tweeted in French about Soldin’s death, which translated to him saying the journalist “paid with his life for his courage” and offered condolences to Soldin’s loved ones.

Civilians in Zaporizhzhia region are being evacuated further into Russian-held territory, Ukraine says

From CNN’s Yulia Kesaieva in Kyiv

The Kremlin-backed authorities in the occupied Ukrainian city of Kamianka-Dniprovska in the southern Zaporizhzhia region are evacuating families and public sector workers further into Russian-held territory, the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said in a statement.

“On May 8, the Russian occupiers began to evacuate preschool and school-age children with their parents, as well as teachers and other public sector employees from the city of Kamianka-Dniprovska in Zaporizhzhia Oblast,” the statement read. “There were not many willing participants.”

Late Thursday, Yevgeniy Balitskiy,the acting governorof the occupied parts of the Zaporizhzhia region –who is backed by Russian President Vladimir Putin–announced his administration would evacuate people from places near the war’s southern front line.

Yesterday, Yurii Malashko, Ukraine’s governor of Zaporizhzhia, said in a television interview that he understood some Moscow-backed officials were leaving occupied towns, and offering to evacuate people with Russian passports, ahead of the anticipated Ukrainian counteroffensive.

“We have also heard that they take civilians, including children, to Berdiansk first of all. Then they go either to Crimea or towards the [occupied] Donetsk region,” Malashko said.

Ivan Fedorov, the Ukraine-elected mayor of Melitopol — a city in Zaporizhzhia — told Ukrainian TV that it was not a “mass evacuation,” but rather “some hundreds evacuated for show.” He claimed that Russia was sending more forces to the southern front line and that, in Melitopol, troops had started mining administrative buildings, kindergartens and schools.

Fedorov advised people in the occupied areas to be prepared for the counteroffensive by finding shelter, charging power banks and stocking up on food and water.

Ukraine downed Russian missile with Patriot missile system, Pentagon says

From CNN's Haley Britzky

The Ukrainian military downed a Russian missile using the Patriot missile defense system, Pentagon spokesman Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder said Tuesday.

“I can confirm that they did down a Russian missile by employing the Patriot missile defense system,” Ryder said. “As you know that system is part of a broader range of air defense capabilities that the United States and the international community have provided to Ukraine.”

Ryder added that the US and its partners would continue to “rush ground-based air defense capabilities and munitions to help Ukraine control its sovereign skies and to help Ukraine defense its citizens from Russia.”

AFP journalist killed in eastern Ukraine, news agency says

From CNN's Jo Shelley

A journalist for Agence France-Presse was killed near the embattled city of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine on Tuesday, the French news agencysaid on Twitter.

“We are devastated to learn of the death of AFP video journalist Arman Soldin in eastern Ukraine today,” according to the post. “All of our thoughts go out to his family and loved ones.”

Soldin, who was a French citizen with Bosnian origins, was killed by rocket fire on the outskirts of the town of Chasiv Yar, near Bakhmut, AFP said, citing colleagues who witnessed the incident.

He was with four colleagues at the time of the attack but the other journalists were not injured, the news agency said.

Soldin is one of the several known journalists killed since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion, including Fox News photojournalist Pierre Zakrzewski and consultant Oleksandra “Sasha” Kuvshynova, journalist and documentarian Brent Renaud, and photojournalist Maks Levin.

CNN’s Xiaofei Xu contributed reporting.

French National Assembly approves motion asking France and EU to list Wagner group as a terrorist organization

From CNN’s Xiaofei Xu

Lawmakers in the French National Assembly on Tuesday approved a motion calling on the French government and the European Union to list Russia’s private military group Wagner as a terrorist organization.

The vote passed with all 331 representatives present voting in favor.

The motion — considered a symbolic move from the members of the assembly — also calls the French government to push for the United Nations to list Wagner as a terrorist organization.

Wagner Group is currently on the sanction lists of the United States, the United Kingdom and the European Union.

Ukraine has what it needs to successfully retake territory, US secretary of state says

From CNN's Kylie Atwood and Michael Conte

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that he thinks Ukraine has the resources it needs to retake territory in an anticipated counteroffensive.

“They have in place … what they need to continue to be successful in regaining territory that was seized by force by Russia over the last 14 months,” Blinken said at a joint news conference with UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly.

“It’s not only the weapons; it’s the training,” Blinken added. “It’s making sure that the Ukrainians can maintain the systems that we provide them, and it’s important, of course, that they have the right plans, again, to be successful.”

Blinken’s comments come on the same day the US announcedan additional $1.2 billion in aid to Ukraine intended to bolster air defenses and keep up ammunition supplies.

Ukraine’s planned counteroffensive won’t be a decisive breakthrough, UK foreign secretary says

From CNN’s Xiaofei Xu in London

Ukraine has demonstrated huge courage and resistance since Russia’s invasion began, but people shouldn’t expect a film-like counteroffensive from Kyiv, UK’s top diplomat said during his visit to the United States Tuesday.

“The real world doesn’t work like that,” UK Foreign Secretary James Cleverly said.

Hisremarks come amid rumors of alooming Ukrainian counteroffensiveagainst Russia.

“I hope and expect they will do very, very well, because whenever I’ve seen the Ukrainians, they have outperformed expectations,” he said, adding that people “have to be realistic.”

“This is the real world. This is not a Hollywood movie,” Cleverly said.

He also expressed London’s willingness to see China play a more constructive role in ending the war.

“We know that (Chinese President) Xi enjoys a significant degree of influence with Vladimir Putin,” Cleverly said.“If through his intervention he can help restore the sovereignty of Ukraine, and get Russian troops out of that country, I’m not going to be critical of that,” he said.

Cleverly admitted that whether China could make a meaningful intervention remains to be seen.

It's 7:30 p.m. in Kyiv. Here are the latest developments as Russia's war in Ukraine continues

From CNN's staff

The US announced a new aid package to Ukraine as Russia celebrated Victory Day with an annual parade that was notably scaled back this year due to security concerns related to the war in Ukraine.

Here’s everything you need to know:

US aid to Ukraine: The US announced a $1.2 billion security assistance package toUkraine Tuesday. The package includes 155 mm artillery rounds, additional air defense systems and munitions and drone ammunition, as well as equipment to help “integrate Western air defense launchers, missiles, and radars” with Ukraine’s existing systems. The package will fall under the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative, which means it will be contracted and purchased from manufacturers instead of pulled directly from Defense Department stocks in a drawdown. The US has now given Ukraine $37.6 billion in military aid.

The EU chief visits Ukraine: European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen isin Kyiv to mark Europe Day– a celebration of peace and unity on the continent. In a joint news conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, she discussed European solidarity in areas such as grain export and more ammunition.

Germany and China talk Russia’s war on the sidelines: German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock held a joint news conference in Berlin with China’s Foreign Minister Qin Gang, and said Germany wants Beijing to promise it won’t help Russia avoid European sanctions.“It is particularly critical if Russian weaponry companies obtain war-related goods,” she said, adding that all countries — China included — should take action to oblige their companies.“Neutrality means taking the side of the aggressor,” Baerbock said.

US has seen no change in posture of Russian nuclear forces after recent saber-rattling, senior officials say

From CNN's Jim Sciutto

Despite recent nuclear saber-rattling by senior Russian officials, the United States has detected no signs of movement or changes to Russian nuclear forces, a senior US military official and senior administration official told CNN.

As a result, the US has made no changes to its own posture, according to these same officials.

“We don’t have any indications of a change to Russia’s strategic force posture and continue to monitor the situation. We’ve seen nothing to warrant a change in our own strategic force posture at this time,” a spokesperson for the National Security Council told CNN.

Russian leaders have repeatedly raised the prospect of nuclear war in recent months. With each threat, the US and its allies have monitored Russian nuclear forces for signs of movement or preparations to deploy them.

Most recently, former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said in late April that the threat of nuclear conflict is “growing every day.”

“Is there such a prospect today? (Unfortunately,) yes. And it is growing every day for well-known reasons,” he said.

It wasn’t the first time this year Medvedev had raised the prospect of nuclear war. In January, he posted to Telegram about US and NATO support for Ukraine, noting, “defeat of a nuclear power in a conventional war may trigger a nuclear war.”

On Tuesday, Russia’s Victory Day parade showcased parts of Russia’s nuclear forces including the country’s state of the art air defense system, the S-400, and its intercontinental ballistic system, the Yars.

“A true war has been unleashed against our motherland,” Putin said on Tuesday, claiming falsely that the West had provoked the war in Ukraine. “We have repelled international terrorism and to fit we will defend the residents of Donbas and secure our own safety. Russia has no unfriendly nations in the West or in the East.”

Germany wants China to guarantee it won’t help Russia bypass EU sanctions

From CNN’s Xiaofei Xu in London, Inke Kappeler in Berlin and Shawn Deng in Toronto

Germany wants Beijing to promise it won’t help Russia avoid European sanctions, while China warns Berlin and Europe about cutting economic ties with China, as the two countries’ diplomatic chiefs meet in Berlin Tuesday.

Imposed sanctions should not be “undermined in a roundabout way,” German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said at a joint news conference.

“It is particularly critical if Russian weaponry companies obtain war-related goods,” she said, adding that all countries — China included — should take action to oblige their companies.

Baerbock welcomed Chinese President Xi Jinping’s recent phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and urged China to play a more decisive role in ending Russian’s war in Ukraine.

China, on the other hand, expressed concern over the rising talks of Europe “de-risking” its relationship with China.

De-risking refers to the concept of “financial institutions terminating or restricting business relationships with clients or categories of clients to avoid, rather than manage, risk,” according to the US Department of State.

“If the reality of removing China’s influence is carried out in the name of risk eradication, it is in fact removing opportunities, removing cooperation, removing stability, and removing development,” China’s Foreign Minister Qin Gang said at the joint news conference.

“We must firmly oppose the so-called decoupling exercise and maintain a high degree of vigilance against the new Cold War. Germany, China and Europe should join hands to safeguard the stability and smoothness of the global industrial and supply chains,” he added.

What other leaders are saying: German Chancellor Olaf Scholz called for more diverse European trade ties, including new deals with countries such as Mexico, India, Australia and Kenya in a speech at the European Parliament Tuesday.

European Council President Ursula Von der Leyen also called for de-risking the EU’s relationship with China through diplomacy instead of de-coupling in a speech back in March before she embarked on a joint visit to Beijing with French President Emmanuel Macron.

Qin’s visit to Berlin unveils a busy week of China-Europe diplomacy in the bloc, with Qin flying to Paris Wednesday and then Oslo, and Baerbock heading to Paris late Tuesday for an expected meeting with Macron.

The US announced a new $1.2 billion package for Ukraine. Here's what's in it

From CNN's Haley Britzky and Oren Liebermann

The US announced a $1.2 billion security assistance package toUkraine Tuesday, as Ukraine’s counteroffensive against Russian forces looms.

The package includes 155 mm artillery rounds, additional air defense systems and munitions and drone ammunition, as well as equipment to help “integrate Western air defense launchers, missiles, and radars” with Ukraine’s existing systems.

Various senior Ukrainian officials expressed their gratitude to the US for the latest round of defense aid.

“We appreciate this sign of solidarity with🇺🇦shown on a symbolic day for us – Europe Day and the Day of Victory over Nazism in World War II. Together we’re moving towards a new victory!” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a tweet.

Ukraine’s defense chief Oleksii Reznikov also welcomed the news, calling the new aid “a new package of security assistance.”

CNN reportedMonday the announcement was expected.

The package, first reported by theAssociated Press, will fall under the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative, which means it will be contracted and purchased from manufacturers instead of pulled directly from Defense Department stocks in a drawdown. Instead of supplying Ukraine with the weapons it currently needs, USAI packages are intended to create a medium- and long-term supply for Ukraine.

With the new package announcement, the US marks $37.6 billion in military aid to Ukraine since the beginning of the Biden administration, including $36.9 billion since the beginning of the war in February 2022.

Even after the Ukrainian counteroffensive begins, the US will continue to send military aid to Ukraine, according to a US military official, both to sustain Ukraine’s military force against dug-in Russian troops and to provide new equipment.

CNN’s Yulia Kesaieva in Kyivcontributed to this post.

European grain restrictions are "absolutely unacceptable," Zelensky says

From CNN’s Amy Cassidy in London

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Tuesday criticized “protectionist measures” from neighboring countries which limit imports of Ukrainian grain, saying they are “absolutely unacceptable.”

The EU last week adopted a temporary measure that bans wheat, maize, rapeseed and sunflower seed originating in Ukraine from being exported to Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia, after those countries raised concerns over local farmers being undercut by a bottleneck of cheap Ukrainian grain.

“Unfortunately, we have encountered problems where we should have continued to see strong signs of solidarity, in proportion to the threats that exist today — tough and even brutal, for wartime, protectionist measures from our neighbors,” Zelensky said at a joint news conference with EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen,
“Any restrictions on our exports now are absolutely unacceptable because they do not strengthen all of us in Europe, instead they strengthen the aggressor’scapabilities,” he added.

Addressing Zelensky’s concerns, von der Leyen described the grain topic as a “challenging situation” and vowed to set up a joint “coordination platform” to get grain exports “fully functioning again.”

“The immediate priority now is that the grain transit goes seamlessly and at the lowest possible cost outside of Ukraine towards the European Union,” she said.

Russia is attempting to destroy values because it's afraid of Ukraine’s path to EU, bloc's chief says

From CNN’s Zahid Mahmood

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said Tuesday that Russia is seeking to destroy values of freedom in Ukraine because it is afraid of the country’s path to the European Union.

“We Europeans cherish our liberty, our democracy, our freedom of thought and speech,” von der Leyen said alongside Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky during a visit to Kyiv to mark Europe Day.

“Ukraine is fighting for the ideals of Europe that we celebrate today. In Russia, Putin and his regime have destroyed these values,” she said.

“They are afraid of the success you represent and the example you show, and they are afraid of your path to the European Union,” she said.

Von der Leyen added that Russia has “dramatically failed,” and Ukraine is “fighting back successfully.”

Russia has failed to capture Bakhmut, Ukraine’s Zelensky says

From CNN’s Zahid Mahmood and Amy Cassidy in London

Russia has failed to capture the eastern city of Bakhmut before the May 9 deadline — a day when Russia marks the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany in World War II, Ukrainian President Volodmyr Zelensky said Tuesday

“They were not able to capture Bakhmut. This was the last important military operation that they wanted to complete by the ninth of May,” Zelensky said in a joint news conference with European President Ursula von der Leyen.

“Unfortunately, the city does not exist anymore. Everything is fully destroyed,” he added.

Zelensky urges more ammo: The Ukrainian president also said ammunitionthe European Unionhas pledged to deliver to Ukraine is already needed on the battlefield, calling for faster deliveries.

“Ukraine daily demonstrates efficiency of our defenseagainst Russian aggression. Every intercepted terrorists’ missile, every success of our warriors in defeating Russian attacks, these are the proofs that we can win over this aggressor,” Zelensky said.

“The main thing is the proportionality of our abilities to the abilities that the aggressor has. And in this context, I have thanked Ursula for the readiness of the European Union to provide Ukraine this badly needed ammunition, one billion artillery shells, and we have also discussed the key issues, the speed of the procurement and delivery of this ammunition, because they are needed on the battlefield already now,” he said.

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin marked May 9 with the annual Victory Day parade and launched yet another scathing attack on the West,accusing it of holding Ukraine hostage to its anti-Russian plans.He also claimed that “real war” has been unleashed against Russia.

It’s mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here’s what you need to know

From CNN staff

Russia held its annual celebration to mark the Soviet Union’s role in defeating Nazi Germany in World War II. In past years, tens of tanks have streamed across Red Square as jets have ripped through the skies in a flex of Russia’s military might. But this year’s parade was a quieter affair: A single T-34 tank – a relic from the Soviet era – led out this year’s mechanized column, and the flypast was canceled.

Here are the latest developments:

  • Prigozhin’s rant: Wagner chief Yevgeny Prigozhin launched the latest in a series of rants directed at Russia’s military leadership – during the parade in Moscow. He claimed his troops were “blatantly lied to” after he received only “10%” of the support he had been pledged to help sustain his troops in Bakhmut. Prigozhin also questioned how Victory Day celebrations could be underway in Moscow, when “we haven’t earned that victory one millimeter.”
  • Kyiv withstands Russian missile strikes: Ukraine’s air defense systems intercepted 23 of the 25 cruise missiles Russia fired overnight Tuesday, according to the Ukrainian air force. The Ukrainian military warned earlier this week that Russia is trying to wear down its air defenses ahead of the long-anticipated Ukrainian counteroffensive. But, for now, Kyiv’s shields are holding firm.
  • EU chief celebrates Europe Day in Kyiv: European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen is in Kyiv to mark Europe Day – a celebration of peace and unity on the continent. In a joint news conference with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, she claimed Russia is trying to destroy liberty, democracy and freedom in Ukraine because they fear its burgeoning European future.
  • More US support incoming: The United States is set to announce a $1.2 billion aid package to Ukraine as early as Tuesday, according to a US official familiar with the issue. The package – which will include drones, artillery ammunition and air defense missiles – comes as Ukraine’s long-anticipated counteroffensive looms.

Wagner leader releases rant while Moscow celebrates Victory Day

From CNN’s Vasco Cotovio in Lisbon and Olga Voitovych in Kyiv

Wagner founder and financier Yevgeny Prigozhin has criticized the Russian military’s focus on the Victory Day parade in Moscow, which comes just as Ukraine is about to launch a counteroffensive.

In the latest in a series of rants directed at Russia’s military leadership in Moscow, Prigozhin claimed Ukrainian forces were on Tuesday “tearing up the flanks” in the direction of Bakhmut and “regrouping at Zaporizhzhia.”

“And a counteroffensive is about to begin,” he said during a long stream on his social media accounts on Tuesday.

Prigozhin claimed that Russians should pay more attention to unfolding events in Ukraine, rather than the televised Victory Day parade.

“They absolutely, clearly say that the counteroffensive will be on the ground, not on TV. In our country everybody thinks that we should do everything on TV and celebrate the Victory Day,” he added.

The Wagner founder went on to say Victory Day belonged to a previous generation.

“Victory Day is the victory of our grandfathers,” he said. “We haven’t earned that victory one millimeter.”

Wagner chief Prigozhin rails against Russian military, claiming his troops were “blatantly lied to”

From CNN’s Vasco Cotovio in Lisbon, Olga Voitovych in Kyiv

Wagner head Yevgeniy Prigozhin has criticized the Russian military leadership for their lack of support for his fighters and for failing to hold the lines near Bakhmut, in a long stream posted on his social media accounts.

“Today [Tuesday], one of the units of the Ministry of Defense fled from one of our flanks, abandoning their positions. They all fled and left a front nearly two kilometers wide and 500 meters deep. Good thing we blocked it somehow,” Prigozhin said.

Prigozhin went on to say his fighters would be able to take the city if they were supplied with enough ammunition — but that Moscow had backtracked from its initial promises.

“We were promised on May 7 that we would be given ammunition,” he explained.

In the morning of May 8, Prigozhin said that Moscow gave an order to provide Wagner with “everything” they wanted. However, they were subsequently only provided with “10% of what was requested,” he claimed.

“We were simply blatantly lied to,” Prigozhin said.

The Wagner founder went on to say the Russian Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov was to blame for the decision.

“This morning the Chief of the General Staff [Valery Gerasimov] personally corrected all the figures and reduced them tenfold,” he claimed, without providing evidence. “This is very bad. If it goes on like this, we won’t be able to fight.”

“If all the tasks are performed in order to deceive the Supreme Commander-in-Chief, either the Supreme Commander-in-Chief will tear you’re a** up or the Russian people, who will be very upset if the war is lost,” Prigozhin added.

The Wagner founder added that his fighters would not leave Bakhmut and that they would “insist for a few more days.”

“Our enemy today is not the AFU (Armed Forces of Ukraine), but the Russian bureaucrat. Especially the near-war one,” he said. “The shells are lying in warehouses, they are resting there. The industry is producing these reserves and instead of giving them to the troops, they are being stockpiled in warehouses. No one knows what for. Instead of spending a shell to kill the enemy, they kill our soldiers.”

Some context: This rant is just the latest in the ongoing spat between Prigozhin’s private mercenary group and Moscow’s military leadership. Last week, Prigozhin launched an explosive tirade against Russia’s defense ministry, accusing them of sitting like “fat cats” while his men died in Bakhmut. He threatened to withdraw completely from the embattled Ukrainian city, which Russia has for months failed to capture.

However, Prigozhin appeared to change his mind Sunday, after securing concessions from the government. He announced his forces would stay in Bakhmut because Moscow promised “to give us ammunition and weapons, as much as we need to continue further actions.”

But this latest rant shows the dispute between Prigozhin and Moscow is far from settled.

CNN’s Christian Edwards in London contributed to this post.

Europe must not be "intimidated" by Putin’s "show of force," German Chancellor Scholz says

From CNN’s Inke Kappeler in Berlin

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz urged Europe to not be intimidated by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “show of force,” during a speech at the European Parliament in Strasbourg on Tuesday.

“In Moscow, 2,200 kilometers (more than 1300 miles) northeast of here, Putin is today deploying his soldiers, tanks and missiles. Let us not be intimidated by such show of force,“ Scholz said, referring to Russia’s Victory Day parade.

Scholz continued to say that Ukrainians were “paying with their lives” for the “delusion of their powerful neighboring state,” reiterating his support for Ukraine.

Scholz also warned in a news conference with the President of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola, Europe’s next round of sanctions on Russia will “not be the last” and that the bloc will be on track to discuss further improvements.

Analysis: Moscow's parade, intended to flaunt strength, instead reveals weakness

From CNN's Nick Paton Walsh

One tank. Some very young soldiers. And a distinctly warped message.

The display on Red Square for May 9, for decades a moment when Russia’s staggering sacrifice in the Great Patriotic War was sombrely honored, rang hollow. In 2023, it became a backdrop for the Kremlin head’s poor decision-making.

Putin’s speech was littered with references to Russia being sinned against — to his wider narrative that the invasion and war he started in Ukraine was foisted upon him by NATO. It is odd to hear as Russia gathers to honor the millions of Soviet citizens who died fighting the Nazis. The key question will be how many in the crowd felt that dissonance too.

The substance of the parade itself was also telling. There was only one tank: a T-34, a model made 89 years ago, before Putin was even born, raising the question of why they decided to include any tanks at all.

The level of hardware on display seemed thin: understandable perhaps for a military being mauled on a wide and relentless frontline. But again, it raises the enduring bind for the Kremlin.

They keep having to prove their strength, their might, yet have little actual might left to do it with. The exercise ends up being one of revealing weakness.

No jets flew by. The Kremlin itself had — according to its own press release — come under drone attack just days earlier. All incompatible with Putin’s unique sales point — that under him Russia is impregnable and respected again.

In the background too lurks the real war’s progress. The constant side drama with Russia’s most prominent military figure — the Wagner mercenary head Yevgeny Prigozhin — continued to play out. He threatened to leave the key city of Bakhmut unless he got more artillery shells, then said he was definitely leaving tomorrow, then said he would stay. He chose the moment of the parade to release a statement saying in fact Russian MoD troops had abandoned positions around Bakhmut and he had been threatened with treason charges if he left. This is not a message of unity.

And secondly, Russia’s wrath appears neutered. For yet another night, a wave of drone and missile attacks was thwarted by Ukraine’s air defenses. Over the past week, lives have been lost and civilians injured by debris from destroyed drones or missiles that have got through.

But above all, Ukraine’s air defense has proven potent — and Moscow less so.

It raises again the long-term question of this war: Is a weak Russia dangerous or just weak?

Moscow considering US request for consular access to detained WSJ reporter Evan Gershkovich, Russian media says

From CNN's Amy Cassidy

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov said Russia is considering the United States’ request for consular access to detained Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, Russia’s state news agency Ria Novosti reported Tuesday.

RIA Novosti adds Moscow has seen only “attempts of pressure and threats from Washington on the subject.”

The US State Department has yet to comment.

Some background: Gershkovich, a US citizen, was arrested in Russia in March on espionage charges, in a sign of the Kremlin’s crackdown on foreign media news outlets since it invaded Ukraine last year.

The Wall Street Journal has vehemently denied the spying accusations against Gershkovich.

Gerschkovich is currently being held in a pre-trial detention center at the notorious Lefortovo prison in Moscow until May 29. Last month, he appeared in Moscow City Court – where he was pictured standing in a glass cage – to ask that his pre-trial detention be under house arrest rather than jail. His appeal was denied.

US State Department principal deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel said last month that Washington was “deeply disappointed” that Moscow had rejected their request to visit Gershkovich.

Moscow’s initial rejection was in retaliation to Washington’s failure to provide visas to Russian journalists from Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s pool when he visited the United Nations in April.

Analysis: Putin uses Victory Day to launch another scathing attack on the West

From CNN's Mathew Chance

Russian President Vladimir Putin used the annual Victory Day parade to launch yet another scathing attack on the West,accusing it of holding Ukraine hostage to its anti-Russian plans.

He also again drew comparisons, falsely, between the conflict in Ukraine and the fight against Nazi forces in World War II,saying that civilisation is at a turning point and claiming that “real war” has been unleashed against Russia.

Throughout the short address, Putinpraised Russian troops fighting in what the Kremlin calls a “special military operation” in Ukraine, saying the country is “proud” of everyone who fights on the frontlines.

However, no mention was made of the high casualties suffered by Russian troops, which are estimated to be in the tens of thousands.

Russia is sending “museum pieces” into war

From CNN's Vasco Cotovio, Clare Sebastian and Martin Bourke

Russia’s Victory Day parade was a more modest spectacle than in previous years, with only one tank on display.

This comes the day after CNN reported on the state of Russia’s military hardware being deployed in Ukraine.

A video, seemingly filmed in late March, showed a cargo train loaded with Soviet tanks being transported somewhere in Russia. “Wow,” a woman said, pointing her phone at the train chugs along. “This is the second train, there was one just like it before.”

Moscow has been known to bring out older military equipment from storage to help it wage war in Ukraine – but these are different.

They’re so old, you can find them in museums.

The tanks are T-55s, a model first commissioned by the Soviet Union’s Red Army in 1948, shortly after the end of World War II. Cheap, reliable, easy to use and easy to maintain, Russia used this model to quash uprisings in former Warsaw Pact countries, rolling through Hungary in 1956, then Prague, capital of what was then Czechoslovakia, in 1968.

Photographs shared by pro-Kremlin bloggers now appear to show these tanks in Russian-occupied territories in Ukraine.

“The Soviets never threw anything away,” historian John Delaney, a senior curator at the Imperial War Museum in Duxford, Cambridge, told CNN. “There’s probably a significant number of them sitting in sheds waiting to be reconfigured.”

Read the full report:

T-55 Russian tanks on the streets of Prague Reg Lancaster/Hulton Archive/Getty Images Related article Russia is sending museum pieces into war, but experts say they may still be effective | CNN

One tank and no flypast at toned down V-Day parade in Moscow

From CNN’s Vasco Cotovio in Lisbon and Radina Gigova in London

Russia traditionally uses the Victory Day parade in Moscow to flex its military might. In previous years’ parades, tens of tanks have streamed across the Red Square as jets and helicopters ripped through the skies above.

But this year’s parade was a more modest event.

There was only one tank leading this year’s mechanized column – the T-34, a Soviet-era vehicle fielded by Russia during World War II.

At the 2022 parade, the T-34 was accompanied by several of the more modern T-90 and T-14. Neither of these models appeared in Wednesday’s celebration. Instead, the T-34 was accompanied by a procession of multipurpose fighting vehicles – the Tigr.

Tigr-M and VPK-Ural armored vehicles were also on display, but the main focus was the country’s state of the art air defense system – the S-400 – and its intercontinental ballistic system – the Yars, which forms part of Russia’s nuclear forces.

According to state news agency TASS, 125 items of military hardware were on display.

Despite weather forecasts showing relatively clear skies above Moscow, the usual fly past above Red Square was canceled, state media reported, without providing an explanation.

In letter to Putin, North Korea's Kim Jong Un congratulates Russia on Victory Day

From CNN's Gawon Bae in Seoul, South Korea

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un on Tuesday congratulated Russia on its annual Victory Day in a letter tohis Russian counterpart.

According to the state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), Kim’s letter expressed warm greetings to Russian President Vladimir Putin, the Russian army and people of Russia for their fight “to realize international justice and defend global peace” against so-called “imperialists.”

“Victory is Russia’s inherent tradition, and the glory of victory will shine in history and last forever with Russia even when the time passes and generations change,” Kim wrote, according to KCNA.

Kim said that under Putin’s leadership, Russia will “smash all challenges and threats posed by hostile forces”and prevail in its quest to ensure the country’s “sovereignty, dignity and regional stability,” KCNA said.

North Korea is one of only a handful of countries to show outright support for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and has blamed the United States and the West for thewar.

The KCNA report made no mention of Ukraine.

Putin falsely equates Russian soldiers waging war in Ukraine to Red Army fight against Nazis

From CNN’s Zahid Mahmood and Amy Cassidy

Russian President Vladimir Putin concluded his Victory Day speech Tuesday by equating the efforts of Russian soldiers fighting in Ukraine, falsely, to Soviet forces who helped defeat the Nazis in World War II.

Putin has often invoked the Soviet Union’s defeat of Nazi Germany to justify Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, saying that the offensive is aimed at “denazifying” the nation – ignoring the fact that President Volodymyr Zelensky is Jewish and lost relatives in the holocaust.

“Today here today, participants of the special military operation they are professional soldiers and those who have come to the ranks of the army as part of the partial mobilization (…) I welcome you friends,” Putin said.
“During the Great Patriotic War, our heroic ancestors proved that there is nothing mightier and stronger than our unity.”

Some analysts say the Russian leader is committing some of the same blunders that doomed Germany’s 1941 invasion of the USSR — while using“Hitler-like tricks and tactics” to justify his brutality.

Putin says Russia remembers the role US, UK and China played in World War II

From CNN's Radina Gigova

In his Victory Day speech in Red Square Tuesday, President Vladimir Putin said Russia honors the sacrifice of the allied armies of the United States, the United Kingdom and China in World War II.

“The memory of our defenders of the motherland is sacred in our hearts,” Putin said, adding: “We honor members of the resistance who fought Nazis, soldiers of allied armies of the US, Britain and other countries. We remember and honor the memory of Chinese soldiers in their battle against Japanese militarism.”

Putin suggested that “experience of solidarity” could bea foundation towardbuilding a “multipolar world.”

“I am convinced that the experience of solidarity and partnership in the days of the struggle against a common threat is our heritage and a reliable base of support in our movement towards a multipolar world based on trust and indivisible security, equal opportunities for unique and free development for all nations in the world,” Putin said.

Remember: Putin’s remarks come just hours after Ukrainian officials said their air defenses had intercepted all but two of 25 cruise missiles fired by Russia overnight — the latest aerial barrage launched by Moscow’s forces amid the Russian leader’s unprovoked war against Ukraine.

UN says no grain ships inspected for 2 days as Ukraine blames Russia for delays

From CNN's Richard Roth, Hande Atay, Mariya Knightand Jen Deaton

No ships have been inspected for the past two days under a UN-brokered deal to facilitate vital grain exports from Ukraine, the Office of the UN Coordinator of the Black Sea Grain Initiative said Monday.

“The Joint Coordination Centre(JCC)conducted no inspections yesterday and today,”the statement said, adding that the inspection rate had dropped since the start of the month.

Earlier Monday, Ukrainian officials blamed Russia for effectively bringing the initiative to a halt, accusing Moscow of not registering or inspecting ships intended to go to and from Ukrainian ports.

The initiative was established in July 2022 to guarantee safe passage for ships exportinggrain and oilseedsfrom Ukrainian ports on the Black Sea, much of which supports humanitarian operations in heavily-dependent countries like Afghanistan, Ethiopia, Somalia and Yemen.

The deal was last extended on March 18 for 60 days and is set to expire on May 18.Talks between the key parties have so far brought no agreement.

In Victory Day speech, Putin falsely claims West provoked the war in Ukraine

From CNN's Radina Giova

Russian President Vladimir Putin falsely claimed that the West had provoked the war in Ukraine during his Victory Day speech in Red Square on Tuesday.

The Russian leader has previously used similar rhetoric in an attempt to justify his unprovoked invasion of Ukraine.

Some background: Putin was using this type of language in relation to Ukraine long before launching the war. In a lengthyessaypenned in July 2021, he referred to Russians and Ukrainians as “one people,” and suggested the West had corrupted Ukraine and yanked it out of Russia’s orbit through a “forced change of identity.”

But Ukrainians, who in the last three decades have sought to align more closely with Western institutions like the European Union and NATO, have pushed back against the notion that they are little more than the West’s “puppet.”

Putin claims "true war" is being waged against Russia, despite having launched full-scale invasion of Ukraine

From CNN Staff

Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed falsely in a speech during the annual Victory Day parade in Moscow that a “true war” is being waged against his country, despite having launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine last year.

The largest land war in Europe has sparkeda massive humanitarian crisis, leaving thousands of civilians dead and millions displaced.

“A true war has been unleashed against our motherland,” Putin said as Russia stages its main annual Victory Day parade on Moscow’s Red Square, marking victory over Nazi Germany in World War II.

“We have repelled international terrorism and to fit we will defend the residents of Donbas and secure our own safety,” he said, referring to the eastern region of Ukraine that has largely been occupied by Russian forces since Putin ordered the invasion of his neighbor in February last year.

“Russia has no unfriendly nations in the west or in the east,” Putin also claimed.

Victory Day is the most significant in Putin’s calendar, and he has long used it to rally public support and demonstrate the country’s military prowess.

On Tuesday, he claimed that he wants a peaceful future.

“As the majority of people on this planet we want to see the future peaceful, free and stable,” he said. “We believe any ideology of supremacy due to its nature is repulsive, criminal and deadly.”

Russia's Victory Day parade begins in Moscow's Red Square

From CNN's Radina Giova

Russia’s annual Victory Day parade is underway in Moscow’s Red Square, where Russian President Vladimir Putin is watching and expected to make a speech.

Russian Defense Minster Sergei Shoigu inspected the troops and congratulated them on the 78th anniversary of victory over Nazi Germany in World War II

Victory Day is the most significant in Russian President Vladimir Putin’s calendar, and he has long used it to rally public support and demonstrate the country’s military prowess.

But this year, the grandeur of the parade contrasts with Russia’s faltering military campaign in Ukraine. Outside of Moscow, several regions in Russia — many near the border with Ukraine — scaled down preparations for the spectacle due to security concerns and a lack of military equipment to display.

Among the troops taking part in the parade today are servicemen who participated in what Russia calls “its special military operation” in Ukraine.

US ambassador to Ukraine criticizes Russia for overnight strikes

From CNN's Olga Voitovych in Kyiv

The US Ambassador to Kyiv criticized Russia for another missile attack on the Ukrainian capital Tuesday as Moscow prepared for its annualVictory Day parade.

“Ukraine, Europe, and the United States commemorated victory over tyranny yesterday,” Bridget A. Brink tweeted, referring to commemorations of the end of World War II. “Russia marks May 9 with more missiles and drones launched toward Ukrainian cities and sleeping civilians.”

Ukrainian officials said their air defenses intercepted all but two of 25 cruise missiles fired by Russia overnight Tuesday as Moscow’s aerial barrage intensified. No casualties were reported.

Russia’s Victory Day parade is anexhibition of patriotismmarking the Soviet Union’s role in defeating Nazi Germany, which has long been used by the Kremlin to rally public support and demonstrate the country’s military prowess.

EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen arrives in Kyiv

From CNN's Olga Voitovych in Kyiv

European Commission PresidentUrsula von der Leyen arrived in Kyiv Tuesday to mark Europe Day, according to a post on her Twitter account.

“Good to be back in Kyiv.Where the values we hold dear are defended every day, so it is such a fitting place to celebrate the day of Europe,” Von der Leyen wrote. “I welcome President @ZelenskyyUa’s decision to make 9 May Europe Day also here in Ukraine.”

The Ukrainian President on Monday proposed moving World War II Victory Day celebrations a day earlier to May 8 in a bill presented to lawmakers in Kyiv. May 9 would henceforth be celebrated as Europe Day in Ukraine, he added.

Like Russia, Ukraine traditionally commemorates victory over the Nazis on May 9, but that date has become increasingly associated with a parade in Moscow, used by the Kremlin to flex its military might.

Ukrainian Air Force says it shot down 23 Russian cruise missiles

From CNN's Josh Pennington

All but two of 25 cruise missiles fired by Russia against Ukraine overnight Tuesday were intercepted by the country’s air defenses, the Ukrainian Air Force said in a statement.

“In total, during two waves of shelling of Ukraine on the night of May 9, 2023, the Russian occupiers launched 25 Kalibr and X-101/X-555 cruise missiles,” the statement said, adding that 23 missiles fired from the sea and the air were destroyed.

The Ukrainian military warned earlier this week that Russia is trying to wear down Ukraine’s air defenses ahead of an anticipated counteroffensive.

Falling debris: Shrapnel from a downed missile landed in a private yard inKyiv’s Holosiivskyi district, Mayor Vitaly Klitschko said in a statement Tuesday. There was no damage and nobody was hurt, he said. Explosives experts and emergency responders were working at the scene, he added.

The intercepted attacks Tuesday come after Klitschko said Russian strikes early Monday marked Moscow’s “most massive” drone attack on the capital.

Ukrainian Eurovision duo launch fundraiser for premature war babies

From CNN's Mariya Knight

Tvorchi, the duo representing Ukraine at this year’s Eurovision Song Contest, have launched a fundraiser for equipment to help Ukrainian babies born prematurely due to war stressors.

The fundraiser is in partnership with Visa and United24, an official fundraising platform launched by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

According to United24, “because of the war, the number of such newborns has increased by at least 15% and behind this figure there are thousands of vulnerable children who were born prematurely and cannot survive without special assistance.”

During the Eurovision opening ceremony on Sunday in the English city of Liverpool, the duo wore costumes with the names and weights of Ukrainian babies born prematurely displayed on their jackets.

“Sofia, 1340 grams. Marichka, 804.6 grams. Nikita, 1280 grams. Alice, 1600 grams. Denis, 900 grams…These names and weights are displayed on our costumes, that we wore on the turquoise Eurovision runway,” they said in an Instagram post Monday.
“They belong to children who were born in Ukraine during the war, very tiny. More often, because their mothers experienced stress during pregnancy due to explosions, shelling and a constant sense of threat.
“These babies survived — their little hearts were saved by intensive care incubators.”

The goal of the initiative is to attract international support to raise nearly $270,000 to buy 10 incubators for Ukrainian infants, according to the United24 website.

Eurovision is traditionally hosted by the defending champion’s country. Ukraine won the contest in 2022 but cannot host it due to the ongoing conflict.The theme of Eurovision 2023 is “United by music” with the first semifinals to start on May 9.

Ukraine shoots down more than a dozen cruise missiles over Kyiv, military says

From CNN's Mariya Knight

Ukrainian air defenses destroyed about 15 cruise missiles launched by Russia in the airspace over Kyiv in the early hours of Tuesday, a Ukrainian military official said.

In a Telegram post, Serhiy Popko, head of the city’s military administration, said preliminary information indicated there were no casualties and little damage caused.

“In the Holosiiv district, a fire broke out in the yard of a private house as a result of falling debris and the removal of debris on the road in the Shevchenkiv district,” he said. “The launched cruise missiles, most notably of the X-101 (X-555) type, did not reach their targets. The anti-aircraft defense of the capital worked perfectly again!”

Popko said the attack was “carried out by four Tu-95MS strategic bombers from the Caspian Sea region,” in the fifth air assault launched by Russia against Kyiv since the beginning of May.

Some context: The intercepted attacks Tuesday come after Kyiv’s mayor said Russian strikes early Monday marked Moscow’s “most massive” drone attack on the capital since the invasion began last year. The Ukrainian military has warned that Russia is trying to wear down Ukraine’s air defenses ahead of an anticipated counteroffensive.

Russia has little to celebrate on its annual Victory Day as Ukraine war falters. Here's the latest

From CNN staff

It’s Victory Day in Russia, where an annual Moscow parade is set to take place in anexhibition of patriotismmarking the Soviet Union’s role in defeating Nazi Germany in World War II.

The day is the most significant in Russian President Vladimir Putin’s calendar, and he has long used it to rally public support and demonstrate the country’s military prowess.

But in light of two recent alleged Kremlin drone attacks, deepening fissures between senior Russian officials over war tactics, and an expected Ukrainian spring offensive, tensions in Moscow are at an all-time-high ahead of the second parade since Russia launched its invasion.

Here are the latest developments:

  • Muted celebrations: Thousands of peoplewill line the streets of Moscow’s Red Square on Tuesday as part of Russia’s annualVictory Day parade, when the Kremlin will display a front of military might and grandeur contrasting with its faltering military campaign in Ukraine. But several regions in Russia — many near the border with Ukraine — have scaled down preparations for the May 9 spectacle due to security concerns and a lack of military equipment to display.
  • “Most massive attack”: Russia launched a wave of strikes on Ukraine early Monday in what Kyiv mayorVitali Klitschkocalled its “most massive attack.” The mayor said five people were injured in capital, but no deaths were reported.Other attacks were recordedin Ukraine’s Kharkiv and Kherson regions.
  • New US aid:The United States is set to announcea $1.2 billion aid packageto Ukraine as early as Tuesday, according to a US official familiar with the package. It comes at a critical point with Ukraine’s counteroffensive against Russian forces looming.The package will include drones, artillery ammunition and air defense missiles as well as other capabilities, the official said.
  • Wagner resupplies:Yevgeny Prigozhin, head of Russian mercenary group Wagner, said preliminary information indicates that his fighters in the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut havestarted to receive more ammunition.Prigozhin had repeatedly complained that his units were not receiving enough munitions from Russia’s defense establishment. Last week, he announced they wouldwithdraw from Bakhmut— a threat he now appears to be rowing back on.
  • Mariupol mobilization:Kremlin-backed authorities in the occupied Ukrainian city of Mariupol are in the process ofmobilizing residents who have Russian passports, the exiled city council claimed on Telegram.Denis Pushilin, head of the Russian-backed self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, which administers Mariupol, signed a decree allowing the mobilization of Russian citizens in the occupied region on March 31.
  • Officials’ departure:A significant part of the Russian-installed administration of Skadovskleft the occupied city near the Black Sea on Sunday, Ukrainian military officials said.The activities of Skadovsk’s district and city administrations were “suspended,” the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said in its daily update. On Saturday night, “the occupiers loaded documentation, office equipment, and other property of state institutions into vehicles,” before leaving with their families on Sunday morning, the Ukrainian military said.

US set to announce $1.2 billion aid package to Ukraine ahead of counteroffensive

From CNN's Oren Liebermann

The United States is set to announce a $1.2 billion aid package to Ukraine as early as Tuesday, according to a US official familiar with the package. It comes at a critical point with Ukraine’s counteroffensive against Russian forces looming.

The package will include drones, artillery ammunition and air defense missiles as well as other capabilities, the official said.

The package — first reported by the Associated Press — will fall under the Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative (USAI), which means it will be contracted and purchased from manufacturers instead of pulled directly from Defense Department stocks in a drawdown.

Instead of supplying Ukraine with the weapons it currently needs, USAI packages are intended to create a medium and long-term supply for Ukraine.

Last week, the Pentagon announced its 37th drawdown package for Ukraine since August 2021. The $300 million package included additional ammunition for the HIMARS rocket system, artillery and tank ammunition, anti-tank weapons and more.

Russia launched its "most massive" attack with drones Monday, Kyiv mayor says

From CNN's Mariya Knight

Russia’s wave of strikes on Ukraine early Monday was its “most massive” drone attack since the invasion began last year, Kyiv mayorVitali Klitschkosaid.

“I visited a high-rise building that was hit by fragments of a Russian drone at night,” Klitschko wrote in a statement on Telegram. “Last night, the barbarians staged the most massive attack with kamikaze drones.Almost 60 ‘Shaheds’ were launched,” more than half of which targeted Kyiv, according to Klitschko.

Other attacks were recorded in Ukraine’s Kharkiv and Kherson regions.

The Ukrainian military said it repelled the assault on the capital, the latest in Moscow’s efforts towear down its air defense system. According to Kyiv’s mayor, “36 drones flew to the capital” but were shot down by air defense forces.

“However, debris from several drones damaged some social facilities and a residential high-rise building in Sviatoshyn district,” Klitschko said.

The mayor said the drone attack did not cause any deaths, “but five people were injured in two districts of the city.”

“Three of them were in high-rise buildings. Two victims were hospitalized, one of them underwent surgery. Doctors say that there is no threat to their lives,” he added.

Shahed dronesare manufactured in Iran and have been frequently deployed by Russian forces in Ukraine.

Wagner forces in Bakhmut are receiving more ammunition, head of private military group says

From CNN’s Uliana Pavlova

Yevgeny Prigozhin, the head of the private Russian military group Wagner, said on Monday that preliminary information indicates that his fighters in the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut have started to receive more ammunition.

“Ammunition supplies, according to preliminary data, we continue to receive. I haven’t seen it in person yet,” Prigozhin said in a voice memo posted to his Telegram channel late on Monday.

Prigozhin has repeatedly complained that his Wagner units are not receiving enough ammunition from Russia’s defense establishment. Last week, he announced they wouldwithdraw from Bakhmut— a threat he now appears to be rowing back on.

Earlier Monday, aUkrainian commander in Bakhmutsaid his unit faces “constant” shelling and had seen no evidence of the Russian ammunition shortage thatPrigozhin had claimed.

Russia-backed officials depart occupied city on Black Sea, Ukraine's military says

From CNN’s Kostan Nechyporenko in Kyiv

A significant part of the Russian-installed administration of Skadovsk left the occupied city on Sunday, Ukrainian military officials said.

The activities of Skadovsk’s district and city administrations were “suspended,” the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said in its daily update.

On Saturday night, “the occupiers loaded documentation, office equipment, and other property of state institutions into vehicles,” before leaving with their families on Sunday morning, Ukrainian military officials said.

The General Staff claims the Russians planned to transport the “documents and looted property,” by sea, further into Russian-held territory.

Skadovsk sits on the Black Sea.

The statement said similar activity was occurring in the nearby villages of Krasne, Shevchenko, Shyroke, Ulianivka and Petrivka, as well as in Mykhailivka — some 28 kilometers (17 miles) away.

Mariupol occupiers are mobilizing Russian citizens, city's exiled council claims

From CNN’s Kostan Nechyporenko in Kyiv

Kremlin-backed authorities in the occupied Ukrainian city of Mariupol are in the process ofmobilizing residents who have Russian passports, the exiled city council claimed on Telegram.

“Mobilization has begun in Mariupol. This is reported by the city residents themselves,” the statement read, adding that men working in the public sector were the first to receive referrals from the military commissariat for medical examinations.

The Telegram post included a photo of a document which the authors said is a referral, received by a resident.

“Draft boards have started working in Mariupol. The occupiers are already looking for citizens who do not fulfill their ‘military obligations’. The enemy plans to conscript men until August,” said Vadym Boichenko, the exiled Ukrainian mayor of Mariupol.

Denis Pushilin, head of the Russian-backed self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, which administers Mariupol, signed a decree allowing the mobilization of Russian citizens in the occupied region on March 31.

"No way out for us": Civilians await evacuation as Ukraine increases pressure on frontline towns

From CNN's Nick Paton Walsh,Natalie Gallón,Kosta Gak, andPeter Rudden in Mala Tokmachka, Ukraine

In this vacant and damaged village, news of Russia’s evacuation of occupiedtownsalong the southern front cannot come soon enough.

Ukrainian-held Mala Tokmachka, just over a mile (2 kilometers) from Russian-held territory in theZaporizhzhiaregion, has been left ghostly and battered by shelling, leaving the central square pockmarked, and the school’s facade torn off. Shrapnel is mixed in with fallen pine cones.

Raisa, a local woman passing some Ukrainian soldiers on her bicycle, said the explosions had picked up recently and she had heard small arms fire from the nearby highway. “There is no way out for us,” she said, of the remaining 200 civilians. “We have no water, gas or power for more than a year.”

Just 9 miles (15 kilometers) down the road isPolohy, a town that Russian occupiers said Friday they would evacuate, a process which local sources said had got underway at the weekend, although some Russian soldiers apparently remain in place.

The town is a focus for Ukraine’s spring counteroffensive. While Kyiv has said it will not announce its commencement so as to cause maximum surprise, recent statements from Russian officials in occupied areas about attacks have indicated at least its opening stages are likely underway.

Polohy is one of over a dozen frontline settlements that occupying forces announced Friday would be emptied of civilians. A Russian occupation official, Yuri Balitsky, said “we cannot risk the safety of people and will provide funds for organized travel, lump sum payments, accommodation and meals.” He added children would undergo rehabilitation and rest in children’s camps,” echoing the language of previous incidents that Ukraine has dubbed forced deportation and on which the International Criminal Court based a war crimes indictment against Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Read the full story here.

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Russian forces lash out indiscriminately as Ukraine increases military pressure on frontline towns
‘Nothing left to grind the meat with’: Wagner boss threatens to withdraw from Bakhmut amid ammo shortage
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Analysis: Ukraine says it stopped a missile Russia said was unstoppable

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Russian forces lash out indiscriminately as Ukraine increases military pressure on frontline towns
‘Nothing left to grind the meat with’: Wagner boss threatens to withdraw from Bakhmut amid ammo shortage
Evacuations from Zaporizhzhia renew concerns for nuclear power plant safety
Analysis: Ukraine says it stopped a missile Russia said was unstoppable
May 9, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news | CNN (2024)
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