Ukraine Latest: Zelenskiy to Meet EU Officials on Accession Bid

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy predicted Russia will mount new attacks from areas of Ukraine it already occupies as the war’s one-year mark approaches. He spoke ahead of meetings in Kyiv with top European Union officials on Friday focused on Ukraine’s potentially years-long bid to join the bloc.

(Bloomberg) — President Volodymyr Zelenskiy predicted Russia will mount new attacks from areas of Ukraine it already occupies as the war’s one-year mark approaches. He spoke ahead of meetings in Kyiv with top European Union officials on Friday focused on Ukraine’s potentially years-long bid to join the bloc.

A new ground-launched, bomb-tipped rocket to be ordered from Boeing Co. will be part of the latest package of US arms to be announced Friday. Russia, meanwhile, will test a hypersonic Tsirkon missile during upcoming exercises with China and South Africa. 

President Vladimir Putin has reportedly ordered Russia’s military to capture all of Donetsk and Luhansk by March, said the Institute for the Study of War, citing a Ukrainian intelligence official. On Thursday Putin framed the war he started almost a year ago as an existential threat to Russia, and said Moscow “has the means to fight back.”

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Key Developments

  • US to Send Ukraine Boeing’s Ground-Launched, GPS-Guided Bombs
  • Putin Vows Ukraine Victory as He Hails WWII Stalingrad Triumph
  • As Russia Gears Up for New Push, Ukraine Waits for More Weapons
  • US Backs Banning Russia and Belarus Anthems, Flags at Olympics
  • Saving Ukraine’s Economy Will Help Win the War: Editorial

On the Ground 

Russia conducted five air attacks over the past day and four missile strikes, two of which hit civilian infrastructure in the city of Kramatorsk in the Donetsk region, Ukraine’s General Staff said on Facebook. Ukrainian troops repelled assaults near 10 settlements in the Luhansk and Donetsk regions in the east. Civilian targets in the southern Kherson and Mykolaiv regions were shelled from multiple launch rocket systems, according to the General Staff.

(All times CET) 

Russia Has No Plans to Cut Fuel Output Amid EU Ban: Tass (8:19 a.m.)

Russia sees no reason for a sharp reduction in its oil-processing volumes and petroleum-product output when the European embargo on imports enters into force this weekend, Tass said. 

Read more: Russia Has No Plans to Cut Fuel Output Amid EU Ban, Tass Says

Russia to Test Hypersonic Missile in Drills With China, South Africa (7 a.m.)

The Russian frigate Admiral Gorshkov will launch a hypersonic Tsirkon missile during the joint naval exercises with China and South Africa this month, Tass reported, citing an official it didn’t identify. 

Tsirkon will be launched at an above-water target at a range of over 500 kilometers (300 miles). In January the same frigate conducted a computer simulation of a launch.  

Read more: Hypersonic Weapons — Who Has Them and Why It Matters: QuickTake

North Korea to Send Works to Occupied Ukraine (6 a.m.)

The government in Pyongyang recently ordered North Korean trading companies operating in Russia to select personnel to work in Russian-occupied eastern Ukraine so they can take part in reconstruction efforts, Daily NK reports, citing an unidentified person in Russia familiar with details of the agreement.

The first batch of about 300 to 500 workers is likely to arrive as early as mid-February. The men are likely to be employed in repairing buildings and roads. 

Bomb-Tipped Rocket Will Be Part of New Military Aid (2 a.m.)

A new ground-launched, bomb-tipped rocket will be part of the latest package of US arms for Ukraine to be announced Friday, officials said.

The weapon combines an Air Force Small-Diameter Bomb guided by GPS satellites and an Army rocket already being operated by Ukraine’s forces. Like some other equipment provided by the US and allies, it won’t be deployed in Ukraine any time soon: An industry official said it would take about nine months for the first deliveries once the Air Force issues a contract.

Zelenskiy Says Russia Will Mount New Attacks From Territories It Holds (10:27 p.m.)

Ukraine’s President Zelenskiy predicted Russia will mount new aggression from land it controls as it seeks options to change the course of the war.

Russia’s strategic defeat is already clear, Zelenskiy said in his evening address, but it still has resources for offensive action.

“We should speak with one voice to the world regarding defense supplies and noticeably increase global pressure on Russia every month,” Zelenskiy said, adding that Ukraine won’t leave any aggressive action unanswered.

Putin Rallies Russians for Victory in Ukraine (4:25 p.m.)

Putin commemorated Russia’s World War II victory at Stalingrad by trying to rally domestic support for his invasion of Ukraine. 

“Those who expect to win a victory against Russia on the battlefield don’t understand that modern-day war with Russia will turn out totally differently for them,” he said at a concert on Thursday in Volgograd, which had been temporarily renamed Stalingrad for the commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi forces there. “We aren’t sending tanks to their borders but we have the means to fight back and they won’t be limited to armor. Everyone should understand this.” 

Read more: Putin Vows Ukraine Victory as He Hails WWII Stalingrad Triumph

Von der Leyen Praises Ukraine’s Efforts to Fight Graft (3:30 p.m.)

Ukraine continues to make “impressive progress” to meet pre-conditions that include anti-corruption measures to start talks on the EU membership, von der Leyen said in Kyiv.

“I am comforted to see that your anti-corruption bodies are on alert and effective in detecting corruption cases,” Von der Leyen told Zelenskiy in Kyiv. She also praised Zelenskiy “on reacting so rapidly at the political level to make sure that the fight against corruption is delivering tangible results.”

Ukraine Widens Dragnet as Pressure Mounts to Tackle Corruption

EU Estimates Russia Loses €160 Million a Day from Oil Price Cap (1 p.m.)

Von der Leyen said the bloc’s price cap on Russian oil exports is costing Russia about €160 million ($176 million) a day, as the bloc looks to extend the mechanism to cover Moscow’s petroleum products.

The EU and G-7 countries aim to have the 10th package of sanctions against Russia by Feb. 24 — exactly one year since the Russian invasion. “We are making Putin pay for his atrocious war,” she said at a joint press conference with Zelenskiy in Kyiv.

She used a visit to Kyiv, accompanied by more than a dozen of her fellow commissioners, to pledge continued support for Ukraine, even as fears of new Russian offensive mount. “Our presence in Kyiv today gives a very clear signal,” she said. “We will stand up for Ukraine as we stand up for the fundamental rights and respect of international law.” 

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