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Russia says destroyed NATO arms depot in western Ukraine by AFP Staff Writers Moscow (AFP) June 15, 2022 Russia said Wednesday its forces destroyed a depot containing NATO-supplied arms in western Ukraine as President Volodymyr Zelensky urged Western allies to speed up arms deliveries to his country. "Near the town of Zolochiv in Lviv region, high-precision long-range Kalibr missiles destroyed an ammunition depot of foreign weapons transferred to Ukraine by NATO countries, including 155-mm M777 howitzers," the defence ministry said in a statement. Ukraine said on Tuesday it had received just 10 percent of the weapons it requested from the West to deter Russia's military intervention. Russian forces are currently concentrating their firepower on the strategically important industrial hub of Severodonetsk as part of efforts to capture a swathe of eastern Ukraine. Earlier on Wednesday, Russia's former president Dmitry Medvedev suggested that Ukraine may not exist in two years. "I saw a report that Ukraine wants to receive LNG (liquified natural gas) under a lend-lease agreement from its overseas masters with payment for delivery in two years," Medvedev, who is now deputy head of the Security Council, wrote on Telegram "And who said that in two yeas Ukraine will even exist on the world map?" said the close ally of President Vladimir Putin. The Ukrainian president has appealed for heavy weapons from the West, criticising the "restrained behaviour" of some European leaders which he said had "slowed down arms supplies very much". "I am grateful for what is coming, but it must come faster," he told Danish journalists in an online briefing on Tuesday. The United States and Britain have said they are providing Kyiv with long-range precision artillery batteries, defying warnings from the Kremlin.
Echoes of WWI in Ukraine war's artillery duels and trenches Paris (AFP) June 14, 2022 Looking at the shell-blasted, trench-marked landscapes of the front lines in Russia's invasion of Ukraine from above, it's easy to see why experts and leaders have drawn parallels with World War I. Satellite images like those from US firm Maxar portray "war landscapes comparable to those visible during the First World War, totally destroyed villages all along the front line," said Nicolas Beaupre, a board member at a French association for research into the 1914-18 conflict. Pictures taken last ... read more
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