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CNN
14 minutes ago
- CNN
What are Patriot missiles and why does Ukraine need them so badly?
US President Donald Trump's announcement that Ukraine will receive Patriot missile systems as part of a new package of US weaponry has been warmly welcomed in Kyiv as it reels under nightly Russian bombardments. President Volodymyr Zelensky has made repeated requests for Patriots in recent weeks as Moscow sends record numbers of drones and missiles to cause havoc and fear in Ukrainian cities and towns. But there were few specifics in Trump's announcement, and major questions remain over how many Ukraine will receive, when they will arrive, and who will provide them. Here's what we know about the vaunted US missile defense system: The Patriots, short for Phased Array Tracking Radar for Intercept on Target, are the US Army's key missile defense system. They most recently proved their worth last month, when they helped shoot down 13 out of 14 incoming Iranian missiles that were launched at the US Air Force's Al Udeid Air Base in Qatar. The latest versions of Patriot interceptors are capable of engaging incoming short-range ballistic missiles, cruise missiles and drones at altitudes up to 15 kilometers (9.3 miles) and distances of up to 35 kilometers. Analysts say that gives a single Patriot battery the ability to cover 100 to 200 square kilometers of area, depending on how many launchers are in the battery, local terrain and other conditions. That's not a large area in a country the size of Ukraine, at more than 603,000 kilometers in total area. Hence, Kyiv's need for multiple new Patriot batteries. A battery consists of six to eight missile launchers, each capable of carrying up to 16 interceptors, along with a phased-array radar, a control station, a power generation station – all mounted on trucks and trailers. About 90 people are assigned to a Patriot battery, but only three soldiers in the command and control center can operate it in a combat situation, according to US military reports. A Patriot battery is expensive, with the complete setup of launchers, radars and interceptor missiles costing more than a billion dollars, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). A single interceptor costs up to $4 million, making their use against cheap Russian drones that can cost as little as $50,000 problematic, according to a CSIS report – especially when Russia is sending hundreds of drones a night in recent attacks on Ukraine. In regards to the latest transfer, US officials said Patriots could get to Ukraine quicker if they were moved from European NATO allies to Ukraine, with those then being replaced by systems bought from the US. Trump said some or all of 17 Patriot batteries ordered by other countries could get to Ukraine 'very quickly,' according to a Reuters report. According to the 'Military Balance 2025' from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, six NATO allies – Germany, Greece, the Netherlands, Poland, Romania and Spain – have Patriot batteries in their arsenals. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said Monday that several nations – including Germany, Finland, Denmark, Sweden and Norway – could be potential suppliers of the new equipment, but did not specifically mention the Patriots as coming from those countries. There has been concern inside and outside the military that US Patriot inventories may be stretched too thin. 'It is our most stressed force element,' Gen. James Mingus, vice chief of staff of the Army, told a dialogue at the CSIS earlier this month. He noted the Patriot unit in Qatar that helped defend the Al Udeid air base had been deployed to the Middle East for 500 days, Mingus said, a 'very stressed force element.' Ukraine has said it needs 10 new Patriot batteries to protect itself against Russia's increased onslaught of missiles and drones. Kyiv has already received six fully operational Patriot batteries – two from the US, two from Germany, one from Romania and one jointly given by Germany and the Netherlands, according to the UK-based arms monitoring group Action on Armed Violence. Analysts say Patriots alone can't end Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Wesley Clark, a retired US Army general and former NATO supreme commander, told CNN's Lynda Kinkade on Monday that the for the arms package to have real effect on the battlefield, it would have to include more than air defense systems. 'If you want to really stop this, you've got to strike Russia and you've got to strike deep,' Clark said. 'you have to shoot the archer and not the arrows coming in.' CNN's Kevin Liptak contributed to this report


CNN
22 minutes ago
- CNN
Opening statements set for today in trial of Colorado dentist accused of fatally poisoning his wife
Opening statements are set for Tuesday in the trial of an Aurora, Colorado, dentist accused of fatally poisoning his wife's protein shakes, plus plotting to kill four others, including the lead detective investigating her death. Fifteen jurors – 12 primary and three alternates – were seated following about six hours of questioning Monday. James Craig, 47, has pleaded not guilty to charges including first-degree murder, solicitation to commit first-degree murder, solicitation to commit tampering with physical evidence and solicitation to commit perjury. Craig's wife, Angela, died on March 18, 2023, after being admitted to local hospitals three times in 10 days. She was 43 years old; they had six children. Investigators say Craig began to carry out a plan to end his wife's life one week before her first hospitalization. Craig created a new email account on February 27, 2023, from a computer in an exam room at his dental office, a probable cause affidavit states. He used the account that same day to order arsenic on Amazon after conducting searches including 'how many grams of pure arsenic will kill a human,' and 'Top 5 Undetectable Poisons That Show No Signs of Foul Play,' the document says. A delivery confirmation shows the arsenic arrived at the Craig home on March 4. Two days later, Angela was admitted to a hospital complaining of dizziness, an inability to focus her eyes and sluggish physical responses, according to the affidavit. She was discharged the same day. Text messages between the couple, included in the document, show Angela told her husband the only thing she had consumed that morning was her protein shake. She denied feeling nauseated when he asked, and texted him, 'I feel drugged.' 'Given our history I know that must be triggering,' Craig wrote back. 'Just for the record, I didn't drug you.' The message is an apparent reference to an incident years prior when Craig allegedly drugged his wife to prevent her from stopping his attempt to commit suicide, one of Angela Craig's sisters told investigators, according to a probable cause affidavit. Angela was hospitalized again from March 9 until March 14 and appeared to have consumed another protein shake before that hospitalization, text messages from the affidavit indicate. In a text conversation on March 10, James Craig told a family friend, 'Yesterday, the only thing she had was a protein shake in the morning which she threw up,' along with soup for dinner which she also vomited, screenshots from the court document show. On March 13, while Angela was admitted for her second hospital stay, investigators allege an online order of potassium cyanide was delivered to Craig's dental practice. Craig told the company from which he placed an order that he needed it for a complex surgical procedure, but he told an office manager he would be receiving a personal package and not to open it, the affidavit says. The office manager told investigators the package was inadvertently opened by another employee and she saw a packing slip labeled 'potassium cyanide' before resealing the box, according to the document. Investigators also uncovered 'sexually explicit' email exchanges between Craig and a woman named Karin Cain who traveled from Texas to Colorado to visit Craig while his wife was hospitalized, the affidavit says. Cain met Craig at a dental convention that February and he told her he was amid a divorce, she told ABC News in 2023. 'If I had known what was true, I would not have been with this person,' Cain said. Angela was admitted to the hospital for the final time on March 15. About three hours after arriving, she had a seizure and unexplained rapid medical decline, which led to her being placed on life support in the hospital's intensive care unit, the affidavit says. She was pronounced dead three days later. The Arapahoe County coroner ruled Angela's cause of death was acute cyanide and tetrahydrozoline poisoning, with subacute arsenic poisoning listed as a significant condition. While Craig was in jail awaiting trial in his wife's death, prosecutors say he plotted to kill four people, including the lead detective investigating her death. Craig tried to convince a fellow inmate to kill the detective, another unidentified law enforcement officer and two other inmates, prosecutors said during a February preliminary hearing introducing two additional criminal charges. Craig also allegedly wrote letters to the inmate's ex-wife, trying to convince her to 'fabricate evidence,' prosecutors told the court. Law enforcement intercepted two letters to the woman offering her money to manufacture texts, phone records and photographs to back up a story about her being friends with Angela Craig – a story prosecutors say he wanted to sell to both the district attorney's office and Craig's own defense attorney at the time. That attorney, Harvey Steinberg, had abruptly withdrawn from the case last November, the day jury selection was set to begin. At the time of his withdrawal, Steinberg cited two rules of professional conduct, according to prosecutors. The first states, 'The client persists in a course of action involving the lawyer's services that the lawyer reasonably believes is criminal or fraudulent,' and the second says, 'The client insists upon taking action that the lawyer considers repugnant or with which the lawyer has a fundamental disagreement.' Steinberg has not responded to requests for comment. In one of the letters to the inmate's ex-wife, Craig indicated he believed his case hinged on 'being able to find someone to say Angela was suicidal,' an investigator testified, hinting at a possible defense. Craig had told several people Angela was suffering suicidal ideations leading up to her death, according to the affidavit. Craig's dental partner, Ryan Redfearn, told investigators when he brought up the potassium cyanide purchase, Craig initially denied it, then recanted, 'but claimed Angela asked him to order it,' the affidavit says. Craig told Redfearn he 'didn't think (Angela) would actually take it,' according to the affidavit, at which point Redfearn told him to 'stop talking and get a lawyer.' A case worker with child protective services described a similar conversation to investigators, the document says. Craig told her Angela had been suicidal 'for some time,' and he believed she had been 'intentionally overdosing on opioids and another unknown substance,' according to the document. The social worker told investigators the statements were concerning because Craig never reported the incidents nor tried to get medical help, and none of the couple's six children mentioned their mother suffered from depression. Craig's attorneys have not responded to requests for comment.


CNN
25 minutes ago
- CNN
Opening statements set for today in trial of Colorado dentist accused of fatally poisoning his wife
Opening statements are set for Tuesday in the trial of an Aurora, Colorado, dentist accused of fatally poisoning his wife's protein shakes, plus plotting to kill four others, including the lead detective investigating her death. Fifteen jurors – 12 primary and three alternates – were seated following about six hours of questioning Monday. James Craig, 47, has pleaded not guilty to charges including first-degree murder, solicitation to commit first-degree murder, solicitation to commit tampering with physical evidence and solicitation to commit perjury. Craig's wife, Angela, died on March 18, 2023, after being admitted to local hospitals three times in 10 days. She was 43 years old; they had six children. Investigators say Craig began to carry out a plan to end his wife's life one week before her first hospitalization. Craig created a new email account on February 27, 2023, from a computer in an exam room at his dental office, a probable cause affidavit states. He used the account that same day to order arsenic on Amazon after conducting searches including 'how many grams of pure arsenic will kill a human,' and 'Top 5 Undetectable Poisons That Show No Signs of Foul Play,' the document says. A delivery confirmation shows the arsenic arrived at the Craig home on March 4. Two days later, Angela was admitted to a hospital complaining of dizziness, an inability to focus her eyes and sluggish physical responses, according to the affidavit. She was discharged the same day. Text messages between the couple, included in the document, show Angela told her husband the only thing she had consumed that morning was her protein shake. She denied feeling nauseated when he asked, and texted him, 'I feel drugged.' 'Given our history I know that must be triggering,' Craig wrote back. 'Just for the record, I didn't drug you.' The message is an apparent reference to an incident years prior when Craig allegedly drugged his wife to prevent her from stopping his attempt to commit suicide, one of Angela Craig's sisters told investigators, according to a probable cause affidavit. Angela was hospitalized again from March 9 until March 14 and appeared to have consumed another protein shake before that hospitalization, text messages from the affidavit indicate. In a text conversation on March 10, James Craig told a family friend, 'Yesterday, the only thing she had was a protein shake in the morning which she threw up,' along with soup for dinner which she also vomited, screenshots from the court document show. On March 13, while Angela was admitted for her second hospital stay, investigators allege an online order of potassium cyanide was delivered to Craig's dental practice. Craig told the company from which he placed an order that he needed it for a complex surgical procedure, but he told an office manager he would be receiving a personal package and not to open it, the affidavit says. The office manager told investigators the package was inadvertently opened by another employee and she saw a packing slip labeled 'potassium cyanide' before resealing the box, according to the document. Investigators also uncovered 'sexually explicit' email exchanges between Craig and a woman named Karin Cain who traveled from Texas to Colorado to visit Craig while his wife was hospitalized, the affidavit says. Cain met Craig at a dental convention that February and he told her he was amid a divorce, she told ABC News in 2023. 'If I had known what was true, I would not have been with this person,' Cain said. Angela was admitted to the hospital for the final time on March 15. About three hours after arriving, she had a seizure and unexplained rapid medical decline, which led to her being placed on life support in the hospital's intensive care unit, the affidavit says. She was pronounced dead three days later. The Arapahoe County coroner ruled Angela's cause of death was acute cyanide and tetrahydrozoline poisoning, with subacute arsenic poisoning listed as a significant condition. While Craig was in jail awaiting trial in his wife's death, prosecutors say he plotted to kill four people, including the lead detective investigating her death. Craig tried to convince a fellow inmate to kill the detective, another unidentified law enforcement officer and two other inmates, prosecutors said during a February preliminary hearing introducing two additional criminal charges. Craig also allegedly wrote letters to the inmate's ex-wife, trying to convince her to 'fabricate evidence,' prosecutors told the court. Law enforcement intercepted two letters to the woman offering her money to manufacture texts, phone records and photographs to back up a story about her being friends with Angela Craig – a story prosecutors say he wanted to sell to both the district attorney's office and Craig's own defense attorney at the time. That attorney, Harvey Steinberg, had abruptly withdrawn from the case last November, the day jury selection was set to begin. At the time of his withdrawal, Steinberg cited two rules of professional conduct, according to prosecutors. The first states, 'The client persists in a course of action involving the lawyer's services that the lawyer reasonably believes is criminal or fraudulent,' and the second says, 'The client insists upon taking action that the lawyer considers repugnant or with which the lawyer has a fundamental disagreement.' Steinberg has not responded to requests for comment. In one of the letters to the inmate's ex-wife, Craig indicated he believed his case hinged on 'being able to find someone to say Angela was suicidal,' an investigator testified, hinting at a possible defense. Craig had told several people Angela was suffering suicidal ideations leading up to her death, according to the affidavit. Craig's dental partner, Ryan Redfearn, told investigators when he brought up the potassium cyanide purchase, Craig initially denied it, then recanted, 'but claimed Angela asked him to order it,' the affidavit says. Craig told Redfearn he 'didn't think (Angela) would actually take it,' according to the affidavit, at which point Redfearn told him to 'stop talking and get a lawyer.' A case worker with child protective services described a similar conversation to investigators, the document says. Craig told her Angela had been suicidal 'for some time,' and he believed she had been 'intentionally overdosing on opioids and another unknown substance,' according to the document. The social worker told investigators the statements were concerning because Craig never reported the incidents nor tried to get medical help, and none of the couple's six children mentioned their mother suffered from depression. Craig's attorneys have not responded to requests for comment.