Shipments from Ukraine. Day 292.
As Russia’s attack on Ukraine continues and the war continues, reliable data resources are essential. Forbes collects data and provides updates on the situation.
By Daria Dzysiuk.
Early in the morning of December 12, Russian forces shelled the Ukrainian town of Kherson and its environs with artillery and SARC, killing 1 and wounding four other civilians, the Ukrainian prosecutor general reports. Meanwhile, in Hirnyk, Donetsk region, a Russian strike killed 2 civilians and wounded 10, said Pavlo Kyrylenko, head of the Donetsk regional military administration.
Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba calls the situation of a general blackout in Ukraine “realistic. “During an interview through German public service broadcaster ARD, Kuleba noted that Ukraine has a critical need for turbines and transformers to strain the Russian power grid. It forces infrastructure and under pressure that there is the option of a complete blackout, but does not expect Ukrainians to leave the country en masse because of this problem. In addition, Kuleba thanked the German government and others for supporting Ukraine in its war. He opposed the Russian Federation, adding that “the way to prevent Russia is undoubtedly to provide weapons to Ukraine. “
Ukraine’s Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal signed the renewal of the Agreement on Privileges and Immunities within the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, offering to open an OECD workplace in kyiv. The Prime Minister addressed the OECD Council with a proposal to outline the precedence spaces of his paintings and expand a comprehensive plan for Ukraine’s admission to the organization. “Ukraine (in) tends to register with the OECD as a leading platform of democratic market economy states for the exchange of reports on post-war reconstruction, reform and public policy making,” Shmyhal wrote on his social media.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the president of Ukraine, and Joe Biden, the president of the United States, spoke by phone today, wrote the official online draft of the president of Ukraine on December 12. Zelenskyy briefed Biden on the impact of Russia’s persistent power terror strategy, noting that only about 50% of the country’s energy infrastructure is destroyed. In addition, the leader of Ukraine defined his perspectives on the realization of Ukraine’s “peace formula” presented at the G20 summit and advised convening a comprehensive peace summit for this purpose. “I expressed my gratitude for some other security package. We discussed additional defense cooperation, hedging and maintenance of our energy sector. Coordinated positions on the eve of the G7 online summit. American leadership remains unwavering,” Zelenskyy wrote after the call.
Slovakia will send MiG-29 fighters to Ukraine in the coming weeks, the country’s Minister of Foreign and European Affairs Rastislav Káčer said in an interview with the news firm ‘Interfax-Ukraine’ on December 12. 29 again. But we are in a position to do so. We are discussing tactics to achieve this with our NATO partners. I believe that the Ukrainian delegation will come to Slovakia in the coming weeks and, in combination with our American friends, we will figure out how to make this movement a reality. “Added.
Russia manages to produce about 40 missiles a month, Vadym Skibitsky, deputy director of Ukrainian intelligence, told The New York Times. Since the beginning of the large-scale war, the Russian military-industrial complex has manufactured 240 Kh-101 cruise missiles and about 120 sea-based Kalibr cruise missiles, he said. Skibitsky noted that Russian forces have enough missiles for at least 3-5 large waves of attacks on Ukrainian cities. In addition, Russia is now shown to use weaponry, namely Kh-55 subsonic cruise missiles designed to bring a nuclear warhead, donated through Ukraine as part of the Budapest Memorandum: “All ballistic missiles, Tu-160 and Tu-95 strategic bombers have also been overlooked. Now they are Kh-55 missiles opposed to us with those bombers. It would be better if we passed them to the United States.