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Russia has suffered record losses for a second consecutive day, Ukraine has claimed, as Vladimir Putin’s forces seek to advance in Donbas and repel Kyiv’s incursion into Kursk.
Just 24 hours after Ukraine claimed Russia had suffered a record 1,770 losses, Kyiv’s military claimed this grim total had been surpassed by 1,950 casualties on Monday – which would mark Russia’s worst single day since launching its full-scale invasion in February 2022.
The totals given by Ukraine’s military do not specify between troops killed, wounded or captured. Ukraine now claims to have inflicted a total of 712,610 casualties upon Russia – which is broadly in line with estimates given by Ukraine’s Western allies. Neither Moscow nor Kyiv provide statistics on their own losses.
Russia appears to be stepping up its efforts to claw back territory in Kursk, after Ukraine’s daring cross-border raid in August. With reports of North Korean troops also being deployed to the Russian region, war monitors said on Monday that both Kyiv and Moscow appeared to have made recent gains in the region.
Russian warship carrying hypersonic missiles conducting drills in English Channel, state media says
A Russian Navy warship equipped with new generation hypersonic cruise missiles has conducted drills in the English Channel and is carrying out tasks in the Atlantic Ocean, Russian news agencies have reported.
The crew of the Admiral Golovko frigate, equipped with Zircon hypersonic anti-ship missiles, conducted counter-terrorism drills, repelling air and sea drone attacks of a mock enemy, Russian state agencies reported.
“The Northern Fleet frigate Admiral Golovko has completed its passage through the English Channel and is currently continuing to carry out missions in the designated areas of the Atlantic Ocean,” RIA state news agency reported, citing the Northern Fleet’s press service.
It is the first long-distance voyage of the multipurpose frigate since it was accepted into the Russian Navy in December 2023, the Tass state news agency reported. The ship left its main base in Russia’s north 10 days ago.
Just before going into service, then defence minister Sergei Shoigu said the warship would be equipped with Zircon missiles. The sea-based hypersonic missiles have a range of 560 miles, and can travel at several times the speed of sound, making it difficult to defend against them.
On orders from President Vladimir Putin in 2023, Russia started mass supplies of Zircon missiles as part of the country’s efforts to boost its nuclear forces, and the missile now forms the centrepiece of Russia’s hypersonic arsenal, alongside the Avangard hypersonic glide vehicle.
Vladimir Putin attends a flag-raising ceremony on the Admiral Golovko warship in St Petersburg, on 25 December 2023 (Sergei Karpukhin/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)
Andy Gregory12 November 2024 07:45
Russia says it downs 13 Ukrainian drones overnight
Russian air defence systems destroyed 13 Ukrainian drones overnight, the Russian defence ministry has claimed.
All of the drones were downed over regions bordering Ukraine, the defence ministry said.
It comes days after both countries accused each other of launching the largest overnight drone attacks of the war so far, with Kyiv attacking Moscow and Russia reportedly firing 145 drones at Ukraine.
Andy Gregory12 November 2024 07:31
UK will not have air supremacy over enemies in future wars, RAF chief warns
The UK will not enjoy supremacy in the air in future warfare but will have to fight against an “ever improving enemy” for control, the head of the Royal Air Force has warned, as he claimed that the UK faces the most difficult strategic environment in decades.
Speaking at the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), a defence think tank, for the annual Lord Trenchard Memorial Lecture, Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Knighton praised the strength of the RAF but added that they had spent the past 25 years preparing for a now outdated form of warfare.
“Throughout my career, we have enjoyed air supremacy, never mind air superiority, at least above 10,000 feet,” he said. “That is not going to be the case in the future. It seems clear to me that we are going to have to fight for control of the air.
“We have spent the last 25 years or more optimising ourselves for the types of conflict we saw in the Balkans, the Middle East or Afghanistan. We as a service responded well and adapted our systems and capabilities for those wars.
“But this is not the threat we face today. We need to become match fit for the new, bigger and more important game.”
In a show of European solidarity days after Trump’s election win, the two leaders held talks in Paris to mark Armistice Day and consider how best to continue supporting the war-torn country.
It comes amid suggestions that the UK and France could seek to persuade Joe Biden to permit Ukraine to use Storm Shadow missiles to strike into Russia before he leaves the White House.
Donald Trump has been critical of the tens of billions of dollars worth of aid given to Kyiv by the Biden administration
Arpan Rai12 November 2024 05:26
Museum tanks and trench systems enhance Ukraine training, EU commander says
Old Soviet tanks have been borrowed from museums to help train Ukrainian troops on what a commander of the EU training mission for Kyiv says are booby-trap tactics used by Russian soldiers on the battlefield.
Instructors from 17 nations have trained some 18,000 Ukrainian troops in Germany to operate high-spec tanks or precision air defence systems and passed on their skills to snipers, engineers, paramedics and for drone warfare.
But with the Russian and Ukrainian armies blasting thousands of shells at each other every day in grinding combat that echoes the trench warfare of World War One, Ukraine has also sought training in circumstances more representative of the battlefield reality as well as on some older equipment.
So the German military has dug trench systems according to Russian standards and borrowed museum piece Soviet tanks to enhance the on-the-ground experience at some of its training sites.
“These (museum) systems are in use on the Russian side, and they sometimes plant booby traps in abandoned gear,” Lieutenant-General Andreas Marlow, head of the EU’s Special Training Command near Berlin, told Reuters.
“Providing such vehicles in the training makes it easier to demonstrate where to be cautious to make sure that you don’t trigger an explosion if you find them on the battlefield and open the door.”
Reuters12 November 2024 05:00
Photos: Ukraine fortifies Donetsk region with dragon’s teeth
A line of “dragon’s teeth” pyramidal anti-tank obstacles is seen in the eastern part of the city as the Ukrainian army prepares fortifications in Pokrovsk. (Getty Images)
A lady walks with a shopping trolley along a line of dragon’s teeth in the eastern part of the city (Getty Images)
Volodymyr Zelensky said the area around Pokrovsk was “the most challenging right now” and added that “the military command and brigade command is working on strengthening positions” (Getty Images)
A line of dragon’s teeth is seen in Pokrovsk where around 10,000 civilians remain under the constant threat of artillery and aerial bombs (Getty Images)
Arpan Rai12 November 2024 04:45
Russian attacks kills at least two, injure 19 in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region
Russian attacks have killed at least two people in Ukraine’s central-east Dnipropetrovsk region and injured at least 19, with more people likely trapped under the rubble, officials said.
Shelling by artillery killed two people in Nikopol and injured five more, damaging a medical facility, a cafe and shops, regional governor Serhiy Lysak said.
Separately, at least 14 people were wounded after Moscow’s troops launched a missile at a residential building in Kryvyi Rih in the morning, according to Lysak. Rescuers were looking for a woman with three children likely trapped under the rubble, he added. A 10-year-old girl and an 11-year-old boy were among the injured.
The site of a rocket attack on a five-story residential building in Kryvyi Rih (EPA)
Andy Gregory12 November 2024 03:59
Russian glide bombs, drones and a ballistic missile kill 6, injure 30 in Ukraine
Russian glide bombs, drones and a ballistic missile smashed into cities in southern and eastern Ukraine yesterday, officials said, killing at least six civilians and injuring about 30 others.
Ukraine resident Volodymyr Zelensky said that Russia has recently intensified strikes that have long tormented civilian areas, in an apparent effort to unnerve Ukrainians and wear down their willingness to keep up a war that is approaching its 1,000-day milestone.
“Every day, every night, Russia commits the same terror,” Mr Zelensky said.
“Except that an increasing number of civilian objects are becoming targets.”Both Russia and Ukraine are waiting to see how Washington will change its policy on the war after Donald Trump takes office as the US president in January.
The US is the biggest provider of military help to Ukraine, but Mr Trump has chided the Biden administration for giving Kyiv tens of billions of dollars of aid.
Arpan Rai12 November 2024 03:34
North Korea ratifies major defence treaty with Russia
North Korea ratified a major defence treaty with Russia stipulating mutual military aid, the North’s state media reported today, as the US, South Korea and Ukraine say North Korea has sent thousands of troops to Russia to support its war against Ukraine.
Russia had completed the ratification of the treaty last week after it was signed by Russian president Vladimir Putin and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in June. It is considered both countries’ biggest defence deal since the end of the Cold War.
North Korea’s rubber-stamp parliament, the Supreme People’s Assembly, has the right to ratify treaties but Kim can unilaterally ratify major ones, according to South Korea’s Unification Ministry.
The treaty requires both countries to use all available means to provide immediate military assistance if either is attacked. Some observers speculate the treaty’s ratification in both countries could signal North Korea could formally enter the Russia-Ukraine war soon.
The Comprehensive Strategic Partnership treaty will take effect when both sides exchange documents on the ratification, the state-run Korean Central News Agency said.
North Korea ratified the treaty through a decree signed Monday by the country’s president of state affairs, KCNA said, using one of Mr Kim’s titles.
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