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Russia accuses West of ‘de facto’ fighting in Ukraine

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavov says at the UN that Westerners are ‘using the hands and bodies of Ukrainians’.

‘We call it a hybrid war, but that doesn’t change things’: Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov after his address to the UN General Assembly, Picture: AFp
‘We call it a hybrid war, but that doesn’t change things’: Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov after his address to the UN General Assembly, Picture: AFp

Western powers through their support for Ukraine are “de facto” fighting against Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said overnight on Saturday, as Kyiv claimed fresh advances on the ground.

“You can call it anything you want, but they are fighting with us they are straight-up fighting with us,” Mr Lavrov told journalists at the UN.

“We call it a hybrid war, but that doesn’t change things.”

Westerners are “de facto fighting against us, using the hands and bodies of Ukrainians”, Mr Lavrov said, pointing to the billions of dollars in Western military equipment provided to Kyiv since Russia attacked last year.

He also indicated the US and British intelligence support and the presence of Western military advisers.

As one of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council, Russia can exercise a veto power that Ukraine argues has “pushed the UN into a deadlock”. Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong in her address to the UN General Assembly on Friday night reiterated previous calls for “constraints” on how the veto was used.

“With its special responsibility as a permanent member of the Security Council, Russia mocks the UN every day it continues its illegal and immoral invasion of Ukraine,” she said.

Officials in Kyiv reported breaking through Russian defence lines in the south. And its army said senior Russian navy commanders had been among dozens killed or wounded in a missile attack on Moscow’s Black Sea Fleet headquarters in Crimea.

Oleksandr Tarnavskiy, the Ukrainian general leading the counter-offensive around the Zaporizhzhia area in the south, told US media that the advance was still under way. “On the left flank (near the village of Verbove) we have a breakthrough, and we continue to advance further,” he told CNN in an interview on Friday.

Satellite image after a missile attack on the headquarters of Moscow’s Black Sea fleet in annexed Crimea. Picture: Planet Labs via AFP
Satellite image after a missile attack on the headquarters of Moscow’s Black Sea fleet in annexed Crimea. Picture: Planet Labs via AFP

Progress had been “not as fast as it was expected – not like in the movies about the Second World War,” he added. But it was important, he added, “not to lose this initiative”.

Ukraine launched its counteroffensive to claw back territory from Russian forces in June. Progress has been slow, with much of the territory heavily mined, but Kyiv has in recent weeks reported strategic advances in the Zaporizhzhia region.

General Tarnavskiy did not accept that Ukraine’s push could be further slowed in the coming winter months.

“The weather can be a serious obstacle during advance, but considering how we move forward, mostly without vehicles, I don’t think (it) will heavily influence the counter-offensive,” he said.

Mykhailo Podolyak, an aide to President Volodymyr Zelensky, spelt out Kyiv’s position on the prospects of a long, drawn-out war. “Are the Ukrainian people happy about the prospect of a long war of attrition?” he wrote Saturday on X. “Absolutely not. We are following this path only because there is no other way today.”

The Tarnavskiy interview was published a day after Kyiv struck Russia’s Black Sea Fleet headquarters in the Crimean port of Sevastopol, claiming to have killed “senior” commanders.

Ukraine’s army said the strike had happened during “a meeting of the Russian navy’s leadership”.

Kyiv intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov said the attack killed “at least nine people”, including generals, in comments to Voice of America. “The details of the attack will be revealed as soon as possible and the result is dozens of dead and wounded occupants, including senior fleet commanders,” the Ukrainian army said.

Russia has said one of its servicemen was missing after the ­attack.

General Tarnavskiy said the counter-offensive’s success depended not only on what happened at the front but also on “destroying command centres” that created “a mess on the battlefield”. Strikes on Crimea, annexed by Russia in 2014, improved morale for Ukrainian troops, he added. “It helps us, but it also gives us hope for the future.”

Mr Zelensky was headed for home after addressing the UN and having talks in Washington with the US congress and President Joe Biden, who pledged the imminent arrival of US tanks to bolster Ukraine’s arsenal.

He also got a pledge of more funding from Canada after addressing parliament in Ottawa.

The Ukrainian leader took to X on Saturday to announce he had met Sudan’s army chief and de facto ruler general Abdel Fattah al-Burhan during a stopover in Ireland. Mr Zelensky also said he made a brief halt in the Polish city of Lublin during the afternoon to decorate two Polish volunteers.

AFP

Read related topics:Russia And Ukraine Conflict

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/russia-accuses-west-of-de-facto-fighting-in-ukraine/news-story/04e72726cb99c8d8974c9fcc28786166