This was CNBC’s live blog tracking developments on the war in Ukraine on June 12, 2023. See here for the latest updates.
All eyes are on Ukraine’s counteroffensive after its armed forces claimed to have liberated four front-line villages in the eastern Donetsk region.
Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar said Sunday that the villages of Blahodatne and Makarivka had been de-occupied and on Monday added Storozheve to the list of liberated settlements.
In the Bakhmut area, Ukrainian troops are continuing to conduct assault actions, Maliar said, with gains recorded there.
Another Ukrainian brigade posted on Facebook that it gained control of the village of Neskuchne in Donetsk.
Ukraine’s government has consistently said there would be no public announcement of the start of the offensive, but last weekend, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy finally confirmed that counteroffensive and defensive actions had indeed begun.
That came after Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday that Ukrainian forces had so far failed in their counteroffensive but that the “offensive potential” of Ukraine had not been undermined yet.
In response, Zelenskyy said Saturday that “it’s interesting that Putin said [that] about our counter offensive. It is important that Russia always feels it, that they do not have much time left, in my opinion. Defensive counter-attacks are taking place in Ukraine — at what stage I will not say in detail.”
Ukraine’s Ministry of Internal Affairs said on Telegram that 42 people, including seven children, are still missing following the attack on the Kakhovka dam last week, according to an NBC News translation.
The ministry added that at least 10 people have died as a result of the explosion at the dam and the subsequent flooding in the region.
According to the data collected by the agency, more than 3,800 houses were flooded in the Kherson region.
— Amanda Macias
One ship left Ukraine’s port of Chornomorsk over the weekend under the Black Sea grain deal, according to data collected by the U.N.-backed organization responsible for monitoring exports via the humanitarian sea corridor.
The Maltese-flagged vessel named “Sea Commander” departed on Saturday for Spain carrying 69,000 metric tons of corn.
The Black Sea Grain Initiative, which has been extended by Turkey, Ukraine, Russia and the United Nations twice since its inception last July, is set to expire next month.
— Amanda Macias
First lady of Ukraine Olena Zelenska met with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to discuss mental health and rehabilitation for Ukrainian veterans, according to a readout from the government in Kyiv.
The two also visited Ukraine’s Lisova Polyana mental health and rehabilitation center, which specializes in psychological work for those who survived episodes of captivity and torture amid an armed conflict.
— Amanda Macias
Britain’s food and farming minister, Mark Spencer, said the Group of Seven was working on a plan to use chemical identification of grain origin to combat the suspected theft of Ukraine’s grain, Reuters reported.
Britain was leading on the scheme, and the G7 was working closely with Ukraine, Spencer told an International Grains Council conference in London, according to Reuters.
Both Russia and Ukraine are major grain exporters. Last month, Britain announced further sanctions to pressure Russia as its invasion of Ukraine continues for a second year.
— Melodie Warner
The International Criminal Court confirmed to NBC News that a team visited the Kakhovka dam in order to carry out an investigation into the explosion that triggered flooding in Ukraine’s southern region.
“We can confirm that a team from the Office of the Prosecutor, OTP, of the International Criminal Court has visited the Kakhovka dam area with the intention of conducting investigations related to the Kakhovka dam breach,” the International Criminal Court wrote in a statement to NBC News.
The statement added that it could not provide further details.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Sunday that a team from the International Criminal Court will arrive in Ukraine to begin investigations into the dam attack.
— Amanda Macias
Rafael Grossi, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, or IAEA, wrote on Twitter that he was on his way to Ukraine to discuss the fallout triggered by the attack on the Kakhovka dam.
Last week, Grossi said he received a request for assistance from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
The flooding in Ukraine’s southern region intensified concerns regarding the safety of the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.
— Amanda Macias
Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said 95 Ukrainian soldiers have now returned home from Russian captivity, after a prisoner swap at the weekend.
“Every time we bring our people back from Russian captivity, we remember our fundamental goal: we will not leave anyone of ours, nothing of Ukraine to the enemy,” Zelenskyy said on Telegram Monday.
“Yesterday we returned 95 more of our guys, our warriors, from captivity. In total, since February 24 last year, we have already returned 2,526 Ukrainians,” he added.
Andriy Yermak, the head of the Ukrainian president’s office, said on Telegram Sunday that the prisoners included soldiers from the Armed Forces, the National Guard, as well as border guards. Among them were 93 privates and sergeants and two officers.
The prisoners had been from Mariupol, Chernobyl, Zmiiny Island, Bakhmut and the Azovstal steel works in Mariupol, the site of a prolonged seige with Russian forces. “Many of our people were wounded in captivity,” Yermak said.
— Holly Ellyatt
President Vladimir Putin marked Russia’s national day on Monday by appealing to Russians’ patriotic pride at what he said was a “difficult time” for the country.
However, speaking at a lavish award-giving ceremony in the Kremlin, Putin made no direct comment on the latest developments in Ukraine, where Kyiv’s forces have launched a long-awaited counteroffensive and have retaken several villages in the eastern Donetsk region over the past few days.
“This public holiday marks the inseparability of our centuries-old history, the greatness and glory of the fatherland,” Putin told the assembled dignitaries.
“Today, at a difficult time for Russia, [feelings of patriotism and pride] unite our society even more strongly … [and] serve as a reliable support for our heroes taking part in the special military operation [in Ukraine],” Putin said.
Russia’s Defense Ministry released a video for Monday’s national day featuring scenes of Russian lakes, forests and Orthodox churches and icons, along with clips of soldiers expressing love for their country.
“I am Russian, thank the Lord, I am Russian, I am so lucky,” says one.
“Russia is like a fortress above the abyss, it has stood and will stand,” says another.
On this day in 1991, the Russian parliament formally declared Russian sovereignty from the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union was officially dissolved in December that year and the June 12 holiday was established in 1992.
Former president Dmitry Medvedev posted a mock-up picture on his Telegram channel of Russia’s white, blue and red tricolor flag flying over Kyiv’s central square, the Maidan, with a message saying it would soon be renamed “Russia Square.”
Oleg Osipov, an aide to Medvedev, who is now deputy head of Russia’s National Security Council, cited the former president as saying, “Kyiv is our direct target. It is a Russian city and it will return home. We will not rest until we recover it. Happy holiday!”
— Reuters
Ukraine’s Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said ensuring food and water security in flood-hit areas of Ukraine is his ministry’s highest priority as the cleanup from last week’s dam breach disaster continues.
“We work here with the relevant services, the Ministry of Ecology, the Ministry of Energy and other services that must ensure the food and water security of our citizens. We also ensure the presence of law enforcement officers along the entire line of the Kakhovka reservoir,” Klymenko said on Telegram Monday.
Several thousand Ukrainians had to be rescued last week as water levels rose, flooding a number of settlements along the Dnipro River in Kherson, southern Ukraine, in both Ukrainian and Russian-controlled areas.
Ukraine and Russia blamed each other for blowing up the Kakhovka dam, causing the humanitarian and ecological disaster.
Klymenko said 10 people have died as a result of the flooding on Ukrainian-controlled territory while 42 people, including seven children, are considered missing.
— Holly Ellyatt
Ukrainian intelligence claimed Monday that Russian engineering units are mining the workshops of the “Crimean Titan” enterprise in occupied Crimea.
The plant, in Armiansk in northern Crimea, is the largest manufacturer of titanium dioxide pigment in the eastern European area.
“The engineering units of the occupying army have been mining the workshops of the enterprise, which currently continue to work, and have planted explosives in the factory and adjacent territory for the past few days,” the Ukrainian Defense Intelligence Directorate said on Telegram, according to comments translated by NBC. It did not provide evidence for its claims, and CNBC was unable to immediately verify the report.
Any attack on the enterprise would “mean an artificial man-made catastrophe, terrible in its consequences,” Ukraine said, given that around 200 metric tons of technological ammonia are used at the plant for refrigeration purposes.
“In the event of an explosion at the plant, an ammonia cloud, depending on the direction of the wind, will cover the surrounding areas in half an hour,” Ukraine said, warning that Armiansk, the Krasnoperekopskyi district and southern districts of the southern Kherson region of Ukraine would be under threat.
Ukraine’s Intelligence Directorate said that Russian forces are preparing for the evacuation of both “representatives of the occupation administration and the local population” in Armiansk in northern Crimea, which has been occupied by Russia since 2014.
— Holly Ellyatt
Russia’s Defense Ministry said on Monday it has signed a contract with the Akhmat group of Chechen special forces, a day after Russia’s powerful mercenary chief Yevgeny Prigozhin refused to do so.
The signing followed an order that all “volunteer units” should sign contracts by July 1 bringing them under the control of Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, as Moscow tries to assert its control over private armies fighting on its behalf in Ukraine.
In return, volunteer fighters would get the same benefits and protections as regular troops, including support for them and their families if they are wounded or killed.
Prigozhin, who has waged a running feud with the defense ministry and accused it of failing to provide adequate ammunition supplies to his Wagner mercenaries in Ukraine, said on Sunday he would refuse to sign any such contract.
He said that Shoigu “cannot properly manage military formations”.
The contract the defense ministry signed on Monday was with the Akhmat paramilitary group that has often been called the private army of Ramzan Kadyrov, leader of Russia’s Chechnya region.
Unlike Prigozhin, Kadyrov has recently refrained from criticizing the defence ministry. Members of the two groups have openly sparred, with one of Kadyrov’s close allies on Thursday casting Prigozhin as a blogger who yells all the time about problems.
Akhmat commander Apty Alaudinov, who took part in the signing of the contract, said the unit has “prepared and sent tens of thousands of volunteers” to Ukraine in the past 15 months.
Moscow said on Friday that the Akhmat forces were waging an offensive near the town of Maryinka, in the eastern Ukrainian region of Donetsk.
“I think this is a very good thing,” Alaudinov was quoted as saying by the defense ministry’s website after signing the deal.
Russia’s deputy chief of the general staff, Colonel General Alexei Kim, said after signing the agreement with the Chechens that he hoped other volunteer units would follow suit.
— Reuters
Russia’s defense minister appears anxious to have a higher public profile as Ukraine’s counteroffensive gets underway, the U.K. noted Monday.
“Over the last week, Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu has maintained a high public profile, likely with the aim of presenting himself as in control of strategic issues while Ukraine accelerates offensive operations,” Britain’s Ministry of Defense said in an intelligence update on Twitter.
Shoigu has provided at least two comments on Russia’s defensive operations, including making almost certainly seriously exaggerated claims about Ukrainian losses, the U.K. said, adding that this contrasts with other key periods in the war when he had disappeared from public appearances.
“Shoigu has also urged Russia’s defence industry to redouble its efforts, and castigated Western Military District officers for not dispatching reserve armoured vehicles to the front quickly enough,” the ministry said.
Shoigu is likely acutely aware of the need to maintain a positive image in the face of increasingly unmasked criticism from some fellow Russians, including so-called military bloggers commenting on Russia’s strategy in Ukraine.
Russia’s defense ministry also appears to be trying to rein in private military groups fighting in Ukraine, such as the Wagner Group, issuing an order Saturday that all “volunteer units” should sign contracts by July 1 to bring them under the control of Shoigu. The head of the Wagner Group refused.
— Holly Ellyatt
North Korea’s leader Kim Jong Un, one of the few friends Russia has left, reportedly sent a message congratulating his Russian counterpart on Russia Day.
June 12 is a national holiday in Russia, marking the anniversary of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic’s declaration of autonomy from the then-Soviet Union in 1990.
North Korea’s state media KCNA said Monday that Kim Jong Un offered his “full support and solidarity” to Russia on its national day and praised Moscow’s efforts “to preserve its sovereign rights against the imperialists high handed and arbitrary practices.”
KCNA added that Kim Jong Un’s message also lauded “the correct decision and guidance of the Russian president, the struggle of the Russian people to foil the hostile forces’ escalating threats and challenges to deprive Russia of its sovereignty, security and peaceful life has entered a new decisive phase.”
The message said that North Korea’s friendship with Russia was “a precious strategic asset common to the two countries and it is the fixed stand of the DPRK government to ceaselessly develop the good neighborly and cooperative relations, as required by the new era.”
Isolated dictatorship North Korea is one of Russia’s remaining friends on a global stage and there has been speculation that it could supply weapons to Moscow. The U.S. said in March that intelligence suggested that Russia wanted to trade food for weapons with North Korea.
— Holly Ellyatt
All eyes are on Ukraine’s counteroffensive after its armed forces claimed to have liberated four front-line villages in the eastern Donetsk region.
Ukrainian Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar said Sunday that the villages of Blahodatne and Makarivka had been de-occupied and on Monday added Storozheve to the list of liberated settlements.
In the Bakhmut area, Ukrainian troops are continuing to conduct assault actions, Maliar said, with gains reported there.
Another Ukrainian brigade posted on Facebook that it gained control of the village of Neskuchne in Donetsk.
Ukraine’s government has consistently said there would be no public announcement of the start of the offensive. But last weekend, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy finally confirmed that counteroffensive and defensive actions had indeed begun.
That came after Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Friday that Ukrainian forces had so far failed in their counteroffensive but that the “offensive potential” of Ukraine had not been undermined yet.
In response, Zelenskyy said Saturday that “it’s interesting that Putin said [that] about our counter offensive. It is important that Russia always feels it, that they do not have much time left, in my opinion. Defensive counter-attacks are taking place in Ukraine — at what stage I will not say in detail.”
— Holly Ellyatt
Work has already started into an investigation by the International Criminal Court of the breach of the Kakhovka dam and the vast flood it triggered, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Sunday.
“Representatives of the International Criminal Court have visited Kherson region in recent days,” Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address.
“On the very first day after the disaster, the general prosecutor’s office sent a corresponding request to the International Criminal Court concerning an investigation of this disaster and the work has already begun.”
Zelenskyy said it was important that international legal experts saw the aftermath of the disaster, including incidents of shelling of flooded areas. Officials said three people were killed on Sunday in Russian shelling of boats carrying evacuees.
The president said Ukrainian rescue teams had evacuated about 4,000 residents from affected zones – including areas on the Russian-occupied east bank of the Dnipro River.
— Reuters