The highly classified leaked Pentagon documents posted to social media offer a pessimistic US view of the war’s progress in Ukraine and predict a stalemate for months to come.
The CIA doesn’t believe President Vladimir Putin is serious about negotiations and it is “Ukrainian progress on the battlefield” that will likely shape the prospect for diplomacy, agency director Bill Burns said.
More than 11 million Ukrainian refugees — around 87% of them women and children — have fled to Poland since Russia invaded in February 2022, Poland’s EU representation tweeted on Tuesday.
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Our live coverage for the day has ended. Follow the latest Ukraine news?here?or read through the updates below.
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Video appears to show beheadings of Ukrainian soldiers
From CNN’s Vasco Cotovio, Andy Carey, Josh Pennington and Yulia Kesaieva
Two videos emerged on social media this past week that appear to show beheadings of Ukrainian soldiers. The videos appear to be of separate events. One of them may have been filmed very recently, while the other — from the amount of foliage seen on the ground — looks like it was filmed during the summer.
The first video was posted to a pro-Russian social media channel on April 8. It was purportedly filmed by Russian mercenaries from the Wagner group and appears to show the beheaded corpses of two Ukrainian soldiers lying on the ground next to a destroyed military vehicle.
In the video, a voice can be heard, behind the camera, the sound seemingly distorted to prevent the speaker’s identification.
“[The armoured vehicle] got f**ked by a mine,” the voice, speaking Russian, says.?
Apparently referring to the bodies on the ground, the voice, laughing, continues, “They killed them. Someone came up to them. They came up to them and cut their heads off.”?
The dead soldiers also appear to have had their hands cut off.?
Russian social media accounts say the video was shot near Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine, which has been the scene of the war’s fiercest fighting for many months, with Wagner fighters very heavily involved. CNN is unable to independently confirm the video’s location.
The second video, which was posted on Twitter and is heavily blurred, looks to have been filmed during the summer because of the amount of plant life on the ground.?It purports to show a Russian fighter using a knife to cut off the head of a Ukrainian soldier. A voice at the beginning of the video suggests the victim might have still been alive when the brutal attack began.
Shortly after the videos emerged, Andriy Yermak, a top advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, tweeted: “There will be an accountability for everything.”
An official Ukrainian government Telegram channel said the tweet?was a direct reference to “another execution video published by Russians.”?
Monday, the Institute for the Study of War said that Wagner was “reportedly continuing to commit war crimes by beheading Ukrainian servicemen in Bakhmut,” referencing a photo shared on pro-Russian social media sites showing what appeared to be a severed head mounted on a spike, which they claimed belonged to a Ukrainian soldier.?The ISW has reported similar incidents in Popasna, in the Luhansk region, where Wagner troops were also operating earlier in the war.
Some pro-Russian social media accounts have suggested Ukrainian forces were responsible for the beheadings in an effort to conceal identification. This echoes a similar claim made by Wagner boss Yevgeny Prigozhin in January after his fighters apparently found bodies with severed hands and heads near Bakhmut.
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CIA director says Putin is "not serious about negotiations" in Ukraine war
From CNN's Zachary Cohen
The CIA assesses that Russian President Vladimir Putin is “not serious about negotiations at this stage” of the war in Ukraine and it is “Ukrainian progress on the battlefield that is most likely to shape prospects for diplomacy” to end the ongoing conflict, CIA Director Bill Burns said on Tuesday.
The CIA director specifically mentioned that Ukraine continues to defend the Donbas region, which one of the leaked intelligence documents says is likely heading for a stalemate.
“Real countries fight back,” Burns said on Tuesday, adding that Ukraine and its president have done just that.?“Putin was profoundly mistaken” in his assumptions about Ukraine before the war, Burns added.
Burns emphasized the importance of continued US support for Ukraine, including through intelligence sharing, at a time when the leaked classified documents are raising questions about the administration’s view of the conflict.
The CIA director made these statements at Rice University, where he’s discussing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, China’s aggressive posturing, Iran’s nuclear enrichment and other pressing foreign policy issues at school’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, according to the?school’s website.
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CIA director says he suspects more nuclear saber rattling from Russia
From CNN's Zachary Cohen
CIA Director Bill Burns said Tuesday he expects more nuclear saber rattling from Russia as its war in Ukraine continues, but his agency does not “see evidence of preparations for any potential use of nuclear weapons.”
Burns said the CIA does not see any “significant change in nuclear deployments by Russian leadership.”
He also said the leak of classified military documents represents an urgent problem for the US that is “as intense as anything” in the current moment.
Burns — stressing the importance of balancing both short-term and long-term issues — specifically pointed to the leak as an immediate problem the US intelligence agencies are grappling with.
The CIA director noted that the Justice Department is currently investigating the leak and declined to elaborate further on his understanding of the issue.
Burns made these statements at Rice University Tuesday, where he’s discussing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, China’s aggressive posturing, Iran’s nuclear enrichment and other pressing foreign policy issues at school’s Baker Institute for Public Policy, according to the school’s website.
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Leaked classified intel suggests US is pessimistic that Ukraine can end war quickly. Here's the latest?
From CNN Staff
The highly classified leaked Pentagon documents posted to social media offer a pessimistic US view of the war’s progress in Ukraine.
The documents highlight flaws in Ukraine’s weaponry and air defenses and predict a stalemate in the war for months to come.
The documents, which appear to date from February and March, detail many of Ukraine’s perceived military shortfalls as Kyiv prepares for a spring counteroffensive against Russia.?
Several of the classified documents warn Ukraine’s medium-range air defenses to protect front-line troops will be “completely reduced by May 23,” suggesting Russia could soon have aerial superiority and Ukraine could lose the ability to amass ground forces in a counteroffensive.?
The documents also underscore lingering problems with Russia’s own military offensive, predicting that the result will be a stalemate between the two sides for the foreseeable future.
Officials familiar with the situation tell CNN the documents appear to be part of a daily intelligence briefing deck prepared for the Pentagon’s senior leaders, including Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley.?
The leaking of the documents — many of which are marked top secret — represents a major national security breach, and the Justice Department has launched a criminal investigation into who may have leaked them while the Pentagon is investigating how the leak impacts US national security.
UN says nearly 8,500 civilian deaths confirmed in Ukraine since invasion: The ?the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said it had recorded 22,734 civilian casualties in Ukraine. between the beginning of the full-scale invasion on February 24, 2022, until April 9, 2023 — with 8,490 civilians killed and 14,244 injured. The actual figures are likely to be “considerably higher,” the OHCHR cautioned, because information from some frontline locations such as Mariupol and Severodonetsk had been delayed, with many reports pending corroboration.?
Ukraine’s top national security official downplays leaked intelligence documents: Some of the information in the highly classified leaked Pentagon documents was “not secret at all,” according to Oleksii Danilov, the head of Ukraine’s National Security Council.?“You can find it in publicly available sources,“ Danilov told journalist, Vassili Golod, of German broadcaster ARD,?in an interview on Sunday. Ukraine is in constant contact with its key allies, such as the US, the UK, Germany and Poland, according to Danilov.
Americans detained by Russia: Paul Whelan, an American wrongfully detained in Russia, was able to call home on Monday for the first time in nearly two weeks, his brother David Whelan said Tuesday. “We been led to believe, erroneously, that Paul had been moved to LPU-21, the prison hospital,” David Whelan said in an email to journalists. Such a move has happened in the past, leaving Paul Whelan unable to call his parents or the embassy. Meanwhile, US President Joe Biden spoke with the parents of Evan Gershkovich, the Wall Street Journal correspondent detained in Russia, Tuesday. It’s their first time speaking since?Gershkovich was arrested in Russia last month. US Secretary of State Antony Blinken noted that he had designated Gershkovich as wrongfully detained Monday, and reiterated that he called on Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov to immediately grant consular access and release the detained journalist.
Russia conducted a test launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile: Russia successfully conducted a test launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) on Tuesday, according to the Russian Ministry of Defense.?The launch from the Kapustin Yar test range in the Astrakhan region was part of testing on next-generation ICBM combat equipment, the defense ministry reports.?
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Russia conducted a test launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile Tuesday, ministry of defense says
From CNN's Josh Pennington and AnneClaire Stapleton
Russia successfully conducted a test launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) on Tuesday, according to the Russian Ministry of Defense.?
The launch from the Kapustin Yar test range in the Astrakhan region was part of testing on next-generation ICBM combat equipment, the defense ministry reports.?
“On April 11, 2023, a Strategic Missile Forces combat crew conducted a successful launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile from the Kapustin Yar state central joint forces test range in the Astrakhan region,” the statement said.
The launch helped confirm the correctness of schematic and structural and technical solutions used in developing new strategic missile systems the defense ministry said. The missile’s test warhead hit the target at the Sary Shagan firing range (Republic of Kazakhstan) with the target accuracy, according to the statement.
CNN’s Oren Liebermann?and?Natasha Bertrand contributed to this report.
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Blinken: Russia's failure to grant consular access to detained journalist violates international commitments
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Russia’s failure to grant consular access to wrongfully detained Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich “puts it, once again, in violation of international commitments it’s made.”
“I think it sends a very strong message to people around the world to beware of even setting foot there, lest they be arbitrarily detained,” he said.
Blinken noted that he had designated Gershkovich as wrongfully detained Monday, and reiterated that he called on Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov to immediately grant consular access and release the detained journalist.
Blinken did say what measures are being taken to free Gershkovich, only saying that the US is “engaged every single day in pressing for that access as well as pressing for Evan’s release.”
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Trudeau confirms cyberattack on Canadian infrastructure first disclosed in Pentagon documents leak
From CNN’s Paula Newton in Ottawa
There was no physical damage to Canadian energy infrastructure after leaked US intelligence documents appeared to show that Russian hackers were attempting to cause damage to pipelines earlier this year, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau confirmed Tuesday.
Trudeau is hosting Ukraine’s prime minister, Denys Shmyhal, in Toronto for an official visit where Canada announced more military and humanitarian aid for the country.?
Trudeau also confirmed that his government website was down after a denial of service attack Tuesday morning. The website appeared to be functioning normally by 2:30 p.m. ET after being down for several hours.?
In February, Canada’s Communications Security Establishment (CSE), which oversees Canada’s foreign intelligence and cybersecurity, issued an alert warning.
CSE said it would not confirm or deny any specific cyberattacks for security reasons.
Canada pledged another $2.4 billion (CDN) loan to Ukraine to support essential services, such as pension payments, purchasing fuel and restoring damaged energy infrastructure. This funding will be distributed through an IMF facility and brings Canada’s total contribution in this regard to about $8 billion (CDN).
Canada also signed a major nuclear supply contract to provide for Ukraine’s uranium needs to fuel its nuclear generators until 2035.
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Blinken: US has "engaged with allies and partners at high levels" in days since document leak
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
The United States has “engaged with allies and partners at high levels” in the days since the leak of classified documents came to light “to reassure them about our own committed to safeguarding intelligence and, of course, our commitment to our security partnerships,” US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said on Tuesday.
Speaking at a news conference at the State Department, Blinken noted that he had spoken Tuesday with Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba and emphasized: “our enduring support for Ukraine and for its efforts to defend its territorial integrity and sovereignty, its independence, reaffirmed the extraordinary support that we have provided to Ukraine along with dozens of other countries.”
The top US diplomat said he would not comment specifically on the “purported documents” when asked about a?report?that documents showed Ukraine had engaged in attacks outside of its territory.
However, Blinken noted that “Ukraine has to make decisions about how it can most effectively defend itself against Russian aggression and take back the territory that’s been seized from it.”
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US defense secretary says leaked classified documents are being taken very seriously
From CNN's Haley Britzky
The leak of classified Pentagon documents is being taken very seriously, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Tuesday.
Austin added that the Defense Department will “turn over every rock until we find the source” of the leaked intelligence documents.?
Austin said the documents they are aware of are dating February 28?and March 1, and that they do not know if there are “other documents” that had been posted.?
“Again,” he said, “we will continue to investigate in and try to determine the full scope of the activity.”
Austin said that he was first briefed on the “unauthorized disclosure” of documents on April 6 and has been convening senior leaders daily since then.
More background: Highly classified Pentagon documents leaked online in recent weeks have provided a rare window into how the US spies on allies and foes alike, deeply rattling US officials, who fear the revelations could jeopardize sensitive sources and compromise important foreign relationships.
Many of the documents, which US officials say are authentic, had markings indicating that they had been produced by the Joint Staff’s intelligence arm, known as J2, and appear to be briefing documents.
CNN’s Celine Alkhaldi and Mostafa Salem contributed to this report.
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No indications Egypt is supplying lethal weapons to Russia for war in Ukraine, White House says
From CNN's Kevin Liptak
The White House says it has no indication Egypt is providing Russia with deadly arms for its war in Ukraine.?
A leaked US intelligence document obtained by the Washington Post indicated Egypt’s military was planning to produce 40,000 rockets for Russia. It said that President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi instructed officials to keep production and shipment secret “to avoid problems with the West.”
Kirby said Egypt remained “a significant security partner” and would remain so.
“The United States military has a longstanding defense relationship with Egypt that goes back many, many years,” he said, speaking to reporters on board Air Force One.?
The February-dated “top secret document” purported conversations between Sisi and senior Egyptian military officials referencing plans to supply Russia with artillery and gunpowder, and to keep the plans a secret, the Washington Post said.
CNN has not seen the document cited by the Washington Post and is not able to confirm its authenticity.
An Egyptian official, unnamed by state-affiliated media, called the Washington Post report “informational absurdity” and said that Egypt follows a “balanced policy” with all international parties, Al Qahera News, a state-affiliated media outlet said. The statement was carried by several Egyptian state-affiliated news outlets.
Kirby refused to confirm the validity of the document and declined to detail any diplomatic conversations between Washington and Cairo.?
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Detained WSJ reporter Evan Gershkovich's family says "There is a hole in our hearts"
From CNN's Jon Passantino
Evan Gershkovich is seen in a picture taken on July 24, 2021.
(Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP via Getty Images)
The family of Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, who has been detained in Russia, released a statement on Tuesday calling for his release.
“We are encouraged that the State Department has officially designated Evan as wrongfully detained. We appreciate President Biden’s call to us today, assuring us that the U.S. government is doing everything in its power to bring him home as quickly as possible,” the statement said.
The statement continued:
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UAE rejects AP report on leaked US intel that alleges Russian officers deepened ties with Emirati government
From CNN’s Celine Alkhaldi and Mostafa Salem
The United Arab Emirates rejected reports suggesting that Russian intelligence was touting?deepened ties with the Emirati government and planned to work against the United States and the United Kingdom, as reported by the Associated Press — citing an apparent intelligence document from the US.?
The purported intelligence document which was posted online and viewed by the AP cited research reportedly from March 9 with the title “Russia/UAE: Intelligence Relationship Deepening,” that said US spies caught Russian intelligence officers boasting that they had convinced the UAE to “work together against US and UK intelligence agencies.”?
CNN has not seen the document cited by AP, and both have been unable to confirm its authenticity.???
“UAE officials have not seen any of the referenced materials, and any purported claims referenced in the Associated Press regarding the FSB enquiries are categorically false,” an official from the UAE told CNN in a statement on Tuesday.
The source spoke on the condition of anonymity, citing longstanding norms around the government’s communications with the media.
More background: Highly classified Pentagon documents?leaked online in recent weeks?have provided a rare window into how the US spies on allies and foes alike, deeply rattling US officials, who fear the revelations could jeopardize sensitive sources and compromise important foreign relationships.
Many of the documents, which US officials say are authentic, had markings indicating that they had been produced by the Joint Staff’s intelligence arm, known as J2, and appear to be briefing documents.
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Biden spoke to parents of journalist Evan Gershkovich, White House says
From CNN's Kevin Liptak
Evan Gershkovich in an undated image
The Wall Street Journal/Reuters/FILE
US President Joe Biden spoke with the parents of Evan Gershkovich, the Wall Street Journal correspondent detained in Russia, Tuesday.
Biden told reporters, before boarding Air Force One, that he planned to speak with?Gershkovich’s parents. He connected with them aboard the plane as he flew to Northern Ireland, according to White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre.?
“The president made it clear that his national security team has been and will remain focused on securing Evan’s release as well as that of Paul Whelan,” she said, referring to a second American who has been detained in Russia for several years.
She said the charges of espionage against?Gershkovich were baseless and said “he should be released immediately.”
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"Serious level of inaccuracy" in leaked US classified documents, UK's defense ministry says
From CNN's Radina Gigova
The apparent leak of US classified information “has demonstrated a serious level of inaccuracy,” the UK’s Ministry of Defence said Tuesday.?
“Readers should be cautious about taking at face value allegations that have the potential to spread disinformation,” the ministry said in a brief statement posted on its official Twitter feed.?
Ukraine’s response: Mykhailo Podolyak, the adviser to the head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, said on his Telegram channel Friday that he believes the documents that have been disseminated are inauthentic, have “nothing to do with Ukraine’s real plans” and are based on “a large amount of fictitious information” spread by Russia.
But while Ukrainian officials brushed off the leak, Ukraine has already altered some of its military plans because of it, a source close to Ukrainian President?Volodymyr Zelensky?told CNN.
What’s in the documents: CNN has reviewed 53 leaked documents, all of which appear to have been produced between mid-February and early March.
They contain a wide range of highly classified information – providing a rare window into how the US spies on allies and adversaries alike.
US allies are doing damage assessments, scrambling to determine whether any of their own sources and methods have been compromised by the leak.
“We expect the US to share a damage assessment with us in the coming days, but we cannot wait for their assessment. Right now, we are doing our own,” said an official from a country that is part of the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing arrangement with the US, which includes Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United Kingdom.
CNN’s Zachary Cohen, Natasha Bertrand and Kylie Atwood contributed to this post.
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US investigations into leaked documents could take months to complete, sources say
From CNN's Natasha Bertrand,?Zachary Cohen,?Kylie Atwood,?Alex Marquardt?and?Haley Britzky
The US government investigations into a?leak of highly classified Pentagon documents?— which includes intelligence on?the war in Ukraine — are starting to take shape, with the Pentagon examining how the leak impacts US national security and the Justice Department launching a criminal investigation into who may have been behind the breach.
The interagency probe is being led by the Pentagon’s Office of Intelligence and Security, according to three US officials, and could take months to complete. It will chiefly examine whether any sources and methods have been compromised since the documents, many of which are marked “top secret,” were?posted on a social media platform?earlier this year.
Milancy Harris, the deputy under secretary of defense for intelligence and security, will be in charge of the effort on the Pentagon side, officials said. The investigation will also try to determine the scope of the leak, since officials do not yet know whether it has been contained or whether there are more classified documents still circulating online.
The Pentagon effort is not focused on the source of the leak, one senior Pentagon official said. But the Defense Department will be examining how it distributes highly classified information and whether it needs to change who receives it on a daily basis.
The leaked materials appear to be photos of documents that were crumpled up and wrinkled, as though they had been folded and stuffed in a pocket.
While many officials tend to take classified information home, one senior US official said, the fact that the paper was folded up “tells me this person did not have that authority.”
Ukraine denies Wagner founder's claim that Russia controls 80% of Bakhmut
From CNN’s Vasco Cotovio and Olga Voitovych
Wagner founder and financier Yevgeny Prigozhin claimed on Tuesday that Russian forces now control much of the embattled eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut.?
“We are fully concentrated on Bakhmut, continuing to carry out combat missions. In Bakhmut, most of it — that is, more than 80% — is under our control, including the entire administrative center, plants, factories, the city administration,” Prigozhin?said. “What is left is part of the multi-story residential areas, where fortification districts were made. There are tunnels under these high-rise buildings.”
Ukrainian officials have denied Prigozhin’s claim.
“Prigozhin needs to show at least some victory in the city, which they have been trying to capture for nine months in a row, so he makes such statements,” Cherevatyi added.?
The Wagner founder has been known to make incorrect claims about his forces’ advance on the ground in Ukraine. Last week, he posted a grainy video raising a flag at dawn, saying Bakhmut had “been taken,” despite ongoing fighting in and around the city. His claim was seen as a “pretty desperate” attempt, Western officials said.
What Western officials are saying: The officials conceded Russia had been able to make some progress in Bakhmut, but added it could be “measured in meters.”
“The Russians at the moment, despite trying for six months, with huge numbers of personnel and huge numbers of losses, have been unable to take the town, and at the moment have made very, very slow progress,” the officials said at a briefing last Wednesday.?
In the video this Tuesday, Prigozhin said Wagner fighters had relinquished control of some areas around Bakhmut to the Russian military.?
“We handed over the flanks to the Ministry of Defence. Units of the Ministry of Defence, including the airborne troops, have today taken over both the right and left flanks,” he said. “That is why Zaliznyanskoye, Nikolaevka, and other settlements, which were stormed by units of the Wagner PMC in previous months, are in the area of responsibility of the airborne troops and other units of the Ministry of Defence.”
CNN’s Max Foster contributed to this post.
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Ukraine’s foreign minister says US secretary of state "reaffirmed ironclad support" in call
From CNN’s Florence Davey-Attlee?
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken has reassured Ukraine of the United States’ support following a leak of classified Pentagon documents, according to Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba.
During a call on Tuesday, Blinken “reaffirmed the ironclad U.S. support and vehemently rejected any attempts to cast doubt on Ukraine’s capacity to win on the battlefield,” Kuleba wrote Tuesday on Twitter, adding that the US “remains Ukraine’s trustworthy partner.”
The comments come after a number of highly classified Pentagon documents were released online in recent weeks. Some divulge?key weaknesses in Ukrainian weaponry, air defense, and battalion sizes and readiness at a?critical point in the war, as Ukrainian forces gear up to launch a counteroffensive against the Russians – and just as the US and Ukraine have begun to develop a more mutually trusting relationship over intelligence-sharing.
CNN’s Natasha Bertrand and Kylie Atwood contributed reporting to this post.
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Biden says he plans to speak with family of detained Wall Street Journal reporter
From CNN's Betsy Klein
US President Joe Biden told reporters that he planned to speak to the family of jailed Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich during his flight to Northern Ireland today.
The US State Department formally designated Gershkovich as wrongfully detained by Russia, and Biden said that he tried to speak to Gershkovich’s family on Monday but would attempt again today.
“We’re making it real clear that it’s totally illegal what’s happening. And we declared it, so changes the dynamic,” he said.
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Egyptian official denies leaked intelligence suggesting Egypt's military was producing weapons for Russia
From CNN’s Mostafa Salem and Anna Chernova
A senior Egyptian official denied that Egypt’s military was planning to produce 40,000 rockets for Russia, following a report from The Washington Post citing a leaked US intelligence document, Egyptian state-affiliated media said.
A leaked US intelligence document obtained by The Washington Post said Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi instructed officials to keep production and shipment secret “to avoid problems with the West.”
The “top secret” document from February contains purported conversations between Sisi and senior Egyptian military officials, according to the newspaper. It referenced plans to supply Russia with artillery and gunpowder, with Sisi asking officials to keep the plans a secret, The Washington Post reported.
CNN has not seen the document cited by the Washington Post and is not able to confirm its authenticity.
The unnamed Egyptian official called the report “informational absurdity” and said that Egypt follows a “balanced policy” with all international parties, according to Al Qahera News, a state-affiliated media outlet. The statement was also carried by several other Egyptian state-affiliated news outlets.
Egypt is one of the world’s top recipients of US military aid, receiving?$1.3 billion in military financing annually.
What Russia says: Russia’s Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov called the information a “hoax.”
“It looks like another hoax, of which there are plenty now. This is how you should treat such publications,” Peskov said in response to a question from a journalist on the report.
CNN has reached out to the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs for comment.
Remember: Highly classified Pentagon documents leaked online in recent weeks have provided a rare window into how the US spies on allies and foes alike, deeply rattling US officials, who fear the revelations could jeopardize sensitive sources and compromise important foreign relationships.
Many of the documents, which US officials say are authentic, had markings indicating that they had been produced by the US Joint Chiefs of Staff’s intelligence arm, known as J2, and appear to be briefing documents.
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US Senate leader requests all-Senate classified briefing about Pentagon documents on Ukraine
From CNN's Lauren Fox
A spokesperson for US Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer told CNN?that Schumer has requested a classified briefing for all senators on the leaked classified US documents that appear to contain information about the war in Ukraine.
Investigations and impact: The US Justice Department is investigating how the trove of highly sensitive documents ended up on social media sites.
The Defense Department is still reviewing the matter and has taken steps to tighten the flow of such highly sensitive documents, officials said, which are normally available on any given day to hundreds of people across the government.
While the Pentagon has stood up an “interagency effort” to assess the impact of the leak, US officials and close allies already fear the revelations could jeopardize sensitive sources and compromise important foreign relationships.
Russian parliament votes in favor of electronic military call-up papers?
From CNN's Anna Chernova
The Russian parliament, the State Duma, voted in favor of amendments to a bill that would allow for the electronic delivery of military call-up papers in addition to traditional letters.?
The bill passed through its third reading in the lower chamber of Russia’s parliament Tuesday.?It now needs to be approved by the upper chamber, the Federation Council, which is scheduled to meet Wednesday.?The final step is for the bill to be signed by President Vladimir Putin before it becomes law.
The Kremlin said?Tuesday?the amendments to military conscription legislation are not connected to mobilization, dismissing rumors of a new wave of enlistment in Russia.
Asked during a regular call with reporters if the Kremlin is concerned that the proposed law, if passed, would trigger another wave of a mass exodus of Russians, spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said, “Absolutely not. It has nothing to do with mobilization; it has to do with military registration.”?
The State Duma published the bill on Tuesday. According to the document, electronic summonses for military service will be equated to paper summons. Currently, conscription documents in Russia must be hand-delivered by the local military enlistment office or through an employer.
A person will be considered notified even if they have not seen the call-up papers or email and from the moment of receipt of the summons. Those liable for military service will be banned from traveling abroad.
Remember: Russia’s “partial mobilization” for its war in Ukraine, which was announced in September, resulted in a significant number of citizens fleeing Russia, as CNN previously reported.
The Kremlin acknowledged mistakes were made in its military draft process, but maintains there is no discussion of a new wave of mobilization.
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Nearly 8,500 civilian deaths confirmed in Ukraine since Russia’s invasion, UN says?
From CNN’s Allegra Goodwin in London?
Volunteers stand next to the?bodies?of members of a?civilian?convoy killed near the village of Kurylivka in Kharkiv region,?Ukraine, on?October 1.
(Vitalii Hnidyi/Reuters)
Nearly 8,500 civilians are confirmed to have been killed since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) said in a?statement Monday.
The OHCHR said it had recorded 22,734 civilian casualties in Ukraine between the beginning of the full-scale invasion on February 24, 2022 until April 9, 2023 — with 8,490 civilians killed and 14,244 injured.
The actual figures are likely to be “considerably higher,” the OHCHR cautioned, because information from some frontline locations such as Mariupol and Severodonetsk had been delayed, with many reports pending corroboration.?
Most confirmed civilian deaths occurred in Ukrainian government-controlled territory that is under attack by Russia, according to the OHCHR, with 3,927 killed in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, which have seen some of the bloodiest battles in the war so far. At least 1,894 civilians have been killed in territory occupied by the Russian Federation when the casualties occurred, the OHCHR said.?
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Russian security services detain man accused of sending money to Ukrainian armed forces??
From CNN's Darya Tarasova and Sarah Dean
Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) has detained a man on suspicion of treason, state news agency TASS reported Tuesday. He is accused of transferring money to the Armed Forces of Ukraine.
The man was detained in Khabarovsk, a city in Russia’s southeast, after making “transfers of personal funds for the purchase of weapons, ammunition and uniforms by the Armed Forces of Ukraine,” the FSB said, according to TASS.
He faces a prison sentence of 12 to 20 years and a possible additional fine of up to 500,000 rubles (around $6,000) if found guilty of treason, TASS reported.
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Ukraine's top national security official downplays leaked intelligence documents
From CNN's Inke Kappeler in Berlin
The?Pentagon?from above on March 3, 2022.
(Joshua Roberts/Reuters)
Some of the information in the highly classified leaked Pentagon documents was “not secret at all,” according to the head of Ukraine’s National Security Council.?
Ukraine is in constant contact with its key allies, such as the US, the UK, Germany and Poland, according to Danilov.
“The data for conducting certain operations, the size of the units, who is involved and in what direction - this information is absolutely secret. If someone thinks he has it, I can only congratulate him. But I don’t know where he could have them from,” he said.
“For the other part of the information - if it was indeed secret - the agencies in the United States and the United Kingdom will know exactly where it came from. And why it surfaced at this particular time,” added Danilov.
The start of Ukraine’s planned counteroffensive will be decided by the staff of the Commander-in-Chief at the very last moment, stressed Danilov.
“If someone believes that we have only one option, it does not correspond to reality. Even three options would not be much,” Danilov said in the interview.
“Intelligence agencies need to be more vigilant when it comes to classified documents,” he added.?
Some context: Ukraine has had to alter some of its military plans after the leak of highly classified Pentagon documents, a source close to Ukrainian President?Volodymyr Zelenskytold CNN.
However, Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to the head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, has said he believes the documents have “nothing to do with Ukraine’s real plans” and are based on “a large amount of fictitious information” disseminated by Russia.
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Paul Whelan, US citizen detained in Russia, calls home for first time in nearly two weeks
From CNN's Jennifer Hansler
Paul Whelan stands inside a defendants' cage during a hearing at a court in Moscow, Russia, on August 23, 2019.
(Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP/Getty Images)
Paul Whelan, an American wrongfully detained in Russia, was able to call home on Monday for the first time in nearly two weeks, his brother David Whelan said Tuesday.
“We been led to believe, erroneously, that Paul had been moved to LPU-21, the prison hospital,” David Whelan said in an email to journalists. Such a move has happened in the past, leaving Paul Whelan unable to call his parents or the embassy.
“The Ministry of Defense did come to IK-17 to recruit prisoners to become war criminals like the rest of the Russian military. But Paul and some other prisoners were sequestered within IK-17, not transferred out,” he said.?
“The prison administration claims that the phones have been out of order from March 30 through to April 9th or 10th. Russia’s infrastructure appears so brittle it could be true, or the prison could just be playing silly buggers again,” David Whelan said.
David Whelan said it seemed his brother has become aware of the case of another wrongfully detained American — Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich.
The Biden administration has urged the Russians to immediately release both Gershkovich and Paul Whelan.
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It's mid-afternoon in Kyiv. Here's what you need to know
From CNN staff
South Korea has claimed that a “considerable amount” of the material leaked from the Pentagon was fabricated, as US officials scramble to contain the effects of the leak.
Elsewhere, Ukrainian refugees continue to cross the border into Poland, with 400,000 new arrivals in the past week taking the total number to 11 million since the start of the invasion.
Here are the latest headlines:
Ukrainian adviser pushes for more weapons: Ukraine needs more long-range weapons and “less contemplation on leaks,” said Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak, referring to the recent leak of classified Pentagon documents.
South Korea claims leaked material was fabricated: South Korea’s presidential office claims the defense ministers of South Korea and the United States have agreed that a “considerable amount” of information in the leaked Pentagon documents was fabricated, after the leak revealed a conversation among Korean officials on the war in Ukraine.
Ukraine PM in Canada: Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal has arrived in Canada ahead of a meeting with his Canadian counterpart Justin Trudeau.?In an interview with Canada’s Globe and Mail newspaper last week, Shmyhal said he would request ammunition and heavily armored vehicles.?
Refugees continue to flee to Poland: More than 11 million Ukrainian refugees have fled to Poland since Russia invaded in February 2022, according to Poland’s EU representation, with nearly 400,000 people crossing the border in the last week.?
Kremlin says US journalist broke law: Detained US journalist Evan Gershkovich “was caught red-handed and violated the relevant laws of the Russian Federation,” said Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov on Tuesday, in response to the US State Department designating him wrongfully detained.
Long sentence for arson protest in Russia: A military court has sentenced two Russian men to 19 years in jail for setting a fire at a local administration building where a military registration desk was located, state media reported Monday.?One of the men said the incident was a protest against the war in Ukraine.
Reporter for U.S. newspaper The Wall Street Journal?Evan?Gershkovich?in an undated handout image.
(The Wall Street Journal/Reuters)
Detained US journalist Evan Gershkovich violated Russian law, the Kremlin maintained Tuesday, in response to the?US State Department having designated him as being wrongfully detained.
“The United States could and should protect the rights of its citizen, who was caught red-handed and violated the relevant laws of the Russian Federation. That is what he is suspected of. That is all I can say,” Russian government spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists during a regular conference call.
Russian investigators formally charged Gershkovich?with espionage, Russian state media reported, adding he denied the accusations.?A Moscow court on April 18 will hear an appeal filed by Gershkovich’s lawyers against his arrest, Russian state media said citing the court. The correspondent is currently held in the notorious Leftereovo pre-detention center until May 29.
What the US is saying: CNN reported on Monday that the US State Department officially designated Gershkovich as wrongfully detained by Russia.
The designation gives further backing to the assertions by the US government and the Wall Street Journal that the espionage charges against the reporter are baseless. It will empower the Biden administration to explore avenues?such as a prisoner swap to try to secure Gershkovich’s release.
CNN’s Jennifer Hansler contributed to this post.
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Senior Ukrainian official?calls for?more long-range weapons and “less contemplation on leaks”
From CNN’s Olga Voitovych in Kyiv
Ukrainian Presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak gives an interview in Kyiv, Ukraine, on February 16.
(Efrem Lukatsky/AP)
Ukraine needs more long-range weapons and “less contemplation on leaks,” said Ukrainian presidential advisor Mykhailo Podolyak,?referring to the recent leak of classified Pentagon documents.
“If we had time, we could watch the RF [the Russian Federation] fall apart & its ‘elites’ devour each other. But we don’t have it, as our people are dying,” tweeted Podolyak, an advisor to the head of the Office of the President of Ukraine, on Tuesday
Some context: Ukraine has pushed for long range weapons in order to be able to strike ammunition depots and logistics hubs that Russian forces have moved out of range of existing systems.
In January, Ukrainian officials asked for longer range missiles that can reach inside Russia.
But Western allies have so far been careful not to provide Ukraine with systems that can reach Russia in order to reduce the risk of escalating the conflict.
CNN’s Tim Lister?and?Fred Pleitgen contributed to this post.
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Two Russian men sentenced to 19 years in jail for "anti-mobilization" arson attack
From CNN’s Anna Chernova
A military court has sentenced two Russian?men?to 19 years in jail for setting a fire at a local administration building where a military registration desk was located, state media reported Monday.
On October 11, 2022, Roman Nasryev and Alexey Nuriev threw a Molotov cocktail into the window of the government building in the town of Bakal, in Russia’s Chelyabinsk region, according to investigators cited by Russian state news agency RIA Novosti.
The two men were found guilty of committing “a terrorist act by a group of persons by prior conspiracy” and of “training for carrying out terrorist activities.”
Nuriev was reportedly the commander of the fire and rescue service of the Ministry of Emergencies, and Nasryev was a driver for the National Guard (Rosgvardia), local news website 74.ru said.
The verdict marks the most severe sentence to date for anti-war arson, according to?the human rights group?Solidarity Zone, which believes?the lengthy sentence?could be because both men were working for government institutions.
In March, Solidarity Zone reported that Nasryev told the court he “decided to take a similar action, because I did not agree with the mobilization, the ‘special military operation’ and the war in general.”
“This way I wanted to convey my position of disagreement, I wanted my voice to be heard,” Nasryev added.
Some context: Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a “partial mobilization” in September 2022, meaning citizens who are in the reserve could be called up, and those with military experience would be subject to conscription.
More recently, Russian officials have consistently denied rumors of a second mobilization.
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More than 11 million people have crossed Poland-Ukraine border since Russia's invasion
From CNN’s Catherine Nicholls in London
Ukrainian?refugees?wait in line to cross the?Ukraine-Poland?border outside the?border?crossing checkpoint in Shehyni,?Ukraine, on March 31, 2022.
(Hannah McKay/Reuters)
More than 11 million Ukrainian refugees have fled to Poland since Russia invaded in February 2022, Poland’s EU representation tweeted on Tuesday. ??
Around 87% of those crossing the border are woman and children, it added.
At the beginning of April, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reported that just over 10.6 million people had crossed the border.
This means that nearly 400,000 people have travelled from Ukraine to Poland in the last week.?
There are currently more than 1.5 million Ukrainian refugees living in Poland and more than 3.5 million Ukrainian refugees settled in other European countries, the UNHCR reports.
“All those fleeing the war will find shelter and all the help they need in Poland,” Poland’s EU representation added. ?
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Ukrainian prime minister arrives in Canada
From CNN’s Sarah Dean in London
Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal has arrived in Canada ahead of a meeting with his Canadian counterpart Justin Trudeau.
(Denys Shmyhal/Twitter)
Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal has arrived in Canada ahead of a meeting with his Canadian counterpart Justin Trudeau, according to his official Twitter account.
Shmyhal said Canada was among the first countries to “stand with Ukraine,” and the two governments are “preparing new agreements and deals to strengthen the macro-financial and economic stability of Ukraine.”
In an interview with Canada’s?Globe and Mail?newspaper last week, Shmyhal said he would request ammunition and heavily armored vehicles.?
“It’s crucially important for the organization of our counteroffensive,” he told the Globe.
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South Korea claims some Pentagon documents are fabricated, after discussion on Ukraine leaked
From CNN’s Gawon Bae,?Yoonjung Seo?and Larry Register
South Korea’s presidential office claims the defense ministers of South Korea and the United States have agreed that a “considerable amount” of information in the leaked Pentagon documents was fabricated, after the leak revealed a conversation among Korean officials on the war in Ukraine.
The statement did not specify whether they believe that only the parts about South Korea is fabricated, or the documents in general.?
CNN has asked the presidential office why they believe some of the information has been fabricated. CNN cannot independently confirm if any of the documents have been altered or fabricated.
The leaked conversation: The leaked documents described a conversation between two senior South Korean national security officials over a US request for ammunition.??
The officials worried that supplying the ammunition, which the US would then send to Ukraine, would violate South Korea’s policy of not supplying lethal aid to countries at war. According to the document, one of the officials then suggested a way of getting around the policy without actually changing it – by selling the ammunition to Poland.
Seoul’s response: South Korea said its Defense Minister Lee Jong-sup had held a phone call with his US counterpart Lloyd Austin on Tuesday morning, at Austin’s request.
On the call, Austin explained recent media coverage of the leak and said the US would “closely communicate and fully cooperate” with Seoul on this issue, according to South Korea’s Defense Ministry.
CNN has not a received a readout of the call from the office of the US Secretary of Defense. CNN has reached out to the US Department of Defense for comment, and for a readout of the call, but has not yet received a response.
Zelensky celebrates prisoner swap, vows to "return all our people" in nightly address
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky delivers his nightly address from Kyiv on April 10.
(President of Ukraine)
In his nightly address on Monday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky celebrated the release of some Ukrainian prisoners of war, vowing to “return everyone.”
Russia and Ukraine exchanged more than 200 prisoners in their latest swap, with 80 men and 20 women returning to Ukraine.
Diplomatic efforts: He also outlined ongoing foreign policy and diplomacy efforts; on Monday, he met prominent British entrepreneur Richard Branson, spoke with the Greek prime minister and struck an agreement with the Iraqi prime minister.
Zelensky added that Germany continues to provide defense assistance, including armored vehicles, ammunition, medicine and more.
Boosting Ukraine’s defense capabilities “protects everyone in the partner countries, everyone in Europe, everyone in the world,” he added.
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Fighting in Bakhmut, and prisoners of war released. Catch up on the latest
Russia is using “scorched Earth” tactics as it tries to take the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, according to Ukraine’s top land commander. Across the country’s east, Ukraine is continuing to repel Russian attacks, the military says.
A prisoner swap saw 200 servicemen exchanged; meanwhile, the fallout from the Pentagon leak of classified documents continues, with the Kremlin denying any involvement.
Here are the latest headlines:
Russia devastating Bakhmut:?Russia is using airstrikes and artillery to destroy Bakhmut, in what one commander has called “scorched Earth” tactics. Meanwhile, Ukraine is working to repel Russian forces in the country’s east, with more than 20 attacks repelled within 24 hours, according to Ukraine’s General Staff of the Armed Forces.
Detained reporter: The US State Department officially declared the Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich was “wrongfully detained.” Gershkovich is being held in Russia, and this designation will empower the US government to explore every avenue to try to secure his release.
Prisoner swap: Russia and Ukraine exchanged more than 200 prisoners of war in their latest swap. Moscow’s Defense Ministry said it received 106 Russian servicemen, while Ukraine’s presidential office head said 100 Ukrainians were returned home — including troops who had fought to defend Mariupol, Hostomel and Azovstal.
Ukraine on the Pentagon leak: A Ukrainian Defense Ministry representative on intelligence accused Russia of using altered versions of the highly classified Pentagon documents leaked online to spread disinformation. “In recent decades, Russia’s most successful?intelligence operations?have been carried out in Photoshop,” said Andrii Yusov.
Moscow’s response: Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov dismissed accusations that Moscow may have been involved in the leak.?“The tendency to always?blame Russia?for everything and blame everything on Russia is now a common disease,” he said.
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Pentagon leak could get Ukrainians killed, says US congressman on intelligence committee
?From CNN's Sean Lyngaas
The?Pentagon?building is seen in Arlington, Virginia, on April 6.
(Tom Brenner/Reuters)
The recent leak of classified US military documents, if authentic, could have deadly consequences for the Ukrainians in the war with Russia, said the top Democrat on the US House intelligence committee.?
“It won’t be hard for the Russians to cut off [intelligence] collection avenues that might have been saving lives every day,” Rep. Jim Himes said on Monday. ?
Himes emphasized that he had not been briefed on the documents and could not independently corroborate their authenticity. But US officials have told CNN that the documents appear real.
The fallout: US allies are doing damage assessments, scrambling to determine whether any of their own sources and methods have been compromised by the leak.
Himes said he worried that the closest of US allies —?the so-called “Five Eyes” intelligence partnership that includes Australia Canada, New Zealand and the UK —?“might think twice about sharing their most sensitive intelligence” because of the leak.
The leak has also led the Pentagon to take steps to tighten the flow of such highly sensitive documents, US officials have said.
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US State Department officially declares journalist Evan Gershkovich as "wrongfully detained by Russia"
The designation underscores the United States government’s statements that the espionage charges against the reporter are baseless, and it will empower the US government to explore every avenue to try to secure his release.?
Gershkovich’s case will now be handled at the State Department through the Office of the Special Presidential Envoy for Hostage Affairs.??
Both of the Americans who have been recently brought home from Russia — Trevor Reed and Brittney Griner — had been designated as wrongfully detained, and were freed in prisoner swaps.?
Paul Whelan, who remains imprisoned in Russia, also has been declared wrongfully detained.?
In his statement, Patel said the “U.S. government will provide all appropriate support to Mr. Gershkovich and his family.”
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US State Department deputy head tapped to lead diplomatic response to classified documents leak, official says
From CNN's Kylie Atwood and Jennifer Hansler
Deputy Secretary of State?Wendy?Sherman?listens to lawmaker’ statements during a US Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing about at the government's policy towards China in “the era of strategic competition” at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, February 9, 2023.
(Amanda Andrade-Rhoades/Reuters)
US State Department Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman has been tapped to lead the diplomatic response to the leak of highly classified Pentagon documents, according to a US official familiar with the matter.
US government officials “are engaging with allies and partners at high levels over this including to reassure them of our commitment to safeguarding intelligence and the fidelity of securing our partnerships” following the mass leak of highly classified documents, State Department principal deputy spokesperson Vedant Patel said Monday.
Patel would not go into details about which countries they had engaged, saying “that work is ongoing.”
Asked by CNN if the State Department is taking the lead on those conversation, Patel said that “as the main diplomatic branch and agency of this administration, of course the Department of State would have a role in communicating with our allies and partners, but these conversations are happening across the administration.”
“US officials are engaging with allies and partners at the highest level over this,” he said.?
Patel would not say if any steps had been taken to restrict access to classified information at the State Department as a result of the leak, saying he did not want to discuss policy decisions.?
CNN has reported that some of the leaked documents included intelligence related to the war in Ukraine.
International response: Patel would not speak on specific comments from South Korean and Israeli officials reacting to leaked documents.?South Korea’s presidential office said it will hold “necessary discussions with the US” regarding the document leak, which comes as the relationship between Seoul and Washington is already strained due to South Korean anger over the Inflation Reduction Act harming South Korea’s electronic vehicle industry and concerns related to the US CHIPS Act.
“There is a lot of frustration towards the Yoon administration for being too committed to the US alliance so every aspect of the US-South Korea relationship is under the microscope,” said a former US Ambassador to South Korea.??
The South Korean president is scheduled to visit the White House later this month, making the timing around this incident particularly unfortunate the former diplomat said.??
“Does Yoon have to raise this during the State Visit? We don’t know yet,” the diplomat said
More broadly, one diplomat from a NATO country told CNN that they do not believe Moscow was overly surprised by the most of the intel that was revealed in the leaked documents, noting Russia has robust intelligence gathering operations.?
They also said that they were not frustrated that there was US intelligence that was not widely shared with allies. This diplomat said most nations do not share everything with their allies nor is there an expectation that they do so.?
“That’s not the way it works,” the diplomat said.
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Pentagon says it's still working to determine scale of intel leak, which included information on Ukraine?
From CNN's Haley Britzky
Ukrainian service members ride a tank in Donbas region, Ukraine, on April 8.
(Yan Dorbronosov/Reuters)
The Pentagon is still working to determine the scale of a leak of classified information that has occurred in recent weeks, Chris Meagher, assistant to the secretary of defense for public affairs, said Monday.?
CNN has reported that some of the leaked documents included intelligence related to the war in Ukraine.
Meagher said Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin was first briefed on the leak on April 6 and began “convening senior leaders on a daily basis” the next day.?
Over the weekend, US officials engaged with allies and partners —?some of whom were also implicated in the document leak, Meagher said.
The?Pentagon?team is also working to determine if the leak of classified material includes the Defense Department’s legislative affairs, public affairs, policy, general counsel, intelligence and security, and joint staff offices, Meagher said.?
Meagher said the team is a “coordinated effort amongst several different components of DOD” who were all working to “get our arms around everything that has to do with” the leak.
Meagher declined to say who specifically was in charge of that team and overseeing those efforts.