U.S. ‘can cheat at any moment,’ Russia says; Kremlin rejects allegations over North Sea spying

U.S. ‘can cheat at any moment,’ Russia says; Kremlin rejects allegations over North Sea spying

This was CNBC’s live blog tracking developments on the war in Ukraine on April 19, 2023. See here for the latest updates. 

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Wednesday that “the United States can cheat at any moment,” claiming Russia had experienced this when the Western military alliance NATO expanded eastward.

“I want to emphasize that everyone knows very well that the United States can cheat at any moment, and much more often they cheat than they keep their own promises, their own proposals,” Lavrov said as he addressed a press conference following talks with Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yvan Gil Pinto.

Russia has long complained that it was tricked by Western nations at the end of the Cold War into believing that NATO, the Western military alliance, would not expand eastward toward its territory. Analysts say, however, that the Soviet Union was never offered any formal guarantee on limits to NATO expansion and that the “betrayal narrative” is designed to provoke anti-Western sentiment.

In other news, the Kremlin rebuffed Western media reports alleging that Russia could be planning to sabotage wind farms and communications cables in the North Sea, saying they are baseless.

Fans of FC Chernomorets Odesa raise flares as they line the road during the funeral procession for Sergiy Fedik, a football fan and Ukrainian serviceman killed near Bakhmut in the Donetsk region.

Bakhmut is the site of heavy recent fighting with the city a battlezone for more than eight months.

-Oleksandr Gimanov | AFP | Getty Images

Ukrainian Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin told U.S. lawmakers that Russian forces have committed more than 80,000 war crimes in Ukraine since the Kremlin launched its invasion nearly 14 months ago.

Kostin said Russian forces use a variety of methods against civilians, including beatings, electric shock torture, waterboarding, rape, sexual humiliation and threats of death.

Kostin told the U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee that in the Kherson region, there are 13,000 cases of war crimes, and more than 1,000 survivors who have reported abuses inside Russian torture chambers.

The Kremlin has previously said its troops in Ukraine do not engage in war crimes nor target civilians.

Last month, a team of international lawyers reported that at least 20 Russian torture chambers discovered in Kherson were directly financed by the Kremlin.

— Amanda Macias

Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff U.S. Army Gen. Mark Milley will travel to Germany to host the Ukraine Defense Contact Group.

The Ukraine Defense Contact Group is a coalition of nearly 50 countries supporting Ukraine’s military needs. Friday’s meeting at Ramstein Air Base will be the 11th time the group has met since it was formed last April.

— Amanda Macias

U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken approved a new security package for Ukraine worth $325 million.

The latest security package, the 36th drawdown authority, includes more ammunition for U.S.-provided High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems and artillery rounds.

“Russia could end its war today. Until Russia does, the United States and our allies and partners will stand united with Ukraine for as long as it takes,” Blinken wrote in a statement announcing the security assistance.

The package includes: 

Additional ammunition for High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS)

155mm and 105mm artillery rounds

Tube-Launched, Optically-Tracked, Wire-Guided (TOW) missiles

AT-4 anti-armor weapon systems

Anti-tank mines

Demolition munitions for obstacle clearing

Over 9 million rounds of small arms ammunition

Four logistics support vehicles

Precision aerial munitions

Testing and diagnostic equipment to support vehicle maintenance and repair

Port and harbor security equipment

Spare parts and other field equipment.

— Amanda Macias

The Alaskan Region of North American Aerospace Defense Command detected, tracked, positively identified and intercepted two Russian aircraft entering and operating within the Alaska Air Defense Identification Zone, NORAD said in a release.

The Russian aircraft were TU-95 bombers and were escorted by NORAD aircraft on Monday, including F-16 fighter jets, F-22 fighter jets, KC-135 Stratotankers and E-3 AWACS.

“Russian aircraft remained in international airspace and did not enter American or Canadian sovereign airspace. This Russian activity in the North American ADIZ occurs regularly and is not seen as a threat, nor is the activity seen as provocative,” NORAD wrote in a release.

— Amanda Macias

Two ships left Ukraine’s ports under the Black Sea Grain Initiative, a deal brokered in July between Ukraine, Russia, Turkey and the United Nations.

One ship departed the port of Chornomorsk, carrying 24,006 metric tons of wheat to Italy. The other ship set sail from Yuzhny-Pivdennyi, carrying 52,000 metric tons of corn destined for China.

The humanitarian sea corridor eased Russia’s naval blockade and reopened three key Ukrainian ports. Ukraine and the U.N. pushed for a 120-day extension of the deal in March, but Russia said that it may only acknowledge the extension for 60 days.

— Amanda Macias

The Superhumans Center clinic in Lviv, Ukraine provides free medical services for combat-related injuries due to Russia’s ongoing war in Ukraine.

The clinic specializes in prosthetics, rehabilitation, reconstructive surgery as well as mental health services, according to the clinic’s website.

— Pavlo Palamarchuk | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

The House Foreign Affairs Committee heard testimony from two Ukrainian women who shared personal stories of Russian war crimes.

The hearing, entitled “Exposing Putin’s Crimes: Evidence of Russian War Crimes and Other Atrocities in Ukraine,” was also attended by Ukrainian Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin.

The women said they witnessed looting, torture, intimidation, rape and sexual humiliation as well as forced deportations of children.

Kostin said last week that his office has registered more than 77,000 incidents of war crimes committed by Russian forces since the Kremlin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

The Kremlin has previously said that its forces in Ukraine do not engage in war crimes.

— Amanda Macias

Lawmakers will receive a classified briefing on the leaked Pentagon documents revealing U.S. intelligence on Russia’s war efforts in Ukraine, among other national security matters.

A House Republican aide confirmed to NBC News that U.S. House Representatives will receive a briefing at 5:15 p.m. ET. Senators will attend their classified briefing at 3 p.m. ET.

Last week, FBI agents arrested Massachusetts Air National Guardsman Jack Teixeira in connection with the leak, according to court records unsealed on Friday. Teixeira, 21, appeared in court to face charges under the Espionage Act of unauthorized removal and retention of classified and national defense information.

— Amanda Macias

Patriot surface-to-air guided missile systems made by the U.S. have arrived in Ukraine, the Associated Press reported, citing Ukraine’s defense minister.

Patriot systems — which Washington agreed to send last October — can target aircraft cruise missiles and shorter-range ballistic missiles, weaponry Russia has used to attack Ukraine, the AP reported.

Ukraine Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov thanked the people of the United States, Germany and the Netherlands, without saying how many systems had been delivered, nor when, according to the AP report.

“Our air defenders have mastered them as fast as they could. And our partners have kept their word,” Reznikov said in a tweet.

— Melodie Warner

The Kremlin rebuffed Western media reports alleging that Russia could be planning to sabotage wind farms and communications cables in the North Sea, saying they are baseless.

“These media of the mentioned countries [Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland] made a mistake in their investigation, they again baselessly prefer to blame Russia for everything,” Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Wednesday, state news agency TASS reported.

The comment come after a joint investigation by the public broadcasters of Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland which claims that Russia has a fleet of vessels in the North Sea disguised as fishing trawlers and research vessels that are actually intended for surveillance, mapping and possibly, sabotage.

The allegations are due to be aired in a TV series starting Wednesday evening and broadcast in Denmark, Norway, Sweden and Finland.

Peskov said Moscow would “prefer that they pay more attention to the topic of the terrorist attack on [the] Nord Stream” gas pipelines, saying “the need for a transparent, urgent and broad international investigation of these unprecedented terrorist acts, sabotage.”

Russia has repeatedly complained of being left out of separate investigations by Sweden, Germany and Denmark into the Nord Stream gas pipeline sabotage that damaged the Baltic Sea infrastructure last year.

— Holly Ellyatt

China’s commerce ministry said on Wednesday the United States and Western media were spreading “unfounded accusations” that it was exporting drones to the battlefield in Ukraine.

The reports were an attempt to “smear” Chinese firms and China would continue to strengthen export controls on drones, the ministry added in statement.

Reuters

Bulgaria has become the latest country to introduce a ban on the imports of agricultural foods from Ukraine, joining its eastern European neighbors in halting agri-food imports amid a glut in produce that they say is damaging the livelihoods of domestic farmers.

Bulgaria’s caretaker government said Wednesday that the ban, which excludes goods in transit to other countries, is temporary but was was being taken as a result of large volumes of grain and agricultural products arriving and remaining in the country over the past year, causing problems for local producers.

“If this trend persists, or grows stronger after the introduction of similar bans by other countries, there may be extremely serious consequences for Bulgarian businesses,” Bulgaria’s caretaker Prime Minister Galab Donev said in a statement, reported by Reuters.

Read more on the story here

— Holly Ellyatt

The southern Ukrainian regions of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia were pummelled by Russian missiles on Tuesday, the same day the Kremlin announced that Russian President Vladimir Putin had visited Russian troops in Kherson.

The Zaporizhzhia Regional Military Administration Head Yurii Malashko said on Telegram Wednesday that the region, which is partially occupied by Russian forces, had been attacked nearly 100 times over the past day, causing damage to civil infrastructure.

“The communities situated at the contact line have faced four air strikes, one unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) attack, three multiple launch rocket system (MLRS) attacks and 93 artillery strikes,” Malashko said, noting that over two dozen towns and villages had been attacked. 

Another Ukrainian official said the Russian army fired 79 times at the Kherson region over the past day, launching 350 shells from heavy artillery and unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs. The city of Kherson had been shelled 12 times, the head of the Kherson regional military administration, Oleksandr Prokudin, said on Telegram.

“The Russian military targeted the residential quarters of the populated areas of the region; hit the territory of the market and the building of the educational institution in Kherson,” Prokudin said, with the attacks leaving one person dead and injuring 10 others.

CNBC was unable to immediately verify the details within the reports. On Tuesday, the Kremlin announced that President Putin had visited Russian military headquarters in occupied Kherson. It did not say when the visit had taken place, however.

— Holly Ellyatt

Inspections of ships are resuming under a U.N.-brokered agreement on the safe export of grain from Ukrainian Black Sea ports, Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov said on Wednesday.

He wrote on Facebook that “ship inspections are being resumed, despite the RF’s (Russian Federation’s) attempts to disrupt the agreement.”

The Russian news agency RIA said inspections had already resumed after two days of talks, citing the U.N. coordinator’s press office.

Kubrakov is in Turkey to discuss the status of the Black Sea Grain Initiative, which was agreed by Russia and Ukraine last July to help alleviate a global food crisis.

Moscow says it agreed to extend the deal only until May 18. Kyiv and the United Nations say the deal has another 60 days to run after then, and is seeking an agreement to ensure it continues. Kyiv says Russian inspectors stopped letting through vessels supposed to ship grain from Ukraine.

Agriculture Minister Mykola Solsky said on Wednesday Moscow was increasing difficulties for Ukraine at a time when three eastern European countries have banned imports of Ukrainian grain and food products.

“Obviously, the Russians could not fail to take advantage of these nuances on the western (Ukrainian) border,” Solsky told reporters.

RIA quoted the Russian foreign ministry as on Wednesday as saying Ukraine and the United Nations were causing difficulties with the ship inspections.

Ukraine and Poland reached an agreement on Tuesday to unblock transit of Ukrainian grain from Friday, but the import bans remain in place in Poland, Slovakia and Hungary.

— Reuters

Britain’s Ministry of Defense said Russia’s pervasive “disinformation campaign” since the start of its invasion of Ukraine has been to promote unverified information as fact at a mainstream level.

The Russian state has systematically used information operations as a major element of its strategy in the war, the ministry noted in its intelligence update on Twitter Wednesday, noting that it has “cultivated multiple channels and proxies to spread disinformation: the intentional creation and sharing of false or manipulated information.”

One component of Russia’s disinformation is “narrative laundering,” the U.K. said, noting that this occurs when “Russia promotes information from proxies, or unverified social media sources, which then permeates to more mainstream or state-run media.”

That has the aim of clouding the source of the information, it said, “making it easier for the Russian state to distance itself from the message. It then promotes misleading fragments of the narrative, while masking its vested interest.”

Russian state actors current priorities almost certainly include discrediting the government in Ukraine and reducing international support for the country, the ministry noted.

— Holly Ellyatt

Western nations have sought to help Ukraine maintain its vital exports of grain and agricultural products since the war with Russia began, but troubles have been brewing in eastern Europe where a glut of Ukraine’s abundant and cheaper produce is seen to be damaging the interests of domestic suppliers.

Following a tide of rising anger from their own producers, Poland, Hungary and Slovakia in recent days have introduced temporary bans on Ukrainian grain imports and other agricultural products, saying these have created unfair competition and trading conditions for local farmers.

Read more on the tensions here: Ukraine’s cheap grain is causing an awkward rift with its European neighbors and allies

— Holly Ellyatt

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Wednesday that “the United States can cheat at any moment,” claiming Russia had experienced this when the Western military alliance NATO expanded eastward.

“I want to emphasize that everyone knows very well that the United States can cheat at any moment, and much more often they cheat than they keep their own promises, their own proposals,” Lavrov said as he addressed a press conference following talks with Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yvan Gil Pinto.

Lavrov claimed this deception was seen when former Soviet and Russian Federation Presidents Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin “were assured that NATO would not expand,” he added.

Russia has long complained that it was deceived by Western nations at the end of the Cold War and into the 1990s into believing that NATO would not expand eastward toward its territory.

Analysts say, however, that the USSR was never offered any formal guarantee on limits to NATO expansion and that the “betrayal narrative” is designed to provoke anti-Western sentiment.

Lavrov’s latest comments, reported by state news agency Tass and news outlet RIA Novosti, and translated by Google, come as he carries out a tour of Latin American countries this week, a trip seen as a way for Russia to cement its alliances with countries in the region.

Lavrov characterized Russia as the “world champion” in terms of the number of sanctions imposed by the West, and said Moscow would share its experience of avoiding their impact with Venezuela, a country that has been under Western sanctions for several years for a variety of reasons.

“I am convinced that our experience will also be useful to our Venezuelan friends, because we are now world champions in terms of the number of sanctions and we are accumulating experience quickly. So we will share it with our Venezuelan colleagues,” Lavrov said.

— Holly Ellyatt

The G-7 reemphasized the bloc’s support for Ukraine and criticized Russia’s threat to deploy nuclear weapons in Belarus, it said in a communique on Tuesday.

Any use of chemical, biological or nuclear weapons by Russia in Ukraine would face “severe consequences,” the ministers said following their meeting in Karuizawa, Japan.

The G-7 also denounced Russia’s “seizure and militarization” of Zaporizhzhya nuclear power plant as a threat to nuclear security. Russia’s repeated shelling of the plant last year raised concerns from the U.N.’s nuclear watchdog about the risk of a major nuclear disaster.

The G-7 added it will continue to intensify sanctions against Russia and take action against third parties who assist Russian war efforts in Ukraine.

— Audrey Wan

NATO held its first-ever joint exercise with Finland since the nation joined the military alliance earlier this month. German and Portuguese ships participated alongside the Finnish navy in the exercise in the Gulf of Finland.

Finland submitted a bid to join the world’s most powerful military alliance on the heels of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

— Amanda Macias

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy visited service members on the front lines in the country’s Donetsk region.

“It is a pleasure for me to see you, shake your strong hands and know that you hold the future of Ukraine in your hands. I am proud to have this meeting. I am proud that there are such strong people in Ukraine,” Zelenskyy said, according to a readout provided by the Ukrainian government.

“Things happen thanks to you. Take care. Our future depends on you,” he added.

While in Donetsk, Zelenskyy also met with wounded troops in a local hospital dedicated to treating service members with combat-related injuries.

“Thank you for your service. I wish you a speedy recovery. All the best to you,” Zelenskyy said, according to a readout of his visit. He also presented some troops with service medals.

— Amanda Macias

Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov shared a video of the French-made AMX-10 armored fighting vehicles, slated to make their combat debut with Ukraine’s marines.

“We took it for a spin together with our warriors, and we agreed to call the AMX-10 the ‘sniper rifle on the fast wheels,'” Reznikov said in a tweet.

“Thank you to my colleague Sebastien Lecornu and to [President] Emmanuel Macron with whom I had a chance to meet and to discuss our priorities and needs. And of course, thank you to all people of France for your strong support,” he added.

— Amanda Macias

Ukraine is rejecting reports that Russian inspectors have restarted inspections of export ships under the Black Sea grain deal.

“Nothing has been resolved. There are no inspections,” Reuters quoted an unnamed Ukrainian official as saying.

Earlier on Tuesday, Russian state news agency RIA cited a Russian foreign ministry official saying that Russian inspections of grain ships leaving Ukraine had restarted.

A deal allowing the safe Black Sea export of Ukrainian grain was renewed in mid-March for at least 60 days — just half of the intended period — after Russia warned that any further extension beyond mid-May would depend on the removal of some Western sanctions.

Ukraine, an agricultural powerhouse, was one of the world’s top exporters of grain and other produce like corn and sunflower oil before Russia’s invasion. A Russian naval blockade of Ukraine’s Black Sea ports caused a spike in prices of those goods worldwide and stoked fears of food crises in parts of the developing world.

— Natasha Turak

Zelenskyy meets with troops in Donetsk; Moscow court denies WSJ reporter’s appeal

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