Nato chief calls for more support for Ukraine as Russia launches more missile strikes

Western countries need
to “ramp up” their military support to Ukraine – and be prepared to provide
long-term assistance – Nato’s secretary general has said, as Russia began the
new year with fresh missile attacks on Kyiv and other cities.
“Russia has shown no
sign of giving up its overall goal of taking control over Ukraine,” Jens
Stoltenberg said. “The Ukrainian forces have had the momentum for several
months but we also know that Russia has mobilised many more forces. Many of
them are now training.
“All that indicates
that they are prepared to continue the war and also potentially try to launch a
new offensive,” Mr Stoltenberg told BBC Radio 4. “It is a core responsibility
for Nato to ensure that we have the stocks, the supplies, the weapons in place
to ensure our own deterrence and defence, but also to be able to continue to
provide support to Ukraine for the long haul.”
“We need to provide
support to Ukraine now, including military support, because that’s the only way
to convince Russia that they have to sit down and negotiate in good faith and
respect Ukraine as a sovereign independent nation in Europe,” Mr Stoltenberg
added.
In Ukraine, the
country’s Air Force command said it had destroyed 45 Iranian-made Shahed drones
– 32 of them in the early hours of Sunday and 13 late on Saturday.
Air raid sirens wailed
for hours and explosions filled the sky around Kyiv. The renewed assault began
the year just as Russian president Vladimir Putin’s forces ended it, with
attacks branded “cowardly” by US officials.
The US ambassador to
Ukraine, Bridget Brink, said: “Russia coldly and cowardly attacked Ukraine in
the early hours of the new year. But Putin still does not seem to understand
that Ukrainians are made of iron.”
Andriy Nebytov, chief
of Kyiv’s police, posted a photo on his Telegram messaging app, reportedly of a
piece of drone used in the attack on the capital with a handwritten sign on it
in Russian saying “Happy New Year”.
“These wreckage are
not at the front, where fierce battles are taking place, they are here, on a
sports grounds, where children play,” Mr Nebytov said.
The latest attacks had
damaged infrastructure in Sumy, in the northeast of the country, Khmelnytskyi
in the west and Zaporizhzhia and Kherson in the southeast and south, the
general staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces said.
“Let the day be quiet,” Valentyn Reznichenko,
governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region, said early on Sunday, after reporting
heavy shelling of several communities in the region overnight, which left one
person wounded.
Grid operator
Ukrenergo said on Sunday the past day had been “difficult” for its workers but
the electricity situation was “under control” and emergency outages were not
being implemented.
Vyacheslav Gladkov,
governor of the southern Russian region of Belgorod bordering Ukraine, said
that overnight shelling of the outskirts of Shebekino town had damaged houses
but there were no casualties.
Russian media also
reported multiple Ukrainian attacks on Moscow-controlled parts of the Donetsk and
Luhansk regions – areas seen by the international community as being illegally
seized from Ukraine – with local officials saying that at least nine people
were wounded.
Russia’s RIA state
news agency cited a local doctor as saying six people were killed when a
hospital in Donetsk was attacked on Saturday. Proxy authorities in Donetsk also
said one person had been killed by Ukrainian shelling. There was no immediate
response from Kyiv, which rarely comments on attacks inside Russian-controlled
territories in Ukraine.
Russian forces have
been engaged for months in fierce fighting in the east and south of Ukraine,
trying to defend the lands Moscow proclaimed it annexed in September and which
make up the broader Ukrainian industrial Donbas region.
The missile assault
over Ukraine on Sunday came following a defiant and combative New Year’s Eve
message by Mr Putin. The Russian president used his address to accuse the West
of using Ukraine to “destroy” his country as he attempted to rally public
support for the Russian invasion.
In his own new year
message, Ukraine’s President Zelensky added that his only wish for all
Ukrainians for 2023 was victory – and resolved to stay the course while the
country fights for it.
“This year has struck
our hearts. We’ve cried out all the tears. We’ve shouted all the prayers,” he
said. “We fight and will continue to fight. For the sake of the key word:
victory.”
In Kyiv on Sunday,
Evheniya Shulzhenko said the “really powerful” end-of-year speech by Mr
Zelensky had made her proud to be Ukrainian. “Of course it was hard to
celebrate fully because we understand that our soldiers can’t be with their
families,” she said while sitting with her husband on a park bench overlooking
the city.
She recently moved to
Kyiv after living in Bakhmut and Kharkiv, two cities that have experienced some
of the heaviest fighting of the war.
Meanwhile, the
prosecutor who led the case against Serb leader Slobodan Milosevic has called
for Mr Putin to be tried for war crimes. Sir Geoffrey Nice, who worked with the
International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, told BBC Radio 4
that the case against the Russian leader “couldn’t be clearer”.