May 1, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news

Ukraine Trenches NPW
Video captures Russian attack inside Ukrainian trenches
03:02 - Source: CNN

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

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

The Biden administration announced new estimated casualty figures Monday from Russia’s winter offensive in Ukraine, saying that the country has suffered more than 100,000 casualties since December and the “stunning” number is a key signal that Moscow’s effort has “backfired.” 

White House official John Kirby told reporters Monday that Russia has “exhausted its military stockpiles and its armed forces” and since December, the US estimates Russia has suffered more than 100,000 casualties, including over 20,000 killed in action. 

The US is defining the term “casualty” as both wounded and killed. 

Here are the latest developments:

  • Intense fighting continues for control of Bakhmut: The Ukrainian military says it is locked in a “positional struggle” as fierce fighting continues to rage in Bakhmut, adding it has been able to push back Russian forces after a series of counterattacks. Serhii Cherevatyi, the 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. 
  • Vatican peace mission: 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.”
  • Explosion of railway in Russia: 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 (84.5 miles) along the Bryansk to Unecha railway, which borders Ukraine. He added that there are no casualties. 
  • “Irregular” talks on detained Americans: Dialogue between the United States and Russia on the status of detained Americans has been “irregular,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Monday. Blinken called for the immediate release of detained Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich

Dialogue between US and Russia on detained Americans has been "irregular," US secretary of state says

Wall Street Journal journalist Evan Gershkovich, accused of espionage, appears in the Moscow City Court on April 18.

Dialogue between the United States and Russia on the status of detained Americans has been “irregular,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Monday.

“We have been in contact. We remain in contact through our embassy,” Blinken said in an interview with Fox News. “We have a channel that President Biden and President Putin established some time ago to deal with the arbitrary detention of our citizens.” 

Blinken called for the immediate release of detained Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich

Pressed on repercussions for Moscow in response to the detention of American citizens, Blinken said the US has “taken a number of measures, including sanctions across the years and across cases.” 

“But I think what you’re seeing, again, is maybe the biggest sanction of all, is to further Russia’s isolation,” Blinken said. “By the way, we’re working with other countries to build an even stronger coalition to make sure that there are strong consequences for any country that engages in these practices.”

Video shows scene of burning freight train at Bryansk railway explosion

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 (84.5 miles) along the Bryansk to Unecha railway, which borders Ukraine. He added that 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.

“I just spoke to the guys who were driving the train, the machinists,” Karnaukhov said in one video. “No one’s hurt, everyone’s happy. But there’s just one question: Why did you do this? There is no explanation.”

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. 

Ukraine says it has no knowledge of peace mission involving Vatican to resolve conflict with Russia

Pope Francis holds a news conference aboard a plane heading back to the Vatican from Hungary on Sunday.

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”.

The official dismissed any papal role 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.

Last week, Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal met Francis at the Vatican and said he had discussed a “peace formula” put forward by Zelensky and invited the pope to visit Ukraine.

Russia has suffered more than 100,000 casualties since December, Biden administration estimates

A destroyed Russian tank sits on the side of the road near Kreminna, Ukraine, on March 24.

The Biden administration announced new estimated casualty figures Monday from Russia’s winter offensive in Ukraine, saying that the country has suffered more than 100,000 casualties since December and the “stunning” number is a key signal that Moscow’s effort has “backfired.” 

White House official John Kirby told reporters Monday that Russia has “exhausted its military stockpiles and its armed forces” and since December, the US estimates Russia has suffered more than 100,000 casualties, including over 20,000 killed in action. 

The US is defining the term “casualty” as both wounded and killed.  

Kirby, who serves as National Security Council coordinator for strategic communications, noted that “nearly half” of those casualties were fighters with the Russian private company Wagner — whom CNN has reported have experienced horrific experiences on the battlefield following minimal training and little leadership.

Kirby lambasted a recent assertion from Wagner leader Yevgeny Prigozhin, who said Sunday that his group had only suffered 94 casualties. Kirby called Prigozhin’s comments “just a ludicrous claim.” 

Pressed on the source of the new 100,000 figure, Kirby said it was “based on some downgraded intelligence that we’ve been able to collect.” He declined to provide information on Ukrainian casualties, noting that the US has “never” provided such information and would defer to Ukraine on the matter.

Kirby added that the Ukrainians “are the victims here, Russia is the aggressor, and I’m simply not going to put information in the public domain that’s going to, again, make it any harder for the Ukrainians.”

The official noted that it’s ultimately Ukraine’s decision to declassify the information and make their casualty figures public. “I don’t need to abide by that same sense of courtesy for the Russians — haven’t done it and I ain’t going to start now,” he said.

With regards to fighting on the ground: Kirby said that “most” of Russia’s efforts have “stalled and failed” as the battle for the eastern city of Bakhmut continues. He added that Russia has made “incremental” gains in the town that has “very little strategic value.” 

“The bottom line is that Russia’s attempted offensive has backfired. After months of fighting and extraordinary losses, Russia continues to be focused on a single Ukrainian city with limited strategic value,” the official said.

Kirby said any decision about a spring counteroffensive from Ukraine would be “for President (Volodymyr) Zelensky to make,” but that the US will continue to provide military aid and support. 

The US official also told reporters a future package for Ukraine would be unveiled “very soon.”

“What we want to stay focused on is making sure that we’re helping them be as ready as they can be for whenever they choose to step off. And that means, obviously, in material support,” he told reporters.

Russia still hasn't completely captured Bakhmut, Ukraine military says

Ukrainian soldiers fire a cannon near Bakhmut, Ukraine, on Saturday.

The Ukrainian military says it is locked in a “positional struggle” as fierce fighting continues to rage in Bakhmut, adding it has been able to push back Russian forces after a series of counterattacks.

“I can definitely confirm the information that the enemy in Bakhmut left some positions after some of our counterattacks,” Serhii Cherevatyi, the spokesperson for the Eastern Grouping of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, told a national broadcaster. 

“There is a positional struggle there,” Cherevatyi said, explaining that the frontline was constantly shifting. “Sometimes the enemy has some success after a powerful artillery strike and the destruction of infrastructure, and they can move forward. But we counterattack and often win back our positions after inflicting fire on the enemy.”

Cherevatyi added that for all its efforts, Russia still had not been able to “completely” capture Bakhmut. 

The spokesperson went on to say that although the Russian military’s airborne units had reinforced positions in Bakhmut, Wagner forces continued to be the ones carrying out the assaults. 

“However, due to heavy losses, they have been reinforced by airborne units. In addition, in an effort to capture Bakhmut completely, we also note that the enemy is also using snipers from special units and even special services (counterterrorism, for instance) to hit our positions as much as possible,” he said.

Cherevatyi said Russian forces were having to be more mindful of their use of artillery shells and rockets, but rejected claims by Wagner founder and financier Yevgeny Prigozhin that his fighters were being starved of ammunition.

“They have been given a general norm of shells, just like other units of the aggressor,” he said. “Over the past 24 hours, the enemy has fired 304 times at the Lyman-Kupiansk direction with various artillery systems. However, of course, if we take the summer of 2022, they could use an unlimited amount of ammunition along the entire front line non-stop. Now they no longer have this luxury.” 

“What Prigozhin is talking about is that they are used to having a lot of ammunition. Now they are forced to limit themselves,” he added.

Cherevatyi concluded by defending Ukraine’s strategy for the region, stating that “the enemy has not been able to take Bakhmut for nine months.”

“Thus, we are conducting a successful defense operation and are achieving our main goal: destroying the enemy’s military potential, personnel, and equipment to the maximum extent possible,” he said. “In particular, Wagner is close to being completely destroyed.”

Ukrainian servicemen gather at a military truck near Bakhmut, on Sunday.

Russia launched a torrent of attacks in parts of Ukraine Monday. Here's what you need to know

Russia unleashed a wave of missile strikes across parts of Ukraine on Monday, killing at least one person in Kherson and injuring dozens more.

In Bakhmut, the Ukrainian military says it is locked in a “positional struggle” as fierce fighting continues to rage, adding it has been able to push back Russian forces after a series of counterattacks.

Here are the latest developments:

  • Air strikes in Dnipropetrovsk: At least 34 people have been wounded in bombardments in the central-eastern Dnipropetrovsk region, including five children, according to local governor Serhiy Lysak. Further south in Kherson, at least one person died and three others were wounded in shelling on Monday. The Russian Defense Ministry said “all assigned targets were hit” in the deadly barrage of strikes.
  • Fighting in Bakhmut: A Ukrainian general said the conflict in the embattled city of Bakhmut is “quite complicated.” His comments came as the head of Wagner, Yevgeny Prigozhin, threatened to remove troops unless they receive more munitions, while hundreds of Russian convicts arrive to bolster the mercenary group’s attempted advance into the city.
  • Energy grid takes a hit: The Ukrainian Ministry of Energy reported disruption to the electricity grid in Dnipropetrovsk, adding that some consumers “have lost power” following Moscow’s attacks in the region.
  • Hungary-Ukraine relations: Hungary’s Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said people in his country have “already paid an extremely high price” for the war in Ukraine, amid a thorny exchange between Budapest and Kyiv as Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s pro-Kremlin stance continues to fracture relations between the two countries.
  • Make the decision for yourself to survive”: Ukraine’s human rights commissioner on Sunday advised Ukrainians living under Russian occupation to accept Russian passports for their safety, adding that those who do so “will be able to officially abandon this passport and return to normal life” once Kyiv takes back its territories.
  • Foreign casualties of war: A former US marine, Cooper “Harris” Andrews, 26, was killed on the outskirts of Bakhmut late last week, according to his mother and colleagues in Ukraine.

Former US marine killed in Ukraine, family says

Cooper "Harris" Andrews

A former US marine, Cooper “Harris” Andrews, 26, was killed on the outskirts of Bakhmut late last week, according to his mother and colleagues in Ukraine.

Andrews, from Cleveland, Ohio, was hit by a mortar, his mother, Willow Andrews said, likely on April 19 on the so-called “Road of Life” — a rare access road into Bakhmut used by the Ukrainian military to resupply their forces and also to evacuate civilians.

Andrews’ body has yet to be recovered, she said, due to the ongoing fighting around Bakhmut. The city’s outsized symbolic importance has led to intense fighting as Moscow desperately tries to seize it.

Andrews worked for an activist group known as the Resistance Committee, according to its social media statements. The group said he was killed assisting the evacuation of civilians from the city.

Andrews left Cleveland, Ohio in November and joined the Foreign Legion in Ukraine, a group of foreign fighters helping the Ukrainian military. His contract ended in March, his mother said, and he decided to stay on. 

The US Department of State said on Monday it could “confirm the death of a US citizen in Ukraine,” without naming the individual.

“We are in touch with the family and providing all possible consular assistance,” a State Department spokesperson said. “Out of respect for the family’s privacy during this difficult time, we have nothing further to add.”

 CNN has reached out to the Ukrainian military for comment but has yet to hear back.

Cooper "Harris" Andrews

Moscow says "all assigned targets were hit" in overnight missile strikes

The Russian Defense Ministry said “all assigned targets were hit” in a deadly barrage of strikes launched against parts of Ukraine on Monday, injuring dozens of people including children.

“The Armed Forces of the Russian Federation launched a group missile attack with long-range precision weapons, air and sea based, on the military-industrial complex of Ukraine,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that the country’s assault on the embattled city of Bakhmut is ongoing.

Ukrainian officials reported that missile strikes in Pavlograd had injured at least 34 people, including five children.

Additionally, video circulating on social media and shared by a Russian-installed governor of the southeastern Zaporizhzhia region, Vladimir Rogov, appears to show that Russia hit an ammunition depot at a railway station in Pavlograd.

CNN has been unable to verify the videos.

CNN’s Josh Pennington contributed to this post.

Ukrainian general says Bakhmut "situation is quite complicated," as fighting rages on

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

Ukrainian Colonel-General Oleksandr Syrskyi said fighting on the ground is “quite complicated” in Bakhmut, amid a grueling battle for control of the heavily contested eastern Ukrainian city.

Bakhmut has been besieged by Russian forces, largely from the Wagner paramilitary group, for months. But Syrskyi said Moscow “fails to take control of the city,” according to a readout published on Monday morning.

Ukrainian Colonel-General Oleksandr Syrskyi visits the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, Ukraine, on May 1.

Syrskyi gave out awards and gifts to soldiers, according to the Ukrainian Defence Ministry.

“The enemy conducted numerous attacks, trying to break through the defense of our positions in several directions,” Syrskyi added.
“Despite significant losses, new assault groups of Wagner, fighters from other private companies, and paratroopers are constantly rushing into the battle. But the enemy fails to take control of the city.”

His trip came as the head of Wagner, threatened to remove troops unless they receive more munitions, signaling tensions between Yevgeny Prigozhin and the Kremlin.

Meanwhile, the Ukrainian army reported the arrival of hundreds of Russian convicts into the city to bolster Wagner’s attempted advance into the city.

Train derailed in Russia in an alleged IED attack

A freight train has been derailed following an alleged improvised explosive device attack in the Russian region of Bryansk, the local governor has claimed.

Alexander Bogomaz, the region’s governor wrote on Telegram that the explosive detonated 136 kilometers (84.5 miles) along the Bryansk to Unecha railway, which borders Ukraine. He added that there are no casualties. 

Video circulating on social media shows several carriages of the locomotive derailed and on fire.

CNN was not able to independently confirm the claims.

Air strikes in Dnipropetrovsk region damage energy infrastructure

The Ukrainian Ministry of Energy reported disruption to the electricity grid in Dnipropetrovsk, after a series of Russian missile strikes hit the eastern region.

“There is significant damage to distribution grids. As a result, some consumers in Dnipro city and the region have lost power,” the ministry’s statement said. It added that it will take “several days to repair.”

A wave of Russian strikes hit parts of Ukraine on Monday morning, injuring dozens of people including five children.

Moscow has carried out targeted attacks on Ukraine’s power infrastructure throughout the war, temporarily leaving millions without access to water and electricity in a campaign of terror that violates international law.

CNN’s Eliza Mackintosh and Yulia Kesaieva contributed reporting.

Russian missile strikes in Dnipropetrovsk injure 34, including five children

A local resident reacts as she stands among the remains of her house hit by a Russian military strike in the town of Pavlohrad, Dnipropetrovsk region, Ukraine, on May 1.

The number of people wounded in strikes in the Dnipropetrovsk region has risen to 34, according to local officials.

The youngest child injured in the attack is eight years old, according local governor Serhiy Lysak. He added that two women, aged 44 and 55, are in intensive care for their wounds.

The attack was in the Pavlograd district in central eastern Ukraine.

Russia launched a fresh barrage of missiles in parts of eastern Ukraine on Monday.

Ukraine’s Air Defense Forces said it intercepted 15 of 18 Russian cruise missiles fired from the northwestern Russian Arctic and the Caspian Sea regions on Monday.

The Ukrainian military said earlier that the eastern cities of Kramatorsk, Kostiantynivka, and Pavlohrad were targeted in the attacks, along with the Dnipropetrovsk region.

Analysis: As Ukraine prepares counteroffensive, Russia appears in disarray

Ukrainian soldiers of the 24th Separate Assault Battalion unload ammunition from a military truck near the frontline in Bakhmut, Ukraine, on April 22.

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.

Ukraine’s 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.

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)

As Ukraine prepares counteroffensive, Russia appears in disarray

Hungarian foreign minister says his country "already paid an extremely high price" for war in Ukraine

Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs & External Economy Peter Szijjarto attends an EU Foreign affairs Ministers meeting at the EU Council headquarters on January 24, in Brussels, Belgium.

Hungary’s Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó said people in his country have “already paid an extremely high price” for the war in Ukraine.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán and his government have always been by far the closest ally of the Kremlin within the European bloc, leading to thorny diplomatic relations with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

After Moscow launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Orbán was the most reluctant European Union leader to impose sanctions on Russia and has voiced objections to Western nations sending arms to Ukraine.

Szijjártó’s comments came after Zelensky told journalists in an interview over the weekend that Hungary’s behavior has been “inappropriate,” criticizing the NATO member state for making extensive efforts to block Ukraine from joining the transatlantic military alliance.

Zelensky said:

“I believe that this is inappropriate behavior. I am giving you my subjective opinion. An ally is not just a word, it is a substance. It is a union of states with the same view on security and on values. They treat certain moments differently, but there is an agreement between the allies, who protect each other and their respective values.”

Szijjártó said Hungarians have been providing “constant help” to Kyiv and “have been accepting and caring for more than a million refugees from Ukraine,” in a Facebook post on Sunday.

He added that “several Hungarians died in this war – members of the Hungarian community in the Transcarpathian region.”

1 killed in Russian strikes on Kherson, official says

Russian attacks killed at least one person and injured three others, including a child, in the Ukraine-controlled part of Kherson during the past 24 hours, a local military chief said Monday.

Oleksandr Prokudin, head of the Kherson regional military administration, said the southern city was shelled eight times, with residential areas and a government building struck.

Earlier, Ukrainian officials said at least 25 people were injured in the Dnipropetrovsk region after Russia launched a fresh round of deadly missile attacks against Ukraine on Monday.

Ukraine's military says 400 Wagner recruits have arrived from Russian prisons

Some 400 Russian convicts have arrived in Ukraine to reinforce Wagner mercenaries fighting for Moscow in the country, according to a statement from the Ukrainian military on Monday. 

The recruits were brought to a field camp in the Berdiansk district of Zaporizhizhia on Ukraine’s southern coast, the statement said. As many as 200 more Wagner recruits are expected to arrive soon for training at a camp in the eastern Luhansk region, it added.

In March, CNN reported that Wagner’s leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, announced that he plans to recruit about 30,000 new fighters by mid-May.