Ukraine announces offensive operations across the south
By Andrew E. Kramer and Thomas Gibbons Neff
KYIV — The Ukrainian military announced Monday (29) that it had launched offensive operations in multiple areas along the front line in the Kherson region in southern Ukraine, perhaps signalling the start of a broad and long anticipated counteroffensive aimed at retaking territory seized by Russia.
Fighting along a swath of the front line escalated sharply Monday, according to Ukrainian military and civilian officials, and the Ukrainian government said that its military had “breached the occupiers’ first line of defence near Kherson.”
The Ukrainian military also claimed Monday to have struck a large Russian military base behind Russian lines in the Kherson region, destroying it. It was not immediately possible to verify the claims.
Across the Kherson region — whose capital was the first major city to fall to Russian forces after President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine in February — electrical networks blinked out amid the fighting Monday, and Russian media reported evacuations from towns in the area.
A US defence official lent support to the idea that Ukraine was escalating its offensive in the south, saying: “The announced offensive shows the Ukrainians’ appetite for progress on the battlefield.” The official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive military matters, added that the Pentagon remained cautious about whether Ukraine’s current military capabilities were sufficient to make significant gains.
It remained unclear if this was the start of the southern counteroffensive that Ukraine has telegraphed for months, or a continuation of strikes in the south that Ukraine has been carrying out for the past several weeks.
Junior Sgt. Dmytro Pysanka, a Ukrainian soldier stationed on the Kherson front, said “our offensive is ongoing.”
“I don’t know what’s going to happen next and how, but so far all goes according to the plan,” he said in a text message.
A local Russian proxy leader in Kherson, Kirill Stremousov, said in a Telegram post that reports of a possible Ukrainian offensive were “fake”.
The reports of intensifying fighting came as the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency announced that a team of nuclear experts would visit the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, which lies to the north of Kherson.
The government of President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been under pressure to begin a counteroffensive intended to push Russian troops from Kherson and the western bank of the Dnieper River before the rainy season leaves fields muddy and impassable or European support wavers amid rising energy prices. Ukraine has signalled the start of offensive operations multiple times since May, though with little land changing hands.
On Monday, Ukraine’s military was circumspect. The spokeswoman for the southern military command, Nataliya Gumenyuk, said that Ukraine had begun “offensive actions on many directions in southern Ukraine.” She later issued a statement saying: “Every military operation requires silence,” and “everyone needs to be patient.”
-New York Times
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