Russia launched a record drone attack, according to kyiv – L’Express

Russia launched a record drone attack according to kyiv –

Ukraine announced on Tuesday, November 26, that it had been the target of a record Russian attack overnight, with a number of 188 combat drones, while Moscow and kyiv have intensified their drone and missile attacks in recent weeks. Ukraine recently fired long-range US missiles at Russia, while the Kremlin launched an experimental hypersonic missile at a Ukrainian city, also threatening to hit Europe and the United States. This Russian shot will be on the agenda of a NATO-Ukraine council in Brussels today.

Information to remember

⇒ Ukraine targeted by record drone attack

⇒ kyiv says it cannot respect its commitment to destroy antipersonnel mines

⇒ A NATO-Ukraine council in Brussels after the firing of an experimental Russian missile

Ukraine targeted by record drone attack

Ukraine announced on Tuesday that it had been the target of a Russian attack overnight with a record number of 188 combat drones which, according to kyiv, damaged residential buildings and “essential infrastructure”, but did not caused victims.

“During the night attack, the enemy launched a record number of Shahed-type and unidentified combat drones,” as well as four Iskander-M ballistic missiles, the Ukrainian Air Force said in a statement on Telegram. “Unfortunately, critical infrastructure sites were affected” and “in several regions, homes and residential buildings were damaged,” she added. According to preliminary data, the attack did not cause any “deaths or injuries”, the air force said.

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By morning, the air defense managed to shoot down 76 drones in 17 Ukrainian regions while 95 of its aircraft probably fell due to electronic jamming by the Ukrainian army, the statement added. Five other drones flew towards Belarusian territory, a country allied with Moscow located in the north of Ukraine, according to the same source.

kyiv says it cannot meet commitment to destroy anti-personnel mines due to Russian invasion

Ukraine will not be able to respect its commitment to destroy nearly six million Soviet-era antipersonnel mines, made under the Ottawa Convention, a Defense Ministry official said on Tuesday. “Unfortunately, the implementation of this obligation is not possible at present,” Yevhenii Kivshyk said at an international summit in Siem Reap, Cambodia, on landmines. “The massive, unprovoked and unjustified aggression of the Russian Federation against Ukraine led to adjustments to the stockpile destruction plans,” he continued.

The official justified this decision by the redeployment of financial resources for the war effort, the “constant” bombings and the “occupation” of the Russian armed forces in certain territories where there are depots. In his speech to delegates, Yevhenii Kivshyk did not refer to the American offer to supply kyiv with antipersonnel mines, intended to slow the advance of Moscow’s troops in the east of the country, according to Washington. The proposal caused an outcry from human rights groups.

READ ALSO: American antipersonnel mines: the sign of a Ukraine in dire straits in the face of Russian advance

Russia claims to have conquered a village in the Kharkiv region

The Russian army claimed Tuesday the capture of a village in the Kharkiv region, in northeastern Ukraine, Russia increasing its conquests in recent weeks in the face of a struggling Ukrainian army. “Thanks to decisive actions, units of the ‘West’ military group liberated the village of Kopanky in the Kharkiv region” in northeastern Ukraine, the Russian Defense Ministry said. This locality is located in an area which had been occupied by the Russians at the start of the conflict, but which kyiv had managed to recapture in the fall of 2022.

NATO-Ukraine Council in Brussels after the firing of an experimental Russian missile

The ambassadors of NATO and Ukraine are meeting today in Brussels, after the firing of an experimental Russian missile on Ukrainian soil, which caused renewed tension between the Allies and Russia. Russia struck Ukraine on Thursday with a latest generation intermediate-range ballistic missile without nuclear warhead, and promised to increase this type of attacks if kyiv continued to use Western missiles to target its territory.

The NATO-Ukraine Council is a body created in 2023 to facilitate dialogue between kyiv and the Atlantic Alliance. Ukraine is awaiting “concrete” decisions against Russia, insisted its Foreign Minister, Andriï Sybiga. The meeting will be an opportunity to discuss “the current situation in Ukraine and will include briefings from Ukrainian officials via video link,” a NATO official said. Alliance diplomats were, however, cautious about the results to be expected from this meeting. The ambassadors should reaffirm that this new Russian weapon will not prevent them from “continuing to support Ukraine”, according to one of them.

United States ‘dismayed’ by Moscow’s alleged use of banned gas in Ukraine

Western countries and Russia locked horns Monday at a meeting on chemical weapons control, with a U.S. official saying she was “dismayed” by Moscow’s alleged use of banned tear gas as a means of warfare in Ukraine .

The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) announced on November 18 that it had discovered CS riot gas in samples provided by Ukraine, coming from the area where it is fighting Russian forces it accuses of have recourse. The OPCW’s Chemical Weapons Convention, based in The Hague, prohibits the use of riot control agents, including CS gas, “as means of warfare.”

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“I remain dismayed by the scale and frequency of Russia’s use of riot control agents as a means of warfare against Ukrainian forces,” said US Under Secretary of State for Arms Control Bonnie Jenkins, at the OPCW annual meeting. “Russia already lied when it said it did not intend to invade Ukraine. It also lied when it said it was not using riot control agents in violation of the Convention,” she told delegates.

This is the first time that the use of riot gas has been confirmed in areas where fighting is taking place in Ukraine, according to the OPCW, which however stressed that it is not seeking to identify the source. Russia and Ukraine have accused each other of using chemical weapons for nearly three years of war.

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