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July 18, 2023 Russia

Feb 13, 2024

By Kathleen Magramo, Sana Noor Haq, Ed Upright, Aditi Sangal, Mike Hayes, Maureen Chowdhury and Tori B. Powell, CNN

Our live coverage of Russia's war in Ukraine has moved here.

From CNN's Mohammed Tawfeeq, Sebastian Shukla and Josh Pennington

Russia launched an attack on Odesa early Wednesday, the second night in a row the southern port city has been targeted.

Ukraine's air defenses were repelling a Russian attack, a spokesperson for Ukraine's Odesa military administration said.

A CNN team in Odesa witnessed a sustained barrage from the air defense near the direction of the port. The team also heard at least three large bangs.

Oleh Kiper, head of the Odesa region's military administration, urged people not to come close to windows.

Russian forces launched airstrikes on Odesa on Tuesday in retaliation for Kyiv's attack Monday on the strategic and symbolic Crimean bridge linking the annexed peninsula to the Russian mainland.

From CNN staff

Russia would be prepared to return to the critical Black Sea Grain Initiative if Moscow's demands are met by international partners, according to remarks made by Russia's permanent representative at the United Nations headquarters.

Gennady Gatilov's comments come after the Kremlin said Monday that it is allowing a deal struck to allow the export of Ukrainian grain to expire.

Here's what else you should know:

From CNN's Steve Contorno and Kit Maher

Gov. Ron DeSantis downplayed the conflict in Ukraine in an exclusive interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper on Tuesday.

Some Republicans have grilled the Republican presidential candidate over his dismissal of Russia’s aggression in Ukraine as a “territorial dispute” not of “vital” national interest. During the interview, DeSantis doubled down, calling the war a “secondary or tertiary interest,” though he said he would be “willing to be helpful to bring it to a conclusion.”

Asked if he would stop arming Ukraine or sending financial support, DeSantis wouldn’t say. Instead, he advocated for turning the focus of the US military away from Europe and toward Asia and China.

“I am not gonna diminish our stocks and not send (them) to Taiwan. I’m not gonna make us less capable to respond to exigencies,” DeSantis told Tapper, calling the island’s future a “significant interest.”

From CNN's Radina Gigova

Russia would be prepared to return to the Black Sea grain deal if Moscow's demands are met by international partners, according to Russia's permanent representative at the United Nations headquarters, Gennady Gatilov.

In remarks published on the Russian Foreign Ministry Telegram channel Tuesday in response to a question from Reuters, Gatilov accused the deal of deviating away from its "intended humanitarian purposes."

Gatilov did say the UN "tried on its part to urge the Western governments and business structures to implement the Russian-UN Memorandum."

"However, despite the efforts, the leadership of the UN Secretariat could not overcome the resistance of the Western countries and private companies, on which depended the fulfillment of our demands," he said.

Gatilov also claimed that Ukraine "repeatedly used the Black Sea humanitarian route for provocations and attacks against Russian civilian and military vessels, as well as infrastructure."

From CNN's Josh Pennington

Two civilians have been killed and seven injured by Ukrainian shelling on Tuesday in different parts of separatist-controlled areas of the Donetsk region, a local official said.

"Two people have been killed today as a result of shelling by Ukrainian armed formations - [one each] in the Kirovskiy district of Donetsk and Vladymirovka in Volnovakha," the head of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic (DPR), Denis Pushilin, said in a Telegram message.

"Another seven people were wounded in Donetsk, Makiivka and Staromikhailivka, including a 17-year-old boy," the post added.

Several homes, two schools and a hospital were damaged by the shelling, he said.

"The [DPR] Republic was shelled 93 times, with more than 490 MLRS rockets, including Turkish-made rockets, being fired, including 152mm and 155mm caliber artillery shells," Pushilin added.

From CNN's Radina Gigova and Yulia Kesaieva

Ukraine's president is warning that Russia's withdrawal from the Black Sea grain deal will result in more crises around the world.

"Last year, thanks to our Black Sea Grain Initiative, we managed to prevent a price crisis in the global food market. A price explosion would inevitably have been followed by political and migration crises, particularly in African and Asian countries," President Volodymyr Zelensky said Tuesday in his evening address.

He said a wide range of countries will feel the effects and that Ukraine is "working without partners to prevent this." Russia pulled out of the deal on Monday.

Ukraine is developing options for action and agreements "to preserve Ukraine's global role as a guarantor of food security, our maritime access to the global market, and jobs for Ukrainians in ports and the agricultural industry," he said, adding Kyiv is "fighting for global security and for our Ukrainian farmers."

From CNN's Hannah Holland and Radina Gigova

Russia's decision to pull out of the Black Sea grain deal was "very deplorable," as it will increase food insecurity around the world, Finland's Foreign Minister Elina Valtonen told CNN's Bianna Golodryga on Tuesday.

“We just have to find alternative ways to get the grain out of Ukraine and onto the markets to those people most in need," she said.

As for her country's recent membership in NATO, Valtonen said it "was a decision that had to be made finally." Finland decided to join the Western alliance following the invasion of Ukraine last year.

As for allowing Ukraine to join, Valtonen said any decision must await the end of hostilities.

From CNN's Yulia Kesaieva and Vasco Cotovio

The latest meeting of the Ukraine Contact Group — informally known as the Ramstein meeting — demonstrated the allies’ “unwavering support for Ukraine," Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov tweeted on Tuesday.

Priority was placed on the supply of weapons and equipment Ukraine “urgently” needs to continue liberating occupied territory, he said.

Reznikov thanked Luxembourg and Estonia for their proposals on IT and Lithuania for their demining coalition initiative. He also thanked US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin for leading “an unprecedented coalition against evil.”

“Together, we are working hard to achieve victory, a just peace and a better future,” he concluded.

Some background: The US and Europe are struggling to provide Ukraine with the large amount of ammunition it will need for a prolonged counteroffensive against Russia, and Western officials are racing to ramp up production to avoid shortages on the battlefield that could hinder Ukraine’s progress.

The dwindling supply of artillery ammunition has served as a wake-up call to NATO, US and Western officials told CNN, since the alliance did not adequately prepare for the possibility of a protracted land war in Europe following decades of relative peace.

Black Sea grain deal: Support for Ukraine: On the ground: Russian special forces: Ukrainian strike impact: Some background: