Russia invades Ukraine Reports of casualties in Europe’s ‘darkest hours’ since second World War
about 3 years in The Irish Times
Russian forces invaded Ukraine by land, air and sea on Thursday, confirming the worst fears of the West with the biggest attack by one state against another in Europe since the second World War.
Russian missiles rained down on Ukrainian cities. Ukraine reported columns of troops pouring across its borders into the eastern Chernihiv, Kharkiv and Luhansk regions, and landing by sea at the port cities of Odessa and Mariupol in the south.
Explosions could be heard before dawn in the capital Kyiv. Gunfire rattled, sirens blared across the city and the highway out became choked with traffic as residents tried to flee.
MAIN POINTS
Vladimir Putin announces military operation in eastern Ukraine
Ukraine’s president declares martial law
Missiles fired at several Ukrainian cities
Troops invade by land, air and sea
Russia says it has ‘incapacitated’ infrastructure of Ukraine’s military bases
Ukraine’s foreign minister says Russia has begun ‘full-scale attack’
Johnson says Putin has ‘chosen path of bloodshed’
Biden says severe sanctions will be imposed
Macron calls for end to military action
Taoiseach condemns ‘outrageous’ attack
Sporadic reports of casualties from region
EU to hold emergency meeting
Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Kremlin leader Vladimir Putin’s aim was to destroy his state.
“Putin has just launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Peaceful Ukrainian cities are under strikes,” Ukrainian foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba said on Twitter.
“This is a war of aggression. Ukraine will defend itself and will win. The world can and must stop Putin. The time to act is now.”
EU foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell said: “These are among the darkest hours of Europe since the second World War.”
Speaking as the UN Security Council held an emergency meeting in New York, Mr Putin said he had ordered Russian forces to protect the people and appealed to the Ukrainian military to lay down their arms.
Mr Zelenskiy has appealed to world leaders to impose all possible sanctions on Russia, including on Mr Putin.
Mr Zelenskiy on Thursday called on all citizens who were ready to defend the country from Russian forces to come forward, saying Kyiv would issue weapons to everyone who wants them. Mr Zelenskiy urged Russians to come out and protest against the war.
Firefighters work on a fire on a building after bombings on the eastern Ukraine town of Chuguiv on February 24th, 2022. Photograph: Aris Messinis/AFP via Getty Images
A resident of Ukraine’s second largest city Kharkiv, the closest big city to the Russian border, said windows in apartment blocks were shaking from constant blasts.
Outside Mariupol, close to the frontline held by Russian-backed separatists, smoke billowed from a fire in a forest targeted by Russian bombing.
A Ukrainian armoured column headed along the road, with soldiers seated atop turrets smiling and flashing victory signs to passing cars which honked their horns in support.
In the nearby towns of Mangush and Berdyansk, people queued for cash and gasoline. Civilians from Mariupol were seen packing bags.
“We are going into hiding,” said a middle-aged woman in a grey sweater.
Initial reports of casualties were sporadic and unconfirmed. Ukraine reported at least eight people killed by Russian shelling and three border guards killed in the southern Kherson region.
Ukraine’s military said it had destroyed four Russian tanks on a road near Kharkiv, killed 50 troops near a town in Luhansk region and downed six Russian warplanes in the east.
Russia denied reports that its aircraft or armoured vehicles had been destroyed. Russian-backed separatists claimed to have downed two Ukrainian planes.
In a televised declaration of war in the early hours, Mr Putin said he had ordered “a special military operation” to protect people, including Russian citizens, subjected to “genocide” in Ukraine, an accusation the West calls absurd propaganda.
“And for this we will strive for the demilitarisation and denazification of Ukraine,” Putin said. “Russia cannot feel safe, develop, and exist with a constant threat emanating from the territory of modern Ukraine . . . All responsibility for bloodshed will be on the conscience of the ruling regime in Ukraine.”
US president Joe Biden said his prayers were with the people of Ukraine “as they suffer an unprovoked and unjustified attack”. He promised tough sanctions in response, and said he would swiftly consult with other world leaders.
The prospect of war and sanctions disrupting energy and commodities markets posed an immediate threat to a global economy barely emerging from the pandemic. Stocks and bond yields plunged, while the dollar and gold rocketed higher. Brent oil surged past $100/barrel for the first time since 2014.
“There are no buyers here for risk, and there are a lot of sellers out there, so this market is getting hit very hard,” said Chris Weston, head of research at broker Pepperstone.
Ukraine, a democratic country of 44 million people with more than 1,000 years of history, is Europe’s biggest country by area after Russia itself. It voted overwhelmingly for independence after the fall of the Soviet Union, and aims to join Nato and the European Union, aspirations that infuriate Moscow.
Mr Putin, who denied for months that he was planning an invasion, has called Ukraine an artificial creation carved from Russia by its enemies, a characterisation Ukrainians call shocking and false.
Three hours after Mr Putin gave his order, Russia’s defence ministry said it had taken out military infrastructure at Ukrainian air bases and degraded its air defences.
Earlier, Ukrainian media reported that military command centres in Kyiv and Kharkiv in the northeast had been struck by missiles, while Russian troops had landed in the southern port cities of Odessa and Mariupol. A Reuters witness later heard three loud blasts in Mariupol.
Russia announced it was shutting all shipping in the Azov Sea. Russia controls the strait leading into the sea where Ukraine has ports including Mariupol. Ukraine appealed to Turkey to bar Russian ships from the straits connecting the Black Sea to the Mediterranean.
Fleeing
Queues of people waited to withdraw money and buy supplies of food and water in Kyiv. Traffic was jammed going west out of the city of three million people, towards the distant Polish border. Western countries have been preparing for the likelihood of hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians fleeing an assault.
By mid-morning, traffic was at a standstill on the four-lane main road to the western city of Lviv. Cars stretched back for dozens of kilometres, Reuters witnesses said.
A Ukrainian soldier runs after explosions hit near his unit’s position on Wednesday, February 23rd, 2022, in Zaitseve, in the Luhansk region of eastern Ukraine. Photograph: Tyler Hicks/The New York Times
Oxana, stuck in a traffic jam with her three-year-old daughter on the backseat, said she was fleeing “because a war has started. Putin has attacked us.”
“We’re afraid of bombardments,” she said. “Tell them: ‘you can’t do this.’ This is so scary.”
Mr Biden, who has ruled out putting US troops on the ground in Ukraine, said Mr Putin had chosen a premeditated war that would bring a catastrophic loss of life and human suffering.
“Russia alone is responsible for the death and destruction this attack will bring, and the United States and its Allies and partners will respond in a united and decisive way,” said Mr Biden, who spoke to Mr Zelenskiy by telephone.
French president Emmanuel Macron condemned Russia’s action while Nato secretary-general Jens Stoltenberg said Nato allies would meet to tackle the consequences of Russia’s “reckless and unprovoked attack”. British prime minister Boris Johnson said Mr Putin had chosen “the path of bloodshed and destruction”.
Taoiseach Micheál Martin has condemned the Russian attack on Ukraine as indefensible. Mr Martin on Thursday said that Russia would pay a “high price for the act of aggression”.
Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney said Russia’s military operation in Ukraine was a “shocking murderous act of aggression against a sovereign peaceful state”.
Ursula von der Leyen, head of the EU Commission said: “We will hold the Kremlin accountable.” The commission had announced new sanctions against Moscow just hours before the attack.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, speaking after the Security Council meeting, made a last-minute plea to Putin to stop the war “in the name of humanity”.
China, which signed a friendship treaty with Russia three weeks ago, reiterated a call for all parties to exercise restraint and rejected a description of Russia’s action as an invasion.
Ukraine closed its airspace to civilian flights citing a high risk to safety, while Europe’s aviation regulator warned against the hazards to flying in bordering areas of Russia and Belarus.
European Union leaders are due to discuss a further sanctions package on Russia at an emergency meeting on Thursday. – Agencies