Russia threatens to stop European energy exports; Ukraine reports eastern gains

Russian President Vladimir Putin gestures during the plenary session of the 2022 Eastern Economic Forum (EEF) in Vladivostok, Russia September 7, 2022. Sergey Bobylev/TASS Host Photo Agency/Handout via REUTERS

KYIV,  (Reuters) – Russian President Vladimir Putin threatened to halt all energy shipments to Europe if Brussels goes ahead with a proposal to cap the price of Russian gas and suggested restricting a U.N.-brokered deal for Ukrainian grain exports via the Black Sea.

In a combative speech to an economic forum in Russia’s Far East region, Putin said yesterday that Russia would not lose its war in Ukraine, which he says is being waged to ensure Russian security and to protect Russian speakers there.

Ukraine remained guarded about its counter-offensive in the east but its top general warned Russia could turn to nuclear weapons and other nations could be drawn into a protracted “Third World War.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy reported “good news” from the Kharkiv region east of Kyiv, saying some settlements had been recaptured from Russian forces.

In an evening video address, Zelenskiy cited “the extremely successful hits in areas where the occupiers are concentrated” and said Ukrainian artillery had made successful strikes against Russian forces in the south.

The Pentagon said Ukraine’s forces were making “slow but meaningful progress” on the battlefield and were doing better in the south than Russia. Ukraine’s military command for the southern district said its forces killed 108 Russian soldiers and destroyed 37 pieces of military hardware on Wednesday amid Russian shelling and air strikes.

Reuters was not able to verify battlefield reports.

Asked about what Russia calls its “special military operation” at the forum in Vladivostok, Putin said: “We have not lost anything and will not lose anything.”

The grain pact, brokered by the United Nations and Turkey, created a protected corridor after Ukraine lost access to its main export route when Russia attacked via land, air and sea.

Designed to help ease global food prices by increasing supplies, the deal has been the only diplomatic breakthrough between Moscow and Kyiv in more than six months of war.

Putin said the accord was delivering grain, fertiliser and other food to the European Union and Turkey rather than to poor countries, which he said was its original goal.

“It may be worth considering how to limit the export of grain and other food along this route,” he said, adding that Russia would continue to abide by its terms.

The pact is up for renewal in late November.

Ukraine said it was strictly adhering to the accord and there were no grounds for renegotiation.

“Today in Russia, another blatantly false statement was made that somehow most Ukrainian grain is being exported to European countries,” Zelenskiy said in his address.

The Istanbul-based coordination group that monitors the deal says 30% of cargo has gone to low and lower-middle income countries. British U.N. Ambassador Barbara Woodward said Putin’s claim was incorrect and that Africa has received more than 50% of Ukraine’s wheat exports under the U.N. deal.

U.S. SAYS RUSSIAN ‘FILTRATION’ IS WAR CRIME

Meanwhile, the United States accused Moscow of war crimes by unlawfully detaining, interrogating and deporting up to 1.6 million Ukrainians, including 1,800 children.

U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, told the U.N. Security Council that Russian officials are overseeing so-called filtration operations that “aim to identify individuals Russia deems insufficiently compliant or compatible to its control”.

The envoy said the practice was preparation for annexing territory.

 U.N. political affairs chief Rosemary DiCarlo said the council had verified that Ukrainian civilians were subjected to filtration and demanded access to all detained people. She said a fact-finding mission would begin in the coming days to Olenivka, where 53 Ukrainians were reported to have been killed at a prison complex in July.

Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said Ukrainians who travel to Russia “go through a registration rather than filtration procedure.”

The European Commission said it would propose a price cap on Russian gas to deprive Moscow of revenue and hold down energy costs as Europe fears hardship this winter. In response, Putin threatened to halt all supplies if it took such a step.

“We will not supply gas, oil, coal, heating oil – we will not supply anything” if that occurs, he said. Europe usually imports about 40% of its gas and 30% of its oil from Russia.

Amid mounting tensions, Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, the Ukrainian army’s commander in chief, said there was a real threat of Russia using nuclear weapons.

“It is also impossible to completely rule out the possibility of the direct involvement of the world’s leading countries in a ‘limited’ nuclear conflict, in which the prospect of a Third World War is already directly visible,” he wrote in an article.

Moscow has in the past denied speculation of potential nuclear or chemical weapons use.