Ukraine consults U.S. ahead of strikes, Skibitsky tells paper
Comment prompts Kremlin to accuse U.S. of direct involvement
First wartime Ukraine grain ship reaches Bosphorus Strait
Russia has accused the United States of direct involvement in the Ukraine war, while the first ship carrying Ukrainian grain to world markets since Moscow’s invasion is due to be inspected in Turkey on Wednesday.
Russia’s defence ministry, headed by an ally of president Vladimir Putin, said comments made by Vadym Skibitsky, Ukraine’s deputy head of military intelligence, to Britain’s Telegraph newspaper showed that Washington was entangled in the conflict despite assertions it was limiting its role to arms supplies.
Skibitsky told the paper there was consultation between U.S. and Ukrainian intelligence officials before strikes and Washington had an effective veto on intended targets, but that U.S. officials were not providing direct targeting information.
“All this undeniably proves that Washington, contrary to White House and Pentagon claims, is directly involved in the conflict in Ukraine,” the Russian defence ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.
“It is the Biden administration that is directly responsible for all Kyiv-approved rocket attacks on residential areas and civilian infrastructure in populated areas of Donbas and other regions, which have resulted in mass deaths of civilians.”
There was no immediate reaction from the White House or Pentagon to the ministry’s assertions.
The Pentagon did deny, however, Moscow’s claims that Russia had destroyed six U.S.-made HIMARS missile systems since the start of the Ukraine war. Russia regularly claims it has hit HIMARS but has yet to show proof.
Ukraine and the West accuse Russia of carrying out devastating missile attacks on civilian targets on an almost daily basis. Both sides deny deliberately targeting civilians.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Tuesday said that despite arms supplies from the West, his country’s forces could not yet overcome Russian advantages in heavy guns and manpower.
“This is very much felt in combat, especially in the Donbas. ... It is just hell there. Words cannot describe it.”
Donbas, Ukraine’s traditional industrial heartland in Ukraine’s east, has seen some of the war’s heaviest fighting.
Russia sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine on 24 February in what it calls a “special military operation”. Kyiv and the West have condemned it as an unprovoked war of aggression.
At a U.N. conference on Tuesday, Igor Vishnevetsky, deputy director of the department for non-proliferation and arms control of the Russian foreign ministry, refuted all allegations of “unprovoked aggression”. He also added that Moscow was convinced a nuclear war “must never be fought”.
Russian diplomat Alexander Trofimov told the United Nations that Moscow would only use nuclear weapons in response to weapons of mass destruction or a conventional weapons attack that threatened the existence of the Russian state.
“None of these two hypothetical scenarios is relevant to the situation in Ukraine,” said Trofimov, a senior diplomat in the non-proliferation and arms control department of Russia’s foreign ministry.
Meanwhile, a 22 July U.N.-brokered deal to unblock Ukrainian grain exports had an initial success as the first loaded ship since Russia’s invasion safely anchored off the Turkish coast.
The vessel, the Sierra Leone-flagged Razoni was at the entrance of the Bosphorus Strait, which connects the Black Sea to world markets, around 1800 GMT on Tuesday, some 36 hours after leaving the Ukrainian port of Odesa.
A delegation from the Joint Coordination Centre (JCC) in Istanbul, where Russian, Ukrainian, Turkish and U.N. personnel work, is expected to inspect the ship at 0700 GMT on Wednesday, Turkey’s defence ministry said.
It was loaded with 26,527 tonnes of corn.
U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric told reporters in New York there were about 27 ships in the three Ukrainian ports covered by the export deal that were ready to go.
The exports from one of the world’s top grain producers are intended to help ease a global food crisis.
Known as Europe’s breadbasket, Ukraine hopes to export 20 million tonnes of grain held in silos and 40 million tonnes from the harvest now under way, initially from Odesa and nearby Pivdennyi and Chornomorsk.
Russia has called the Razoni’s departure “very positive” news. It has denied responsibility for the food crisis, saying Western sanctions have slowed its exports.