Tag Archives: Mark Milley

Inside the US scramble to run down the facts as the Russia-Ukraine war spills into NATO territory


Washington
CNN
 — 

President Joe Biden was asleep on the other side of the world when aides woke him up in the middle of the night there with urgent news: a missile had struck Poland and killed two people.

By 5:30 am local time in Bali, where the president was attending the G20 summit, Biden, still in a t-shirt and khakis, was on the phone with his Polish counterpart Andrzej Duda seeking clarity on where the missile had actually come from – a critical fact due to the potentially dire implications of a Russian missile strike on a NATO ally.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who was traveling with Biden, had also been roused with a knock on the door by his body man around 4 a.m. local time with news of the explosion, a US official said – news that most US officials only discovered from public reports and conversations with Polish officials.

Blinken and national security adviser Jake Sullivan spoke to their Polish counterparts and joined Biden for the call with Duda.

Polish officials first began hearing about a potential explosion in the eastern border village of Przewodów around 10 a.m. ET on Tuesday, or 11 pm Bali time, sources said, and information began trickling out publicly and briefed to allies around 1 p.m. ET, or 2 a.m. in Bali.

As the morning wore on there and more intelligence came in, it became clear to American officials examining satellite-based intelligence systems and speaking to their Polish counterparts that the missile, which landed on a Polish farm in the country’s far east, appeared to have been launched by Ukraine as part of its air defense systems.

After several anxious hours, Biden was the first to relieve some of the tension, telling reporters that initial information suggested the missile was not launched by Russia.

The relief among US officials was palpable. Contrary to their worst fears the preliminary intelligence suggested that Russia had not deliberately attacked Poland, one official said. But for Biden and his advisers, the episode still represented a situation they had long feared: an unintentional strike in NATO territory, for which the implications and consequences remained murky.

With the situation so fluid, Biden’s advisers urged calm and patience, including to Ukrainian officials.

Around an hour after the news broke of the incident, Volodymyr Zelensky said in his nightly address that “Russian missiles hit Poland,” calling it “a very significant escalation” that required a response.

Sullivan quickly called Zelensky’s office after those remarks, and urged officials to tread more carefully with how they were speaking about the incident, sources familiar with the call said. Biden and Zelensky did not speak on Tuesday night, despite requests by the Ukrainian leader to arrange a call, a source familiar with the matter said.

The US and Poland quickly agreed to work closely together on an investigation of the strike, and CIA Director Bill Burns met with Duda in Warsaw on Wednesday evening, a US official said. Just hours before, Burns had been hunkered down at the US embassy in Kyiv as Russian missiles struck the city.

But the incident has also created some cracks in the West’s alliance with Ukraine.

Biden and Duda have now both said publicly that the missile appeared to have originated with Ukraine’s air defense system—a claim Zelensky has continued to adamantly deny, which has frustrated Polish officials, sources said.

And although Biden spoke with Duda and NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg in the aftermath of the strike, and held emergency talks with world leaders at the G20, the president had still not spoken directly with Zelensky by Wednesday afternoon, sources familiar with the matter told CNN.

Instead, Sullivan spoke to Zelensky’s chief of staff in the hours after the explosion, the sources said, and Blinken spoke with his Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba.

Ukraine has also requested to join the investigatory team, made up of US and Polish officials, inspecting the site of the missile strike, Zelensky said on Wednesday. “We have to participate in the investigation,” he told reporters. But that request has not yet been granted.

Back in Washington on Tuesday, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin was in a meeting with the Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark Milley when an aide interrupted with the news of the explosion, and all three officials called their Polish counterparts soon after.

A short time later, around 2 p.m., a press conference with Pentagon spokesman Brig. Gen. Pat Ryder was mere minutes away. But some officials in the Pentagon had only just heard about a missile hitting Poland from the media, and the Pentagon had nothing to corroborate a Russian missile launch that struck NATO territory.

Pentagon officials had to decide whether to go through with it, knowing they had virtually no information to provide on what immediately became the single most important item of the day.

In the end, one official told CNN, the press shop pushed ahead, reasoning that cancelling the press conference at the last minute would signal the exact sort of panic officials were eager to avoid.

As Ryder stood at the podium, he fielded repeated questions about the missile for which he did not yet have any answers.

Meanwhile, Milley was in his office in the outer ring of the Pentagon, instructing his staff to line up phone calls, officials said. First up was his Polish counterpart, quickly followed by his Ukrainian counterpart. Milley hopped off one call and onto another, speaking to other defense chiefs, as well as to Gen. Chris Cavoli, the commander of European Command, who was also working the phones.

Milley’s staff worked to get his Russian counterpart, Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov, on the line. The two last spoke towards the end of October, one of the only times they’ve held discussions since Russia’s invasion began. But this time, there was no call, and the two never spoke Tuesday night.

That evening, Milley and Austin briefed Biden on what they had learned about the incident.

By Wednesday, multiple senior US officials were saying publicly that intelligence pointed to the explosion coming from a Ukrainian air defense missile that landed in Poland accidentally. The US had also shared the classified information with allies before Wednesday morning’s North Atlantic Council meeting at NATO headquarters, an official said.

“We have seen nothing that contradicts President Duda’s preliminary assessment that this explosion was most likely the result of a Ukrainian air defense missile that unfortunately landed in Poland,” National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson said in a statement.

In early examinations of the site of the explosion, debris was found that appeared to be from a Soviet-era S-300 missile, sources familiar with the intelligence said. The initial assessment is that the Ukrainian air defense missile tried to intercept a Russian missile but missed and landed in Poland, multiple US and NATO officials said.

In a press conference on Wednesday, Duda said that “from the information that we and our allies have, it was an S-300 rocket made in the Soviet Union, an old rocket and there is no evidence that it was launched by the Russian side. It is highly probable that it was fired by Ukrainian anti-aircraft defense.”

The US has also determined that the Russian missile likely continued on its trajectory and either hit its intended target or landed in close proximity to it, one official said.

Zelensky on Wednesday afternoon insisted that the missile was not launched by Ukrainian forces. He told reporters in Kyiv “I have no doubt that it was not our missile,” citing reports he had received from the command of the Ukrainian armed forces and the Air Force.

Zelensky also expressed frustration that Ukrainian officials had not been permitted to join the joint Polish-US investigation of the site, and said he wanted to see “the number on the missile, because all missiles have numbers on them.”

“Do we have the right to be in the investigation team?” Zelensky said. “Of course.”

On Thursday, Zelensky confirmed that Ukrainian investigators will be permitted to access to the site of the strike, and acknowledged that Ukraine did fire an air defense missile. “I don’t know what happened. We don’t know for sure. The world does not know. But I am sure that it was a Russian missile, I am sure that we fired from air defense systems,” Zelensky said.

Only after the investigation would it be possible to draw conclusions about which missile fell on the territory of Poland, he added.

This story has been updated with comments Zelensky made on Thursday

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Russia Tries to Tighten Grip on Occupied Areas of Ukraine

KYIV, Ukraine—Russia is moving to tighten its hold over occupied parts of Ukraine as its military campaign to take more territory in the eastern Donbas region stalls in the face of fierce resistance, with Ukrainian President

Volodymyr Zelensky

warning that fighting is set to intensify.

Three months into the war, Russia’s military advance is being held at bay by a Ukrainian army equipped with newly delivered Western arms amid mounting pressure on its economy. As a result, even Russian victories are coming at a high cost.

In Mariupol, the largest Ukrainian city taken over by Russian forces, Russia published footage of minesweepers preparing to clear the area around the Azovstal steel plant that had for weeks served as a refuge for hundreds of Ukrainian fighters until their surrender earlier this month. Petr Andriushchenko, an adviser to Mariupol’s mayor Vadim Boychenko, said four of the Russian minesweepers had been wounded after a mine exploded on the plant’s territory, with one having sustained serious injuries. Russia didn’t immediately comment on the reports.

The Mariupol City Council, which functions partly from exile in the city of Zaporizhzhia, itself under threat from Russian forces, Tuesday published the names and photos of nine people it said were collaborating with the Russian occupying forces in Mariupol. “Those collaborators will be punished for the crimes they have committed against their city and country,” it wrote in a Telegram post.

Russian servicemen worked to clear mines at the Azovstal steel plant in Mariupol, Ukraine, on Sunday.



Photo:

Russian Defense Ministry press service/Shutterstock

“The Russian occupiers are trying hard to show that they won’t give up parts of Kharkiv and Kherson region and occupied territories of Zaporizhzhia region and Donbas,” Mr. Zelensky said in a late-evening address on Monday. “The coming weeks of the war will be tough, and we should understand this. But we have no alternative but to fight.”

In Russia, opposition leader

Alexei Navalny,

one of the few vocal opponents to the invasion in Ukraine, again criticized Russian President

Vladimir Putin’s

campaign as a court rejected his appeal against a nine-year prison sentence.

“Putin can break a lot of lives, but sooner or later he will be defeated in both this and the stupid war he is waging,” Mr. Navalny said, according to his spokesperson.

From behind bars, Mr. Navalny has called on his supporters to protest the war. He is already serving a prison sentence that began in February last year in relation to a parole violation on an earlier conviction. His latest conviction stemmed from charges of fraud and contempt of court, which, like the other case against him, Mr. Navalny says are politically motivated.

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny appeared via video link during a court hearing on Tuesday.



Photo:

EVGENIA NOVOZHENINA/REUTERS

“I am certainly ready to go to jail to tell everyone that people are dying,” said Mr. Navalny, who was speaking via video link and was repeatedly interrupted by the judge. “No one has killed more Russians than Putin.”

“Your time will pass and you will burn in hell,” Mr. Navalny said, though it is unclear how widely his comments will be heard in Russia.

Russia is facing what could be its sharpest slowdown in decades, partly due to rising defense expenditures and Western sanctions. The World Bank has forecast that Russia’s economic output will shrink by 11.2% this year, its worst contraction since the 1990s.

Efforts to bolster Russian control over seized Ukrainian cities and towns come amid a hardening of the front line in the eastern Donbas region. Moscow’s forces have slowed in their push to seize territory there and begun preparing for counter-offensives by Ukrainian forces armed with newly delivered Western arms, including M777 howitzer artillery pieces.

Ukraine says Russia is also getting ready to mount military offensives from occupied areas where it has had the time to regroup forces and strategize. The General Staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces said Tuesday that Russia has improved its tactical position around the town of Vasylivka in south Ukraine and was readying an attack northward toward Zaporizhzhia, the regional capital under Ukrainian control.

A Ukrainian soldier on a reconnaissance mission at the front line in Izyum.



Photo:

Manu Brabo for The Wall Street Journal

Smoke rose over the city of Soledar in the Donbas area of eastern Ukraine on Tuesday.



Photo:

aris messinis/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

The Russian Defense Ministry said Tuesday that its air-based missiles, aviation and artillery have hit command posts and ammunition depots in several settlements along the Donbas front line.

Mr. Zelensky said during a news conference this week that up to 100 Ukrainian soldiers could be dying each day on the front lines in the east of the country, where Russia has refocused its forces after failing to take Kyiv in the early days of the war. The Ukrainian leader said that as of April 16, between 2,500 and 3,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed, with up to 10,000 injured.

Ukraine has confirmed 4,600 civilian deaths as a result of Russian attacks since the invasion began on Feb. 24, including 232 children, Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Iryna Venediktova, said on Monday in Davos. The figures don’t include information about Russian-occupied territories, she said.

In Kherson, a city of 290,000 that came under Russian control in the first weeks of the war, attempts to integrate more closely with Russia have advanced furthest. Andrei Turchak, the head of Russia’s ruling United Russia party, said on a recent visit to the city, north of the Crimean Peninsula that Moscow annexed in 2014, that “Russia is here to stay forever.”

People evacuating Bakhmut, in the Donbas area, on Tuesday.



Photo:

aris messinis/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

A flower shop in a market in Kharkiv, in eastern Ukraine.



Photo:

Bernat Armangue/Associated Press

The Russian-appointed deputy regional head in Kherson, Kirill Stremousov, on Tuesday called for a Russian military base to be established as “a guarantor of continued peace and security in our region.” Mr. Stremousov, who has previously said that Kherson region would start using the Russian ruble and would aspire to join Russia, told Russia’s state news wire RIA that the regional population backed closer integration with Russia.

Polls taken on a nationwide level appear to contradict that idea. In a survey published Tuesday by the Kyiv International Institute of Sociology, 82% of the 2,000 respondents across Ukraine said the country shouldn’t make territorial concessions in exchange for peace. Only 10% backed the idea of ceding territory to Russia.

Mr. Stremousov is a wanted man in Ukraine, which is stepping up its campaign to prosecute collaborators and Russian soldiers accused of committing atrocities in areas they have occupied.

On Monday, a Russian soldier was convicted of premeditated murder and sentenced to life in prison in Ukraine’s first war-crimes trial since the Russian invasion began.

The European Union, meanwhile, is working to find new ways to get grain out of Ukraine, such as by shipping Ukrainian produce over land to European ports, said European Commission President

Ursula von der Leyen.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said Poland is pushing the U.S. and EU to help rapidly expand the rail infrastructure needed to export Ukraine’s looming grain harvest, circumventing Russia’s naval chokehold in the Black Sea.

A damaged Ukrainian armored vehicle outside the city of Lysychansk in the Donbas area of eastern Ukraine.



Photo:

aris messinis/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Ms. von der Leyen accused Russia of weaponizing food partly by undermining Ukraine’s ability to export. She said 20 million tons of wheat are stuck in Ukraine and normal monthly exports of around five million tons are down to 200,000 or one million tons.

Denmark’s pledge to send a Harpoon launcher and antiship missiles to Ukraine, which was disclosed on Monday, would help Kyiv bolster its defense against the Russian navy, which is laying siege to its Black Sea ports. The U.S.-made missiles would extend Ukraine’s striking range against Russian ships that have attacked it from the Black Sea.

“This is more than just a European issue. It’s a global issue,’’ President Biden said of the war, in remarks during a meeting of the leaders of the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue made up of the U.S., Japan, Australia and India.

The remarks appeared to make a personal plea to Indian Prime Minister

Narendra Modi.

The U.S. has been trying to persuade India to come off the sidelines and take a more forceful stand against Russia.

A joint statement released by the Quad after the meeting referred to “a tragic conflict raging in Ukraine” but didn’t say who was to blame.

U.S. troop numbers deployed in Europe have increased by 30% as a result of the war, topping 100,000, according to the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen.

Mark Milley.

Write to Matthew Luxmoore at Matthew.Luxmoore@wsj.com

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Belarusian president vows war if Russia, Belarus attacked

Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko on Friday vowed that war would result if either his country or Russia were attacked, while noting that Belarus did not want to engage in conflict.

Lukashenko, an ally to Russian President Vladimir PutinVladimir Vladimirovich PutinYes, the US can legally intervene if Russia invades Ukraine Russia-Ukraine conflict threatens U.S. prestige China warns US to ‘stop interfering’ in Olympics MORE, made those comments to officials and lawmakers in a speech amid escalating tensions between Russia and the West, Reuters reported.

Russian troops and equipment have already started to arrive in Belarus, as the two are scheduled to participate in military exercises together between February 10 and February 20.

More than 100,000 Russian troops have already been amassed at the Ukrainian border, and the joint exercises taking place next month in Belarus, a country that borders Ukraine to the north, only amplify the military presence near the former Soviet republic.

The international community remains concerned that Russia is readying itself for an invasion into Ukraine, though Russia denies such intent.

President BidenJoe BidenCourt nixes offshore drilling leases auctioned by Biden administration Laquan McDonald’s family pushes for federal charges against officer ahead of early release Biden speaks with Ukrainian president amid Russian threat MORE on Friday said he anticipated moving U.S. troops to Eastern Europe “in the near term,” adding “not too many.” 

Meanwhile, U.S. officials on Friday called on Russia to seek diplomacy and “stand down” on Ukraine.

“We strongly encourage Russia to stand down and to pursue a resolution through diplomacy,” Gen. Mark MilleyMark MilleyBiden’s first year: A mirage of gender parity Defense & National Security — Pentagon puts 8,500 troops on high alert Special Operations Command’s top general tests positive for COVID-19 MORE, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said before reporters. “Armed force should always be the last resort. Success here is through dialogue.”

“There’s no reason that this situation has to devolve into conflict,” Defense Lloyd AustinLloyd AustinPentagon chief orders closer focus on preventing civilian deaths in airstrikes Overnight Defense & National Security — Inside Austin’s civilian harm directive Pentagon pauses civilian vaccine mandate after federal court ruling MORE said. “[Putin] He can choose to deescalate, he can order his troops away. He can choose dialogue and diplomacy.”



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Russian military buildup puts Washington on edge

Washington is on edge as Russia’s military buildup threatens a confrontation, with fears escalating following reports that U.S. intelligence shows Russian forces preparing to push into Ukraine.

Even as the nation’s capital goes quiet for the Thanksgiving holiday, the Biden administration must contend with reports that nearly 100,000 Russian troops are stationed at various locations on the country’s western border, with no sign of those numbers waning.

Tensions have grown so high that the U.S. Embassy in Ukraine on Wednesday warned of “unusual Russian military activity” near Ukraine’s eastern border and in the annexed peninsula of Crimea, telling U.S. citizens not to travel there.

“U.S. citizens are reminded the security conditions along the border may change with little or no notice,” the embassy said. 

The new warnings come as Ukraine, a strategic U.S. ally, this week began to publicly trumpet that Russia could invade as soon as January or early February, much like when it annexed the Crimean Peninsula in 2014 and backed an insurgency in eastern parts of the country that continued on. More than 14,000 people have since been killed in that conflict. 

A similar land grab, which would be the second in less than 10 years, has global implications and could trigger a massive military conflict as well as geopolitical strife between Russia and Western nations.

“Our concern is that Russia may make the serious mistake of attempting to rehash what it undertook back in 2014, when it amassed forces along the border, crossed into sovereign Ukrainian territory and did so claiming — falsely — that it was provoked,” Secretary of State Antony BlinkenAntony BlinkenCIA director says there will be consequences if Russia is behind ‘Havana Syndrome’ attacks Buttigieg has high name recognition, favorability rating in Biden Cabinet: survey US considering sending military advisers, weaponry to Ukraine: report MORE said earlier this month. 

But U.S. officials are determined not to be caught off-guard by such a military operation, with Blinken on Saturday indicating the administration was preparing for any aggressive Russian maneuver. 

“We know the playbook of trying to cite some illusory provocation from Ukraine or any other country and using that as an excuse for what Russia plans to do all along,” Blinken said while traveling to Senegal.

Reports also emerged this week that the Biden administration is mulling its options to deter the Kremlin, including sending military advisers and new weapons to Kyiv.  

Such an aid package could include helicopters, mortars, air defense systems such as stinger missiles and new Javelin anti-tank and anti-armor missiles. 

U.S. officials have also reportedly talked with European allies about forming a new sanctions package that could go into effect should Russia invade.

State Department officials have not publicly mentioned any new weapons or sanctions package, but one official told The Hill on Tuesday that the administration has “demonstrated that the United States is willing to use a number of tools to address harmful Russian actions and we will not hesitate from making use of those and other tools in the future.” 

Also in an effort not to be caught flat-footed, administration officials have shared intelligence with allied countries. 

White House press secretary Jen PsakiJen PsakiBiden: Guilty verdicts in Arbery case ‘not enough’ Buttigieg has high name recognition, favorability rating in Biden Cabinet: survey Overnight Energy & Environment — Biden to release 50M barrels from oil reserve MORE on Monday told reporters that the administration has “had extensive interactions with our European allies and partners in recent weeks, including with Ukraine.”

She added that the U.S. has “also had held discussions with Russian officials about Ukraine and U.S.-Russian relations in general.” 

Pentagon officials have also kept in close contact with their counterparts, with Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark MilleyMark MilleyOvernight Defense & National Security — Russian military moves cause for concern Drones are a strategic liability for US US Embassy warns of ‘unusual Russian military activity’ near Ukraine’s border, in Crimea MORE speaking by phone with the Lt. Gen. Valeriy Zaluzhny, the commander in chief of Ukraine’s military, on Monday.

Milley also spoke via telephone on Tuesday with Russia’s top military officer, Gen. Valery Gerasimov.

The military leaders discussed “several security-related issues of concern,” Col. Dave Butler, Joint Staff spokesperson, said in a readout of the call

In addition, the administration has sent U.S. Navy patrol boats to help the Ukrainian navy counter Moscow in the Black Sea. 

But even with its threatening stance, one that numerous NATO nations have publicly noted, Russia continues to deny it has any intention to invade its neighbor like it did nearly eight years ago.

Russian spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday that its amassing of forces and equipment don’t “pose a threat to anyone and should not cause concern to anyone.”

He instead blamed a “targeted information campaign” from Western nations as the cause for “building up tension” and said should the U.S. send additional military assistance to Ukraine, it could lead “to a further aggravation of the situation on the border line.”

Western nations are not convinced, however, and even less so with Russia this week conducting further military exercises, according to a Wednesday report by Interfax.

Russia reportedly had fighter planes and ships practicing airstrikes and combating air attacks, including about 10 aircraft crews and ships of the Black Sea fleet’s Novorossiysk naval base, Interfax wrote.

Ukraine, for its part, is equally preparing for any military maneuver with its own drill this week.



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