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Kremlin compares Moscow hit to 9/11

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The Kremlin is comparing Ukraine drone attacks on Moscow’s financial district that have caused minor damage and no deaths with the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks that killed thousands in the United States.

Russian Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told the Soloviev Live TV channel that, like Lower Manhattan, the Moscow City district is a civilian site hosting offices and residential buildings “that have nothing to do with the military.” Some of the Moscow buildings targeted by the drones did include defensive ministry offices, however.

“The 9/11 attack on the Twin Towers caused an enormous number of casualties, but the methods were the same,” she said. “We are seeing the same picture now, as if it is repeating itself.”

Earlier Tuesday, Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin said a skyscraper in central Moscow was damaged by a drone attack for the second time in 48 hours. Sobyanin said the facade was damaged, but no injuries were reported.

Russia has accused Kyiv of the attacks. Ukrainian officials have not directly addressed the incidents, but President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said after Sunday’s attack that it was “inevitable, natural and absolutely fair” to bring the war to Russian territory. Presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak tweeted Tuesday that “#Moscow is rapidly getting used to a full-fledged war, which, in turn, will soon finally move to the territory of the “authors of the war” to collect all their debts.”

‘The Russians were waiting for us’:Small Ukraine gains come at high cost

Developments:

∎ The Soviet coat of arms was being removed Tuesday from Ukraine’s tallest statue, the Motherland Monument in Kyiv. The Ministry of Culture said on Facebook the coat of arms will be replaced by the Ukrainian trident in time for Ukraine’s Independence Day Aug. 24.

∎Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko said some divisions of the Wagner Group mercenary fighters from Russia will remain in his country as the foundation for creation of a “contract” army. “These are experienced people, mostly officers, this is their profession,” he said.

∎More than 270 cultural sites have been damaged or destroyed by Russian attacks since the invasion began in February 2022, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization says. Among them: 117 religious sites, 98 buildings of historical and/or artistic interest, 27 museums, 19 monuments and 12 libraries.

∎ A physician was killed and five people were wounded in a Russian missile strike on a hospital in the Ukrainian city of Kherson, regional governor Oleksandr Prokudin said on Telegram.

Russians ‘are not horrified’ by drone attacks

Popular pro-Kremlin commentator Margarita Simonyan said Russians won’t be intimidated by the Moscow attacks − “we are not horrified, we do not tremble” she tweeted. But she said she did ask military officials how the drones are getting through to the city.

“The essence of their explanation is that the systems are designed for a different power – for rockets, planes – and this little thing is skipped, like birds are skipped,” Simonyan tweeted. “Otherwise, all over the world, air defense would shy away at the birds around the clock.”

White House, Sen. Graham respond to Russian nuclear threat

Sen. Lindsey Graham has issued a stern warning to Russia after a top Kremlin officials said Moscow could resort to nuclear weapons if Ukraine’s counteroffensive results in Kyiv “taking away part of our land.” Dmitry Medvedev, deputy chairman of the Russian Security Council and former Russian President, suggested Ukraine could take territory with the support of NATO. The White House, which has repeatedly said there is no evidence Putin is preparing to use nuclear weapons, called Medvedev’s comments irresponsible.

Graham went further, tweeting: “To my Russian friends who talk about using nuclear weapons in Ukraine: You need to understand that would be an attack on NATO itself, given Ukraine’s proximity to NATO territory. Time to sober up, realize that your barbaric invasion of Ukraine is not working, withdraw and save many young Russians from a pointless death.”

Belarus says it has dispersed Russian nukes throughout country

More than half of the nuclear weapons Russia plans to deploy in Belarus have been delivered and dispersed throughout the country, Lukashenko said. Belarusians, Poles, Lithuanians have always lived together, but “now our Western neighbors are going crazy,” Lukashenko said.

“God forbid they will have to use this weapon. I still hope that this will not happen,” he said. “We don’t interfere in anyone’s garden, but please don’t interfere with us either.”

President Vladimir Putin agreed in March to begin moving some short-range, land-based tactical nuclear weapons into Belarus, which shares an almost 700-mile border with Ukraine. If verified, it is the first deployment of Russian nukes outside Russian territory since the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991

“No one has ever attacked a nuclear country,” Lukashenko said.



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