Russia launched airstrikes across Ukraine overnight, hitting the central city of Kryvyi Rih just two days after it was rocked by a deadly attack, officials said.
Ukrainian forces are claiming some success in their offensives in the south and east, while Russia said its troops repelled Ukrainian offensive operations in the?Zaporizhzhia?region.
NATO’s support for Ukraine is making a difference on the battlefield, the alliance’s chief said, as its defense ministers gather in Brussels.
The UN nuclear watchdog’s head visited the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant Thursday, and stressed it is essential that the water remain at the same level for safety. The facility is upstream from a major dam that collapsed last week and not far from where the Ukrainian offensive is evolving.
Russia-installed governor in southern Ukraine claims he was targeted in assassination attempt
From CNN’s Josh Pennington
Vladimir Saldo attends a meeting in Moscow on December 22, 2022.
Stringer/Getty Images
Vladimir Saldo, the Moscow-installed governor of the Russian-occupied Kherson region, claims Ukraine tried to assassinate him last week.
Ukrainian forces launched more than 10 “high precision” missiles at his “supposed location” in the southern region, Saldo claimed in a post on his official Telegram channel.
The June 9?strike?on Arabat Spit ended up badly damaging a temporary accommodation center and left one person dead, Saldo told Russian state news agency TASS.
CNN cannot independently confirm the veracity of Saldo’s?accusation. The Ukrainian military has not yet commented on the report.
Other attacks in southern Ukraine: Russia-backed officials have accused Ukraine of making several recent assassination attempts in southern Ukraine.
In May, a Moscow-appointed court chairman was targeted in an attack, according to the Russian-installed governor of the occupied Zaporizhzhia region. That attack was one in a string of alleged assassination attempts in the occupied city of Melitopol.
And earlier this month, a deadly car bombing targeted “Kremlin collaborators” in a town just outside Melitopol, according to the city’s Ukrainian mayor.
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Russia says its forces are resisting the Ukrainian counteroffensive. Here's what to know on Thursday
From CNN staff
Ukraine’s deputy defense minister says Russia is “putting up a strong resistance” to Kyiv’s counteroffensive efforts — but Ukrainian officials are claiming successes in places like Bakhmut and Zaporizhzhia.
Ukrainian counteroffensive:?Ukraine’s military offensive?is continuing in “several directions” and Kyiv’s troops are “gradually but surely advancing” in the south of the country, Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar said. A?clandestine Ukrainian unit?has also claimed successes against Russian forces in Bakhmut.
Russia pushes back: Russia is attempting to advance in other areas, with assault operations in the Kharkiv region and along parts of the Donetsk front, according to Oleksii Hromov, deputy chief of the Ukrainian general staff. Russian attacks in the first two weeks of June were focused on “targets related to logistics, industrial facilities, as well as oil and gas supply,” he added.
Here’s a closer look at the front lines:
New military aid for Ukraine: The United States, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Denmark will deliver “high priority” air defense equipment to Ukraine, the nations said in a joint statement. Delivery of the equipment has begun and “should be complete within several weeks,” it said. US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin also pointed out Kyiv has the ability to recover and repair its damaged equipment and get it “back into the fight.”
Ukraine’s appeal to Switzerland: President Volodymyr Zelensky asked Swiss lawmakers to export weapons to Ukraine. At the beginning of the month,?the lower house of the Swiss Parliament rejected a bill known as “Lex Ukraine”?that would have allowed third-party countries to transfer Swiss-made arms to Ukraine.?Switzerland is a neutral country with a legal framework ensuring it does not send weapons directly or indirectly to belligerent states.
Use of US Patriot system: Ukraine said its defenses?successfully intercepted?six Russian?Kinzhal?missiles, Russia’s toughest weapons using the United States Patriot air defense system last month. Commander Serhii Yaremenko said soldiers in his brigade realized the missiles were moving directly toward them and the Patriot system, but “did not panic for a second.” Later they learned there were six Kinzhals among the assault. Russian President Vladimir Putin claims the Kh-47’s hypersonic speed makes it extremely difficult to intercept.
Watchdog visits nuclear power plant: Rafael?Grossi, the head of the?International Atomic Energy Agency,?visited the?Zaporizhzhia?nuclear?plant?to?assess the situation?after the?Nova Kakhovka dam collapse.?Grossi?said it is essential that the water stays at the same level for the?plant’s safety.
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Zelensky appeals to Swiss parliament as it debates whether to re-export weapons to Ukraine?
From CNN's Sarah Dean and Yulia Kesaieva
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is seen on screens addressing?Swiss parliament via video in Bern, Switzerland, on June 15.
Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky appealed to Swiss lawmakers to export weapons to Ukraine Thursday to make the country “a territory of peace again.”
Switzerland has been a neutral country since 1815, with its legal framework ensuring it does not send weapons directly or indirectly to belligerent states.
Since Russia’s war in Ukraine began, the country has faced increasing pressure from its European neighbors to approve the re-exportation of weapons to Ukraine.
Zelensky told Swiss parliament that Ukraine is “not a source of aggression, not a territory of war, and not some kind of conflict zone.”
“We are a country that has always valued and will always value peace. Our peace can only withstand such aggression by force of arms,” he added.?
More background: On June 1,?the lower house of the Swiss Parliament — the National Council —?rejected a bill known as “Lex Ukraine”?that would have allowed third-party countries to transfer Swiss-made arms to Ukraine.?
A plan to allow buyers of Swiss arms to re-export them to third countries under certain conditions was backed by the upper house of Switzerland’s parliament — the?Council of States?— on June 7. However, that plan has further legislative hurdles to take.
During his video address to parliament, Zelensky said: “Any unbiased view will show one thing, if (the) war had not been brought from Russia to our peaceful Ukrainian land, there would have been no war. The source of evil and death is beyond our borders. By supporting us, the world supports protection from war.”
He appealed to lawmakers to imagine what it is like to fall asleep checking to see if there are warnings of Russian bombers “on the verge of launching missiles” or to imagine living in communities that border Russia.
In April,?Switzerland’s President Alain Berset said Switzerland “cannot be asked to break our own laws,” when discussing whether Swiss weapons could be re-exported to Ukraine. Berset was addressing the issue of neutrality at a joint press conference in Berlin with German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.?
Berset said that, while discussions are ongoing regarding whether the country “should, must or could develop” its stance on re-exporting weapons to Ukraine, it is currently out of the question, with Swiss law “clear on that.”
So far, for example, Switzerland has prohibited Germany from transferring Swiss-made ammunition for the Gepard anti-aircraft systems Berlin provided to Ukraine.??
Switzerland did, however, break its neutrality status quo shortly after the war began by adopting European Union sanctions in March 2022. Berset said Switzerland is taking the implementation of these sanctions seriously and is “doing everything that can be done in order to enforce them.”
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It is essential that water at Zaporizhzhia plant remain at same level, chief of UN nuclear watchdog says
From CNN’s Claudia Rebaza in London
Rafael Grossi, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, visits the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine on June 15.
Olga Maltseva/AFP/Getty Images
The head of the?International Atomic Energy Agency?(IAEA) visited the?Zaporizhzhia?nuclear?plant?on Thursday?to?assess the situation after the?Nova Kakhovka dam collapse.
In a statement published on social media, Rafael?Grossi?said it is essential that the water stays at the same level for the?plant’s safety.
“The?plant?is going?to?be working?to?replenish the water so that the safety functions can continue normally,”?Grossi?said, adding they will be monitoring it closely.
The?plant?is held by?Russian forces and not far from where a Ukrainian offensive in the south is evolving.?This is?Grossi’s third?visit?to?the?nuclear?power?plant?since last September.?
Watch the official’s update from the plant:
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Evacuated residents of Russian border village in Belgorod region allege looting by Moscow's troops
From CNN's Katharina Krebs in London
Smoke over the village of Novaya Tavolzhanka in the Belgorod region of Russia on June 4.
Anatoliy Zhdanov/Kommersant/Sipa USA/AP
Two residents evacuated from a Russian village that borders Ukraine in the Belgorod region have alleged to authorities that Russian soldiers looted their homes.
In public comments to regional Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov, the two residents said that the Russian military sent to guard their village?of Novaya Tavolzhanka had instead robbed their houses.
Several thousand people were evacuated from the area when Russian volunteers opposed to the rule of President Vladimir Putin launched cross-border raids late in May.
One of the residents,?Natalya Chemerchenko, told the governor in a post Thursday on the VK social media site:?“Military personnel of the Russian Federation break into many houses (although the state of emergency has not been introduced and they do not have the right to enter private homes).”?
“We do not want our houses, which have already suffered from the actions of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, to be now still a haven for the outrages of our defenders!” she added.
Vladimir Zhdanov, the head of the administration of the Shebekino district, told?Chemerchenko?in a reply that her “appeal has been forwarded to the Security Council.”
Another comment, which was written Wednesday, claimed that Russian soldiers were living in a home that a family had fled.
“Two houses were broken into, one door was broken with a crowbar, windows were broken,” according to a comment from local resident Danil Bilych.
Other comments in response to the governor have focused on an alleged lack of social support that had been pledged to residents who were evacuated.
“We are located outside the Belgorod region, in the city of Zelenograd. For a week I have been trying to get answers, how can we receive the payment? We have two children, we do not live, we survive! Thanks to the volunteers from Moscow, at least they bring food!” according to one comment.
CNN has reached out to Russia’s Ministry of Defense for comment.
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Ukraine can recover damaged equipment and get it "back into the fight," US defense secretary says
From CNN's Michael Conte
US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin gives a press conference at the NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, on June 15.
Simon Wolfahrt/AFP/Getty Images
As Ukraine’s counteroffensive begins, Kyiv has the ability to recover and repair its damaged equipment and get it “back into the fight,” US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told reporters Thursday after a meeting of the Ukraine Defense Contact Group in Brussels, Belgium.
The top US general, Mark Milley, said Kyiv is “making steady progress” in its counteroffensive, but outlined some of the difficulties in the effort.
The US defense secretary note that “there will continue to be battle damage” but that the Ukrainian forces “still have a lot of combat capability, combat power.”?
More background: Earlier this week CNN reported that?Ukraine has lost 16?US-supplied armored vehicles?in the past several days, according to open-source intelligence analysis, as the country’s military announced its forces had captured three villages from Russia in an offensive in the eastern Donetsk region.
The 16 US Bradley infantry fighting vehicles either destroyed or damaged and abandoned in recent days represent almost 15% of the 109 that Washington has given Kyiv, according to Jakub Janovsky of the Dutch open-source intelligence website Oryx, which has been collecting visual evidence of military equipment losses in Ukraine since Russia’s invasion began on February 24, 2022.
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Ukrainian commander details destroying Russian Kinzhal missiles with US Patriot system
From CNN's Olga Voitovych and Sarah Dean
A Ukrainian military commander has detailed how he says his brigade shot down one of Russia’s most modern ballistic missiles using a US Patriot air defense system.
Ukraine says its defenses?successfully intercepted six of the Russian?Kinzhal?missiles on May 16.
Commander Serhii Yaremenko and his 96th Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade of the Air Command Center were at the heart of the defense, though they didn’t realize until later they had defeated one of Russia’s toughest weapons, he said in an interview Thursday.
“Frankly speaking, I realized that we had shot down the Kinzhal only after expert analysts examined the wreckage,” Yaremenko told?Army Inform, a Ukrainian defense ministry website.
When Russia launched its assault, “Sixteen ballistic targets flew from different directions, most of them aimed at the Patriot system,” the commander said, referring to the powerful US-provided missile defense system.
“They did not panic for a second, acted in a coordinated and organized manner, shared targets across sectors, and ensured their destruction at a minimum range, high enough to reduce the likelihood of damage to infrastructure.”
Yaremenko said the Ukrainian fighters were emotional when all the targets had finally been destroyed and the airspace declared clear. Later they learned there were six Kinzhals among the assault.
The grueling defense proves the Patriot system’s value to Ukraine, holding its own even against weapons Moscow has positioned as impossible to combat, Yaremenko said.
More on the Russian missiles: The Kinzhal, or Kh-47, has been touted by Russian President Vladimir Putin and his military as an example of Moscow’s modernized missile arsenal, claiming that its hypersonic speed makes it extremely difficult to intercept.?An air-launched ballistic missile, the Kh-47 has a range of some 2,000 kilometers (1,250 miles), so it can be fired far from the battlefield.
It travels at about 10 times the speed of sound and is derived from the shorter-range Iskander ballistic missile, which is ground-launched. It carries a warhead of nearly 500 kilograms (about 1,100 pounds).
Attack on the Patriot: The Russian Ministry of Defense claims it destroyed a US-made Patriot air defense system in Kyiv during the May 16 assault, despite Ukraine saying it destroyed all Russian missiles in the early morning attack.
US officials inspected the system and said damage was “minimal,” CNN reported. It was not clear whether the system was damaged by an actual missile strike or falling debris.?
The Patriot has a powerful radar to detect incoming targets at long range, making it a potent air defense platform capable of intercepting ballistic missiles and more. But the radar emission necessary to spot threats at a distance also makes it possible for the enemy to detect the Patriot battery and figure out its location.
CNN’s Tim Lister, Natasha Bertrand, Oren Liebermann and Jim Sciutto contributed to this report.
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US, UK, Netherlands and Denmark to deliver "high priority" air defense equipment to Ukraine
From CNN’s Sarah Dean
The United States, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Denmark will deliver “high priority” air defense equipment to Ukraine, the nations announced in a joint statement on Thursday.
Hundreds of short- and medium-range air defense missiles and associated systems are included in the initiative, according to the statement.?
Delivery of the equipment has begun and “should be complete within several weeks,” it added.
The aid was announced ahead of the meeting of the US-led Ukraine Defense Contact Group in Brussels, Belgium.
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Ukraine has liberated some territory around Zaporizhzhia, senior official claims
From CNN's Olga Voitovych, Katharina Krebs and Tim Lister
More than 100 square kilometers of territory have been liberated “in the Zaporizhzhia direction” over the last week in southeast Ukraine, a senior figure in Kyiv’s military has claimed.
He echoed other Ukrainian officials who claim that seven settlements in the area have been retaken — most of the settlements are small villages.?
The Russian Defense Ministry says that its Vostok group of forces in the area had used “air strikes, artillery fire and heavy flamethrower systems” to repel two attacks in the area.?
Meanwhile, Russia is attempting to advance in other areas, with assault operations in the Kharkiv region and along parts of the Donetsk front, but it is on the back foot around Bakhmut, Hromov said. His comments are consistent with claims made by other Ukrainian officials.
On the Donetsk front, Ukraine’s Tavria group of forces claimed to have advanced by up to 1 kilometer (less than a mile) in an effort to improve their tactical position near the town of Vuhledar, which has been on the frontlines since the invasion began, Hromov said.
Following the collapse of the Nova Kakhovka hydroelectric dam last week, Russian forces are “focusing on equipping new defensive lines,” Hromov said.
Russia had attacked Ukrainian infrastructure with more than 140 missiles and 250 drones in the first two weeks of June, “focusing on targets related to logistics, industrial facilities, as well as oil and gas supply,” he added.
The Russian Defense Ministry said that the latest round of missile attacks early Thursday had targeted drone production sites.
Since the beginning of June, Ukrainian air defense forces had shot down 74% of the cruise missiles used by Russia and almost 60% of the attack UAVs, Hromov claimed, adding that there is a growing missile threat because the Russians had moved a missile division closer to Ukraine’s northern border.?CNN is unable to verify the claim.
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It’s mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here’s what you need to know
From CNN staff
As NATO’s defense ministers are set to meet in Belgium to discuss how to step up support for Ukraine, Kyiv’s forces may be gaining small amounts of progress on the fluid front lines of its counteroffensive.
Here are the latest developments:
Gradual progress: Ukraine’s military offensive is continuing in “several directions” and Kyiv’s troops are “gradually but surely advancing” in the south of the country —which is where many expect to be the main focus of Ukraine’s counteroffensive — Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar said. But Maliar warned that the “enemy is putting up strong resistance,” and that Ukraine is also performing defensive actions.
NATO meeting: The gathering of NATO defense ministers in the Belgian capital of Brussels on Thursday and Friday comes at a “critical” time, according to the bloc’s chief Jens Stoltenberg. He confirmed that “Ukrainians are making gains” after launching its counteroffensive and that it has been “able to liberate occupied land.” This week’s meeting comes ahead of a key summit to be held in Lithuania in July.
Ukraine’s Bakhmut gains: A clandestine Ukrainian unit has claimed successes against Russian forces in Bakhmut. CNN’s Sam Kiley embedded with the units falling under various Ukrainian intelligence organizations, to witness how its forces are attempting to resist Russia’s occupation on and beyond the front lines.
Zaporizhzhia offensive: The Russian Defense Ministry claimed to have repelled Ukrainian offensive operations in the Zaporizhzhia region on Thursday. But Russian military bloggers have been less certain, with one claiming that Ukrainian forces on the Zaporizhzhia front were regrouping. CNN is unable to verify the state of the battlefield in the area.
Power plant visit: Zaporizhzhia is home to Europe’s largest nuclear power plant. Amid concerns that fighting in the region could stop the plant from functioning properly or cause a disaster, the International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi began a visit to the plant Thursday, according to Mikhail Ulyanov, Russia’s representative for international organizations in Vienna.
Waters receding: Floodwaters from the Nova Kakhovka dam collapse in southern Ukraine are predicted to fully recede by June 20, according to Andrey Alekseenko, the Russia-backed head of the Kherson region. The breach of the dam on June 6 unleashed a mass of water down the Dnipro river and flooded towns and villages on both sides, and created huge ecological impacts.
Russian soldier spared: Ukrainian troops spared the life of a Russian soldier when he surrendered to a drone on the battlefield just moments before its operators were about to open fire, a Ukrainian commander has confirmed to CNN. “When he realized that he was going to die, he threw his machine gun aside, raised his hands and said that he would not continue to fight,” the commander said. Watch the full video here.
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Ukraine's offensive is progressing "gradually," deputy defense minister says
From CNN’s Olga Voitovych
Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar says Kyiv’s military offensive is continuing in several areas and is making what she called gradual progress.
Maliar told a briefing in Kyiv that on the southern front – which many expect to be the main focus of Ukraine’s counteroffensive – the “offensive continues in several directions, and the armed forces are also gradually but surely advancing there.”
But she cautioned that “the enemy is putting up strong resistance.”
The minister said that “all defense forces are engaged in both offensive and defensive operations. That is, today we are conducting an offensive in several areas, and defense, because the enemy is also carrying out offensive actions.”
She also appealed for what she called “information discipline” to “give our soldiers the opportunity to deliver unpleasant surprises to the enemy.”?
Maliar said the Russians were bringing additional reserves into the Bakhmut area, trying to prevent the advance of Ukrainian forces.
But she said the Russians had been unable to take more ground, and claimed Ukrainian forces had advanced three kilometers (almost two miles) in the Bakhmut area over the last ten days.
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"Russophobic hysteria": Kremlin slams Australia's termination of Russian mission lease
From CNN's Anna Chernova
The proposed new Russian embassy site, in Canberra, Australia, on June 15.
Yoann Cambefort/AFP/Getty Images
The Kremlin has condemned Australia’s decision to cancel the lease agreement for the construction of a new building for the Russian embassy in capital Canberra.
Speaking to journalists Thursday, Dmitry Peskov, the spokesperson for the Kremlin, labeled the move as another “unfriendly” move from Australia, characterized by hostility and Russophobia.
Peskov said the Kremlin sees Australia’s decision to cancel the lease agreement as an attempt to align with the “Russophobic hysteria” prevailing in some Western countries.
The Russian Embassy in Australia issued a statement Thursday condemning the action as a deliberate “step towards undermining relations with Moscow,” according to a statement reported by Russian state news agency RIA Novosti.
Some background: The Australian government is introducing legislation to terminate the lease of a new Russian embassy near Parliament House in Canberra, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Thursday.
Albanese said the decision was based on “very clear security advice as to the risk presented by a new Russian presence so close to Parliament House.”
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Russia says Ukrainian offensive in Zaporizhzhia was repelled
From CNN’s Anna Chernova
The Russian Defense Ministry claimed Thursday that its forces had repelled Ukrainian offensive operations in the Zaporizhzhia region.
In a video briefing, Chekhov said the group’s motorized rifle units repelled enemy attacks near Novosilka, Novodarivka, and Levadne, three areas where there has been heavy fighting in the last few days.?
He said enemy attacks were also repelled in the area around Makarivka, a village that has changed hands several times.
Fluid front lines: CNN was given unprecedented access to the frontline town of Velyka Novosilka in southeastern Ukraine, where Kyiv has been preparing part of the opening phases of its counteroffensive.
Immediately to the south of the town, Ukrainian pushing and probing has produced some success, with the liberation of multiple villages.
Ukrainian forces have been working to stabilize some of the liberated villages but when CNN visited Velyka Novosilka, the situation remained very fluid. Russia, some soldiers said, was not going down without a fight.
Ukraine's army claim some success as fighting rages in south and east
From CNN's Olga Voitovych in Kyiv
Ukrainian service members ride a BMP-1 infantry fighting vehicle near the frontline city of?Bakhmut, Donetsk region, Ukraine on June 9.
Viacheslav Ratynskyi/Reuters
Ukrainian forces are claiming some success as they continue their offensive in the south and east of the country, with much of the fighting taking place near the embattled eastern city of Bakhmut, an army spokesman said.
The General Staff said Russia continues to focus its primary efforts in the Donetsk region on Lyman, Bakhmut, Avdiivka and Mariinka, with at least 49 combat engagements taking place Wednesday.
“Ukrainian defenders repelled all enemy attacks in the vicinity of the city of Mariinka,” the General Staff claimed.
In the southern Zaporizhzhia region, “fighting continues in the area of Makarivka village in the Berdiansk direction,” said the spokesman.
Fighting is also raging in the vicinity of Novodanylivka and Novopokrovka villages, he said.
Meanwhile, Russian military bloggers say that around Orikhiv, a town west of Makarivka, the fighting has been “positional” with little movement after heavy rain.
One Russian blogger claimed that Ukrainian forces on the Zaporizhzhia front were regrouping. CNN is unable to verify the state of the battlefield in the area.
To the east, in the Donetsk region, a Russian military blogger acknowledged there had been “enemy advances on [the] flank near Bakhmut,” and said “fierce fighting is ongoing.”
Both sides have reported clashes elsewhere along the Donetsk frontline, especially immediately to the west of Donetsk city.
Russian bloggers said the situation around the village of Pervomaiske was tense but denied claims by Ukrainian sources that Russian forces in the area had lost ground.?
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Norway and Denmark give 9,000 more artillery rounds to Ukraine
From CNN's James Frater and Lauren Kent in London
Norway's Defence Minister Bjorn?Arild?Gram?speaks to the media as he arrives to the donor conference for Ukraine, in Copenhagen, Denmark, on August 11.
Philip Davali/Ritzau Scanpix/Reuters
Norway and Denmark will jointly donate an additional 9,000 rounds of artillery to Ukraine “within a short time,” the Norwegian Ministry of Defence said on Thursday.?
Norway is providing the shells, while Denmark is contributing the fuzes and propellant charges.
Acting Danish Defense Minister Troels Lund Poulsen added, “Ukraine still has an urgent need for ammunition in its fight against Russia.”
Poulsen also said that Denmark itself will donate a further 1,500 complete artillery rounds and 500 shells.
Including the new donations, Norway has donated a total of 27,000 artillery rounds itself, and a further 17,000 jointly with Denmark.
“The artillery rounds can be used in several types of artillery, including the M109 that Norway previously has donated,” the Norwegian Defense Ministry said.
NATO meeting: The announcement was made ahead of a gathering of NATO defense ministers in Brussels, Belgium on Thursday and Friday, coming at what the alliance’s chief Jens Stoltenberg has called a “critical” time in the conflict.
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US will continue to provide Ukraine with "urgent capabilities" needed to withstand Russia
From CNN's Lauren Kent in London
US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin arrives at the NATO headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, on June 15.
Simon Wolfhahrt/AFP/Getty Images
The United States and NATO allies will continue to provide Ukraine with the “urgent capabilities” that it needs to combat Russian aggression, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Thursday at the NATO Defense Ministers meeting in Brussels, Belgium.
“Throughout the Kremlin’s vicious war of choice, Ukrainian forces have shown outstanding bravery and skill and Ukraine’s fight is a marathon and not a sprint,” Austin said.?
Austin also thanked the Netherlands and Denmark, as well as Germany and Poland for spearheading those coalitions.
“We applaud the leadership that has gone into forging two coalitions – one dedicated to fighter aircraft training, and another to provide and sustain Leopard tanks,” Austin added.
The Netherlands and Denmark will give an update on Thursday regarding the progress of the program to train Ukrainian pilots on fourth-generation aircraft, including F-16s, Austin said.
Germany and Poland will also brief NATO defense ministers on the next steps in sustaining Ukraine’s Leopard tanks, originally made by Germany and provided to Ukraine by various European countries.
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UN nuclear watchdog chief is visiting Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant today, Russia says
From CNN's Olga Voitovych in Kyiv
International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General?Rafael?Grossi?stands next to an armored car during his trip to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine, on June 15.
IAEA/Reuters
International Atomic Energy Agency chief Rafael Grossi began a visit to the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant on Thursday, according to Mikhail Ulyanov, Russia’s representative for international organizations in Vienna.
The plant, which is held by Russian forces and not far from where a Ukrainian offensive in the south is evolving, lies upstream from a major dam that collapsed last week.
Following a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in Kyiv Tuesday, Grossi said he was concerned the plant could be caught up in the counteroffensive.
Energoatom, the Ukrainian nuclear energy company that operated the plant before the Russian invasion, was unable to confirm that Grossi’s visit had begun.?
It would be Grossi’s third visit to the plant since last September.
Dam impact: The plant receives cooling water that’s critical for safety from a nearby thermal plant that is fed upstream from the reservoir adjacent to the destroyed Nova Kakhovka dam.
On Sunday, the IAEA said it needed access to a location near the plant to determine water levels at the reservoir to clarify a discrepancy between measurements following the dam’s collapse.
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NATO support for Ukraine "makes a difference" on the battlefield, says defense alliance chief
From CNN's Sharon Braithwaite?
Jens Stoltenberg speaks during a media conference at NATO headquarters in Brussels, on Wednesday, June 14.
Virginia Mayo/AP
NATO’s support for Ukraine is making a difference on the battlefield, the bloc’s Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said Thursday ahead of a key meeting in Brussels.
The gathering of NATO defense ministers in the Belgian capital on Thursday and Friday comes at a “critical” time, Stoltenberg said.
Stoltenberg said one of the main issues NATO ministers will address is how to step up support to Ukraine and further strengthen NATO’s deterrence and defense, ahead of the upcoming NATO summit in Vilnius, Lithuania.
At the July summit, NATO “will have new regional plans, a new force model, a new force structure and also address the need to strengthen our pledge to invest more in defense,” Stoltenberg said.?
The matter of Ukrainian membership in NATO?is one of several issues leaders will tackle when they meet in Vilnius. Also up for discussion are new defense spending commitments and a successor to Stoltenberg, who is planning on leaving his post in the autumn.
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Russia launched multiple missiles and drones overnight, Ukraine's air force says
From CNN's?Olga Voitovych in Kyiv?
Russia launched fresh airstrikes across Ukraine overnight, with air defenses scrambling to respond, Ukraine’s air force said.
Moscow’s forces launched four Kh-101/Kh-555 cruise missiles at the central city of Kryvyi Rih from the Caspian Sea, one of which was shot down, the air force said.
A 38-year-old man was wounded after two industrial sites were struck in the city, Ukrainian military officials said earlier.
Russia also launched 20 Iranian Shahed-136/131 attack drones, all of which were destroyed by the air force’s southern and eastern air commands, the air force said.
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1 injured in new Russian missile attack on?Kryvyi Rih, Ukrainian official says
From CNN's?Olga Voitovych in Kyiv
Russian missiles again targeted Kryvyi Rih overnight, a Ukrainian official said Thursday, just two days after the central city was rocked by deadly strikes.
Serhii Lysak, head of the Dnipropetrovsk regional military administration, said Thursday that a?38-year-old man was wounded and is in a “moderate” condition in hospital.?
The city had observed a day of mourning Wednesday following the deaths of 11 people, including a child, in a Russian missile strike on an apartment building there on Tuesday.
New attack: On Thursday, the?Ukrainian air force said Russia launched four Kh-101/Kh-555 cruise missiles at Kryvyi Rih from the Caspian Sea, one of which was destroyed.
The attack hit two industrial sites in the city, sparking fires and causing significant damage, Lysak said.?
Debris from the intercepted missile fell to the ground, damaging a car, he added.
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Clandestine Ukrainian unit claims successes against Russian forces in Bakhmut
Exclusive from CNN's Sam Kiley in eastern Ukraine
His forearms bulged with the effort of holding onto the straining leash of a slobbering dog. The creature’s muffled grunts could be felt as much as heard — like the growls of a souped-up truck.
Which was fitting, given that his owner’s call sign is Brabus — after the German firm specializing in bulking out luxury vehicles with engineering testosterone.
“Come,” Brabus grunted as he was towed back into a roadside building for our clandestine meeting with some of his special operations team.
They’re part of a shadowy tapestry of units falling under various Ukrainian intelligence organizations. They operate in the crepuscular landscapes in the?war?against Russian occupation on and beyond the front lines.
Other groups run by Ukrainian intelligence include the Russian Volunteer Force and Freedom for Russia Legion, formed of Russian citizens fighting to rid their homelands of President Vladimir Putin, which are currently?carrying out raids inside Russia?from Ukraine.
But Brabus and his group are entirely homegrown. Former soldiers with specialist skills, they coalesced around an ex-officer from the Ukrainian forces in the first days of Russia’s invasion last year.
In those early days and weeks, small bands of men in pickups, armed with anti-tank rockets like NATO-supplied NLAW and Javelins, ambushed, trapped, and picked off invading Russian columns down main arteries running in from the north.
Bold, fast-moving and insanely brave, they preyed on Russia’s military Leviathan — eventually, north of Kyiv and Sumy, stopping the invasion in its tracks.
While they were scratched together into “reconnaissance units” back then, some have since been absorbed into the formal army structures.
But all have clung to the freewheeling, partisan-style of warfare with higher risks but greater autonomy.
Those who’ve survived — and many have not — are now often set to work at tactical tasks aiming for strategic effect. Crudely put: killing Russian officers to collapse Russian morale.
Ukrainians were "ready to eliminate" Russian soldier before dramatic surrender, commander says
From CNN's Mitchell McCluskey,?Sarah Dean?and?Olga Voitovych
Drone footage obtained by The Wall Street Journal appears to show a Russian soldier surrendering to a Ukrainian drone on the battlefield of Bakhmut in May.
WSJ
Ukrainian forces spared the life of a Russian soldier when he?surrendered to a drone?on the battlefield just moments before its operators were about to open fire, a Ukrainian commander has confirmed to CNN.
Drone footage from a unit of Ukraine’s 92nd mechanized brigade, published by the Wall Street Journal, shows the surrender taking place in a trench in the eastern city of Bakhmut in May.
In a statement to CNN, Yuriy Fedorenko, commander of the assault drone division “Achilles” of the 92nd Brigade, confirmed the surrender had occurred.
The video appears to show a Russian soldier running from?Ukrainian assault drones?in the trenches of the Bakhmut battlefield. The soldier then stops and attempts to communicate with the drone through hand gestures.
The video is edited with music playing. CNN has not viewed the raw video.
Following the surrender, reporters at the Wall Street Journal interviewed the Russian soldier at a detention facility in the Kharkiv region on May 19, under the supervision of a guard.
CNN cannot verify whether the soldier spoke under duress or not.
The reporters also spoke with the Ukrainian drone pilot, according to the paper, who said he decided to spare his life after watching his pleas.
Ukraine reports some gains in its counteroffensive efforts. Here's what else to know
From CNN staff
There is a “fierce battle” happening on Ukraine’s front lines, according to its deputy defense minister, as Kyiv’s fighters also start to carry out counteroffensive attacks in the southeastern parts of the country.
NATO allies are continuing to pledge their support for Ukraine and making it clear that “Russia doesn’t get a voice or a veto” in whether or not Kyiv joins the alliance, according to Washington’s top diplomat to NATO.
Here’s what else to know:
Zaporizhzhia gains:?Ukrainian military officials said they had?“partial success”?in?attempted advances in the region, with fighting ongoing in several areas. Kyiv is mounting the early stages of a sweeping counteroffensive across southeastern parts of the country. Both sides have also reported?clashes?in the Donetsk region.
US military aid:?The US Defense Department?announced Tuesday?it will supply 15 more Bradley fighting vehicles to Ukraine as part of a $325 million assistance package after a report said Kyiv lost multiple US-supplied armored vehicles in its counteroffensive.
Nord Stream investigation:?The?investigation into who was behind the?Nord Stream pipeline sabotage?is entering its “final phase,” according to the lead prosecutor Mats Ljungqvist. Swedish and Danish authorities have been investigating four holes in the?Nord Stream 1 and 2 pipelines?that link Russia and Germany via the Baltic Sea, which investigators believe were caused by explosives last year. Ukraine has?denied any involvement in the sabotage.
Dam collapse:?Floodwaters from the Nova Kakhovka?dam breach in southern Ukraine are expected to?fully recede by early next week, said the Russia-backed head of the Kherson region.. On the Ukrainian side of the river, Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko said “everything” is being done to return citizens “to a normal, peaceful and safe life as soon as possible.”
NATO bid:?The alliance is making it clear it supports?Ukraine’s aspirations to join the group and added that?Russia doe not have a say?in NATO’s open-door policy.?Julianne Smith, Washington’s top diplomat to NATO, said “Russia doesn’t get a voice or a veto” in the matter. She said allies are working to provide Ukraine with aid for the war against Russia, but also longer-term efforts.
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Australia will seek to terminate lease of new Russian embassy
From CNN's Alex Stambaugh
Anthony Albanese at a press conference in Canberra, Thursday, June 15.
Mick Tsikas/AAP Image/Reuters
The?Australian?government is introducing legislation to terminate a lease of a new Russian embassy near Parliament House in the capital Canberra, Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Thursday.
The land proposed for the second Russian embassy lies directly adjacent to Parliament House, Australian Home Minister Clare O’Neil said alongside Albanese.
“We’re acting quickly to ensure the leased site does not become a formal diplomatic presence,” the prime minister said. He said the decision was taken “in the national security interest of Australia.”
The prime minister said that coalition leadership had been briefed and would be supporting the legislation. Crossbenchers in the House and Senate and the Australian Capital Territory Chief Minister Andrew Barr have also been briefed, Albanese added.
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Fierce battle ongoing on Ukraine's front lines, deputy defense minister?says
From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva and Sarah Dean
There is a “serious confrontation ongoing” on Ukraine’s front lines, Ukraine’s deputy defense minister said Wednesday, describing it as a “fierce battle.”
Russian forces are trying to stop Ukraine’s offensive by increasing shelling and aviation strikes, Maliar said. “We also see the enemy actively using anti-tank guided missiles and self-destroying drones in attempts to stop our offensive and inflict various damage.”
Ukraine’s troops are experiencing “difficulties” advancing in the south as “the fields are mined,” she added, saying the troops are advancing “slowly but surely.”
In an update that echoed Maliar’s description of the fighting, the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said Russia had carried out 37 airstrikes and fired 32 times from multiple launch rocket systems at Ukrainian troops’ positions and settlements in the past day.
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Here's where Ukraine has stepped up operations near the front lines
Ukrainian military officials have claimed some success in?attempted advances?in the Zaporizhzhia region on Wednesday, as Kyiv mounts early stages of a sweeping counteroffensive across southeastern parts of the country.
Both sides have reported?clashes?in the Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk regions.
Ukraine’s top general also said Tuesday that the military has seen?“certain gains”?in its offensive and is “moving forward.”
These are the areas of focus right now:
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Biden holding firm on Ukraine joining NATO
From CNN's Kevin Liptak?and?Jennifer Hansler
Joe Biden speaks in Washington, on June 14.
Susan Walsh/AP
President Joe Biden and his team are in the midst of a high-stakes conversation with fellow?NATO?members on how and when Ukraine may join — a debate that could expose strains in the alliance ahead of?a key summit.
The matter of Ukrainian membership in NATO?is one of several issues leaders will tackle when they meet in the Lithuanian capital Vilnius in mid-July. Also up for discussion are new defense spending commitments and a successor to Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, who is planning on leaving his post in the autumn.
Yet it is the issue of Ukrainian membership that will prove one of the biggest flash points for the group, which has managed to remain remarkably united amid Russia’s unprovoked invasion.
At past NATO summits, the allies have produced a joint declaration outlining their shared views. A failure to reach a consensus this year would be hugely consequential and would signal trouble for the unity of the alliance as the war in Ukraine continues.
Some allies, particularly those in Eastern Europe who are?located closer to Ukraine and Russia,?have advocated for a more concrete path for Kyiv to join the defensive alliance once the war ends.
Other European officials, particularly those in western and southern Europe, have argued an expedited entrance of Ukraine into NATO could be too provocative and that it could amount to an extremely risky gamble for the alliance even if there is an end to the fighting, particularly if Russia still stakes claim over Ukrainian territory.
Biden and members of his administration have remained committed to the alliance’s current posture, which states Ukraine will eventually join NATO but without any certainty of when.
The divide has prompted urgent discussions ahead of the summit. The result of the conversations could determine whether Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky attends.
Floodwaters from dam collapse predicted to recede by next week, Russia-appointed official says
From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva
A local resident stands near a flooded house after the?Nova?Kakhovka?dam?breached, in Afanasiivka, Kherson region, Ukraine on June 12.
Oleksandr Klymenko/Reuters
Floodwaters from the?Nova Kakhovka?dam collapse in southern Ukraine are predicted to fully recede by June 20, according to Andrey Alekseenko, the Russia-backed head of the Kherson region.
The breach of the dam on June 6 unleashed a mass of water down the Dnipro River and flooded towns and villages on both sides.
“As of today, the water in Oleshky and the district remains only in the lowlands — up to 1.6 meters [5.2 feet]. Supplies have returned to normal — vehicles with food products were able to enter,” he said?on Telegram.?Oleshky is around 70 kilometers (43 miles) west of Nova Kakhovka.
The head of the Russia-appointed Kherson region administration, Vladimir Saldo, said Tuesday that the water level in Nova Kakhovka was unchanged at 5 meters.
Remember:?Ukraine controls the west bank of the Dnipro River and the city of Kherson after its?counteroffensive last year, while Russian troops remain on the east bank in the larger Kherson region.
On the Ukrainian side:?Ukraine’s Minister of Internal Affairs Ihor Klymenko said “everything” is being done to return citizens “to a normal, peaceful and safe life as soon as possible” nine days after the collapse.
He said more than 3,000 people in Ukraine-controlled Kherson have filed police reports about flooded homes, and 3,761 people have been evacuated from Ukrainian-controlled parts of the Kherson and Mykolaiv regions.