Current:Home > StocksRussia hits Ukraine's biggest cities with deadly missile attack as Moscow blames U.S. for diplomatic deadlock -Mastery Money Tools
Russia hits Ukraine's biggest cities with deadly missile attack as Moscow blames U.S. for diplomatic deadlock
View
Date:2025-04-27 19:40:10
More than 40 Russian missiles slammed into Ukraine's two largest cities Tuesday morning, killing at least seven people and leaving 60 more wounded, according to Ukrainian officials, as Moscow again dismissed any diplomatic resolution to the two-year war backed by Kyiv and its Western supporters. The Russian missiles targeted Ukraine's capital Kyiv and Kharkiv, damaging about 30 residential buildings in the latter and shattering around 1,000 apartment windows, leaving residents exposed to frigid winter weather, regional Gov. Oleh Syniehubov said.
Mayor Ihor Terekhov of Kharkiv, which is only about 18 miles from the eastern border with Russia, was quoted by the French news agency AFP as saying an entire section of a multi-floor apartment building was toppled and an unknown number of people left trapped under the rubble.
The onslaught killed six people and injured 48, including four minors, in Kharkiv, according to Syniehubov. Russia used S-300, Kh-32 and hypersonic Iskander missiles in the attack, he said.
The attack injured at least 20 people in four districts of Kyiv, including a 13-year-old boy, according to Mayor Vitalii Klitschko. A missile also killed a 43-year-old woman and damaged two schools and eight high-rise buildings in Pavlohrad, an industrial city in the eastern Dnipro region, the country's presidential office said.
Russia's Ministry of Defense claimed the strikes carried out Tuesday had hit Ukrainian military production facilities, and that all intended targets had been struck successfully.
- Blinken promises Ukraine "enduring" U.S. support in war with Russia
The latest missile strikes came after months of grueling trench and artillery warfare along the nearly 1,000-mile front line that stretches from the northern to the southern border of eastern Ukraine. They also came a day after Russian officials said Ukrainian drones had struck an oil storage facility in the Russian region of Bryansk, about 40 miles from the border, causing a massive blaze.
The front line has barely moved in a year, and both sides' inability to dislodge the other has been matched by their unwillingness to budge on their key negotiating points.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, a veteran diplomat close to President Vladimir Putin, again rejected on Monday any negotiations for a truce within the parameters put forward by Ukraine at the U.N., backed by the U.S., which include a full withdrawal of Russian troops from Ukrainian territory and a cessation of hostilities.
Lavrov blames U.S. for diplomatic deadlock
Lavrov, in New York for U.N. meetings on Ukraine and the Middle East, in an exclusive interview with CBS News on Monday, reiterated Moscow's long-standing claim that it is the U.S. and its close allies that are preventing a resolution to the war Russia started with its Feb. 24, 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
"The current administration is not interested in having any dialogue, except from time to time on issues of the detainees, exchanges, functioning of the two embassies in Washington and in Moscow and the mission in New York, but not on any policy matters," insisted Lavrov. He complained that Russia was being treated unfairly by Washington and said if the U.S. would halt what he called its "policy of using Ukraine as an instrument of war against Russia, we would be ready to listen."
Lavrov repeated Moscow's frequent claim that the U.S. government "demonizes Russia" and, asked why more than 140 nations voted in the U.N. General Assembly to condemn Russia for violating Ukrainian sovereignty with its ongoing 2022 invasion, Lavrov said all the countries that voted against Russia were pressured "by the U.S., the Brits, and some Europeans."
During Monday's Security Council meeting on Ukraine, Kyiv's Ambassador, Sergiy Kyslytsya, told delegates his country's security was "an integral part of world and regional security," calling Russia's invasion one of the primary "destabilizing factors for security in the world."
U.S. deputy U.N. Ambassador Robert Wood said it was Putin's "single-minded pursuit of the obliteration of Ukraine and subjugation of its people that is prolonging" the war.
- In:
- War
- Ukraine
- Russia
- United Nations
- War Crimes
- Vladimir Putin
- Sergei Lavrov
- Kyiv
Pamela Falk is the CBS News correspondent covering the United Nations, and an international lawyer.
TwitterveryGood! (77)
Related
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- When mortgage rates are too low to give up
- North Dakota governor, running for president, dodges questions on Trump, says leaders on both sides are untrustworthy
- Ron Forman, credited with transforming New Orleans’ once-disparaged Audubon Zoo, to retire
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Videos of long blue text messages show we don't know how to talk to each other
- Millions of Apple customers to get payments in $500M iPhone batterygate settlement. Here's what to know.
- A Rare Look Inside Kaia Gerber and Austin Butler's Private Romance
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Bruce Springsteen forced to postpone Philadelphia concerts with E Street Band due to illness
Ranking
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- USC study reveals Hollywood studios are still lagging when it comes to inclusivity
- California town of Paradise deploys warning sirens as 5-year anniversary of deadly fire approaches
- Former Northwestern athletes send letter defending school’s athletic culture
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Mortgage rates just hit their highest since 2002
- California town of Paradise deploys warning sirens as 5-year anniversary of deadly fire approaches
- On 2nd anniversary of U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, girls' rights remain under siege
Recommendation
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Oklahoma City man kills his 3 children and estranged wife before taking his own life, police say
How 5th Circuit Court of Appeals mifepristone ruling pokes holes in wider FDA authority
Entire city forced to evacuate as Canada's wildfires get worse; US will see smoky air again
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
6 Arkansas schools say they are moving forward with AP African American studies course
Tom Brady Jokes His New Gig in Retirement Involves Blackpink and Daughter Vivian
Head back to school with the Apple M1 MacBook Air for 25% off with this Amazon deal