Monday Briefing: Ukraine Steps Up Sabotage
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As Russia and Ukraine each fail to make substantial advances at the front in their war, Ukraine has been turning to guerrilla tactics, including sabotage, assassinations and the targeting of Russian trains and train tunnels.
On Nov. 29, Ukrainian saboteurs placed explosives on a Russian freight train roughly 3,000 miles from the Ukrainian border, in an attempt to damage an important tunnel through the Severomuysky mountains. After an explosion rocked the tunnel, Russian officials said the blast had been caused by “the detonation of an unidentified explosive device.” Ukrainian partisans also said that they had blown up a freight train last month as it was transporting ammunition and fuel from Russian-occupied Crimea.
Russia is using similar tactics. Last month, the Polish authorities convicted 14 people on charges of sabotage under the direction of Russian intelligence, Polish officials said. Their main targets were trains transporting military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine, officials said.
Elsewhere in the war:
Russia pummeled Kharkiv, an eastern Ukrainian city, with missiles and drones leading up to New Year’s Eve.
Just days after invading Ukraine, Vladimir Putin, president of Russia, signed a sweeping censorship law to silence wartime dissent. The law has led to more than 6,500 cases of people being arrested or fined, according to a Times analysis through last August.
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That’s it for today’s briefing. See you tomorrow. — Justin
P.S. After The Times announced that Tracy Bennett would become Wordle’s first editor, her life took a public turn.
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