Ukraine war live updates: Ukraine attacks Russian city of Belgorod and occupied Crimea overnight as retaliatory strikes intensify
Polish farmers to resume blockade of Ukraine border crossing
Polish farmers will resume their blockade at the Medyka border crossing with Ukraine from Thursday as they say they have not received a signed assurance from the prime minister that their demands will be met, state-run news agency PAP reported.
The Polish farmers suspended their protest, which aims to secure government subsidies for corn and prevent tax hikes, on Dec. 24.
Polish protesters block the Polish-Ukrainian border crossing Hrebenne during a strike on December 1, 2023 in Hrebenne, Poland.
Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images News | Getty Images
Polish truck drivers, however, have continued to block several crossings with Ukraine since Nov. 6, to press their demand that the European Union reinstate a system that requires Ukrainian companies to obtain permits to operate in the bloc. The same would apply to European truckers seeking to enter Ukraine.
“We have not received written confirmation that our demands will be met, so we are continuing the protest,” farmers leader Roman Kondrow told PAP.
Although Agriculture Minister Czeslaw Siekierski had provided a note telling the farmers their demands would be met, Prime Minister Donald Tusk has not given a signed declaration, Kondrow said.
He added they would only allow one truck per hour pass through the crossing. Tusk said in December that he believed Poland was close to being able to end the truckers’ protest.
— Reuters
The latest Russian missile attacks show a change in target, UK says
Remains and debris of Russian missile in the aftermath of a missile strike on December 29, 2023 in Dnipro, Ukraine.
Denys Poliakov | Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images
The latest missile attacks on Ukraine indicate that Russia is targeting Ukraine’s defense industry rather than energy infrastructure, as seen last year.
“Since 29 December 2023, Russia has increased the intensity of its long-range strike operations against Ukraine,” the U.K.’s Ministry of Defence said Wednesday.
It noted that Russian forces had committed a “significant proportion” of the stock of air-launched cruise missiles and ballistic missiles that they had built up in recent months to strikes on targets across Ukraine in the last week.
“The recent strikes likely primarily targeted Ukraine’s defense industry. This contrasts with its major attacks last winter which prioritised striking Ukraine’s energy infrastructure,” the ministry noted in an intelligence update on X, formerly known as Twitter, Wednesday.
“These new operations suggest at least a temporary change in approach in Russia’s use of long-range strikes. Russian planners almost certainly realise the importance of relative defence industrial capacity as they prepare for a long war.”
— Holly Ellyatt
Poland says West should give Ukraine long-range missiles
The West should tighten sanctions against Russia and provide Kyiv with long-range missiles in response to Moscow’s latest shelling of Ukraine, Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said on Wednesday.
Russia pounded Ukraine’s two biggest cities on Tuesday in a new wave of heavy air strikes that killed at least five civilians and prompted calls for the West to quickly provide more military assistance.
“We should respond to the latest onslaught on Ukraine in language that Putin understands: by tightening sanctions so that he cannot make new weapons with smuggled components and by giving Kyiv long range missiles that will enable it to take out launch sites and command centers,” Sikorski wrote on social media platform X.
— Reuters
What to expect from the war in Ukraine in 2024
Ukrainian soldiers sit on a T-64 tank during combat duty in the Bakhmut direction on December 27, 2023 in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine.
Roman Chop | Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images
90 civilians have died in Ukraine over the last six days, UN says
Ukrainian rescuers carry a wounded woman out of a damaged residential building in the centre of Kharkiv after a missile strike on January 2, 2024, amid the Russian invasion in Ukraine.
Sergey Bobok | Afp | Getty Images
The UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission in Ukraine said it has recorded 90 civilian deaths in Ukraine within the last six days alone following a series of large Russian assaults that began last Friday.
“Since the onset of a wave of attacks by the Russian Federation across the country that began on December 29 until today, the MMPLU has recorded 90 cases of civilian deaths, including 2 children, and 421 cases of civilian injuries in 12 regions,” the UN said on Facebook.
A child and an adult stand near a smoking high-rise apartment building after a Russian missile attack on December 29, 2023 in Odesa, Ukraine.
Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images
“This includes shelling and rocket attacks that reportedly killed 8 civilians and injured 29 in areas of [the] Donetsk region occupied by the Russian Federation.” Each civilian death will be independently verified by the monitoring mission, it said.
The monitoring mission found that there had been 421 civilians injured in 12 regions “since the Russians launched barrages of missiles and drones at Ukraine on December 29,” it said in the update posted on Facebook.
The State Emergency Service of Ukraine is carrying out work to extinguish a fire at a warehouse after rocket attacks in the center of the capital of Ukraine on December 29, 2023 in Kyiv, Ukraine.
Kostiantyn Liberov | Getty Images
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly address Tuesday that Russia had used nearly 300 missiles and over 200 Iranian-made “Shahed” drones to attack Ukraine since Dec. 29.
— Holly Ellyatt
Russia attacked Kharkiv late into Tuesday night, official says
Russia attacked the northeast Ukrainian city of Kharkiv into the night on Tuesday, the regional governor said.
Oleg Sinegubov, head of the Kharkiv regional state administration, said on Telegram Wednesday that Russian forces shelled the city of Kharkiv with S-300 missiles late the previous evening, partially destroying a school. There were no casualties.
KHARKIV, UKRAINE – JANUARY 2: Cars lie damaged or destroyed at the site of a missile strike on a residential apartment building on January 2, 2024 in Kharkiv, Ukraine. Russia pounds the center of Kharkiv with Iskander-M and Kinzhal missiles, injuring at least 47 people, including two children. One person died. 41 residential buildings and infrastructure objects were damaged. (Photo by Oleksandra Novosel/Suspilne Ukraine/JSC “UA:PBC”/Global Images Ukraine via Getty Images)
Global Images Ukraine | Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images
Kharkiv was attacked multiple times on Tuesday, with strikes leaving one woman dead and 62 others injured, Sinegubov said. As well as Kharkiv city, more than 15 settlements of the Kharkiv region were hit by Russian artillery and mortar attacks
— Holly Ellyatt
Norway sends 2 fighter jets to Denmark for Ukraine training mission
Norway will send two F-16 fighter jets to Denmark to contribute to the training of Ukrainian pilots on the use of the U.S.-made airplane, the Norwegian defence minister said on Wednesday.
F-16s have been on Ukraine’s wish list as the country seeks to boost its air force in the war with Russia, and Norway last year said it would join Denmark, the Netherlands and others in donating aircraft.
A Danish F-16 fighter jet is pictured at the Fighter Wing Skrydstrup Air Base near Vojens, Denmark on May 25, 2023.
Bo Amstrup | Afp | Getty Images
Norway has already sent 10 instructors to Denmark to aid the education of Ukrainian pilots, Defence Minister Bjoern Arild Gram said in a statement.
The Norwegian air force has replaced its own F-16s with the successor model F-35.
— Reuters
EU adds Russia’s biggest diamond producer to sanctions list
Alexander Nemenov | Afp | Getty Images
The European Union has added Russia’s biggest diamond producer to its sanctions list, an EU official said Wednesday.
“In line with the diamond ban we have introduced with the 12th package of sanctions, the EU today lists Alrosa, the largest diamond-mining company in the world and its CEO,” the bloc’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Borrell added that the latest addition was part of a coordinated effort by the Group of Seven industrialized nations, which includes the EU, “to deprive Russia of this important revenue source.”
The Council of the EU said in a statement it had introduced restrictive measures against Alrosa and its CEO Pavel Alekseevich Marinychev as they were deemed to be “responsible for actions undermining or threatening the territorial integrity, sovereignty and independence of Ukraine.”
“PJSC Alrosa is the largest diamond-mining company in the world, owned by the Russian state and accounts for over 90% of all Russian diamond production, and the company constitutes an important part of an economic sector that is providing substantial revenue to the government of the Russian Federation.”
— Holly Ellyatt
Russian defense ministry says Ukraine attacked Belgorod with 12 missiles
Russia’s Defense Ministry said Ukraine used 12 missiles to target the Russian border region of Belgorod overnight.
“This morning, the Russian Armed Forces have foiled another attempt by the Kiev regime to carry out a terrorist attack using Olkha and Tochka-U tactical missiles against facilities on the territory of the Russian Federation,” the ministry posted on Telegram.
“Six Olkha and six Tochka-U missiles were destroyed by alerted air defence systems on duty over the territory of Belgorod region,” it added.
The Russian governor of Belgorod, Vyacheslav Gladkov, said Russia downed more Ukrainian missiles approaching the city and wider Belgorod region and reported some damage to houses and power supplies. He said this morning that “the situation in Belgorod continues to remain tense.”
Ukraine rarely comments on attacks against Russia itself and has not publicly commented on the latest strike. On Saturday, it launched a large attack against Belgorod that left 25 dead, including five children, and over 100 injured.
Moscow and Kyiv both deny any deliberate targeting of civilians in the war, although at least 10,000 civilians in Ukraine have died, the United Nations says. The true number of casualties is believed to be far higher.
— Holly Ellyatt
Belgorod, Sevastopol attacked overnight, Russian officials say
Russian officials said Ukraine attacked the Russian city of Belgorod overnight, as well as the port city of Sevastopol in Russian-occupied Crimea.
The Russian Governor of Belgorod, Vyacheslav Gladkov, said Russia downed more Ukrainian missiles approaching the city and wider Belgorod region and reported some damage to houses and power supplies. Belgorod is across the Russian border from Ukraine’s northeastern Kharkiv region.
“The situation in Belgorod continues to remain tense. There were two shellings in the morning,” Gladkov said on Telegram.
“The air defenses worked. As soon as it dawns, we will conduct door-to-door inspections to look at the damage to rooves, windows, facades and [we will] begin restoration work,” he said.
In Crimea, the Russian-installed Governor of Sevastopol Mikhail Razvozhaev also said a missile was downed there Tuesday night, although no damage to infrastructure was recorded. CNBC was unable to immediately verify the claims made by the officials.
A firefighter walks along a street in front of a burning building in Podilskyi district after a Russian missile attack on January 2, 2024 in Kyiv, Ukraine.
Viktor Kovalchuk | Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images
The latest attacks, which have not been confirmed by Ukraine, continue a recent intensification of aerial warfare around the new year, and a series of “tit-for-tat” strikes by Russia and Ukraine over the last few days.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly address Tuesday that Russia had used nearly 300 missiles and over 200 Iranian-made “Shahed” drones against Ukraine since Dec. 29.
“No other state has ever repelled such attacks, combined ones: both drones and missiles, including air-launched ballistic missiles. Ten “Kinzhal” missiles [hypersonic air-launched ballistic missiles] have been shot down today alone,” Zelenskyy said.
— Holly Ellyatt
Pictures show aftermath of strikes on Kyiv and Kharkiv
Pictures show destruction in Ukraine’s capital Kyiv and Kharkiv in the northeast of the country following Russian strikes on the cities.
Ukrainian rescuers carry a wounded woman out of a damaged residential building in the centre of Kharkiv after a missile strike on January 2, 2024, amid the Russian invasion in Ukraine.
Sergey Bobok | Afp | Getty Images
A smoke rises from residential building damaged by blast wave after Russian missile attack on January 2, 2024 in Kyiv, Ukraine.
Oleksandr Gusev | Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images
Firefighters on a ladder work at a residential building damaged by Russian shelling on January 2, 2024 in Kyiv, Ukraine.
Roman Petushkov | Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images
People stand amid destroyed cars in a yard of a residential building damaged by Russian shelling on January 2, 2024 in Kyiv, Ukraine.
Roman Petushkov | Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images
Firefighters evacuate a disabled man from a destroyed multi-storey building after a missile attack in the centre of Kyiv, on January 2, 2024, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Anatolii Stepanov | Afp | Getty Images
Firefighters conduct operation on a burning building after a massive rocket attack by Russian forces on morning of January 2, 2024.
Danylo Antoniuk | Anadolu | Getty Images
— Sophie Kiderlin
Death toll rises to 5 in Kyiv and Kharkiv strikes
Kyiv’s mayor Vitali Klitschko (R) inspects a multi-storey residential building destroyed by a missile attack in central Kyiv, on January 2, 2024, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Genya Savilov | Afp | Getty Images
The death toll has risen to five following Russian strikes on the cities of Kyiv and Kharkiv, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Tuesday.
As it stands, two people were killed 49 injured in strikes on Kyiv. Two others died and 16 were injured in the wider Kyiv region. In Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine, one person was killed and 47 were injured. Zelenskyy said Russia would be held “responsible for every life taken.”
Utility workers stand in the yard of a damaged residential building after a Russian missile attack on January 2, 2024 in Kharkiv, Ukraine.
Oleh Arkhanhorodsky | Global Images Ukraine | Getty Images
He said almost 100 missiles of various types had been used in the strikes with 70 of them downed by Ukraine’s air defense systems. “‘Patriots’, ‘Iris’, ‘NASAMS’ — each such system has already saved at least hundreds of lives,” Zelenskyy said.
— Holly Ellyatt
Russian official claims Ukraine attempted to strike Belgorod again
The governor of the Russian region of Belgorod said Tuesday that Ukraine attempted to strike the city of the same name again.
Belgorod Governor Vyacheslav Gladkov said Russian air defenses downed five Ukrainian missiles as they approached the city. “Operational services are clarifying information about the consequences on the ground,” he said on Telegram.
“According to preliminary data, there is one victim – a woman has a torn wound to her left hand. She was examined by emergency physicians and refused hospitalization,” Gladkov said. He added that a retail space and several cars were damaged by shrapnel. In the Belgorod region, one passenger car was damaged by shrapnel in the village of Belovskoye.
CNBC was unable to verify the information. If accurate, the latest attempt to hit Belgorod would continue an intensification of assaults between Ukraine and Russia around the new year.
BELGOROD, RUSSIA – DECEMBER 31: People put flowers, toys and candles at the site of the Belgorod attack yesterday to commemorate the victims of the attack in Belgorod, Russia on December 31, 2023. At least 24 killed and 108 injured, Governor of Russia’s Belgorod Region Vyacheslav Gladkov said in a statement in Telegram channel. (Photo by Emil Leegunov/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Anadolu | Anadolu | Getty Images
Ukraine targeted Belgorod on Saturday in retaliation for a massive missile and drone attack that was carried out by Russia on Ukraine last Friday.
Russian President Vladimir Putin vowed on Monday to intensify attacks on Ukraine after the Belgorod attack, in which 25 people died, including five children, and over 100 were injured. Ukraine has not publicly commented on the attack and both Moscow and Kyiv deny targeting civilians.
On Tuesday, Ukraine’s largest cities Kyiv and Kharkiv were attacked with drones and missiles by Russia, leaving four people dead and dozens injured.
— Holly Ellyatt
Poland says threat level from Russian strikes reduced, planes return to base
Poland said planes protecting its airspace following the latest Russian strikes on Ukraine had returned to base.
Poland deployed two pairs of F-16 fighter jets and an allied tanker following the latest assault on Ukraine in which Kyiv and Kharkiv were targeted.
The Polish army’s operational command said the planes had now returned to base “due to the reduced level of threat.”
“The operations of Polish and allied aircraft on duty in our airspace have been ended. The resources released returned to their bases and standard operating activities,” the operational command said on X, formerly known as Twitter.
Poland has been on higher alert since last Friday after a Russian missile entered Polish airspace for almost three minutes before it turned back into Ukrainian airspace. Poland said Tuesday that it is monitoring the situation in Ukraine on an ongoing basis “and remains on constant readiness to ensure the safety of Polish airspace.”
— Reuters
Ukraine urges faster supplies of air defense, combat drones, long-range missiles
Ukraine’s foreign minister urged faster supplies of air defence systems, combat drones, and long-range missiles, the ministry said on Tuesday.
It said in a statement that Dmytro Kuleba called on Ukraine’s Western partners to respond to a new Russian strike on Ukraine by “accelerating the supply of additional air defence systems, combat drones of all types, long-range missiles with a range of 300+ km.”
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba attends a joint press conference with Dutch Foreign Minister Hanke Bruins Slot, (not pictured) amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine, December 5, 2023.
Alina Smutko | Reuters
It also said he had called on partners to make “a decision to transfer frozen Russian assets for the needs of Ukraine and terminating contacts with Russian diplomats in the relevant capitals and international organizations.”
— Reuters