All the latest developments from the war in Ukraine.
Ukraine claims shooting down Russian drones and missiles overnight
Ukraine shot down ten missiles and 25 drones launched by Russia overnight attacks in the cities of Kyiv and Dnipro and eastern regions, Ukrainian officials said on Friday.
The Ukrainian air force said it had shot down 10 missiles fired from the Caspian Sea, 23 Iranian-made Shahed drones and two reconnaissance drones, according to US-based news agency Reuters.
A total of 17 missiles and 31 drones had been launched starting at about 10 pm local time on Thursday, the Ukrainian side claimed.
The attacks continued until the early hours of Friday with several drones and missiles hitting the targets in Kharkiv and Dnipropetrovsk. The officials have not confirmed any deaths so far.
“It was a very difficult night,” Serhiy Lysak, the Dnipropetrovsk regional governor, said on the Telegram. “It was loud – the enemy launched a mass attack on the region with missiles and drones. Dnipro has suffered.”
Lysak said several infrastructures were damaged by the attacks, including civilian houses, cars, and companies, including a transport company and a gas station.
US says allies will unite to train Ukrainians on F-16 jets
European allies are developing a coordinated program to train Ukrainian forces on the F-16 fighter jet, US Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin said on Thursday.
Austin said the allies recognize that in addition to training, Ukraine will also need to be able to sustain and maintain the aircraft and have enough munitions.
But Pentagon leaders warned that it will be a costly and complex task and won’t be a magic solution to the war.
“The Russians have a thousand fourth and fifth-generation fighters, so if you’re going to contest Russia in the air, you’re going to need a substantial amount of fourth and fifth-generation fighters,” said Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Providing 10 F-16s could cost $2 billion including maintenance, according to Milley.
He said F-16s have a future role as part of Ukraine’s air capabilities, but it’s “going to take a considerable length of time to build up an air force that’s the size and scope and scale that would be necessary.”
The US’s European allies have been vocal in their support for the fighter jet training in recent days.
German Chancellor to talk to Putin ‘in due course’
The German chancellor Olaf Scholz said he plans to speak to Russian President Vladimir Putin soon to explore a variety of topics, including halting the war in Ukraine.
Olaf also held out the prospect of resuming contact after a near-total breakdown in relations since the Ukraine war.
“My last telephone call was some time ago,” Scholz told the Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger newspaper in an interview published on Friday. “But I plan to speak to Putin again in due course.”
The leaders last spoke by telephone in early December, AFP reports.
Scholz said that Putin had to understand that the war could not be ended by making “some kind of cold peace”.
“Rather it is about a fair peace, and the prerequisite for that is the withdrawal of Russian troops,” he added.
Wagner Group in Mali sanctioned for alleged arms trafficking
Russian paramilitary Wagner Group’s leader in Mali was sanctioned on Thursday for allegedly bolstering Russia’s weaponry in the ongoing war in Ukraine.
The US said Wagner’s local official Ivan Maslov could be working to buy mines, drones and other weapons systems from foreign suppliers for delivery to Russian fighters in Ukraine.
US Treasury Department said there were indications that Kremlin was trying to use the West African nation as a way-station for arms shipments.
The suspicions, however, are yet to be proven according to state department spokesman Matthew Miller.
“We have not seen, as of yet, any indications that these acquisitions have been finalized or executed, but we are monitoring the situation closely,” Miller said earlier this week.
The Wagner Group has brokered deals in Mali, the Central African Republic, Libya and elsewhere, providing security for what are often autocratic national leaders, frequently in exchange for a share of local mining of gold and other resources.