The Ukrainian army is advancing from the west and the north towards Kherson, making it harder for the Russians to defend as they fear being cut off. This is especially true as most of their army's effort is focused on Donbas in Ukraine's northeast.
Kherson is far more strategically significant than Severodonetsk, because if it falls, so does Russia's 'land bridge' to Crimea. JL
Marc Santora reports in the New York Times, image Oleksandr Ratushniak, AP:
The Ukrainian military claimed to be outmaneuvering Russian forces in the south, steadily reclaiming towns and villages and bringing its forces to within 12 miles of the Russian-occupied city of Kherson. As Ukraine’s forces press on the city of Kherson from the west, it was also engaging the Russians in the north of the occupied territory. Russian forces are contending not only with the Ukrainian military, but also with a growing insurgency made up of civilians and former soldiers. “Retreating, the occupiers resorted to looting and harassment of local residents.”As its forces struggle against the power of Russia’s vast arsenal of heavy artillery in the east, the Ukrainian military claimed on Tuesday to be outmaneuvering Russian forces in the south, steadily reclaiming towns and villages and bringing its forces to within 12 miles of the Russian-occupied city of Kherson.
A lack of heavy artillery has slowed the Ukrainian effort in the south and makes it unlikely that Ukraine will launch a broader offensive soon to try to take back the city. But Russian forces are contending not only with the Ukrainian military, but also with a growing insurgency made up of civilians and former soldiers.
“The enemy continues to fight, but our units are gradually forcing him to liberate positions and test the strength of the second and third lines of defense, and in some cases to retreat further,” the Ukrainian southern military command said in a statement.
The Russians do not comment on military setbacks and have portrayed the occupied regions as stable and benefiting from Moscow’s embrace.
Unable to advance in the south since the first weeks of the war, the Russians have focused on fortifying their positions and launching long-range strikes against Ukrainian military targets and the civilian population.
Serhii Khlan, the head of Ukraine’s Kherson regional military administration, said the Ukrainians had scored a number of tactical victories that would enable its forces to launch a broader counteroffensive when the time was right.
He said that the front in this pocket of fighting stretched over a dozen miles, with the Russians pushed back to “positions that were inconvenient and not equipped for defense,” and that the battles were being fought between two villages west of the city of Kherson, the only provincial capital taken by Russian forces early in the war.
While both sides have suffered heavy losses and neither seems poised to deliver anything resembling a decisive blow, the fighting remains intense in many places. Active fighting has been reported along more than 680 miles of the long and twisting front between Ukrainian and Russian forces, the commander of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, Valeriy Zaluzhny, said this week.
As Ukraine’s forces press on the city of Kherson from the west, its military said it was also engaging the Russians in the northern reaches of the occupied territory.
There has been fighting around Davydiv Brid, an area about 100 miles north of Kherson, over control of a highway that is critical to Russian logistical operations. Two weeks ago, the Ukrainian military reported that the Russians had blown up bridges over the Inhulets River to slow the Ukrainian advance. On Tuesday, the Ukrainian military said it had discovered that much of the riverbank was mined.
In Beryslav, a village on the west bank of the Dnipro River about 50 miles north of the city of Kherson, Ukraine said the entire district was under fire. “Retreating, the occupiers resorted to looting and harassment of local residents,” the Ukrainian military said.
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