May 2, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news | CNN

May 2, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news

Russian defensive trenches, Zaporizhzhia region -- March 4
Why Russia fears a 'major breakthrough' by Ukraine, according to British intelligence report
02:43 • Source: CNN
02:43

What we covered here

  • Russia has suffered more than 100,000 casualties since December, including more than 20,000 dead, according to new White House estimates. The Kremlin has rejected the numbers.
  • Russia’s new military defenses in southern regions bordering Ukraine indicate the Kremlin’s “deep concern” Kyiv’s spring counteroffensive could mark a “major breakthrough” in the conflict, Britain’s defense intelligence agency said. 
  • A Russian official claimed Ukrainian forces shelled a border town overnight — the third time in three days he has accused Kyiv of attacking Russia’s southwest region of Bryansk.
  • The White House on Tuesday offered rare praise for House Speaker Kevin McCarthy after he said he supports aid to Ukraine.
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Ukrainians say they're ready for a counteroffensive. Here's the latest

Ukraine’s counteroffensive appears imminent.

The country’s front lines are abuzz with vehicle movement and artillery strikes, with regular explosions hitting vital Russian targets in occupied areas. President Volodymyr Zelensky has assured a counteroffensive “will happen,” while demurring on any exact start date.

It may have already started. It may be weeks away. We don’t know — but Ukrainians, whom CNN spoke to in Kyiv, are pinning their hopes on this much-anticipated counteroffensive.

Here’s the latest headlines:

  • Ukrainian solider says military is prepared or counteroffensive: A Ukrainian soldier, who goes by the pseudonym Artur, told CNN that his brigade is prepared for a much-anticipated counteroffensive. “We are ready and have been waiting for a counteroffensive for a long time. We have completed our resupply,” he said in a text message.
  • No exact date for counter offensive: Yurii Sobolevskyi, first deputy head of Ukraine’s Kherson regional council, said he doesn’t think a specific date will be announced for an expected counteroffensive in the south. He expressed optimism that Ukraine will be able to take back its territory from Russia.
  • Signs of bipartisan support for Ukraine aid in US: The White House on Tuesday offered rare praise for House Speaker Kevin McCarthy after he said he supports aid to Ukraine and called out Russian atrocities resulting from the invasion. While McCarthy has said he supports Ukraine, he has also told reporters that he would not support “a blank check” for aid requested by the Biden administration. 
  • US company that owns major dating apps pulling out of Russia: The US-based owner of dating app Tinder, Match Group, announced it is withdrawing from the Russian market by June 30. The company’s global portfolio of brands includes the dating apps Hinge, OkCupid and PlentyOfFish.

There could be no exact date for counteroffensive start, according to member of Kherson council

Yurii Sobolevskyi, first deputy head of Ukraine’s Kherson regional council, said he doesn’t think a specific date will be announced for an expected counteroffensive in the south.

“In fact, what the Ukrainian Armed Forces are doing in our southern sector may be considered a counteroffensive: maintaining fire control, constantly destroying military targets, and reducing the enemy’s combat capability,” he said.

He expressed optimism that Ukraine will be able to take back its territory from Russia.

“Because what is happening now in the temporarily occupied territory is just a nightmare. This should not happen in the 21st century. These are torture chambers, forced passportization, and deportation of children, etc.,” he alleged.  

Remember: In November 2022, Ukrainian troops advanced through much of the city of Kherson and its surrounding area, forcing Russian fighters to retreat to the Dnipro River’s east bank.

Owner of dating app Tinder says it's withdrawing from Russia

The US-based owner of dating app Tinder has announced it is withdrawing from the Russian market.

Match Group’s global portfolio of brands includes the dating apps Hinge, OkCupid and PlentyOfFish.

Ukrainian soldier says troops are ready for an expected counteroffensive: "We have completed our resupply"

A Ukrainian soldier, who goes by the pseudonym Artur, told CNN that his brigade is prepared for a much-anticipated counteroffensive.

“We are ready and have been waiting for a counteroffensive for a long time. We have completed our resupply,” he said in a text message.

His 46th Separate Airmobile Brigade, which is located in the direction of the southern Zaporizhzhia region, has been buoyed by volunteers who’ve donated money for drones, cameras, clothing and even cars, he said.  

But Artur did note that a few aspects of the potential counteroffensive do cause concern for his fellow soldiers.

“First of all. We will not have an element of surprise. Because every smartphone is shouting about this counteroffensive. So, the [Russians] may not know where it will be, or maybe they do. And if they do, they will be prepared,” he said.

Artur said the Russian forces have been able to gather reserves after President Vladimir Putin announced a controversial “partial mobilization” in September 2022 — which also caused rare protests and long lines of cars to flee Russia — following a successful Ukrainian counteroffensive.

Artur also said Ukrainian forces are no longer waiting for fighter jets, which President Volodymyr Zelensky and other leaders have repeatedly asked Western nations to provide. “We are learning how to fight with what we have. Tanks and HIMARS should do the job,” he said.

Some background on the expected counteroffensive: Russian defenses have been built up for hundreds of miles across the meandering southern front – where the Ukrainian forces are expected to concentrate their counteroffensive. Several satellite images shared with CNN by Maxar Technologies show extensive trenches east of the town of Polohy in the Zaporizhzhia region.

NATO officials say that 98% of the fighting vehicles pledged to Ukraine are now in the country as well.

White House offers rare praise for House Speaker McCarthy over comments supporting aid to Ukraine

US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy during an interview on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, on Thursday.

The White House on Tuesday offered rare praise for House Speaker Kevin McCarthy after he said he supports aid to Ukraine and called out Russian atrocities resulting from the invasion.

“We’re glad to hear that Speaker McCarthy agrees it is vital to keep supporting Ukraine. It was good to hear him push back on propaganda put forth by Russian state news outlets, as we have seen,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said during the press briefing. 

In Israel on Monday, a Russian reporter asked McCarthy if the US posture of sending supplies and aid to Ukraine will change and implied that the speaker did not support Ukraine.

While McCarthy has said he supports Ukraine, he has also told reporters that he would not support “a blank check” for aid requested by the Biden administration. 

On Tuesday, Jean-Pierre underscored that “the widespread bipartisan support that we’ve seen in Congress for Ukraine has been critical to those efforts, and we agree that it is important for that support to continue. And we’re glad to hear that from Speaker McCarthy.”

Ukrainians are pinning their hopes on a spring counteroffensive

Ukrainian soldiers fire artillery on the Donetsk front line on April 24, 2023.

Ukraine’s counteroffensive appears imminent.

The country’s front lines are abuzz with vehicle movement and artillery strikes, with regular explosions hitting vital Russian targets in occupied areas. President Volodymyr Zelensky has assured a counteroffensive “will happen,” while demurring on any exact start date.

It may have already started; it may be weeks away. We don’t know – but Ukrainians, whom CNN spoke to in Kyiv, are pinning their hopes on this much-anticipated counteroffensive.

Tetiana Kolle-Kolesnikova, 35, left her town Volnovakha in the Donetsk region in the first days of Russia’s full-scale invasion. Now she lives and works in Kyiv as a manicurist. 

“I expect that our army will win in any case and take back all the occupied territories. And our family will finally be able to return home and see their homeland. We miss home very much,” she told CNN.

Lawyer and Kyiv resident, Yurii Holovach, is also hoping for a positive outcome from the counteroffensive, but he also doesn’t want the Ukrainian forces to feel rushed.

“They need to be trained and prepared. Even if it takes more time to get prepared — it’s better, because then we will get more weapons. We need long-range weapons for the counteroffensive to go successfully,” he said.

Tetiana Kravets, 26, an administrator in a notary firm in Kyiv, hopes that the counteroffensive is successful so the country could return to its pre-war conditions.

Contrary to their expectations, 56-year-old Ruslan Stryk living in Kyiv thinks there may not be a counteroffensive at all. Recounting his observations from the early days of April 2022 in Mariupol — before he evacuated with his wife — he said, a successful counteroffensive would need military aircraft.

“We don’t have planes! I remember in Mariupol, the sky was theirs [Russians’]. So without the military aircraft, there can be no counteroffensive. Or maybe the long-range weapons can do the trick, to be able to destroy their logistics in the rear. But without it, it’s very dangerous,” he said.  

“I want to [go] back home. But we need combat aircraft and long-range artillery. Otherwise, there will be big personnel losses,” he added. 

It's evening in Ukraine. Catch up here on the latest developments in the war

Three rows of dragon's teeth and trenches, east of Vasylivka, Zaporizhzhia -- March 4.

The latest intelligence update from Britain’s defense intelligence agency said Moscow has constructed some of the most sprawling and complex defensive trenches “seen anywhere in the world for many decades,” along the northern border of annexed Crimea, and “well inside” Russia’s southern Belgorod and Kursk regions.

“The defences highlight Russian leaders’ deep concern that Ukraine could achieve a major breakthrough,” the agency said.

Catch up on other key developments today from Russia’s war in Ukraine:

Russia rejects US casualty estimates: The White House on Monday estimated that the Russian military has suffered at least 100,000 casualties — both wounded and dead — in Ukraine in the past five months. Washington said more than 20,000 military members have been killed, half of which were Wagner fighters. 

On Tuesday, the Kremlin pushed back, with spokesperson Dmitry Peskov saying that Washington has “absolutely no way” to give accurate estimates of Russian losses in Ukraine. Peskov said numbers from the Russia defense ministry “will publish in due time.” The last Russian casualty count was released last September.

Russian official defends actions on children: Maria Lvova-Belova, the Russian commissioner for children’s rights, who was issued an arrest warrant from the International Criminal Court along with Russian President Vladimir Putin, spoke about the charges against her in an interview with Vice News. The warrants were issued in March for the alleged “unlawful deportation and transfer of children” from occupied areas of Ukraine to Russia. 

In the interview, she dismissed the allegations against her and said she is fostering a 16-year-old Ukrainian boy who she called “my child,” adding, “We love each other madly.”

US ambassador to China’s comments: US Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns said Beijing needs to “push Russia to withdraw its troops.”

“It’d be helpful if China pushed Russia to cease bombing of Ukrainian schools, and Ukrainian hospitals, and Ukrainian apartment buildings,” he said. His remarks come after a phone call between Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and Chinese leader Xi Jinping, the first since Russia’s full-scale invasion.

Explosion in Melitopol: A Russian-installed deputy head of a regional police department was hospitalized by an explosive device in the Russian-occupied southern Ukrainian city of Melitopol on Tuesday, Russia’s investigative committee said.

The incident comes after another police chief in Melitopol, Oleksandr Mishchenko, was killed on April 27 when an improvised device exploded at the entrance to the apartment building where he lived.

Russian-installed official hospitalized by explosive device in Melitopol, Russian investigators say

A criminal investigation was launched after a Russian-installed deputy head of a regional police department was hospitalized by an explosive device in the occupied southern Ukrainian city of Melitopol on Tuesday, Russia’s Investigative Committee said in a statement.

The incident happened at the gate of a residential building, the statement added.

“An improvised explosive device was planted, which was set off when the deputy head of the Russian Central Internal Affairs Directorate for the Zaporizhzhia region opened the gate on his way to work. As a result, the man suffered a mine-explosive injury. The victim was admitted to a medical facility,” it said. The statement did not name him.

“Investigative and operational-search measures are being taken to identify those involved in the commission of this crime,” it added. 

The exiled Ukrainian mayor of Melitopol, Ivan Fedorov, said that an explosion was heard on Tuesday morning by residents in the northern districts of the city.

It follows a similar blast last week: The incident comes after another police chief in Melitopol, Oleksandr Mishchenko, was killed on April 27 when an improvised device exploded at the entrance to the apartment building where he lived.

Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) said Tuesday three suspects “of a sabotage and reconnaissance group, which included a citizen of Ukraine and two citizens of Russia” allegedly involved in Mishchenko’s death were detained. 

Last week, Fedorov commented on Mishchenko’s death on Telegram, writing: “Before the full-scale invasion, Mishchenko was the head of the Pryazovia police department. After the occupation, not only he did defect to the enemy, but he also persuaded his employees to become traitors.”

China should push Russia to end war in Ukraine, US ambassador says

Current U.S. Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns appears before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, on October 20, 2021.

The United States wants to see China press Russia to end its war in Ukraine, US Ambassador to China Nicholas Burns said Tuesday.

“What we need to see from China is to push Russia to withdraw its troops and so that Ukraine can have all of its territory back and can be fully sovereign again in all aspects of that word,” Burns said at an event at the foreign affairs think tank Stimson Center, which he attended virtually.

Burns said the conversation between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was “a good first step,” but it’s unclear if any action will follow it.

Burns said that the US has been watching the issue of China potentially providing lethal aid to Russia “very carefully now for many months.”

“We have not seen evidence that the Chinese are doing that, but we continue to watch it,” he said.

Some context: Beijing has claimed neutrality on the war in Ukraine, but has not condemned Russia’s invasion and instead bolstered its economic and diplomatic ties with Moscow over the past year.

Russian commissioner for children’s rights, wanted by the ICC, says she is "not ashamed of anything"

Russian Children's Representative Maria Lvova-Belova holds a press conference at the Foreign Ministry following accusations by Ukraine that the Russian leadership is deporting children, in Moscow, Russia, on April 4.

A senior Russian official wanted by the International Criminal Court said that she is “not ashamed of anything” she has done in an alleged scheme to illegally deport Ukrainian children to Russia in an interview with Vice News.

Maria Lvova-Belova, the Russian commissioner for children’s rights, is being sought — along with Russian President Vladimir Putin — for the alleged “unlawful deportation and transfer of children” from occupied areas of Ukraine to Russia. An ICC arrest warrant for Putin and Lvova-Belova was issued in March.

During the interview, when asked if she views herself as a war criminal, she laughed and said, “It’s funny. I am a mother. That says it all. A war criminal? What are you talking about?”

According to American and European governments and independent investigators, Lvova-Belova has overseen an organized effort to forcibly deport Ukrainian children to Russia. Those reports allege many of those minors undergo political reeducation and are given to Russian families for adoption.

Lvova-Belova said she herself is fostering a 16-year-old Ukrainian boy named Philip, who is from Mariupol.

Lvova-Belova claimed that under Geneva conventions, children can be moved “from a zone that threatens their lives.” When challenged that the conventions say they should be moved to third countries, she said the self-declared Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic are evidence of third countries.

They “were not part of Ukraine; they were recognized as independent republics by our country,” she said.

The separatist republics are now claimed by Moscow to be part of Russian territory, despite broad international condemnation of the annexation attempt.

On Bakhmut: Lvova-Belova claimed that there are no evacuation corridors for adults and children in Bakhmut, the eastern city that has been besieged for months by Russian forces.

“My staff and I just recently evacuated families with children from there. We were saving children. We took them to places where they can survive and be safe,” she claimed.

To note: A number of international news organizations have curtailed their work inside the Russian Federation following the arrest of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich in late March on what the US government, the WSJ and other media outlets have condemned as bogus espionage charges. Vice News said in the article that their journalists observed Lvova-Belova’s team filming them with mobile phones in the days preceding the interview.

Kremlin says it is unaware of any Vatican peace plan mission for Ukraine

Russia is not aware of the Vatican’s mission to help resolve the conflict with Ukraine, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told journalists on Tuesday.

“No. We know nothing about it,” Peskov said.

A Ukrainian official close to the President Volodymyr Zelensky’s office also told CNN Monday that Kyiv has “no knowledge” of a peace mission involving the Vatican.

“President Zelensky has not consented to any such discussions on Ukraine’s behalf,” the official said. “If talks are happening, they are happening without our knowledge or our blessing”.

These comments come after Pope Francis on Sunday told journalists that the Vatican is part of a mission to end the war in Ukraine. “The mission is in the course now, but it is not yet public,” he said after a three-day trip to Hungary.

“When it is public, I will reveal it,” the pope added.

Kremlin rejects US estimates of 100,000 Russian casualties in Ukraine since December 

Smoke rises from buildings in this aerial view of Bakhmut, Ukraine, on April 26.

Washington has “absolutely no way” to give accurate estimates of Russian losses in Ukraine, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday. 

“Washington has absolutely no way to give any correct numbers, and this is how it should be treated. You need to focus on the numbers that the Ministry of Defense will publish in due time,” Peskov said in response to CNN’s question on a daily call.

The White House on Monday estimated that the Russian military has suffered at least 100,000 casualties in Ukraine in the past five months, including more than 20,000 dead, half of which were Wagner fighters. The US is defining the term “casualty” as both wounded and killed.  

The Russian Ministry of Defense has not released updates on the casualties since last September, when Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu announced that 5,937 Russian soldiers have been killed. 

On Tuesday, Shoigu appeared to issue a rebuttal to the US claim, saying, “despite the unprecedented military assistance from Western countries, the enemy is suffering significant losses. Over the past month alone, they have lost more than 15,000 people.”

It's mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know

A sea of trenches built by Russia in the southern regions bordering Ukraine reveal the Kremlin’s concern Kyiv’s anticipated spring counteroffensive could result in a “major breakthrough,” as senior Ukrainian officials signal preparations are almost complete.

Here are the latest developments:

  • Moscow’s defenses in the south: The latest intelligence update from Britain’s defense intelligence agency said Moscow has built some of the most sprawling and complex defensive trenches “seen anywhere in the world for many decades,” ahead of an expected Ukrainian spring offensive that could mark a major shift in the conflict.
  • Shelling in Bryansk: Russian Bryansk Gov. Alexander Bogomaz, on Tuesday said Ukrainian forces had shelled the border town of Kurkovichi overnight — the third time in three days he has accused Ukraine of attacking the southwest Russian region.
  • Ukrainian spring counteroffensive: Ukraine’s ambassador to the United Kingdom Vadym Prystaiko told Sky News on Tuesday that weather is hampering Ukraine’s much anticipated spring offensive, adding that “we’re not signaling [to] the Russians when we’re starting.”
  • Train track explosion: Video footage taken at the scene of Monday’s track explosion, which caused a freight train derailment in Bryansk, Russia, shows dozens of destroyed and burned out rail cars smoldering as emergency crews put out several fires. The region’s governor said an explosive detonated 136 kilometers (85 miles) along the Bryansk-Unecha railway, which borders Ukraine. 
  • Russian casualties: Russia has suffered more than 100,000 casualties since December and the “stunning” number is a key signal that Moscow’s winter offensive has “backfired,” according to new estimated figures announced by the Biden administration on Monday. The US is defining the term “casualty” as both wounded and killed.  

Russia's new military defenses reveal Moscow's fear that Ukraine could achieve "major breakthrough"

Overview of Russian defenses in Hoholivka, Zaporizhzhia region, Ukraine on April 26.

Russia has built “extensive systems of military defensive works” in southern regions bordering with Ukraine, indicating the Kremlin’s “deep concern” Kyiv’s spring counteroffensive could mark a “major breakthrough” in the conflict, according to the latest intelligence update from Britain’s defense intelligence agency on Monday.

The update said Moscow has constructed some of the most sprawling and complex defensive trenches “seen anywhere in the world for many decades,” along the northern border of annexed Crimea, and “well inside” Russia’s southern Belgorod and Kursk regions.

“These defences are not just near the current front lines but have also been dug deep inside areas Russia currently controls,” the agency said in an assessment shared on Twitter Monday. It added that construction started in summer 2022, several months after Russia launched its brutal military campaign.

“However, some works have likely been ordered by local commanders and civil leaders in attempts to promote the official narrative that Russia is ‘threatened’ by Ukraine and NATO.”

Some background: Satellite imagery reviewed by CNN and other news organizations shows the extent of Russian defenses that have been built up in parts of southern Ukraine – layers of anti-tank ditches, obstacles, minefields and trenches.

The defenses continue for hundreds of miles across the meandering southern front – where Ukrainian forces are expected to concentrate their counter-offensive in the coming weeks.

Such defenses, however, are only as good as the forces assigned to each sector. On their own they are a limited impediment. Which is why the Russians have pushed more units into southern Ukraine. These defensive lines have become critical to their overall goals.

Read more on the spring offensive here:

Three rows of dragon's teeth, seen near the road, are designed to hinder tanks.

Related article Ukraine could launch its offensive against Russia any moment. Here's what's waiting | CNN

Ukrainian ambassador cites weather as reason for delay to spring offensive

Ukrainian Ambassador to the UK, Vadym Prystaiko arrives in 10 Downing Street, London, on February 8.

Ukraine’s ambassador to the United Kingdom Vadym Prystaiko said on Tuesday that weather is hampering Ukraine’s much anticipated spring offensive, even as senior officials in Kyiv signal that preparations are reaching their final stage.

Prystaiko added that he understood Ukraine had now received “98% of everything we asked for this particular counter offensive,” as Western allies continue to pledge military aid and support to Kyiv.

Ukraine has been preparing for a spring offensive likely in the south. When launched, it will mark a significant shift in the grueling conflict. Asked where the war is going, Prystaiko said: “That’s why we’re trying to have this really breakthrough offensive. But too much hope is put on this one.”

On Friday, Ukraine’s defence minister Oleksii Reznikov said plans for the counter offensive are almost complete.

“Preparations [for the counteroffensive] are coming to an end,” Reznikov said.

“In a global sense, we are ready in a high percentage mode. The next question is up to the General Staff … As soon as it is God’s will, the weather and the commanders’ decision, we will do it.”

As Ukraine prepares counteroffensive, Russia appears in disarray

Mikhail Mizintsev, Russia's Colonel General and head of the National Centre for State Defence Control, speaks at a briefing in Moscow, Russia, on July 25, 2018.

Ukraine’s much-anticipated counteroffensive appears imminent – and the way each side is preparing speaks volumes about their readiness.

Kyiv’s front lines are abuzz with vehicle movement and artillery strikes, with regular explosions hitting vital Russian targets in occupied areas.

Its defense minister has said preparations are “coming to an end” and President Volodymyr Zelensky has assured a counteroffensive “will happen,” while demurring on any exact start date.

It may have already started; it may be weeks away. We don’t know – and that fact is a strong measure of Ukraine’s success as this begins.

First, the apparent firing of the deputy defense minister in charge of logistics, Mikhail Mizintsev. The Russian Ministry of Defense has not spelled out his dismissal, merely issuing a decree that Aleksey Kuzmenkov now has his job.

The “Butcher of Mariupol,” as Mizintsev is known, surely had enough failings over Russia’s disastrous war to merit his firing. But this fails to satisfy the question: Why now?

By removing key ministers in the moments before its army faces Ukraine’s counter-assault, Moscow sends a message of disarray.

Read the full story:

DONETSK OBLAST, UKRAINE - APRIL 24: Ukrainian soldiers fire artillery on Donetsk frontline as the Russia-Ukraine war continues in Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine on April 24, 2023. (Photo by Muhammed Enes Yildirim/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Related article As Ukraine prepares counteroffensive, Russia appears in disarray | CNN

Russian official makes new claim of Ukrainian attacks on Bryansk region

A Russian official on Tuesday said Ukrainian forces had shelled the border town of Kurkovichi overnight — the third time in three days he has accused Ukraine of attacking the southwest Russian region of Bryansk.

Bryansk Gov. Alexander Bogomaz, whose region shares a border to its south with Ukraine and to its west with Belarus, made the latest allegations in a Twitter post, adding there were no casualties.

It comes after he claimed on Monday that an IED exploded along the Bryansk-Unecha railway, which borders Ukraine, causing a freight train to derail.

Video footage taken at the scene of the railway explosion shows dozens of destroyed and burned out rail cars smoldering as emergency crews put out several fires. There were no casualties in that incident, he said.

A pro-Kremlin blogger posted videos from the scene of the railway incident on Monday.

On Sunday, the governor said Ukrainian shelling killed four civilians after strikes hit residential buildings in the village of Suzemka, in Syzemsky district.

In all instances, Bogomaz has not provided any evidence and CNN cannot independently verify his claims. Ukraine has not commented on the alleged incidents.

Russia is still fighting for control of Bakhmut and has suffered major casualties. Here's the latest

Ukrainian service members from a 3rd separate assault brigade of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, fire a howitzer D30 at a front line near the city of Bakhmut, Ukraine on April 23.

Russia’s winter offensive has “backfired” as its forces suffered more than 100,000 casualties since December, according to new estimated figures announced by the Biden administration on Monday.

White House official John Kirby told reporters Russia has “exhausted its military stockpiles and its armed forces” and the US estimates more than 20,000 of its troops have been killed in action in recent months. 

The US defines a “casualty” as wounded or killed.  

Here are the latest developments:

  • Missile toll rises: At least two people were killed and 40 others injured Monday following a Russian strike on Pavlohrad in the Dnipropetrovsk region, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said. Russia’s Defense Ministry said on Telegram that “all assigned targets were hit” in a fresh round of missile attacks across Ukraine on Monday.
  • Intense combat: The Ukrainian military says it is locked in a “positional struggle” as fierce fighting rages in Bakhmut, adding it has been able to push back Russian forces after a series of counterattacks. A spokesperson for the Eastern Grouping of the Ukrainian Armed Forces said that for all its efforts, Russia still had not been able to “completely” capture Bakhmut. 
  • Mixed messages: Ukraine said it has “no knowledge” of a peace mission involving the Vatican to resolve the conflict with Russia. “President Zelensky has not consented to any such discussions on Ukraine’s behalf,” a Ukrainian official close to the presidential office told CNN. “If talks are happening, they are happening without our knowledge or our blessing.”
  • Russia railway blast: Video footage taken at the scene of Monday’s track explosion, which caused a freight train derailment in Bryansk, Russia, shows dozens of destroyed and burned out rail cars smoldering as emergency crews put out several fires. The region’s governor said on Telegram that an explosive detonated on the Bryansk-Unecha railway, which borders Ukraine. There were no casualties, he added. 
  • “Irregular” talks: Dialogue between Washington and Moscow on the status of detained Americans has been “irregular,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Monday. Blinken also called for the immediate release of detained Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich

Video shows burning train after explosion in Russian region near Ukraine

Pro-Kremlin blogger and activist Sergey Karnaukhov posted videos from the scene of the incident.

Video footage taken at the scene of Monday’s track explosion, which caused a freight train derailment in Bryansk, Russia, shows dozens of destroyed and burned out rail cars smoldering as emergency crews put out several fires.

Alexander Bogomaz, the region’s governor, wrote on Telegram that an explosive detonated 136 kilometers (85 miles) along the Bryansk-Unecha railway, which borders Ukraine. He added there are no casualties. 

“You must highlight the wretchedness of those who are doing the planning in the Ukrainian special forces. They came here and put down mines, blew up a commercial train. How vile!” said Sergey Karnaukhov, the pro-Kremlin blogger and activist who posted videos from the scene of the incident.

CNN cannot independently verify the allegations made by Karnaukhov as to who was responsible for the derailment. Ukraine has not yet commented on the incident. 

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