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Russia-Ukraine War Russia Hints at Deal to Free Griner in Prisoner Swap
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Stari Petrivtsi Preparing to detonate the remnants of a Russian Kh-101 cruise missile.
Kherson region Ukrainian soldiers a week after Russians retreated from the region.
Kherson City People sorting through donated clothing.
Kherson City A smashed portrait of President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia.
Kherson City Extinguishing a fire from an exploded mine left by Russian forces.
Kherson City Residents in a heated tent with electricity to charge phones.
Kyiv Students at an award ceremony at a military boarding school.
Kherson City Graves of civilians said by Ukraine to have been executed by Russian forces.
Kherson City Emergency workers after a Russian strike on an industrial area.
Kherson region A member of the International Legion searching for Russian positions.
The State of the War Explosion in Poland: A Ukrainian air-defense missile — not a Russian weapon — most likely caused a deadly explosion in a Polish village , a top NATO official and Poland’s president said, easing fears that the military alliance would become more deeply embroiled in the war. Retaking Kherson: On Nov. 11, Ukrainian soldiers swept into the southern city of Kherson , seizing a major prize from the retreating Russian army and dealing a bitter blow to President Vladimir V. Putin . Days after the liberation, evidence and accounts of torture are emerging. Infrastructure Attacks: In a relentless and intensifying barrage of missiles , Moscow is destroying Ukraine’s critical infrastructure, depriving millions of heat, light and clean water. For Ukraine, keeping the lights on as winter looms has become one of its biggest battles. Beta Testing New Weapons : Ukraine has become a testing ground for state-of-the-art weapons and information systems that Western officials predict could shape warfare for generations to come.
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A day after the American basketball star Brittney Griner was sent to a notoriously tough prison, Moscow raised the possibility of an exchange for a convicted arms dealer, but Washington said it was not a serious proposal.
As Russia raises possibility of a deal to free Griner, U.S. officials dismiss it as mere talk.
Residue of explosives at the Nord Stream site backs European claims of sabotage.
Nearly half of Ukraine’s energy grid has been disabled by Russian strikes, the prime minister says.
Ukrainian teen who fled war with a backpack and a bassoon will play at Carnegie Hall.
Fighting in eastern Ukraine slows as both sides seek to adapt for winter.
Ukraine starts to build a wall on its border with Belarus, a close Russian ally.
Zelensky expresses skepticism that a Ukrainian missile hit Poland, putting him at odds with the West.
A day after it emerged that the American basketball star Brittney Griner had been sent to a Russian penal colony, a top Russian diplomat said on Friday that the prospect of a prisoner exchange was increasing, and acknowledged that it could involve a Russian arms dealer imprisoned in the United States.
But U.S. officials dismissed the suggestion of any new optimism about an agreement, saying that the Kremlin had not been serious about negotiating a deal.
Since June, the Biden administration has proposed trading Viktor Bout, the arms dealer , for Ms. Griner, who has been jailed for nine months, and Paul N. Whelan , an American held for almost four years and convicted of espionage, according to U.S. officials and numerous news media reports.
Their fates have been caught up in the hardening confrontation between Washington and Moscow over the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which American officials say is reflected in the tough treatment of Ms. Griner. She has been jailed for nine months and was sentenced to nine years for entering Russia with vape cartridges containing hashish oil, and her lawyers confirmed on Thursday that she had been transferred to a penal colony, where harsh conditions and mistreatment are commonplace.
U.S. officials have not publicly acknowledged that Mr. Bout has been offered in a prisoner swap, but on Friday, the Kremlin did. “So far, we have not come to a common denominator, but it is undeniable that Viktor Bout is among those who are being discussed, and we certainly count on a positive result,” Sergei A. Ryabkov, the deputy foreign minister, told reporters in Moscow, according to the Interfax news agency,
The chance of an exchange “is being strengthened,” he said, adding that “we are working professionally through a special channel designed for this.” But he did not explicitly say for whom Mr. Bout would be traded, according to Interfax.
The U.S. State Department quickly threw cold water on his comments.
“We have made a substantial offer that the Russian Federation has consistently failed to negotiate in good faith,” a department spokesman, Vedant Patel, said at a news briefing. The U.S. government “has continued to follow up on that proposal and propose alternative potential ways forward.”
But, he said, the Kremlin’s “failure to seriously negotiate on these issues in the established channel, or any other channel for that matter, runs counter to its public statements.”
Mr. Bout is currently serving a 25-year sentence in a U.S. prison for conspiring to sell weapons to people who said they planned to kill Americans. Since his arrest in 2008, Russia has repeatedly made efforts to secure his release.
In addition to Ms. Griner’s case, the Biden administration has been working to secure the release of Paul Whelan, a former Marine who in 2020 was sentenced to 16 years in a high-security Russian prison on espionage charges.
The release of Trevor Reed , a former U.S. Marine, as part of a prisoner exchange with Russia in April raised hopes that diplomatic efforts could still yield results despite the current level of hostility between Washington and Moscow.
Debris collected from the site of the ruptured Nord Stream gas pipelines has revealed evidence of explosives, indicating an act of “gross sabotage,” Swedish prosecutors said on Friday, backing up European authorities ’ earlier assertions that blasts had deliberately targeted the critical infrastructure.
A series of undersea explosions ripped holes in the Nord Stream pipelines in late September, damaging the links built to carry Russian natural gas to Germany and rendering them unusable. The statement from the Swedish prosecutors provides the first public forensic confirmation that explosives were found at the site.
“Analyses now carried out show residues of explosives on several of the foreign objects found” at the site, said Mats Ljungqvist, the prosecutor in charge of the Swedish investigation. He did not give further details on the evidence collected or a potential suspect.
Denmark and Germany are also carrying out investigations into the explosions . The European authorities have called the leaks “a deliberate act” aimed at exacerbating an energy dispute between Europe and Russia that has escalated since Russian troops invaded Ukraine in February.
Mr. Ljungqvist said in a statement that “extensive seizures” had been made and that the area surrounding the sites where the pipes were damaged had been thoroughly documented. Investigators are now carrying out more “advanced analysis,” he said, “with the aim of drawing more reliable conclusions about the incident.”
He described the Swedish investigation as “very complex and extensive” and said that it would continue with the aim of indicating “whether anyone can be suspected of a crime,” without elaborating further.
The two main leaks occurred on each of the pipelines, which consist of a twin strand of pipes, in busy international waters: one northeast and the other south of the Danish island of Bornholm. The Danish authorities said last month that “powerful explosions” had caused the Nord Stream 1 and 2 natural gas pipelines to rupture, although they declined to say who might have caused them.
A submersible drone operator who filmed the site for the Swedish tabloid Expressen after the Swedish authorities finished their initial investigation said last month that he could not tell from his images the extent to which Swedish investigators had removed debris from the sea floor, or from the ruptured pipeline itself. The images by the drone operator, Trond Larsen, showed a gaping end of a pipe that appeared to have been sheared off.
Nord Stream AG, the company that owns and operates the Nord Stream 1 pipeline, has said that it was allowed to send its own investigative teams to each of the main sites in the waters that fall under Danish and Swedish economic control.
This month, the company said that its preliminary survey of the damage site examined by the Swedish prosecutor had shown unnatural craters as deep as 10 to 16 feet and about 800 feet apart. The section of the pipe between the craters was destroyed, and debris had been scattered, Nord Stream said.
Russia has accused the British Navy of targeting the pipelines . London has denied any involvement and called the claim a distraction.
Since the blasts, NATO and its European partners have increased patrols around critical infrastructure in the Baltic Sea and the North Sea, which is home to a vast network of cables and pipelines connecting Norway — Europe’s most important energy exporter since Russia invaded Ukraine — to Britain and the European mainland.
Nearly half of Ukraine’s energy grid has been knocked out by recent Russian missile strikes, at a time when temperatures are dropping into the 30s and winter is closing in, Ukraine’s prime minister said on Friday.
The prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, noted that on Nov. 15 alone Russia had fired 100 missiles at Ukrainian cities, targeting vulnerable points in the grid, like power plants and substations.
“Almost half of our energy systems has been taken out of service,” he said at a joint news conference with a visiting European Commission official. He said Russia’s strategy was “fighting against the civilian population and depriving them of light, water supply, heat and communications during the winter.”
Russia’s aerial attacks on the energy grid come as Moscow’s forces have been pulling back to the east side of the Dnipro River on the southern front and digging in for the winter, according to Britain’s defense intelligence agency.
While Ukraine recently recaptured the city of Kherson on the west side of the river, the fighting in the east of the country has fallen into a stalemate, with neither side making significant progress in recent weeks.
Winter will make offensives harder to carry out, and the Russian strategy appears to be to make the cold months as intolerable as possible not just for Ukrainian troops but for civilians far from the front lines, in a bid to erode morale and the will to fight.
The United Nations has warned that the Russian attacks on Ukraine’s energy system could cause a humanitarian disaster.
Mr. Shmyhal, the prime minister, said Ukraine needs more support from its European allies to help its energy sector get through the winter, including money for the purchase of gas and additional equipment.
His estimate that nearly half the grid has been disabled was higher than a previous assessment given by President Volodymyr Zelensky on Nov. 1, when he said that between 30 and 40 percent of the country’s critical energy infrastructure had been damaged in waves of drone and missile strikes. Since then, Russia has launched further attacks on Ukraine’s critical infrastructure .
Utility workers have been in a race against time, trying to repair the system as supplies run low and as Moscow continues to hammer it with strikes.
Dmytro Tishyn, a 16-year-old Ukrainian bassoonist who fled the Russian invasion this year, is preparing for a New York Youth Symphony concert at Carnegie Hall on Sunday.
But his thoughts are also with his family. “They’re not safe,” he said in an interview with The New York Times on Friday, “but they’re staying positive.”
As he told CNN in an earlier interview, his family is still in Ukraine, and he had just learned that his grandmother had found rocket fragments in her backyard.
“I’m always scared for them,” Tishyn said in the Times interview. “Maybe I’m more scared than they are.”
The war moved very close to his hometown, Dnipro, as Russian and Ukrainian forces traded fire across the river nearby on Monday.
Tishyn decided to leave Dnipro in February with only a backpack and his father’s bassoon. He spent 24 hours on a train to Poland, then made his way to Berlin, where he awaited a visa, and finally landed in the United States in May.
His mother traveled with him to the United States, but has returned to Ukraine. His brother, who is 21 and is eligible to serve with Ukrainian forces, stayed back with his father. Ukraine has prohibited men 18 to 60 from leaving the country.
Michael Repper, the New York Youth Symphony music director, said he was honored to have Tishyn audition in early fall and play as second bassoonist.
“He’s an unbelievable player,” Repper said. “He plays with so much soul and passion.”
Buoyed by its recent success in retaking the southern city of Kherson, Ukraine has pressed its counteroffensive in the eastern province of Luhansk even as winter approaches .
But the fighting there over villages and roads outside the Russian-held cities of Svatove and Kreminna has slowed to a grind in recent weeks, and military experts say that both sides have started to adapt their approach as the weather worsens.
Each has claimed to have taken territory in recent days, as well as to have repulsed attacks, though it was not possible to assess the claims independently.
Direct combat has ended, for now, in the Ukrainian village of Makiivka, but a local official gave a sense of the scale of destruction: “There is not a single living soul on the streets, and there is almost no surviving house. Not even the cellular tower survived.”
Ukraine said it had recaptured the village close to the front line in Luhansk’s north in recent days, but Serhiy Haidai, the regional military governor, said Russian forces continued to rain shellfire on to it. He posted photographs on the Telegram messaging app of abandoned and damaged houses, and the bodies of some Russian soldiers who had died in the battle for the village.
“Ukraine’s further offensives are going to be more challenging,” said Michael Kofman, research program director for Russia studies at CNA research group. “They will take more time. They will take more ammunition. They’ll be more costly, potentially,” he said on the Brussels Sprouts podcast.
Ukraine has won a series of battlefield victories in recent weeks that have shifted the momentum in the nine-month war. In September, it took a large slice of territory in Kharkiv in the northeast. It then struck farther south, taking the city of Lyman in Donetsk Province. Last week, its forces swept triumphantly into the city of Kherson in the south of the country.
Military experts say that those victories have increased morale and provided a trusted counteroffensive strategy, and that Ukraine would seek to maintain the momentum in Luhansk and Donetsk Provinces, collectively known as the Donbas. In addition, it could now transfer some forces and artillery from the south to its campaign in the east.
Russian commanders seem to be increasingly pursuing a “defensive strategy,” Mr. Kofman said. Moscow appears to have improved its ability to match its resources to its military objective, citing what he said was a relatively orderly withdrawal of Russian forces from an exposed position on the western bank of the Dnipro River in the Kherson region.
Russia could benefit from the influx of newly mobilized troops and could transfer some of the forces it withdrew from Kherson to the Donbas region. The British Ministry of Defense noted on Friday that Russian forces had been digging new trench systems near the Siversky Donets River between the Donetsk and Luhansk Provinces, suggesting that they were making preparations “in case of further major Ukrainian breakthroughs.”
One area of the Donbas where Russian forces are most obviously on the offensive is Bakhmut, a city around 50 miles south of the fighting in northern Luhansk region. There, Moscow is pressing an offensive led by the Wagner Group, a private Russian military force, which has close ties to President Vladimir V. Putin.
Fighting over the largely abandoned city, which is in Donetsk, has been continuing for months and has become a symbol of the Kremlin’s objective, announced in April, of securing the whole Donbas region, though analysts say it offers little strategic value.
“Reports and messages from Donetsk region are unchanged,” President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said a speech. “Fierce battles continue at the same points as before. We hold our positions despite dozens of attacks.”
Ukraine has started to build a fortified wall along its border with Belarus, a senior Ukrainian official has said, to protect it against its northern neighbor, whose territory Mosco
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