Russian violence getting 'increasingly indiscriminate': US official
The Russian military is trying to subdue population centers "using more and more long-range fires, which are increasingly indiscriminate in terms of what they're hitting," a senior U.S. defense official warned Monday.
Russia has now launched more than 900 missiles against Ukraine, according to the official.
But the official said "almost all of Russia's advances remain stalled."
The Russians closest to Kyiv are still near Hostomel Airport, about 9 miles from the city center. Some troops are moving in behind those advance forces, "but not at a great pace," the official said.
The coastal city of Mariupol remains isolated and under heavy bombardment, with Russian forces to the north and east, though Ukrainians are continuing to fight back, the official said.
Significant fighting continues over Kharkiv in northeast Ukraine, with Russians relying more and more on long-range missile attacks, the official said.
The official said the U.S. is seeing a new line of advance, with 50 to 60 vehicles moving from the southwest of Kharkiv down toward the town of Izyum.
"The assessment is that they are trying to block off the Donbass area and to prevent the flow westward of any Ukrainian armed forces that would be in the eastern part of the country, prevent[ing] them from coming to the assistance of other Ukrainian defenders near Kyiv," the official said.
-ABC News' Matt Seyler