November 22, 2024

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Ukraine war: Russia says it thwarted a major Ukrainian attack

Ukraine war: Russia says it thwarted a major Ukrainian attack

  • By George Wright in London and James Waterhouse in Kiev
  • BBC News

image source, Getty Images

photo caption,

Ukraine had been planning a counterattack for months

Russia’s Defense Ministry said it had thwarted a major Ukrainian attack on Donetsk, claiming it had killed 250 soldiers and destroyed 16 armored vehicles.

A video of what Russia says is the battle appears to show military vehicles under heavy fire in the fields.

Russia’s claim has not been independently verified.

On Monday, the Ukrainian military said it had no information about a major attack in the area.

“We do not have such information and we do not comment on any kind of fraud,” a Ukrainian army spokesman told Reuters.

The Ukrainian counter-offensive has been long overdue, but Kiev said earlier that it would not give advance warning of its start.

Russia’s defense ministry said Ukraine launched a “large-scale offensive” in the Donetsk region on Sunday using six mechanized battalions and two battalions of tanks.

It claimed that the Ukrainians had tried to break through the Russian defenses in what Kiev considered the most vulnerable part of the front line – but that it “didn’t accomplish its tasks, it didn’t succeed”.

image source, The press service of the Armed Forces of Ukraine

photo caption,

A video clip released by the Ukrainian army shows a military vehicle in the direction of Bakhmut

And if not, it is still an attempt by Moscow to control the narrative.

There has been a surge of Ukrainian messaging about when and how their long-awaited counter-offensive could take shape.

On Monday morning, the Ukrainian military said on Telegram that Russia was “stepping up its information and psychological operations” regarding Ukraine’s operations.

Ukraine had been planning a counterattack for months. But she wanted as much time as possible to train troops and receive military equipment from the Western allies.

Officials in Kiev cautioned against public speculation about the attack, saying it could help the enemy.

“Plans love silence,” the defense ministry said in a video posted to Telegram on Sunday. “There will be no announcement of the start.” The footage showed masked and well-armed soldiers holding their fingers to their lips.

It will take Ukraine some time to achieve its goal of liberating the territories Russia occupied nine years ago.

And Moscow had time to prepare. This means that if Ukraine is able to launch a counterattack, it will take some time.

There is a lot at stake because the government in Kiev needs to show the people of Ukraine — and Western allies — that it can break through Russian lines, end the effective military impasse, and reclaim some of its sovereign territory.

The commander of the Ukrainian ground forces, Oleksandr Sersky, said the forces were “advancing” towards Bakhmut and destroyed a Russian position near the city.

Both groups want to overthrow President Vladimir Putin. They oppose the all-out invasion of Ukraine that he launched in February last year.

The chief Belgorod official, Vyacheslav Gladkov, responded by saying that he had agreed to meet the captors of the men if the soldiers were still alive. But the fighters later said the governor “didn’t find the courage” to meet them and would hand over their captives to Ukraine.

Russia has blamed Ukraine for the recent attacks on its border lands, but Kiev denies direct involvement.

Authorities in Belgorod said a power plant had caught fire following a drone attack on Monday morning.

In Russia’s Kaluga region – which borders the southern regions around Moscow – Governor Vladislav Shapsha said two drones had crashed on a main road. Shabsha said there was no explosion and the area is now cordoned off.

There has been no independent confirmation of either attack, but Moscow says the Belgorod region has been the usual target of drone attacks from Ukraine.