Today marks 100 days since Russia invaded Ukraine
“Of course intends to stay,” Andrei Kolesnikov, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said. To Russia, “it’s a pity to give away what has been occupied, even if it was not part of the original plan.”
The Russian ruble this month was introduced as the second official currency in both the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions — at least in the parts under Russian control — and pro-Russian administrations started offering a “one-time social payment” of 10,000 rubles to local residents. An office of Russia’s migration services opened in Melitopol, taking applications for Russian citizenship in a fast-track procedure Putin expanded to residents of the Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions. The rapid procedure was first implemented in 2019 in the rebel-controlled areas of the Donbas, where more than 700,000 people have received Russian passports.
Tatyana Stanovaya, founder and CEO of R.Politik, an independent think tank on Russian politics, thinks Putin doesn’t want to rush the referendums and run the risk of them being denounced as shams.
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EXPLAINER: at 100 Days, Russia-Ukraine War by the NumbersOne hundred days into Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, numbers tell the tale of the death, destruction and economic havoc caused by Europe’s worst armed conflict in decades. The counts, while often just estimates, are staggering: Tens of thousands of civilians and soldiers likely killed. Millions more forced to flee the country or internally displaced. Factories, hospitals, bridges, schools and residences destroyed. Ukraine says about 35% of its gross domestic product has been wiped out, while Western sanctions have targeted Russian oil and natural gas exports. The economic ripples are also being felt around the world, from high prices at U.S. gasoline pump to countries reliant on agricultural imports from Ukraine, a major grain producer.
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Russia says U.S. rocket supplies to Ukraine risk widening conflictLONDON (Reuters) -Russia on Wednesday sharply criticised a U.S. decision to supply advanced rocket systems and munitions to Ukraine, warning it could widen the conflict and increase the risk of direct confrontation with Washington. U.S. President Joe Biden has agreed to provide Ukraine with rockets that can strike with precision at long-range Russian targets as part of a new U.S. package to help Kyiv defend itself in the three-month-old war that began with Russia's Feb. 24 invasion. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters: 'We believe that the United States is purposefully and diligently adding fuel to the fire.'
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Russia: US rocket shipments to Ukraine are 'adding fuel to the fire'Russia says the United States is 'adding fuel to the fire' by sending rocket shipments to Ukraine as part of their latest military aid package in the war
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Russia-Ukraine war live updates: Street battles in Severodonetsk; Kyiv frustrates Kremlin’s grip elsewhereUkraine is suffering major setbacks in parts of the country’s east, amid grueling street-by-street battles in Severodonetsk, which appears to be mainly under Russian control. 'They’re hanging on, but it is a grinding fight,” a top Pentagon official said.
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Russia Goes After British MP’s Son for Killing of Chechen Commander in UkraineRussia’s National Guard has confirmed that a Chechen commander was killed in a bloody firefight with foreign volunteers in Ukraine—and they singled out the son of a British lawmaker as one of those responsible
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