The founder of Russia’s Wagner mercenary group, Yevgeny Prigozhin, renewed a threat to pull his forces from the battlefield near Bakhmut in Ukraine’s east because of a shortage of ammunition. The comments, directed at Russia’s defense minister, were made in a grisly video showing a field of corpses.
(Bloomberg) — The founder of Russia’s Wagner mercenary group, Yevgeny Prigozhin, renewed a threat to pull his forces from the battlefield near Bakhmut in Ukraine’s east because of a shortage of ammunition. The comments, directed at Russia’s defense minister, were made in a grisly video showing a field of corpses.
A major oil refinery in southern Russia, not far from the bridge that links the mainland with occupied Crimea, was hit by a drone Friday for a second time in as many days. Last weekend, a drone strike ignited a major blaze at an oil storage facilitiy in Crimea.
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy visited the International Criminal Court in The Hague on Thursday, where he urged the creation of a “full-fledged” tribunal to punish Russia for its aggression. Ukraine’s leader and other officials also redoubled their push for allies to provide Kyiv’s troops with modern fighter jets.
Key Developments
- Russia Pipeline Data Offer Scant Evidence of Oil Output Cuts
- Russia’s Next Standoff With the West Is In the Oil-Rich Arctic
- Wheat Set for First Weekly Gain in Three on Ukraine Trade Worry
- Wagner Chief Again Threatens Bakhmut Pullout Over Supplies
(All times CET)
Wheat Prices Set for Weekly Gain on Ukraine Trade Worries (12:17 p.m.)
Wheat futures in Chicago headed for the first weekly gain since mid-April on concerns over the outlook for Ukraine’s crop trade.
Tensions in the region escalated this week after Russia claimed the US was behind a drone strike on the Kremlin that it blamed on Ukraine, but it provided no evidence. The rift comes during a crucial time for negotiations over the Black Sea crop-export deal. A meeting of deputy defense ministers has been postponed to next week from Friday, according to Turkish media reports.
Russia’s Big Rupee Surplus With India a Problem, Lavrov Says (11 a.m.)
Russia’s large trade surplus in rupees has become “a problem” because Moscow has billions of the Indian currency it can’t use, foreign minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters.
“This is a problem because we accumulated billions of rupees on accounts in Indian banks and we need to use this money. But for now, these rupees must be transferred in another currency and this is being discussed now” with India, Lavrov said after talks with officials in Goa.
Russian energy exports to India have surged since the Kremlin invasion of Ukraine, but restrictions on rupee convertibility make it hard for Moscow to spend the proceeds.
Prigozhin Renews Threat to Pull Out of Bakhmut (10:25 a.m.)
Yevgeny Prigozhin, founder of the Wagner group, accused Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and other senior officials of failing to supply his mercenary troops in Ukraine with enough ammunition.
In an expletive-laden video filmed in front of a field of corpses, Prighozin renewed a threat made over the weekend to pull his forces out of the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, where they’ve been fighting since summer.
“These are all Wagner guys who were killed today, the blood is still fresh,” Prigozhin said in the video posted Friday on his Telegram channel, in which he claimed his troops lacked 70% of the ammunition they needed.
Read more: Prigozhin Renews Threat to Pull Out of Bakhmut on Shell Shortage
China Has Role to Play for Peace in Ukraine, Borrell Says (10 a.m.)
Josep Borrell, the European Union’s foreign policy chief, reiterated that China has a role to play in returning peace to Ukraine “even if it is on the side of Russia.”
“China is a permanent member of the Security Council, China is the one who has the biggest influence on Russia,” Borrell said in Florence, Italy, at the European University Institute’s State of the Union conference.
“The reality is [Russian President] Putin continues saying ‘I have military objectives and as far as I don’t get these military objectives I will continue fighting,’” Borrell said. “So peace plans are good but you need someone who wants to talk about peace, really.”
Seven Regions Face Power Cuts After Russian Shelling (10 a.m.)
Residents of several settlements in several regions of Ukraine, including Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, Sumy, Chernihiv, Kharkiv, Kherson and Kyiv, suffered power cuts after recent Russian shelling, Ukraine’s energy ministry said in emailed statement.
A TPP unit and a coal mine in Donetsk region were also cut off the grid Friday morning after an artillery strike. Repair crews are at work to restore power “where the security situation allows,” the ministry said.
Southern Russian Oil Refinery Under Attack for Second Day (8:40 a.m.)
The Ilsky oil refinery in southern Russia’s Krasnodar region was attacked Friday morning by a drone for the second time in as many days, according to TASS. A fire was quickly put out and there were no injuries, the Russian news agency reported.
Located about 150 kilometers (93 miles) from the Kerch bridge from mainland Russia to occupied Crimea, the refinery was also hit by three drones on Thursday morning. One tank with oil products was destroyed and another caught fire in that incident, according to Interfax.
The incidents follow an attack on a fuel depot in Sevastapol on the Crimean peninsula on April 29 that triggered a huge fire and was blamed by the region’s Kremlin-appointed governor on Ukrainian drones. Kyiv never confirmed its involvement. Russia also said a drone was shot down over Crimea on Thursday.
Orban Says Counteroffensive is Ukraine’s Last Chance (8:30 a.m.)
Ukraine’s expected counteroffensive against Russia in the nation’s south will “clear up the situation,” opening the way for diplomatic peace negotiations, Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orban said in an interview on state radio. The offensive is Ukraine’s “last bullet” to change the military situation in its favor, he added, without elaborating on what might happen next.
Hungary’s leader expressed skepticsm about Ukraine’s ultimate chances against Russia, even with increasing supplies of weapons from Western allies, saying the idea that nuclear-armed Russia would accept defeat is “the stuff of tales.”
Rail Accidents Create Localized Disruptions to Russia’s Military, UK Says (7:30 a.m.)
An increase in Russian rail accidents in areas bordering Ukraine, attributed to sabotage by unknown actors, “has almost certainly caused short-term localized disruption to Russian military rail movements,” the UK defense ministry said.
“These incidents will increase pressure on Russia’s internal security forces, who will highly likely remain unable to fully protect Russia’s vast and vulnerable rail networks from attack,” the ministry said in a Twitter update.
Ukraine Says Two Drones Shot Down Overnight (7 a.m.)
Ukraine’s air defense intercepted two Iranian-made loitering Shahed-136/131 drones launched from the southeast overnight, it said on Telegram. The UAVs were downed in Ukraine’s eastern region, the air force said, without elaborating.
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