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ConflictsUkraine

Ukraine: Berlin will back Kyiv for 'as long as necessary'

August 28, 2022

Germany's foreign minister vowed to support Ukraine "financially and militarily" even if the war endures "for years." Meanwhile, Britain believes Russia will struggle to reinforce its troops. DW has more.

https://p.dw.com/p/4G9Cm
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock in Kyiv on May 10, 2022
Germany on Sunday restated its military and financial support for Ukraine Image: Florian Gaertner/photothek/dpa/picture alliance

German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock on Sunday reaffirmed Berlin's support for Ukraine in its war against Russia, warning that the conflict "could go on for years."

"Unfortunately, we have to assume that Ukraine will still need new heavy weapons from its friends next summer," she told Bild am Sonntag newspaper.

"Ukraine is also defending our freedom, our peace. And we support them financially and militarily — and for as long as it is necessary. Full stop!" Baerbock said. 

Germany's top diplomat said that Russian President Vladimir Putin had been delusional in thinking that Ukraine would fall within a few weeks. 

Baerbock also defended Ukraine's claim to the Crimean Peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russia in 2014.

"Crimea also belongs to Ukraine. The world has never recognized the annexation of 2014, which was against international law," she told the newspaper.

She said the German government would "cushion the social imbalances resulting from high energy prices," linked to doubts over a reliable supply of Russian gas to Europe this week.

Baerbock also categorically rejected demands made by some politicians
in Germany for Berlin to approve the Nord Stream 2 Baltic Sea pipeline to allow for more Russian gas deliveries.

The project, which is the sister pipeline to Nord Stream 1, was completed last year but Berlin refused to give a permit to operate in the days leading up to Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February.

A Bundeswehr photo fo a Gepard 2A6 tank
Germany has sent Gepard tanks to Ukraine along with other military hardwareImage: Thomas Imo/photothek/IMAGO

Here's a roundup of some of the other key developments regarding Russia's invasion of Ukraine on August 28.

EU member states to suspend visa agreement with Russia – report

The Financial Times reports that the EU is preparing to suspend the 2007 visa facilitation agreement with Russia.

Foreign ministers within the 27-nation bloc will give political backing to suspending the agreement during a midweek two-day informal meeting in Prague, Czechia, three officials told the Brtish newspaper.

However, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell told Austria's ORF TV, "I don't think that this idea will have the required unanimity."

He added, "We have to be more selective. But I am not in favour of stopping delivering visas to all Russians."

Following the February 24 invasion of Ukraine, the EU announced a partial suspension imposed on Russian government officials and business leaders. Now it is set to include civilian Russian EU visa applicants.

Czechia, Estonia and Finland have pushed for the ban within the EU after imposing their own restrictions on the issuance of visas to Russian nationals. They have called for a total ban on Russians traveling within the EU.

Numerous Russian elites with high level political connections including talk show host Ksenia Sobchak and popstar Emin Agalarov have posted to Instagram from vacation spots such as St. Tropez, in the south of France, this summer.

UK: Russia will struggle to boost combat power in Ukraine

Russia's plan to increase the size of its armed forces by 140,000 is unlikely to have a big impact on the war in Ukraine, Britain said in its latest intelligence report.

The remarks come after Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree last week to boost the size of his military to 2.04 million.

"It remains unclear whether Russia will attempt to fill this allocation by recruiting more volunteer 'contract' soldiers or from increasing the annual targets for the conscription draft," the UK Defense Ministry wrote on Twitter.

It added that "the decree is unlikely to make substantive progress in increasing Russia's combat power in Ukraine. This is because Russia has lost tens of thousands of troops; very few new contract servicemen are being recruited; and conscripts are technically not obliged to serve outside of Russian territory.

Russia and Ukraine accuse each other of Zaporizhzhia attacks

Moscow and Kyiv accused each other of reckless rocket and artillery strikes at and around the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, the largest in Europe.

Russian forces seized control of the plant in early March in the early days of the war following Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24.

Valentyn Reznichenko, the Dnipropetrovsk regional governor, said heavy shelling overnight had left sections of the city of Nikopol across from the Zaporizhzhia plant without electricity.  Rocket strikes also reportedly damaged a dozen residences in Marhanets, according to local officials there.

Igor Konashenkov, Russia's Defense Ministry spokesman, said Saturday Ukraine had twice attacked the plant in the previous 24 hours. He accused Ukraine of shelling near reactor fuel and radioactive waste storage.

Vladimir Rogov, a Russian-backed official in the region, said on Telegram that a Ukrainian drone had crashed on the roof of a building. No one was hurt in that incident which caused only minor damage.

UN: Ukrainian grain silos must be cleared for next harvest

Millions of tons of food from previous harvests in Ukraine still need to be cleared to make room in silos for the next one, the United Nations coordinator for a grains deal said on Saturday.

More than 1 million tons of grains and other foods have so far been exported under a grains deal brokered by Turkey and the United Nations. 

The wheat and barley exports had been held up for months by Russian forces blocking the Black Sea exit route.

"The Black Sea Grain Initiative has started creating some space but much more grain needs to shift to make space for the new harvest," said Amir Abdulla, UN Coordinator for the Black Sea Grain Initiative.

Ukraine warns of leak risk at Zaporizhzhia power plant: Mathias Bölinger from Kyiv

Report: Berlin makes move to nationalize Gazprom's German subsidiary

The German government has created a holding company to carry out a possible nationalization of Gazprom Germania, the energy business abandoned by Russia's Gazprom, Welt am Sonntag newspaper reported.

Gazprom ditched the firm in April during a dispute between the two countries over Moscow's insistence on switching payments for Russian gas to rubles from euros.

In doing so, it gave up ownership of the firm's assets in more than 20 countries, including subsidiary Astora, which operates 6 billion cubic meters of underground gas caverns in Germany and Austria.

In June, the energy trading, storage and transmission business, was renamed Securing Energy for Europe GmbH and is currently being run by Germany's energy regulator, acting as a temporary trustee.

The newspaper reported Sunday that the nationalization plans were more advanced than previously known, citing the creation of a new shell company.

However, an Economy Ministry spokesperson said the new firm had been created as a "precautionary measure."

More on the war in Ukraine

Kyiv says Russian troop losses have surpassed 45,000.

A German state leader has been told he is not welcome in Ukraine after calling for the war to be "frozen" to give diplomacy a chance.

mm/kb (AFP, AP, dpa, Reuters)