Ukraine tells critics of slow counterattack to ‘shut up’

  • Troops fight through heavy minefields
  • NATO Secretary General says ‘need to trust’ Ukrainian leaders
  • Ukraine has intensified its drone attacks on Russia

KYIV (Reuters) – Ukraine told critics of the pace of its three-month-old counteroffensive to “shut up” on Thursday, the clearest sign yet of Kiev’s frustration with leaks from Western officials who say its forces are advancing too slowly. .

Since launching a counteroffensive using billions of dollars’ worth of Western military equipment, Ukraine has recaptured more than a dozen villages, but has yet to penetrate Russia’s main defences.

Reports in the New York Times, Washington Post and other news organizations last week quoted US and other Western officials as saying that the attack did not live up to expectations. Some have criticized Ukraine’s strategy, including accusing it of concentrating its forces in the wrong places.

Moscow says the Ukrainian campaign has already failed. Ukrainian leaders say they are moving slowly on purpose, weakening Russian defenses and logistics to minimize casualties when they eventually attack in full force.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said, “Criticizing the slow pace of the counterattack means spitting in the face of the Ukrainian soldier who sacrifices his life every day, advancing and liberating kilometer after kilometer of Ukrainian territory.” told reporters on Thursday.

“I recommend to all critics to be silent, to come to Ukraine and try to free one square centimeter themselves,” he said during a meeting of European Union foreign ministers in Spain.

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg told CNN that Ukrainian leaders deserve the benefit of the doubt.

“The Ukrainians have exceeded expectations time and time again,” he said. “We need to trust them. We advise, help and support. But… it is the Ukrainians who have to make these decisions.”

Defensive lines

After months of fighting through heavy minefields, Ukrainian forces finally reached Russia’s main defensive lines in recent days, south of the village of Robotin they captured last week in the western Zaporizhya region.

They are now advancing between the neighboring villages of Novopokrupivka and Verpov, searching for a way around the anti-tank ditches and rows of concrete pyramids known as dragon’s teeth that make up Russia’s main fortifications visible from space.

A breakthrough would be the first test of Russia’s deeper defences, which Ukraine hopes will be more vulnerable and less mined than the areas its forces have traversed so far.

A Ukrainian commander in the region told Reuters last week that his men had broken through the toughest lines, reached less defended areas and were now expected to advance more quickly. Reuters was unable to independently verify this.

Kiev rarely provides details about its offensive operations.

In a statement on Thursday, Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar announced unspecified successes near Novopokropivka, without providing details.

It also said Ukrainian forces were advancing near Bakhmut in the east, the only city Russia captured in its offensive earlier this year. She added that violent battles are sweeping villages south of the city.

Oleksandr Sersky, commander of the Ukrainian Ground Forces, spoke of a “positive dynamic” near Bakhmut.

Drone attacks inside Russia

Ukraine has also intensified drone attacks on targets deep inside Russia and in Russian-controlled territory in Ukraine.

The Russian Defense Ministry said it had destroyed a new Ukrainian drone over the Bryansk region in southern Russia.

It had earlier reported drone strikes overnight in Bryansk and said it had shot down a missile fired at Crimea, which Russia occupied and annexed in 2014.

The night before, Moscow reported Ukrainian attempts to launch drone strikes in six Russian regions, including one that caused a massive fire at a military air base in Pskov in northern Russia, damaging several giant military transport planes on the runway.

While Ukraine rarely comments directly on specific attacks inside Russia, President Volodymyr Zelensky appeared to brag about the Pskov attack twice on Thursday.

In his evening video address, he said: “The results of our weapons – the new Ukrainian weapons – are 700 kilometers away.” “The mission is to do more.”

Ukraine’s Western allies generally prevent Kiev from using the weapons they provide to attack Russian territory, but say Ukraine has the right to attack military targets with its own weapons.

The attacks in recent weeks, including several in central Moscow over the past month, have brought the war home for many Russians for the first time after 18 months during which Russia subjected Ukraine to air strikes across the country.

Russia is also facing the fallout from a mutiny two months ago by Wagner, a private army that formed the main offensive force for its winter offensive earlier this year. Wagner leader Yevgeny Prigozhin and his key aides were killed in a plane crash last week.

The Kremlin denied being behind the incident. President Vladimir Putin had called Prigozhin’s rebellion a betrayal, but promised not to punish him for it.

On Thursday, Prigozhin’s right-hand man Dmitry Utkin, a neo-Nazi former military intelligence officer whose Wagner callsign gave the mercenary force its name, was buried in a cemetery near Moscow guarded by Russian military police. Prigozhin was buried near St. Petersburg on Tuesday.

Writing by Peter Graff. Edited by Alex Richardson and Cynthia Osterman

Our standards: Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Obtain licensing rightsopens a new tab

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *