KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — At a Ukrainian power plant repeatedly hit by Russian aerial attacks, equipment department chief Oleh has a one-word answer when asked...
KYIV, Ukraine — At a Ukrainian power plant repeatedly hit by Russian aerial attacks , equipment department chief Oleh has a one-word answer when asked what Ukraine ’s battered energy industry needs most: “Patriot.”aimed at pulverizing Ukraine ’s energy grid, hobbling the economy and sapping the public’s morale. Staff worry they will lose the race to prepare for winter unless“Rockets hit fast. Fixing takes long,” Oleh said in limited but forceful English.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba told Foreign Policy magazine that half of the country’s energy system has been damaged by Russian attacks.in 2022. It estimates that repairing all the damaged plants would take between six months and two years — even if there are no more strikes.Shift supervisor Ruslan was on duty in the operations room when the air alarm sounded. He sent his crew to a basement shelter but remained at his post when the blast struck only meters away.
Oleh said the Russians are “learning all the time” and adapting their tactics. Initially they targeted transformers that distribute power; now they aim for the power-generating equipment itself, with increasing accuracy. The Russians also are sending growing numbers of missiles and exploding drones to exhaust Ukraine’s air defenses, and striking the same targets repeatedly.
Some 51 DTEK employees have been wounded in attacks since 2022, and three have been killed. Staff say they keep working despite the danger because they know how crucial their work is. ‘It’s not my deal. I’m a lover, not a fighter,’ Mr Trump told a crowd of supporters in Wisconsin about his actions on January 6
DTEK Ukraine’S Energy Aerial Attacks Dmytro Kuleba Power Plant Dmytro Sakharuk Patriot Missile
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