Rolling blackouts began Thursday across Ukraine after Russian attacks on energy infrastructure saw the nation lose at least 40% of its power-generating capacity.
The EU and the UK separately announced new sanctions on Iran for providing drones used by Russia in Ukraine. The US State Department has said it has “abundant evidence” that Russia is using Iranian-made drones, despite Tehran’s repeated denials.
Around 15,000 civilians in the Russian-occupied part of Ukraine’s southern Kherson region have been “relocated” away from the frontline, a Russian-backed official said.
Biden casts doubt on future US aid for Ukraine if GOP makes gains in midterm elections
From CNN's Phil Mattingly and Sam Fossum
President Joe Biden speaks to the press during a visit to Primanti Bros sandwich shop in Moon Township, Pennsylvania, on Oct. 20.
Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Image
President Joe Biden seized on comments from several Republicans, including House GOP Leader Kevin McCarthy, calling into question future Ukraine aid, framing the position as undermining the US role – and leadership – in an increasingly volatile world.
“You heard what they said today?” Biden asked at a fundraiser in Philadelphia for Senate candidate John Fetterman, according to the press pool. “They said that if they win, they’re not likely to fund – to help – continue to fund Ukraine, the Ukrainian war against the Russians. These guys don’t get it. It’s a lot bigger than Ukraine – it’s Eastern Europe, it’s NATO. It’s real, serious, serious consequential outcomes. They have no sense of American foreign policy.”?
Biden sought to broaden the implications for Republican opposition or reluctance, tying it to palpable concerns from allies after former President Donald Trump’s four years in office that the US was receding from its role in the world. Biden noted it was something that raised the stakes for the midterm elections even further, and explicitly tied in the Jan. 6 attack on the US Capitol – and the GOP’s response – as an element driving anxiety for allies.?
The President also repeated his story about how at his first G7 meeting when he said he told leaders “America’s back and one of the other heads of state turned to me and said ‘For how long’?”
On the Jan. 6?insurrection, Biden said that?it was?“a bunch of thugs attacked the United States Capitol,” continuing, “then they come along and they’re called patriots and heroes.”
“The rest of the world is looking at this election as well, both the good guys and the bad guys out there to see what, they want to see what’s going to happen,” Biden said, according to the pool.?
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White House: Iran's military gave Russia hands-on training with drones used to strike civilian targets
From CNN's Kevin Liptak
The?White?House?says?Iranian?military personnel have visited Crimea to assist with Russian drone strikes targeting civilian infrastructure in Ukraine.
John Kirby, the communications coordinator at the National Security Council, said Iran’s training visit was evidence of Tehran’s direct engagement in the conflict.
“We can confirm that Russian military personnel that are based in Crimea have been piloting?Iranian?UAVs, using them to conduct strikes across Ukraine, including strikes against Kyiv,” Kirby said, referring to unmanned aerial vehicles.
CNN previously reported?that?Iranian?military personnel had been sent to Crimea to train Russian forces.
“Iranian?military personnel were on the ground in Crimea and assisted with these operations,” he said. “Russia has received dozens of UAVs so far and will likely continue to receive additional shipments in the future.”
The US has said that Russia was obtaining drones from Iran, but has not previously said that?Iranian?personnel were on the ground.
Kirby said it was a “relatively small number” of?Iranian?personnel on the ground.
Kirby said the Russians weren’t familiar with the use of the drones and needed Iranian training to use them.
He added that the US is now concerned that Russia will seek additional weapons, including surface-to-surface missiles, from Iran.
Some background:?Iran?has repeatedly denied?supplying Russia with weapons for use in Ukraine, saying last week that it “has not and will not” do so.
A Russian representative to the UN also insisted that drones used against Ukraine have all been Russian — not Iranian. He called claims to the contrary a “disinformation campaign.”
That hasn’t convinced Ukraine’s Western allies. The European Union just agreed on new sanctions against Iran over the drone allegations.
“They can lie to the world but they certainly can’t hide the facts,” Kirby said Thursday.
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Ukraine's foreign minister says he told Israel's PM about "unspeakable suffering" caused by missile attacks
From CNN's Tim Lister and Jen Deaton
Ukraine’s Foreign Minister?Dmytro Kuleba?said he has spoken to Israel’s Prime Minister Yair Lapid?to tell him about the “unspeakable suffering” caused by Russian missiles and Iranian-made drones.
It’s the latest appeal Ukraine has made to Israel to help it acquire modern air defense systems.
Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz responded to Ukraine’s request on Wednesday, saying that Israel?would help Ukraine develop an air defense alert system, but?had no plans to deliver weapon systems.
“We have sent a request to the Ukrainians to share information about their needs for air defense alerts. Once we gain this information, we will be able to assist in the development of a life-saving civilian early-warning?system,” Gantz said.
View Kuleba’s tweet here:
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Biden?says he's concerned about the future of US aid to Ukraine if Republicans win the House
From CNN's Sam Fossum and Maegan Vazquez
US President Joe Biden speaks in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on Thursday.
Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images
US President Joe?Biden?said he’s worried the US commitment to supporting Ukraine could waver if Republicans retake control of the House of Representatives.
Biden made the remark to reporters on the midterms campaign trail, days after House Republican Leader?Kevin McCarthy said if the GOP wins the chamber they may not be as forthcoming with aid to the embattled nation.
“Yeah, I am worried about that because they said they’ll cut it,”?Biden?told reporters while visiting a sandwich shop in Moon Township, Pennsylvania, on Thursday. He was touring with Senate candidate John Fetterman.
What McCarthy said: The minority leader’s comments were published by the political news outlet Punchbowl News on Tuesday.
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Russia orders arrest of state television employee who protested the invasion of Ukraine
From CNN's Josh Pennington
A former employee of?state?television?network Channel One in Russia has been ordered under arrest in absentia for “spreading misinformation” about the war in Ukraine, according to?state?news agency TASS.
In March, journalist Marina Ovsyannikova appeared in the background during a live broadcast on Channel One holding a sign that read “Stop the war!” and “They’re lying to you!”
Ovsyannikova was fined twice and placed under house arrest. In early October, she and her family fled Russia to Europe while Russian authorities continued to investigate her.
Ovsyannikova joins a growing list of journalists, including Alexander Nevzorov and Dmitry Gordon,?who Russia has ordered arrested in absentia for criticizing the state.
Soon after Russia’s invasion, the?State?Duma passed a law imposing a prison sentence of up to 15 years for anyone knowingly spreading “fake news” that discredits Russia’s Armed Forces and the “special military operation,” which is how it refers to the war in Ukraine.
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More parts of Ukraine face blackouts. Here is what else you need to know
As the Kremlin steps up its military assault, Ukrainian energy officials said they?had no choice?but to introduce emergency and scheduled blackouts Thursday. Days of devastating?Russian attacks on energy infrastructure?have caused the nation to lose at least 40% of its power-generating capacity.?
Meantime, fighting is escalating in the Russian-occupied part of Ukraine’s southern Kherson region where authorities are attempting to “relocate”?up to 60,000 civilians, despite humanitarian bodies warning such a strategy could constitute?human rights violations.
Here are the latest developments in Russia’s war in Ukraine:
Blackouts: Ukraine’s state energy company extended its?temporary electricity restrictions beyond Kyiv and other central regions. Kharkiv, Sumy and Poltava were added to the list of areas under a “temporary controlled restriction,” according to Ukrenergo, the energy agency.
Calling on international allies: Ukraine’s foreign ministry said diplomats have appealed to several dozen international and non-governmental organizations and private companies with a request for generators and equipment for the gas transportation system to combat blackouts and damaged infrastructure.
Kherson relocations: So far, around 15,000 civilians in the Kherson region have been “relocated” away from the frontline, Kirill Stremousov, a regional leader backed by Moscow said Thursday. Ukraine officials have dismissed the relocation as a?“propaganda show”?and accused Moscow of trying to intimidate residents.
Russian coordination with Belarus: A senior Ukrainian military official says there is a growing danger that Russia will open a new front in the war through its?coordination with Belarus, using it to cut military supplies to Ukraine. Belarusian authorities have denied any plans for mobilization but have held a high number of training and readiness exercises this year and recently?announced a joint force?with Russian troops.
US weighs in on Russia-Iran relations:?The US State Department said there is “abundant evidence” Moscow is using Iranian drones?to strike Ukraine, a claim Tehran has?repeatedly denied. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky?accused Iran?of taking “blood money” from Russia, while the UK and EU separately announced?sanctions against Tehran over the drones.
Global food crisis: Russia’s foreign ministry has said it is ready to?export food and fertilizer products?to prevent a global food security crisis but blamed the US for “making it very difficult” for Moscow to do so. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has exacerbated the?global food crisis.
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Zelensky alleges Russia mined a critical dam on Dnipro river in Kherson region
From CNN's Tim Lister, Julia Kesaieva and Katerina Krebs
Ukrainian President Volodymyr?Zelensky?alleged that Russian forces have mined a critical dam on the Dnipro river in the southern Kherson region, as well as the adjacent hydroelectric plant.
“We have information that Russian terrorists have mined the dam and units of the Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant,”?Zelensky?told the Council of Europe during a video address.
CNN has reached out to the Russian Ministry of Defense for a response to the allegations.
The dam and hydroelectric plant have been working at much-reduced capacity as the area was captured by Russian forces in March. Ukrainian forces are some 40 kilometers (more than 24 miles) north of the dam. Over the past four months, they have launched several strikes against the bridge that forms part of the dam to prevent its use by the Russian military.
Separately,?Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to the head of the Ukrainian President’s office, said on Twitter Thursday that Russia planned to mine the dam and transformers, forcing the deportation of Ukrainian civilians from Kherson and flooding territory to stop the Ukrainian counteroffensive in the region. The land to the south and east of the river is low-lying.
What pro-Moscow officials are saying: The Russian-appointed head of the Nova Kakhovka administrative district, Vladimir Leontiev, told Russian state media TASS that it makes no sense for Russia to destroy the dam of the power station.
“What is the point for Russia to destroy it now? Even from a formal point of view, this is nonsense. This is absolute nonsense,” Leontiev said.
“First of all, you need to think about who benefits from it: it is only beneficial for Ukraine to destroy the dam, the hydroelectric power station, to disrupt logistics, to sow fear and panic, to stop the possibility of supplying water through the North Crimean Canal to the territory of Crimea,” he said, according to TASS.
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Ukrainian missile strikes Russian military convoy in Luhansk, new video shows
From CNN's Paul P. Murphy and Tim Lister
From Telegram
A Russian military convoy near Stara Krasnyanka in the eastern region of Luhansk was struck by a Ukrainian missile, new video shows.?
CNN has geolocated and verified the authenticity of the video, which was posted on Thursday.?The video is a compilation of a series of videos taken by a drone that shows five military vehicles, first traveling east on a road in eastern Kreminna.?
Later, the convoy is seen turning around in Stara Krasnyanka and returning to Kreminna.?As the convoy nears a set of train tracks, it moves into a wooded area just outside of Stara Krasnyanka.?
They are then targeted by a Ukrainian missile salvo, and a number of explosions are seen.?The resulting fire appears to explode the munitions that are being carried by the vehicles.?Later, the burnt husks of the convoy are seen.
In recent weeks, Ukrainian forces have repeatedly hit Russian positions in the town of Kreminna, located just west of Severodonetsk.?
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UK sanctions Iran over "kamikaze" Russian drones used in Ukraine
In a statement, Cleverly accused Iran of “warmongering” by profiting off of “Russia’s abhorrent attacks on Ukrainian citizens?and adding to the suffering of the people and the destruction of critical infrastructure.”?
The new sanctions match measures agreed to by the EU on Thursday, targeting three individuals?and one business responsible for providing drones to Moscow.?
Subject to asset freezes and travel bans are:
Maj. Gen. Mohammad Hossein Bagheri, the chairman of the armed forces general staff
Brig. Gen. Seyed Hojjatollah Qureishi, the key Iranian negotiator in the deal that has provided Russia with the Iranian-produced drones
Brig. Gen. Saeed Aghajani, the head of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) — a branch of the Iranian armed forces.?
One entity — Aerospace Force UAV Command — reported to have been in the temporarily controlled territories of Ukraine advising Russian forces on how to use the drones, is also subject to an asset freeze.?
More context: Iran has denied supplying weapons to Russia despite evidence to the contrary.?CNN reported Tuesday that Iran has?sent military personnel to Russian-occupied territory?inside Crimea to train and advise the Russian military on the use of their drones, according to two sources familiar with US intelligence.?
A spokesperson for the Iranian mission at the United Nations said “Iran does not confirm this claim and rejects it.”?
“These cowardly drone strikes are an act of desperation. By enabling these strikes, these individuals and a manufacturer have caused the people of?Ukraine untold suffering. We?will ensure that they are held to account for their actions,” Cleverly said.
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Former Italian leader criticized for remarks on Russian invasion and his relationship with Putin
From CNN’s Valentina DiDonato and Antonia Mortensen in Rome, Sugam Pokharel and Sharon Braithwaite?in London
Former Italian leader Silvio Berlusconi speaks in Rome, Italy, on September 22.?
Riccardo Fabi/NurPhoto/Getty Images
Former Italian Prime Minister Silvio?Berlusconi is facing criticism for comments on his relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin and the invasion of Ukraine.
The 86-year-old former Italian leader said he “re-established relations with President Putin,” according to audio released this week by?Italian news agency LaPresse.
Putin sent him 20 bottles of vodka and a “very sweet letter” on his birthday last month, Berlusconi says, and he sent back a letter and some Italian sparkling wine, according to the LaPresse audio.
He went on to boast that Putin called him “the first of his five true friends.”?
A secret recording: Berlusconi’s comments were surreptitiously captured during a meeting of his Forza Italia party in the Parliamentary Chamber Tuesday, his office confirmed with CNN on Thursday, while confirming the authenticity of the audio clips released by LaPresse.???
In the audio clips, the Italian politician can be heard talking to the members of his party about what he thought?led to the war.
He accuses Kyiv of violating a 2014 treaty with separatist-controlled regions in?Donbas and says the Russian-backed leaders in the area asked Putin to defend them.
In the LaPresse audio,?Berlusconi?is also heard saying,?“I do not see how Putin and Zelensky can sit at a mediation table.
Defending his remarks: Berlusconi?defended his comments in an interview with the Italian daily Corriere della Sera Thursday.??
“Everything was taken out of context. It was circulated without knowing the global meaning of my words. With the only scope to spread disinformation and lies,” he told the newspaper.???
“I don’t deny my past friendship with Vladimir Putin, that brought to important results, which were achieved in full accord with our western allies … But today the circumstances have changed,” he said.???
The comments he made were “ended with the condemnation of the Russian invasion and with the hope of a negotiated solution that would put an end to this massacre and protect the rights of the Ukrainian people,”?Berlusconi?went on to say.??
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Russia's military is focused on holding off southern counteroffensive, Ukraine says
From CNN's Julia Kesaieva
A senior Ukrainian official says that Russian forces’ “task number one” is to hold the southern frontline.
The Russians are digging in and sending more resources in hopes of holding off the Ukrainian forces pushing toward Kherson, said Oleksii Hromov, a top official with the military’s General Staff.
“The enemy plans to fulfill this task with the help of the first wave of the partial mobilization and by increasing the number of their troops on the west bank of the Dnipro River,” he said, referring to a key waterway where fighting has recently taken place on both banks.
Hromov suggested there were now more than 40 Russian battalion tactical groups in the Kherson region. Each group usually comprises some 1,000 personnel.
Why this region is key:
In his own statement, the Russia-backed head of Crimea stressed the region’s importance to Moscow and its appointed leaders in occupied Ukraine.
“Our common position is that the protection of Kherson region will ensure the security of the Republic of Crimea. To that end, we will continue to take all necessary measures, including providing maximum assistance to the troops and law enforcement units on the front lines,” Sergey Aksenov said Thursday.
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Putin visits recently mobilized Russian troops at training ground
From CNN's Katharina Krebs
Russian President Vladimir Putin visits a training ground in the western Ryazan region of Russia, on October 20.
Russian Defence Ministry/Handout
Russian President Vladimir Putin visited mobilized troops at a?training ground in the western Ryazan region, according to a statement published by Kremlin on Thursday.
The statement said he inspected the “combat coordination of the units and the readiness of the military personnel to perform tasks” at the site in the Western Military District.
Russian Minister of Defense Sergei Shoigu presented Putin with a report on combat training for the mobilized, according to the statement.
“Vladimir Putin inspected practical exercises as part of tactical, firearms, engineering and medical training,” officials said.
Putin also visited “a multifunctional shooting complex, where military personnel practice various types of shooting under the guidance of full-time commanders and professional instructors with combat experience,” according to the statement.
The Ministry of Defense says instructors are training newly mobilized servicemen with “increased intensity.” Recruits fire at least 600 rounds and use five grenades in the course of their training, according to the ministry.
Putin’s partial mobilization order: The Russian president announced in September that he sought to recruit 300,000 military personnel, but its execution has been widely criticized inside Russia.
The process has been beset by errors, caused angry protests and prompted a mass exodus when it was announced last month.
In early October, Russia’s Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu said more than 200,000 new people had joined the Russian Armed Forces through the mobilization.
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Ukraine calls on international allies for help with power infrastructure
From CNN's Tim Lister
Ukraine's Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba speaks during a meeting at UN Headquarters in New York, on September 22.?
Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket/Getty Images
Ukraine is turning to its global allies for help as it faces blackouts brought on by Russian attacks on its energy infrastructure.
A statement from the Foreign Ministry added that Ukrainian diplomats have appealed to several dozen international and non-governmental organizations and private companies with a request for generators as well as equipment for the gas transportation system.
“Russia’s targeted attacks on critical energy infrastructure are war crimes for which we will hold Russia accountable,” Kuleba said. “Russian missile terror will not break either Ukraine or our partners.”
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Ukrainian military sees growing risk of Russia reopening a northern front from Belarus, official says
From CNN's Tom Lister
A senior Ukrainian military official says there is growing danger that Russia will open a new front in the war through its coordination with Belarus, using it to cut military supplies to Ukraine.
“The threat of the Russian armed forces resuming the offensive on the northern front is growing,” Oleksii Hromov, a senior official in the military’s General Staff, said at a news conference in Kyiv.
“This time, the direction of the offensive may be changed to the (western part) of the Belarusian-Ukrainian border to cut the main logistics arteries of supplying weapons and military equipment to Ukraine from partner countries.”
Hromov said Ukraine’s defense forces were “taking measures to ensure reliable coverage of the state border of Ukraine and the city of Kyiv from the northern direction. In case the enemy decides to open the so-called second front, namely, to conduct offensive actions from the Republic of Belarus, we will be ready for an adequate response.”
More background: Belarusian authorities have denied any plans for mobilization but have held a high number of training and readiness exercises this year and recently announced a joint force with Russian troops.
The last time Belarusian and Russian forces held joint exercises,?in February, many of those Russian forces went on to cross the Ukrainian border in their ill-fated drive toward the capital.
Ukraine and Belarus share a 1,000-kilometer (about 620-mile) frontier, much of it sparsely populated and thickly forested.
Belarus does not have a mighty army in numbers. But the prospect of the long northern border again becoming a passageway for Russian forces would be a nightmare for Ukraine’s already stretched forces.
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US secretary of state calls latest Russian moves in Ukraine "another sign of Putin’s desperation"
From CNN's Andrew Millman
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken speaks in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on October 19.
Branden Eastwood/AFP/Getty Images
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken described recent Russian attacks in Ukraine as another sign of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s “desperation” in a television interview this week.
Blinken’s remarks came in an interview with George Stephanopoulos that aired Wednesday on ABC’s “Good Morning America.”
Blinken also said Putin’s latest moves were “pretty close” when Stephanopoulos asked if Putin was preparing for “all-out war.” When asked if the Russian president was acting rationally, he said that Putin’s “objectives are not rational.”
“We have not seen reason at this point to change our own nuclear posture,” he added.
US steaming at oil decision: “It’s helping to line Putin’s pockets,” Blinken said of Saudi Arabia and OPEC+’s recent decision to slash oil production, describing now as “exactly the wrong time to engage in production cuts.”
“There was no reason to make the decision when they made it,” he said, while also acknowledging: “We have a multiplicity of interests with Saudi Arabia.”
More context: OPEC+ is a group of major oil producers, including Saudi Arabia and Russia. The countries announced a production cut equivalent to about?2%?of global oil demand earlier this month, despite US pressure not to tighten supply further.
Russia’s production has held up better than predicted against Western sanctions for the invasion of Ukraine, with supply being diverted to China and India.
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Russian-backed official claims about 15,000 civilians were relocated away from Kherson frontline
From CNN’s Olga Voitovych in Kyiv, Olly Racz, and Jo Shelley in London
Civilians evacuated from Kherson, Ukraine arrive at a railway station in Dzhankoi, Crimea, on October 20.?
Alexey Pavlishak/Reuters
Around 15,000 civilians in the Russian-occupied part of Ukraine’s southern Kherson region have been “relocated” away from the frontline, Kirill Stremousov, a regional leader backed by Moscow said Thursday.
“Already about 15,000 residents, having listened to the recommendations of the leadership of the Kherson region, have moved to the left bank of our region,” Stremousov said in a post on the Telegram messaging app.?
Remember: Pro-Moscow officials in occupied Kherson?plan to move up to 60,000 residents across the Dnipro River, further into Russian-held territory, amid fears of a Ukrainian counteroffensive on the southern front.?
Civilians evacuated from Kherson, Ukraine arrive at a railway station in Dzhankoi, Crimea, on October 20.
Alexey Pavlishak/Reuters
Kyiv has dismissed what Stremousov and colleagues have termed an “organized relocation” as a?“propaganda show”?and accused Moscow of trying to “intimidate” residents.
In an earlier post on Thursday, Stremousov published guidance for residents crossing the Dnipro on what to take with them. The list included money, identity documents, a mobile phone, personal hygiene products, comfortable clothes, two to three days’ of food and drink and a first aid kit.
Stremousov said everyone would have to be registered and then stay in their assigned group.
Ukraine’s deputy head of the Kherson regional council, Yurii Sobolevskyi, claimed Thursday that the Russian troops in occupied Kherson planned to take over the houses of residents that leave.
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Blackouts extended to 3 eastern regions of Ukraine
From CNN’s Olga Voitovych in Kyiv and Jo Shelley in London
Ukraine’s state energy company has been forced to extend its temporary electricity restrictions to three eastern regions as the nation continues to grapple with limited supply.
Kharkiv, Sumy and Poltava were added to the list of areas under a “temporary controlled restriction,” according to Ukrenergo, the energy agency.
The company said earlier Thursday that it had been forced to implement restrictions on electricity use in the capital Kyiv and other central regions because of high energy demand there.
Ihor Taburets, the head of the Cherkasy regional military administration, said the emergency power outages were needed to stabilize the country’s power grid.
The electricity supply to “socially important facilities” would be maintained, he added.
Remember: Days of devastating Russian attacks on energy infrastructure have caused the nation lose at least 40% of its power-generating capacity. Ukrainian officials warned earlier this week that both emergency and scheduled blackouts would follow.
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Ukraine?appeals to Jewish groups to persuade Israel to provide air defense systems
From CNN's Tim Lister and Olga Voitovych
The Ukrainian government has appealed to Jewish organizations to help it acquire modern air defense systems from Israel as the country continues to face Russian attacks.
Israel has a policy of not sending military equipment to?Ukraine?but has said it is ready to assist?the country with early warning systems. Israel has some of the world’s most sophisticated air defense systems, including some developed to counter Iranian ballistic missiles and long-range drones.
Yermak told the meeting that Russia had carried out?190 strikes with missiles and drones on the territory of?Ukraine?on Oct. 7 and 8 alone.
“We are talking about the intention to intimidate civilians, efforts to destroy the critical infrastructure of?Ukraine?before winter, to plunge the country into darkness and frost,” he said.
Yermak told the meeting it was “important to unblock military-technical cooperation between the two countries” and Jewish organizations could “persuade the Israeli government to provide our state with the necessary systems.”
Natan Sharansky, the chair of the executive board of the Jewish Agency for Israel, said he believed “that being together with?Ukraine?at this moment is not just a moral obligation, it is in the interests of Israel.”
According to Ukraine’s presidential office, the chief rabbi of Kyiv, Yaakov Dov Bleich, said that they “are talking now about saving lives….This is terror to destroy people. We have to do something to stop this.”
Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz said Wednesday that Israel?would help?Ukraine?develop an air defense alert system?but?does not plan to deliver weapon systems.
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There will be "temporary" controlled restrictions on state electricity supply in Kyiv and central regions
From CNN’s Olga Voitovych in Kyiv and Jo Shelley in London
Ukraine’s state energy supplier Ukrenergo said on Thursday it had been “forced” to implement restrictions on electricity use in the capital Kyiv and other central regions because of a rapid increase in consumption there.
President Volodymyr Zelensky had appealed to Ukrainians to reduce their energy consumption from 7 a.m. local time on Thursday, but the restrictions were voluntary and not enforced.
Ihor Taburets, the head of the Cherkasy regional military administration, confirmed on Telegram that there would be “emergency power outages” in the region “to stabilize the operation of the country’s power grid.”
The electricity supply to “socially important facilities” would be maintained, he added.
On Thursday morning, the Kyiv region military administration had posted a schedule of potential power?outages in the event that Ukrenergo needed to balance the power grid.
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It's mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know
From CNN staff
A view of Kyiv, Ukraine, on October 19.
Ed Ram/Getty Images
As the Kremlin steps up its military assault on Ukraine, Moscow’s recent strikes on energy facilities led authorities to impose nationwide blackouts starting Thursday, following electricity and water outages across the country.
Here are the latest developments in Russia’s war in Ukraine:
Blackouts sweep Ukraine: Ukrainian energy officials said they had no choice but to introduce emergency and scheduled blackouts Thursday, after devastating Russian cruise missile and drone strikes starved the country of at least 40% of its power-generating capacity.
Fighting escalates in Kherson: Russian forces deterred an attempted Ukrainian advance in Kherson, the defense ministry said Thursday. CNN cannot independently verify the claims. Meanwhile, Russian-installed authorities’ attempts to “relocate”?up to 60,000 civilians?in the southern region are ongoing, despite humanitarian bodies previously warning such a strategy could constitute human rights violations.
Devastation in the east: Russian forces in the town of Bakhmut have made small, steady gains, largely thanks to?the Wagner group, which is considered by analysts to be a Kremlin-approved private military company. One Ukrainian medic told CNN that “the price” for Kyiv’s resistance in the eastern Donetsk region “will be enormous.”
“Abundant evidence” on Russia-Iran relations: The US State Department said there is “abundant evidence” Moscow is using Iranian drones to strike Ukraine, a claim Tehran has repeatedly denied. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky accused Iran of taking “blood money” from Russia, while European Union members have agreed on new sanctions against Iran.
Global food crisis: Russia’s foreign ministry has said it is “ready” to export food and fertilizer products to prevent a global food security crisis, but blamed the US for “making it very difficult” for Moscow to do so. The Kremlin’s invasion of Ukraine has exacerbated the global food crisis.
Here’s where the state of control stands in Ukraine:
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Ukrainian authorities reduce electric transport services as power-saving measure
From CNN’s Olga Voitovych in Kyiv and Jo Shelley in London
Municipal workers check a public transport electrical network before possible power outages in Mykolaiv, Ukraine, on October 20.
Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters
Local Ukrainian authorities reduced electric transport services such as trams and trolleybuses?on Thursday, as restrictions came into force nationwide following Russia’s recent bombardment of critical energy infrastructure.
Out of 38 trolleybus routes in Kyiv, 21 would be replaced by buses on Thursday “in order to save electricity,” according to the city’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko.
Further south in Mykolaiv,?the city reduced electric transportation services by 60%, said mayor Oleksandr Sienkevych.
Public information campaigns have been launched in some Ukrainian regions to encourage people to reduce their energy consumption.
In the central Poltava region, authorities circulated a graphic on Telegram showing residents and business owners the electrical appliances they needed to turn off. Residents were asked to limit their use of kettles, irons, microwaves and other appliances.
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Fighting in Kherson region continues while Russian-backed leaders “relocate” civilians
From CNN's Anna Chernova, Olga Voitovych and Jo Shelley
A Ukrainian serviceman checks the trenches dug by Russian soldiers in Kherson region, Ukraine, on October 12.
Leo Correa/AP
Russian forces have deterred an attempted Ukrainian advance in the Kherson region in southern Ukraine, the defense ministry said on Thursday.
“The enemy succeeded in wedging into the defense of Russian units near Sukhanovo [in Ukrainian: Sukhanove] (Kherson region),” spokesperson Lieutenant General Igor Konashenkov said in a briefing, adding that Russian units successfully fought back. “The positions along the front line have been completely recovered.”?
CNN cannot independently verify the claims.
Sukhanove is near the front line in the northwest of the Kherson region, on the right bank of the Dnipro River.?
Some context: The Russian-installed authorities continued their attempts to “relocate” up to 60,000 civilians from the right bank of the Dnipro River in the occupied Kherson region to the left bank on Thursday, citing fears of a Ukrainian counteroffensive.
The Russian-backed Service for Civil Defense and Emergency Situations of the Kherson region on Thursday called for residents to “urgently” move. “For the sake of our own safety, in connection with the escalation of hostilities, you urgently need to move to the left-bank territory of the region,” it said in a Telegram post.?
Kyiv has accused the separatist leaders in occupied Kherson of trying to “intimidate” residents and put on a “propaganda show.”
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European Union agrees on new Iran sanctions over drones, says EU presidency
From CNN's Sharon Braithwaite in London
Czech Republic Minister for European Affairs and President of the Council, Mikulas Bek, speaks during the European Parliament plenary session in Strasbourg, France, on October 19.
Dursun Aydemir/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
European Union members have agreed on new sanctions against Iran over supplying drones that have been used to attack Ukraine, the Czech presidency of the EU said on Thursday.
“EU states decided to freeze the assets of three individuals and one entity responsible for drone deliveries,” it said.
The EU is “also prepared to extend sanctions to four more Iranian entities that already featured in a previous sanctions list,” it concluded.
Some context: Iran has repeatedly denied supplying Russia with weapons for use in Ukraine, saying last week that it “has not and will not” do so.
On Wednesday, EU spokeswoman Nabila Massrali said the bloc had “sufficient evidence” to sanction Iran in relation to supplying drones to Russia, which are believed to have been used against Ukraine.
Earlier this week, the Ukrainian Defense Ministry said a total of 37 Iranian Shahed-136 drones and three cruise missiles launched by Russia were shot down overnight Sunday and on Monday.
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Russia accuses US of imposing “difficult” obstacles to exports to avert global food crisis
From CNN's Anna Chernova and Sugam Pokharel
Wheat is loaded aboard a cargo ship in the port of Rostov-on-Don, Russia, on July 26.
Getty Images
Russia’s foreign ministry has said it is “ready” to export food and fertilizer products to prevent a global food security crisis, but blamed the US for “making it very difficult” for Moscow to do so.
She accused countries supplying weapons to Ukraine of being “donors and sponsors of extremist terrorist activities.”
“You are not just accomplices in the crimes of the Kyiv regime, you are exactly those whom you regularly talk about in the adopted declarations and statements,” Zakharova said.
“You are the sponsors of terrorist activities that take place under the auspices of the Kyiv regime and directly with the participation of NATO as an Alliance and as its individual members, led by the United States,” she added.
Some background: Russia’s military assault on Ukraine has exacerbated the global food crisis.
Before the war, wheat supplies from Russia and Ukraine accounted for almost 30% of global trade, and Ukraine is the world’s fourth-largest exporter of corn and the fifth-largest exporter of wheat, according to the US State Department.
However, Moscow’s blockade of Black Sea ports earlier this year stalled millions of tons of grain exports from Ukraine.
The?Black Sea Grain Initiative?— brokered in July by the UN and Turkey — ended months of the blockade, allowing grain ships to navigate a safe corridor through the Black Sea, helping alleviate global food shortages.
Earlier this week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky emphasized the importance of the deal, adding that since July Ukraine has exported 8 million tons of food by sea.
CNN’s Betsy Klein, Phil Mattingly and Jennifer Hansler contributed reporting.
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Russia’s "scorched earth tactics" won't help Putin win the war, German chancellor says
From CNN's Nadine Schmidt in Berlin?
20 October 2022, Berlin: Chancellor Olaf Scholz (SPD) delivers a government statement on the European Council in the Bundestag, b
Kay Nietfeld/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Images
Moscow’s “scorched earth” attacks against Ukraine are only strengthening the Western alliance against Russia, according to German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.
Scholz told members of the German Parliament that Russian President Vladimir Putin is using energy and hunger as weapons, adding that “such scorched earth tactics will not help Russia win the war.”
”They only bolster the resolve and perseverance of Ukraine and its allies,” he said in a key policy speech ahead of a European Council summit in Brussels.
“In the end, Russia’s bomb and missile terror is an act of desperation – just like the mobilization of Russian men for the war.
The German chancellor spoke in reference to Moscow’s recent barrage of strikes on Ukrainian energy infrastructure.
The attacks on power facilities have caused rolling blackouts across the country and prompted authorities to introduce curbs on electricity usage, starting Thursday.?
Scholz said that Germany had ”freed itself from dependence” on Russian gas but was working to bring energy prices down, including by securing new gas delivery contracts from other countries.?
He addressed the lower house of parliament in Berlin ahead of a meeting with the 27 European Union member countries on Thursday, which are set to meet for the second time in a fortnight in an effort to bring down energy prices across Europe.
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Russian rockets hit school in Zaporizhzhia, Ukrainian official?says
From CNN's Olga Voitovych?
Russian rockets hit a school in Ukraine’s southeastern Zaporizhzhia region on Thursday, according to a Ukrainian official.
Some context: The village is located about 35 kilometers (22 miles) southeast of Zaporizhzhia city, not far from the front lines of the conflict. Though the city is under Ukrainian control, about three quarters of the greater Zaporizhzhia region is occupied by Russian forces. The region is one of four Ukrainian territories Russia has claimed to annex in violation of international law.
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Russian strikes overnight caused "serious destruction" at Kryvyi Rih power facility, official says
From CNN’s Josh Pennington?
An energy infrastructure facility and an industrial area were struck overnight in Ukraine’s central Kryvyi Rih region causing “serious destruction,”?the head of Dnipropetrovsk’s regional military administration?Valentyn Reznichenko said on Telegram Thursday.?
Some context: Rolling blackouts are set to begin Thursday across Ukraine after the nation lost at least 40% of its power-generating capacity following days of Russian attacks on energy infrastructure targets.
On Wednesday, Kryvyi Rih Mayor Oleksandr Vilkul confirmed parts of the city were without electricity due to an overnight strike on an energy infrastructure facility.
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Iran's UN ambassador denies Tehran has supplied Russia with drones
From CNN's Richard Roth and Mohammed Tawfeeq?
People clear blast debris outside a house damaged during a Russian drone strike on October 19, in Kyiv, Ukraine.
Ed Ram/Getty Images
Iran’s Ambassador to the United Nations Amir Saeid Iravani on Wednesday denied his country has supplied Russia with drones for use in Ukraine.?
Speaking to reporters after a closed-door UN Security Council meeting, Iravani claimed Western countries were running a disinformation campaign against Iran, saying Tehran would not violate a Security Council resolution by shipping drones to Russia.
Ukrainian authorities say Russia has used the Iranian-supplied drones in strikes against Kyiv and other cities in recent weeks.?
Russia’s denial: Dmitry Polyanskiy, first deputy permanent representative of Russia to the UN, told reporters in a news conference after the Security Council meeting that all drones used against Ukraine are Russian — not Iranian — calling claims to the contrary a “disinformation campaign” by the West.?
The United States, the United Kingdom and France have called for a UN Security Council briefing “on recent evidence that Russia illegally procured Iranian UAVs that it is using in its war on Ukraine,” Nate Evans, spokesperson for the US mission to the UN said in a statement after Wednesday’s meeting.
Polyanskiy, however, said the UN Secretariat “has no mandate to investigate anything regarding United Nations Security Council resolution 2231.”
Dmitry Polyanskiy, first deputy permanent representative of Russia to the United Nations, speaks to the media at UN headquarters on April 1.
(John Lamparski/Getty Images)
Some context: ?Drones have played a significant role in the conflict since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in late February, but their use has increased since the summer when the US and Kyiv say Moscow acquired Shahed-136 “kamikaze” drones from Iran.
US State Department spokesperson Ned Price said Wednesday the US has “abundant evidence” that Russia is using Iranian drones to strike Ukraine.
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Ukraine's President Zelensky says Iran has supplied Russia with "kills of Ukrainians"
From CNN's Jennifer Feldman
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky speaks with CTV, Wednesday October 19.
(CTV)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has accused Iran of taking “blood money” from Russia for supplying “kamikaze” drones used in deadly attacks against cities including Kyiv.
The use of drones in the war in Ukraine has increased since the summer, when the United States and Kyiv say Moscow acquired Shahed-136 drones from Iran. Tehran has denied supplying weapons to Russia despite evidence to the contrary.
CNN reported Tuesday that Iran has?sent military personnel to Russian-occupied territory?inside Crimea to train and advise the Russian military on the use of their drones, according to two sources familiar with US intelligence.
A spokesman for the Iranian mission at the United Nations said, “Iran does not confirm this claim and rejects it.”
Zelensky however, was unequivocal in his accusations against Tehran.
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US State Department says there's "abundant evidence" Russia is using Iranian drones in Ukraine
From CNN's Kylie Atwood?and?Paul LeBlanc
The United States has “abundant evidence” that Russia is using Iranian drones?to strike Ukraine, State Department spokesperson Ned Price said Wednesday.
“The United States began warning in July that Iran was planning to transfer UAVs to Russia for use in Russia’s brutal war against Ukraine, and we now have abundant evidence that these UAVs are being used to strike Ukrainian civilians and critical civilian infrastructure,” Price said in a statement.
The United Nations Security Council received expert briefings on Iran’s transfer of such drones to Russia, Price said, and the issue was collectively raised by the US, United Kingdom and France at a closed-door UNSC meeting Wednesday.
Drones have played a significant role in the conflict since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in late February, but their use has increased since the summer, when the United States and Kyiv say Moscow acquired the drones from Iran. Iran has denied supplying weapons to Russia despite evidence to the contrary.
CNN reported Tuesday that Iran has?sent military personnel to Russian-occupied territory?inside Crimea to train and advise the Russian military on the use of their drones, according to two sources familiar with US intelligence.
A spokesman for the Iranian mission at the United Nations said, “Iran does not confirm this claim and rejects it.”
US charges multiple foreign nationals in alleged schemes to send military technology to Russia
From CNN's Hannah Rabinowitz?and?Holmes Lybrand
The US Justice Department?announced charges?on Wednesday against nearly a dozen people and two companies in connection with illegal schemes to send military technology to Russia, some of which has allegedly been recovered from battlefields in Ukraine.
The department said in a statement that some of the defendants also tried to send “nuclear proliferation technology” to Russia, but that it was intercepted before it arrived.
The indictments are the most recent action law enforcement has taken with the help of the department’s Task Force KleptoCapture, which was announced earlier this year and part of an effort to enforce sanctions against Russian government officials and oligarchs.
Ukraine forced to introduce scheduled blackouts nationwide following days of Russian missile attacks
From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva and Jonny Hallam
Traffic is seen by the Dnipro River at dusk in Kyiv, Ukraine on October 19.
(Ed Ram/Getty Images)
Ukrainian energy officials on Wednesday said they had no choice but to introduce emergency and scheduled blackouts after losing at least 40% of the country’s power generating capacity following days of devastating Russian cruise missile and drone strikes.
NPC Ukrenergo, Ukraine’s national energy company, on Wednesday called for the “understanding and support” of its energy users as they have been forced to introduce consumption restrictions following the missile attacks.
Ukrenergo said the “consumption restrictions may be applied throughout Ukraine from 7:00 a.m. to 22:00 p.m.” Thursday.?
“The outages will be alternate — the duration of the outage is also determined by the regional power distribution company, but not more than 4 hours,” the statement said.
“The enemy, who cannot compete with the Armed Forces of Ukraine on the battlefield, attacked the civilian energy infrastructure again. Therefore, tomorrow we will apply controlled and carefully calculated restrictions to consumers, which we must implement to make the system work in a balanced way,” the power company said.
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Devastation on Ukraine's eastern front, where the notorious Wagner group is making gains
From CNN's Sebastian Shukla,?Frederik Pleitgen?and?Rich Harlow
A Ukrainian tank crew fighting on the frontline is seen in Bakhmut, Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine, on October 19.
Wolfgang Schwan/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
The weather in?Bakhmut deceives the senses, sunny and warm — almost peaceful.
But a deafening boom of outgoing artillery from the critical eastern Ukrainian town shakes that notion out of the system, as Ukrainian soldiers on Wednesday launched offensives to try and reclaim positions from Russian forces.
Three men could be seen making a run for it out of town, one with a microwave strapped to his back.
Russia’s war in Ukraine has been going on nine months. It’s only when you descend into the town that you really get a sense of the devastation and destitution that Vladimir Putin’s invasion has wrought on this city.
Our guide is a Ukrainian military medic, who goes by her nom-de-guerre “Katrusya.” In tinted sunglasses and fatigues, she slings our convoy into the center of the city at breakneck speed.
Flashing through the windows is a ghost town.
She took us to see a building that had just been shelled. Our car hadn’t even come to a complete halt as another artillery shell hit nearby. We scrambled for cover as more artillery rained and whizzed down nearby for around 20 minutes.
Iran is slowly entrenching itself as a player in the Ukraine war
From CNN's Nadeen Ebrahim
As Russia faces growing setbacks in Ukraine, it appears to be increasingly turning to Iran for help, in a development that has sparked concern from the West and Tehran’s regional adversaries.
Sources familiar with US intelligence have told CNN that Iran?has sent military trainers to Crimea?to train and advise the Russian military on the use of Iranian-built drones that Moscow has used to rain down terror on cities across Ukraine.
The presence of Iranian personnel in occupied Ukrainian territory would mark a significant escalation in Iran’s involvement in the war in support of Russia, and a new phase in the two countries’ budding military alliance.
Reuters on Tuesday also reported that Iran may supply Russia with surface-to-surface missiles. Nasser Kanani, the spokesperson for Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, denied the allegation, saying Iran “has always opposed the continuation of the [Ukraine] war.”
If Iran sells missiles to Russia, this would mean that it is “moving some of its most accurate, some of its most precise ammunition closer to Europe,” he said.
Since Russia’s invasion, the two sanctioned countries have cooperated on political and economic matters, with the military dimension being the latest facet in their relationship.
Editor’s Note:?A version of this story first appeared in CNN’s Meanwhile in the Middle East newsletter, a three-times-a-week look inside the region’s biggest stories. Sign up here or read more:
EU working on new Iran sanctions due to Russia's use of Iranian drones in Ukraine, diplomat says
From CNN's Kylie Atwood, Michael Conte and Jennifer Hansler
The European Union is working on new Iran sanctions that could come as soon as this week due to the use of Iranian drones by Russia in Ukraine, a European diplomat told CNN.
These ongoing EU efforts came as the UN Security Council was set to discuss the Iranian drones during a closed-door meeting on Wednesday in New York.?But diplomats caution that they do not expect they could get new sanctions through the security council because they will be vetoed by Russia.??
The State Department said the US would “welcome” EU sanctions on Iran for supplying drones to Russia for its invasion of Ukraine.
State Department deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel said the US has been “coordinating closely with the EU” but would not get into details of those discussions.
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Russia says its chaotic military draft is starting to wind down. Has it actually helped Putin?
From CNN's Rob Picheta
The “partial mobilization” of Russian citizens to fight in?the country’s war on Ukraine has been beset by errors, caused angry protests and prompted a mass exodus when it was announced last month.
Now, as Russian officials suggest the scheme will wind up soon, questions linger over whether the turmoil was really worth it for President Vladimir Putin.
Roughly half of Russia’s regions, including Moscow, had fulfilled their draft quota as of Tuesday, and the capital’s mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, said the city would close its draft offices.
But the signs from Moscow suggest that at least the current phase of the divisive scheme is set to finish soon. “Mobilization is ending. I assume in two weeks all mobilizing measures will be over,” Putin said on Friday.
It may be too early to tell whether the influx of soldiers can be considered a military success for Putin, who announced the plan after weeks of Ukrainian counteroffensives flipped the momentum in the conflict.
But, to date, few parts of the plan can be considered a success.
Russia ramps up relocation of civilians in Kherson. It may soon lose one of the biggest prizes of its war
From CNN's Mick Krever
The Russian-installed leaders in Ukraine’s Kherson region on Wednesday began massively ramping up the relocation of up to 60,000 people amid warnings over?Russia’s ability?to withstand a?Ukrainian counteroffensive.
Ukrainian officials have accused Russia of generating “hysteria” to compel people to leave. Residents in the city of Kherson began to receive text messages on Wednesday morning from the pro-Russian administration.
Martial law: Meanwhile on Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that he had signed a law introducing?martial law?in Kherson and three other Ukrainian regions the Kremlin claims to have annexed, in violation of international law. The other regions are Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk and Luhansk.
In his first outing on Russian state television as the Kremlin’s new commander for Ukraine, Gen. Sergey?Surovikin?said Tuesday evening that the situation in Kherson was “far from simple” and “very difficult.”
“Our further plans and actions towards the city of Kherson will depend on the military and tactical situation on the ground,” he said.