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US President Joe Biden shakes hands with French President Emmanuel Macron at the White House in Washington, the US, on December 1 2022. Picture: REUTERS/EVELYN HOCKSTEIN
US President Joe Biden shakes hands with French President Emmanuel Macron at the White House in Washington, the US, on December 1 2022. Picture: REUTERS/EVELYN HOCKSTEIN

Washington/Kherson — The presidents of the US and France said they would hold Russia to account for its actions in Ukraine and the EU reached tentative agreement on an oil price cap to squeeze Moscow’s export earnings.  

Western powers are trying to rally support for Ukraine, which is reeling from missile and drone attacks targeting power supply, water and heat in its cities just as winter has set in nine months into Russia’s invasion.

Russia, meanwhile, accused the US and Nato of playing a direct and dangerous role in the war and said Washington had turned Kyiv into an existential threat for Moscow which it could not ignore.

In a bid to reduce the money available for Moscow's war effort, the EU tentatively agreed on Thursday on a $60 a barrel price cap on Russian seaborne oil, according to diplomats. The measure would need to be approved by all EU governments in a written procedure by Friday.

US President Joe Biden and French President Emmanuel Macron said in a joint statement after Oval Office talks on Thursday that they were committed to holding Russia to account “for widely documented atrocities and war crimes, committed both by its regular armed forces and by its proxies” in Ukraine.

Biden said Washington and Paris “are facing down Vladimir Putin’s grasping ambition for conquest” and “defending the democratic values and universal human rights.”

Biden told reporters he was prepared to speak with the Russian president “if in fact there is an interest in him deciding he’s looking for a way to end the war,” but added that Putin “hasn't done that yet”.

Macron said he would continue to talk to Putin to “try to prevent escalation and to get some very concrete results” such as the safety of nuclear plants.

Ukraine’s casualties

There are no political talks under way to end the war, which Russia began on February 24 as a “special military operation” claiming its aim was to disarm its neighbour and root out leaders it characterises as dangerous nationalists.

Ukraine and the West call it an imperialist land grab, which has killed tens of thousands of Ukrainian civilians and soldiers on both sides.

Ukraine’s armed forces have lost somewhere between 10,000 and 13,000 soldiers so far, presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak told a Ukrainian television network on Thursday.

“We will never urge the Ukrainians to make a compromise which will not be acceptable for them, because they are so brave,” Macron said in Washington.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, in a video posted on Thursday night, remarked that December 1 was the anniversary of a referendum 31 years ago when Ukraine — then still part of the Soviet Union — voted overwhelmingly in favour of independence.

“Our desire to live freely ... will not be broken. Ukrainians will never again be a tiny stone in some empire,” Zelensky said.

Hours later in the early hours of Friday, Russian forces shelled a building in the Ukrainian-held city of Zaporizhzhia, setting it ablaze, city official Anatoly Krutyev said.

Attacks on infrastructure

The stakes have increased in recent weeks as Russia intensified a campaign to knock out power, water and heat supplies in Ukrainian cities. Ukraine and the West say the strategy deliberately intends to harm civilians, a war crime.

Kyiv mayor Vitaliy Klitschko told residents to stock up on water, food and warm clothes in the event of a total blackout.

The attacks on infrastructure are likely to increase the cost to keep Ukraine’s economy going next year by up to $1bn a month, and aid to the country would need to be “front-loaded”, IMF head Kristalina Georgieva told the Reuters NEXT conference on Thursday.

Russian artillery pounded Ukrainian positions in and around the eastern city of Bakhmut, and the regional capital of Kherson in the south, Ukraine’s General Staff said.

Russian forces, having abandoned the city of Kherson in November, are trying to establish defensive positions and are shelling several towns to the north, it said in a statement.

Reuters could not independently confirm battlefield reports.

Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov, speaking during an annual news conference in Moscow, defended recent missile strikes, saying it was targeting Ukraine's civil infrastructure to prevent Kyiv from importing Western arms.

He did not explain how such attacks could achieve that aim.

“We disable energy facilities [in Ukraine] that allow you [the West] to pump lethal weapons into Ukraine to kill Russians,” Lavrov said.

“So don’t say that the US and Nato are not participants in this war — you are directly participating.”

In a sign some channels of communication remain open, Russia’s defence ministry and the head of Ukraine’s presidential administration said the two countries swapped 50 service personnel on Thursday.

Reuters

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