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Ukraine war: ICC seeks Russian officers, Ukrainian drones sink Russian warship, nuclear safety talks
2024-03-06 00:00:00.0     欧洲新闻电视台-欧洲新闻     原网页

       

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       Three days of negotiations with Hamas over a ceasefire in Gaza and the release of Israeli hostages failed to achieve a breakthrough on Tuesday, less than a week before the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, Egyptian officials said.

       The United States, Qatar and Egypt have spent weeks trying to mediate a deal where Hamas would free up to 40 hostages in exchange for a six-week truce.

       Two Egyptian officials reported the latest discussions ended on Tuesday, with Hamas submitting a proposal to be discussed with Israel by mediators, who are set to meet with the Hamas delegation on Wednesday.

       Hamas has refused to release all of the estimated 100 hostages it holds, and the remains of around 30 more, unless Israel ends its offensive, withdraws from Gaza and releases a large number of Palestinian prisoners.

       U.S. officials have expressed skepticism about Hamas's genuine interest in reaching an agreement, pointing out that the group has resisted several demands that the U.S. and other countries consider reasonable, including providing the names of hostages slated for release.

       “It is on Hamas to make decisions about whether it is prepared to engage,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Tuesday.

       On the same day, senior Hamas official Osama Hamdan said that his group demands a permanent ceasefire, rather than a six-week pause, and a “complete withdrawal” of Israeli forces.

       “The security and safety of our people will be achieved only by a permanent ceasefire, the end of the aggression and the withdrawal from every inch of the Gaza Strip,” Hamdan told reporters in Beirut.

       Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has publicly rejected Hamas' demands and repeatedly vowed to continue the war until Hamas is dismantled and all the hostages are returned. Israel didn't send a delegation to the latest round of talks.

       Mediators had hoped to broker an agreement before Ramadan, the month of dawn-to-dusk fasting that often sees heightened Israeli-Palestinian tensions linked to access to a major holy site in Jerusalem. Ramadan is expected to begin around March 10.

       UN warns of threats to children's health in Gaza

       The United States and Jordan airdropped 36,800 meals over northern Gaza on Tuesday, the second U.S. airdrop since Saturday. The U.N. children’s agency said that at least 10 children have reportedly died in isolated northern Gaza because of dehydration and malnutrition.

       “There are likely more children fighting for their lives somewhere in one of Gaza’s few remaining hospitals, and likely even more children in the north unable to obtain care at all,” Adele Khodr, the UNICEF regional director for the Middle East and North Africa, said in a statement.

       “These tragic and horrific deaths are man-made, predictable and entirely preventable," she added.

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       Another Russian warship has reportedly been sunk by Ukrainian sea drones in the Black Sea on Tuesday, the latest in a series of strikes that has crippled Moscow’s naval capability and limited its operations with the war now in its third year.

       According to Ukraine's military intelligence agency, the most recent strike involved Ukrainian naval drones targeting the Sergei Kotov patrol ship near the Kerch Strait, which connects the Black Sea with the Sea of Azov.

       The strike, which couldn't be independently verified, killed seven members of the Russian crew and injured six others, while 52 were rescued, the agency said.

       The Russian Defence Ministry has not issued any statements regarding the incident. However, several Russian military bloggers have acknowledged the loss of the ship and reported that its crew was rescued.

       Nuclear watchdog chief arrives in Russia for safety talks

       The UN atomic watchdog agency’s director has arrived in Russia for talks on nuclear safety in Ukraine, where Europe's largest nuclear power plant is at risk amid fighting, Russian state news agency RIA Novosti reported Tuesday night.

       International Atomic Energy Agency Director-General Rafael Mariano Grossi arrived at the Black Sea resort of Sochi on Tuesday evening, where the Kremlin says he will meet with Vladimir Putin.

       Grossi visited Ukraine in February, crossing the front line to visit the Russian-held Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant as part of the IAEA’s efforts to prevent a nuclear disaster amid ongoing hostilities. He also held a meeting with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

       He told reporters in Vienna that he considered it important to maintain a dialogue with both sides, and added that the situation with the plant, which is Europe's largest, “continues to be very fragile.”

       The Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, Europe's largest, in Energodar, Russian-occupied Ukraine.LIBKOS/Copyright 2023 The AP. All rights reserved.

       Grossi said that on his Russian trip, he expects to discuss “technical issues” related to “the future operational status of the plant”.

       The IAEA has repeatedly expressed alarm about the Zaporizhzhia facility amid fears of a potential nuclear catastrophe.

       The plant has repeatedly been caught in the crossfire since Russia sent troops into Ukraine, seizing the facility shortly after.

       Its six reactors have been shut down for months, but it still needs power and qualified staff to operate crucial cooling systems and other safety features.

       ICC issues arrest warrants for Russian military officers

       The International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants on Tuesday for two high-ranking Russian military officers on charges linked to attacks on civilian infrastructure in Ukraine.

       It's only the second time the global court has publicly announced warrants linked to Russia's war in Ukraine. In March 2023, the court asked for the arrest of Russian President Vladimir Putin accusing him of being responsible for the abductions of children from Ukraine.

       On Tuesday, the court announced warrants for Russian Lt. Gen. Sergei Ivanovich Kobylash, who was commander of the Long-Range Aviation of the Aerospace Force at the times of the alleged crimes. Also wanted is Russian Navy Adm. Viktor Kinolayevich Sokolov, who was the commander of the Black Sea Fleet.

       They are wanted for the war crime of directing attacks at civilian objects, causing excessive incidental harm to civilians or damage to civilian objects, and the crime against humanity of inhumane acts.

       “I have repeatedly emphasixed that those responsible for actions that impact innocent civilians or protected objects must know that this conduct is bound by a set of rules reflected in international humanitarian law,” ICC Prosecutor Karim Khan said in a statement. “All wars have rules. Those rules bind all without exception.”

       The court said that judges who reviewed the evidence presented by prosecutors said that there are “reasonable grounds to believe” that the two men are responsible for “missile strikes carried out by the forces under their command against the Ukrainian electric infrastructure” from Oct. 10, 2022 until at least March 9, 2023.

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       Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the warrants should serve as a warning to other Russian top brass.

       "Every Russian commander who orders strikes against Ukrainian civilians and critical infrastructure must know that justice will be served. Every perpetrator of such crimes must know that they will be held accountable,” Zelenskyy wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

       Ukrainian Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin welcomed the warrants, saying they were supported by evidence provided by Ukrainian agencies. He called them “another milestone in ensuring justice for all victims and survivors of this war."

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       After months of what appeared to be an effective stalemate, a new narrative of the Ukrainian conflict is setting in: unless the West both expands and speeds up its support for the Ukrainian military, Russia could soon have a major window of opportunity.

       And with the US House of Representatives still yet to clear a new package of American military aid, European NATO allies are moving to ramp up their contributions to the war effort. But not all of them are on the same page – and the continent's largest economy is suddenly looking like a major political and strategic problem for both Ukraine and NATO as a whole.

       Germany has been on a long journey since the Russian invasion in February 2022. The then-relatively new government led by Chancellor Olaf Scholz oversaw a major change in German defence policy by announcing the country would provide Ukraine with military hardware, a move that helped prove how seriously the West as a whole was taking the conflict.

       Since then, however, the Germans' part in the war has been somewhat muddled. On the one hand, German Euros and materiel have been reaching Ukraine, albeit on a stop-start basis. The country's defence ministry clearly acknowledges the seriousness of the conflict: it has increasingly urged Europe to anticipate a larger Russian threat to countries beyond Ukraine, and is deploying combat-ready battalions to Lithuania, meaning German troops will be stationed just 100km away from the Russian border.

       But on the other hand, Scholz's government has lately been resisting pressure to share one of its most powerful military assets with the Ukrainians just when they need it most.

       A Taurus missile flies during a military drill off the coast of South Korea. AP/Copyright 2017 The AP. All rights reserved.

       The item in question is the Taurus missile, a stealth missile with a 500km range – twice the range of the British Storm Shadow and French Scalp missiles, both of which have been used by Ukraine to hit major Russian military targets.

       The Ukrainians have been asking for the Taurus system for months, but Scholz has so far refused. The chancellor has claimed that the missiles cannot be sent to Ukraine because it would entail putting German troops on the ground to programme them, a move that he claimed could threaten a dangerous escalation.

       Scholz made a major diplomatic misstep at a recent summit when he implied that French and British forces are operating cruise missiles that are ostensibly under Ukrainian control – something neither country admits is happening. The head of the UK House of Commons's Foreign Affairs Committee called the remarks "wrong, irresponsible and a slap in the face to allies".

       But worse than Scholz's refusal to send Tauruses to Ukraine was the recent leak of a recording in which German air force officers could be heard directly contradicting Scholz's argument, instead confirming that the missile would not in fact require the deployment of German manpower inside Ukraine.

       The recording was revealed in Russian media, with Moscow threatening "dire consequences" for Germany if Taurus is deployed in Ukraine.

       Former president Dmitry Medvedev, who has voiced some of the Kremlin's most extreme rhetoric since the invasion, responded with a pair of nationalistic tirades in response via the messaging app Telegram, sharing a Second World War-era poem entitled "Kill Him!" and writing, "The call of the Great Patriotic War has become relevant again: "DEATH TO THE GERMAN-NAZI OCCUPIERS!"

       Caught out

       That such a sensitive conversation could be recorded and leaked at all, not least by the Russians, has horrified many in Germany and NATO more widely. But the revelation that Scholz's public pretext for withholding the Taurus is baseless has caused deep anger.

       According to Benjamin Tallis, Senior Fellow at the German Council on Foreign Relations, the recording shows that the chancellor is not truly committed to a Ukrainian victory.

       "Holding back like this risks a Ukrainian defeat, which would put all of Europe at great risk" he told Euronews. "Scholz's arguments have been dismantled one by one and revealed to be excuses. Allies have sent similar weapons and faced no retaliation. All Scholz is doing is projecting weakness and making Germany more of a target.

       "Following the Taurus leak, it seems that what Scholz is really afraid of is the weapon's effectiveness. This betrays his position of not wanting Ukraine to win – and it's an approach that lets down all Europeans by making us less safe."

       Olaf Scholz boards an Air Force plane at the military section of Berlin Brandenburg Airport. Michael Kappeler/(c) Copyright 2024, dpa (www.dpa.de). Alle Rechte vorbehalten

       The saga of the Taurus missile and the leaked recording comes at an extremely inopportune moment in the Ukrainian conflict.

       Recent Russian advances in the east of the country have owed a lot to a shortage of ammunition on the Ukrainian side, which Kyiv and some of its allies have attributed to certain Western countries' slowness to resupply the war effort.

       Aside from continuing to inflict major casualties on the Russian military – which Kyiv claims has lost well over 400,000 troops since February 2022 – the Ukrainian Armed Forces are currently focusing on destroying high-value military assets that the Russians will struggle to replace, among them a high-tech Russian patrol ship that was hit by a sea drone on 4 March.

       These strikes have multiple benefits: aside from costing nothing in Ukrainian lives, they both undermine Russia's tactical abilities and challenge the idea that its enormous resources offer anything like a guarantee of victory. The same goes for missile and drone strikes within Russian territory, particularly in the border region of Belgorod, which Ukraine has targeted multiple times.

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       But without enough Western hardware to continue these efforts, and with ever more reports of troops retreating from positions with depleted ammunition, Ukraine will struggle to keep its closest allies' hopes alive.

       


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关键词: Scholz's     Hamas     warrants     Scholz     Ukraine     Tuesday     Taurus     Israeli hostages    
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