Ukraine invasion: Boris Johnson tells Commons Putin's military HAS committed war crimes


Boris Johnson explicitly accused Vladimir Putin’s forces of committing war crimes in Ukraine today, and said more are happening ‘almost hourly’.

The PM told the Commons there were already incidents in the first week of the conflict that ‘fully qualify’ as breaches of international law.

And Downing Street pointed to strikes on the Babi Yar Holocaust memorial in Kyiv and targeting of apartment blocks.

The government has previously warned that evidence is being collated, with the International Criminal Court investigating.

Defence Secretary Ben Wallace raised fears this morning that Russia will switch tactics to ‘indiscriminate bombing’ after the invasion failed to make swift progress.   

The ruins of buildings in Kharkiv today after the latest shelling by Russian forces

The ruins of buildings in Kharkiv today after the latest shelling by Russian forces

Vladimir Putin

Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson (right) explicitly accused Vladimir Putin’s (left) forces of committing war crimes in Ukraine today, and said more are happening ‘almost hourly’

Mr Johnson spoke to Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky on Wednesday morning, promising further support and weapons for the forces resisting Russia’s military.

At PMQs, he said: ‘Putin has gravely miscalculated; in his abhorrent assault on a sovereign nation, he has underestimated the extraordinary fortitude of the Ukrainian people and the unity and resolve of the free world in standing up to his barbarism.’

The chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court, Karim Khan, has said he plans to open an investigation into events in Ukraine and Mr Johnson told MPs: ‘What we have seen already from Vladimir Putin’s regime in the use of the munitions that they have already been dropping on innocent civilians, in my view, already fully qualifies as a war crime.’

The PM’s spokesman said after the session: ‘Obviously, formally it will be for a criminal court to make that ruling but I think no one can be in any doubt that what we’re seeing daily, almost hourly now, are horrific acts that would certainly appear to be war crimes.’

Mr Johnson said ‘the vice is tightening on the Putin regime’ as he was urged by Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer to ramp up sanctions against oligarch allies of the Russian leader.

Russian troops have entered Ukraine’s second city Kharkiv following days of intensive bombardment.

The Ministry of Defence said the latest intelligence suggested Russian forces had reportedly also moved into the centre of Kherson in south Ukraine.

Artillery and air strikes have targeted built-up areas in Kyiv, Kharkiv, Mariupol and Chernihiv.

But Mr Wallace said the advance of Russian forces continued to be slowed by a combination of overstretched logistics, poor morale and brave resistance by Ukrainian fighters.

He told BBC Breakfast that despite the presence of Russian troops, ‘none of the major cities have been taken control of’.

There was ‘huge amounts of low morale in the Russian forces, we’ve seen lots of surrenders’.

However, he added: ‘But that doesn’t take away from the fact you have a very ruthless Russian armed forces leadership and a president who seems to know no limit to how much violence they will use to achieve their aims.’

The lack of progress in meeting the aims of the invasion had led to a change in tactics, focusing on aerial and artillery bombardment of cities rather than the kind of lightning mobilised armoured advances originally envisaged by the Kremlin, Western military experts believe.

The smoking ruins of a gym following shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine, today

The smoking ruins of a gym following shelling in Kyiv, Ukraine, today

Ben Wallace highlighted Moscow's military 'doctrine' as he said Vladimir Putin's forces are likely to surround cities and 'bombard indiscriminately' - before seizing 'what's left'

Ben Wallace highlighted Moscow’s military ‘doctrine’ as he said Vladimir Putin’s forces are likely to surround cities and ‘bombard indiscriminately’ – before seizing ‘what’s left’

Mr Wallace told Sky News that meant a plan to ‘carpet-bomb cities, indiscriminately in some cases’ and on BBC Radio 4’s Today he warned Russian forces would ‘pummel these cities with artillery and then hope to break the city’.

The tactics had been used in Chechnya but Ukraine is a different proposition because of its size and population.

Mr Wallace warned that an occupying force would face the kind of insurgency faced by the Soviets in Afghanistan or the UK and Western allies in Iraq.

There could be ‘years of resistance’ to a Russian occupation, he said.

The Defence Secretary again rejected calls for the UK and its allies to enforce a no-fly zone in the skies above Ukraine, because shooting down a Russian plane could trigger a Europe-wide conflict between Mr Putin and Nato.

A no-fly zone would also have to apply to Ukrainian jets, meaning they could not target Russian forces from the air, he added.

‘If you had a no-fly zone in Ukraine, the overwhelming scale of the Russian army would be able to drive around with impunity, which it can’t at the moment.’

But he said the UK had ‘led the way’ in supplying surface-to-air weapons systems to Ukraine.

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