Ukraine uses long-range missiles secretly provided by US to hit Russian-held areas, officials say

Ukraine uses long-range missiles secretly provided by US to hit Russian-held areas, officials say
Ukraine for the first time has begun using long-range ballistic missiles provided secretly by the United States, bombing a Russian military airfield in Crimea last week and Russian forces in another occupied area overnight, American officials said Wednesday. (AFP/File)
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Updated 24 April 2024
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Ukraine uses long-range missiles secretly provided by US to hit Russian-held areas, officials say

Ukraine uses long-range missiles secretly provided by US to hit Russian-held areas, officials say
  • The new missiles give Ukraine nearly double the striking distance up to 300 kilometers
  • The two US officials would not provide the exact number of missiles given last month or in the latest aid package, which totals about $1 billion

WASHINGTON: Ukraine for the first time has begun using long-range ballistic missiles provided secretly by the United States, bombing a Russian military airfield in Crimea last week and Russian forces in another occupied area overnight, American officials said Wednesday.
Long sought by Ukrainian leaders, the new missiles give Ukraine nearly double the striking distance — up to 300 kilometers (190 miles) — that it had with the mid-range version of the weapon that it received from the US last October. One of the officials said the US is providing more of these missiles in a new military aid package signed by President Joe Biden on Wednesday.
Biden approved delivery of the long-range Army Tactical Missile System, known as ATACMS, in February, and then in March the US included a “significant” number of them in a $300 million aid package announced, one official said.
The two US officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the delivery before it became public, would not provide the exact number of missiles given last month or in the latest aid package, which totals about $1 billion.
Ukraine has been forced to ration its weapons and is facing increasing Russian attacks. Ukraine had been begging for the long-range system because the missiles provide a critical ability to strike Russian targets that are farther away, allowing Ukrainian forces to stay safely out of range.
Information about the delivery was kept so quiet that lawmakers and others in recent days have been demanding that the US send the weapons — not knowing they were already in Ukraine.
For months, the US resisted sending Ukraine the long-range missiles out of concern that Kyiv could use them to hit deep into Russian territory, enraging Moscow and escalating the conflict. That was a key reason the administration sent the mid-range version, with a range of about 160 kilometers (roughly 100 miles), in October instead.
Adm. Christopher Grady, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Wednesday that the White House and military planners looked carefully at the risks of providing long-range fires to Ukraine and determined that the time was right to provide them now.
He told The Associated Press in an interview that long-range weapons will help Ukraine take out Russian logistics nodes and troop concentrations that are not on the front lines. Grady declined to identify what specific weapons were being provided but said they will be “very disruptive if used properly, and I’m confident they will be.”
Like many of the other sophisticated weapons systems provided to Ukraine, the administration weighed whether their use would risk further escalating the conflict. The administration is continuing to make clear that the weapons cannot be used to hit targets in Russia — only those inside Ukrainian territory, according to one of the US officials.
“I think the time is right, and the boss (Biden) made the decision the time is right to provide these based on where the fight is right now,” Grady said Wednesday. “I think it was a very well considered decision, and we really wrung it out — but again, any time you introduce a new system, any change — into a battlefield, you have to think through the escalatory nature of it.”
Ukrainian officials haven’t publicly acknowledged the receipt or use of long-range ATACMS. But in thanking Congress for passing the new aid bill Tuesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky noted on the social platform X that “Ukraine’s long-range capabilities, artillery and air defense are extremely important tools for the quick restoration of a just peace.”
One of the US officials said the Biden administration warned Russia last year that if Moscow acquired and used long-range ballistic missiles in Ukraine, Washington would provide the same capability to Kyiv.
Russia got some of those weapons from North Korea and has used them on the battlefield in Ukraine, said the official, prompting the Biden administration to greenlight the new long-range missiles.
The US had refused to confirm that the long-range missiles were given to Ukraine until they were actually used on the battlefield and Kyiv leaders approved the public release. One official said the weapons were used early last week to strike the airfield in Dzhankoi, a city in Crimea, a peninsula that Russia seized from Ukraine in 2014. They were used again overnight east of the occupied city of Berdyansk.
Videos on social media last week showed the explosions at the military airfield, but officials at the time would not confirm it was the ATACMS.
Ukraine’s first use of the weapon came as political gridlock in Congress had delayed approval of a $95 billion foreign aid package for months, including funding for Ukraine, Israel and other allies. Facing acute shortages of artillery and air defense systems, Ukraine has been rationing its munitions as US funding was delayed.
With the war now in its third year, Russia used the delay in US weapons deliveries and its own edge in firepower and personnel to step up attacks across eastern Ukraine. It has increasingly used satellite-guided gliding bombs — dropped from planes from a safe distance — to pummel Ukrainian forces beset by a shortage of troops and ammunition.
The mid-range missiles provided last year, and some of the long-range ones sent more recently, carry cluster munitions that open in the air when fired, releasing hundreds of bomblets rather than a single warhead. Others sent recently have a single warhead.
One critical factor in the March decision to send the weapons was the US Army’s ability to begin replacing the older ATACMS. The Army is now buying the Precision Strike Missile, so is more comfortable taking ATACMS off the shelves to provide to Ukraine, the official said.


Malala Yousafzai revisits hometown after 13 years, recalls childhood memories

Malala Yousafzai revisits hometown after 13 years, recalls childhood memories
Updated 29 sec ago
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Malala Yousafzai revisits hometown after 13 years, recalls childhood memories

Malala Yousafzai revisits hometown after 13 years, recalls childhood memories
  • Nobel Peace Prize laureate visits family, schools during short trip to Shangla district
  • Education activist was shot by Pakistani Taliban in 2012 when she was a schoolgirl

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai reminisced on Thursday about her childhood memories during a return to her hometown in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Shangla district, her first visit since being shot in the head by the Pakistani Taliban in 2012.

The Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan targeted Yousafzai when she was 15 years old and returning from school. The attack was in retaliation for her open advocacy of women’s right to education at a time when her district had fallen under TTP control, with the militant group enforcing strict restrictions on women’s mobility and education.

Yousafzai had visited Pakistan in January as a speaker at the global summit on girls’ education in the Islamic world, which brought together representatives from Muslim-majority countries in which millions of girls remain out of school. However, she was unable to visit her hometown during that trip.

She said in a post on X: “As a child I spent every holiday in Shangla, Pakistan, playing by the river and sharing meals with my extended family.

“It was such a joy for me to return there today — after 13 long years — to be surrounded by the mountains, dip my hands in the cold river, and laugh with my beloved cousins.”

She said her hometown held a “dear place” in her heart and expressed hope to return “again and again,” adding that she prayed for peace in “every corner of Pakistan.”

She also extended condolences to the victims and families of an attack at a military cantonment in Bannu this week, in which five Pakistan army soldiers, 13 civilians and 16 militants were killed.

News agency Agence France-Presse reported that the area was sealed off to provide security for her visit, which took place on Wednesday and included a stop at local education projects backed by her Malala Fund.

“Her visit was kept highly secret to avoid any untoward incidents,” AFP quoted a senior administration official as saying, who spoke on condition of anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to the media.

“Even the locals were unaware of her plans to visit.”

Local media reported that Yousafzai also reunited with her family in Barkana and visited her ancestral graveyard during the three-hour trip.

Yousafzai gained global recognition after the 2012 attack, when she was evacuated to the UK for treatment. She later became a prominent advocate for girls’ education and, at the age of 17, became the youngest-ever Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

Her first return to Pakistan after being shot was in 2018. She returned again in 2022 to visit flood-affected areas in the country.

She has been living in the UK since 2012.


Pope Francis remains so stable that Vatican says next update will be provided Saturday

Pope Francis remains so stable that Vatican says next update will be provided Saturday
Updated 42 min 22 sec ago
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Pope Francis remains so stable that Vatican says next update will be provided Saturday

Pope Francis remains so stable that Vatican says next update will be provided Saturday
  • His prognosis remained guarded, meaning he is not out of danger
  • The Vatican said Francis continued respiratory and other physical therapy Thursday, worked, rested and prayed

ROME: Pope Francis remained in stable condition Thursday with no new respiratory crises or fever and worked from the hospital as he recovered from double pneumonia, the Vatican said.
Given the stability of his condition, doctors said they didn’t expect to provide a new medical update until Saturday. His prognosis remained guarded, meaning he is not out of danger.
The Vatican said Francis continued respiratory and other physical therapy Thursday, worked, rested and prayed.
The pope has been sleeping with a non-invasive mechanical mask to guarantee that his lungs expand properly overnight and help his recovery. He has been transitioning to receiving high-flow oxygen with a nasal tube during the day. His routine now includes physical therapy, along with treatment for double pneumonia and respiratory therapy, Vatican officials said.
The 88-year-old pope, who has chronic lung disease and had part of one lung removed as a young man, has been stable for two days after suffering a pair of respiratory crises Monday. Doctors underlined that his prognosis remained guarded due to the complex picture.
The Vatican said the evening Rosary prayer for Francis would be presided over by Cardinal Ángel Fernández Artime, the deputy official in charge of the Vatican’s department for religious orders. The department is actually headed by Sister Simona Brambilla, the first-ever nun named as prefect of a major Holy See office. But when Francis appointed her in January, he simultaneously named Artime as “pro-prefect” in a sign that he foresaw there were some functions that only an ordained priest can perform.
The pope on Wednesday marked the start of Lent by receiving ashes on his forehead and by calling the parish priest in Gaza, the Vatican said.
The Catholic Church opened the solemn Lenten season leading to Easter without the pope’s participation. A cardinal took his place leading a short penitential procession between two churches on the Aventine Hill, and opened an Ash Wednesday homily prepared for the pontiff with words of solidarity and thanks for Francis.
“We feel deeply united with him in this moment,″ Cardinal Angelo De Donatis said. ”And we thank him for the offering of his prayer and his suffering for the good of the entire church in all the world.”
On Ash Wednesday, observant Catholics receive a sign of the cross in ashes on their foreheads, a gesture that underscores human mortality. It is an obligatory day of fasting and abstinence that signals the start of Christianity’s most penitent season, leading to Easter on April 20.
“The condition of fragility reminds us of the tragedy of death,″ De Donatis said in his homily. ”In many ways, we try to banish death from our societies, so dependent on appearances, and even remove it from our language. Death, however, imposes itself as a reality with which we have to reckon, a sign of the precariousness and brevity of our lives.”
The pope was supposed to attend a spiritual retreat this weekend with the rest of the Holy See hierarchy. On Tuesday, the Vatican said the retreat would go ahead without Francis but in “spiritual communion” with him. The theme, selected before Francis got sick, was “Hope in eternal life.”


UK crossbow murderer found guilty of raping one victim

UK crossbow murderer found guilty of raping one victim
Updated 06 March 2025
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UK crossbow murderer found guilty of raping one victim

UK crossbow murderer found guilty of raping one victim
  • A jury at Cambridge Crown Court in eastern England on Thursday found Clifford guilty of raping one of the daughters, his ex-girlfriend Louise Hunt, 25, before he killed her
  • His sentencing for all the crimes is expected on Tuesday

LONDON: A 26-year-old man who murdered three women in a crossbow and stabbing attack was found guilty of raping one of them, his ex-girlfriend, by a British court on Thursday.
Kyle Clifford had pleaded guilty in January to the murder of two daughters of a BBC sports commentator and their mother in their home in Bushey, northwest of London in July 2024.
The killings had sparked a manhunt for Clifford, who was found hours later injured in a cemetery in north London.
A jury at Cambridge Crown Court in eastern England on Thursday found Clifford guilty of raping one of the daughters, his ex-girlfriend Louise Hunt, 25, before he killed her.
His sentencing for all the crimes is expected on Tuesday.
Clifford admitted murdering Carol Hunt, 61, the wife of horseracing commentator John Hunt, and two of their daughters, Louise and Hannah, 28.
He had pleaded guilty to three counts of murder, one of false imprisonment, and two of possessing offensive weapons but denied raping Louise.
In the resulting trial, the court heard that after he stabbed Carol Hunt to death, Clifford “lay in wait” for an hour for Louise, before tying, raping and then killing her with a crossbow.
He then killed Hannah when she returned home from work.
The prosecution accused Clifford, a former soldier, of committing a “violent, sexual act of spite.”
He had become “enraged” after Louise ended their 18-month relationship, the court heard, and had “carefully planned” the attack.
According to the prosecution, Clifford searched for a podcast by misogynistic social media influencer Andrew Tate less than 24 hours before the killings.
The prosecution said the murders were fueled by the “violent misogyny promoted” by Tate.
The judge, Justice Joel Bennathan, said Clifford’s crimes were “dreadful” and were “almost unspeakable.”


Man jailed for machete attack on German police station

Man jailed for machete attack on German police station
Updated 06 March 2025
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Man jailed for machete attack on German police station

Man jailed for machete attack on German police station
  • The man shouted God is Greatest and said he wanted to kill a police officer
  • Prosecutors say that he sympathized with the ideology of Daesh

BERLIN: A man who attacked a German police station with a machete last year was sentenced to eight years in prison Thursday for attempted murder and criminal damage.
The man, then aged 29, shouted “Allahu Akbar” (God is Greatest) and said he wanted to kill a police officer in the September 6 attack in the western town of Linz.
He had entered the police station armed with a machete and hit the glass screen separating him from the on-duty officer around 50 times.
An officer then locked the front door so that the man was trapped in the entrance area until backup arrived and he could be detained.
Prosecutors say that he sympathized with the ideology of the Daesh group.
Local media reported at the time of the attack that the man was an Albanian national.
He caused an estimated 70,000 euros ($75,800) worth of damage.


Putin says any Ukraine peace deal must ensure Russia’s security, vows no retreat

Putin says any Ukraine peace deal must ensure Russia’s security, vows no retreat
Updated 06 March 2025
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Putin says any Ukraine peace deal must ensure Russia’s security, vows no retreat

Putin says any Ukraine peace deal must ensure Russia’s security, vows no retreat
  • Vladimir Putin: ‘There are still people who want to go back to the time of Napoleon, they forget how it ended’
  • Putin: ‘All the mistakes of our enemies and opponents began with this: in underestimating the character of the Russian people and representatives of Russian culture in general’

MOSCOW: Russia will seek a peace deal in Ukraine that safeguards its own long-term security and will not retreat from the gains it has made in the conflict, President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday in comments to relatives of soldiers killed there.
Putin also took an indirect swipe at French President Emmanuel Macron, saying Western leaders should not underestimate the Russian people and should keep in mind the fate of Napoleon Bonaparte, whose invasion of Russia in 1812 ended in disaster.
“We must choose for ourselves a peace option that will suit us and that will ensure peace for our country in the long term,” Putin told a group of Russian women who have lost loved ones during the three-year war in Ukraine.
Asked by the mother of one fallen soldier if Russia would retreat, Putin said he did not intend to do that. Russia currently controls just under a fifth of Ukraine — or about 113,000 square km.
At times during the meeting some women wiped away tears.
US President Donald Trump has upended Western policy on the Ukraine war, opening up bilateral talks with Moscow and pausing military aid to Kyiv after clashing with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the White House last week.
Reuters reported in November that Putin was open to discussing a Ukraine peace deal with Trump but ruled out any major territorial concessions and would insist that Kyiv abandon ambitions to join NATO.
In comments last summer setting out his terms for ending the war, Putin also said Ukraine must withdraw all its forces from the entire territory of four Ukrainian regions claimed and partly controlled by Russia.

Opinion

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Trump’s dramatic change of US policy on Ukraine has raised hopes for peace talks but has also alarmed Washington’s European allies who this week have reaffirmed their support for Kyiv.
France’s Macron angered Moscow on Wednesday when he said in an address to the nation that Russia was a threat to Europe.
Macron said Paris could discuss extending its nuclear umbrella to allies and that he would hold a meeting of army chiefs from European countries willing to send peacekeeping troops to Ukraine after any peace deal.
Russia mocked Macron, calling him “Micron.” Russian cartoons cast him as France’s Emperor Napoleon riding toward defeat in Russia in 1812.
“There are still people who want to go back to the time of Napoleon, they forget how it ended,” Putin said on Thursday, without mentioning Macron by name.
“All the mistakes of our enemies and opponents began with this: in underestimating the character of the Russian people and representatives of Russian culture in general,” Putin added.