you re live in the cnn newsroom. i m jim acosta in washington. we begin in the middle east where a cease fire and israel and islamic jihad was supposed to go into effect n the ground says more rockets wereidf also s si sirens warning of incoming fear. now we ve seen attacks like the ones yesterday but in the meantime, we want to switch over the news in ukraine. ukraine s president and his desire to hit russia on its home soil citing recently leaked classified documents. the washington post says president zelenskyy has suggested bold attacks behind closed doors including blowing up a pipeline in attempting to occupy russian border village to gain leverage over moscow. in talks, the post points out where zelenskyy made suggestions happened months ago. still, it says the pentagon did not dispute the authenticity of the leaked materials. this comes as ukraine carried out what could be its second missile attack in 24 hours on the luhansk region. it s a section of ukraine that
operations, shaping through definition military doctrine definition means anything from looking at intelligence to attacking headquarters or fuel du dumps zelenskyy has been doing that in preparation for that attack and i d suggest his general has probably been doing it rlonger than that in anticipation of long range planning. as a military commander, you re always looking to conduct deep strikes to intercept anything the enemy is going to do in the long-term. but these are the kind of things that i m not sure would pay that much, it would not give that much of bang for the buck in terms of kconducting those kind of operations when he has a lot of other things to focus on to regain sovereign territory within ukraine. there s also the latest missile strikes in liuhansk. what do these strikes tell you about their tactics? that was actually a great strike in my opinion because it