Russia
sending ‘suicidal missions’ to win foothold over Dnipro River, says Ukraine
Moscow
trying to improve its claim to entire Kherson region in time for peace
negotiations, says governor
Dan Sabbagh
Defence and security editor
Tue 4 Mar
2025 06.00 CET
Russian
forces are repeatedly trying to seize a foothold across Ukraine’s Dnipro River,
dispatching troops on high-casualty missions to gain territory for future peace
negotiations, according to the Ukrainian governor of Kherson region.
Oleksandr
Prokudin said Russian forces were trying to cross in four locations to justify
their claim to the whole oblast, one of four Ukrainian regions that Moscow says
it wants to incorporate.
“Every
single day they are trying to cross,” Prokudin said, while on a working visit
to the UK. “We heard from our intelligence, that the Russian deputy commander
told troops in the area that they had to force the river at any cost, though
not all the soldiers are willing to do that.”
The
governor, directly appointed by the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy,
said his understanding was that Russian soldiers had been told “they have to
make the right [western] bank part of the negotiation” by capturing a village
across the river, though so far they had failed to do so.
Casualties
had been high, Prokudin continued, and the attackers were killed or injured
almost immediately. “The Russians completely understand it is a suicidal
mission,” he said. Documents recovered from soldiers showed that some were
recent recruits while others had fought for more than two years in Ukraine, he
added.
Russia had
largely captured the Kherson region, which includes territory on both sides of
the Dnipro River, in the early stages of the war, but was forced to retreat
from the west bank, including the city of Kherson, in November 2022 because it
was proving impossible to supply it.
Nevertheless,
a few weeks before that, the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, unilaterally
announced the annexation of the entire region as well as three others,
declaring in the Kremlin that people who lived in those regions were “our
citizens for ever”.
Kherson is
particularly important because it straddles the mouth of country’s main river.
Before the war it had a population of about 1 million, but only about 155,000
remain on the Ukrainian-controlled side, with constant drone and artillery
attacks continuing in the frontline regions.
Those
territorial claims have been not been forgotten by Russia, which is trying to
gain as much land in Ukraine as it can ahead of any peace negotiations. Though
Ukraine has said repeatedly it will not formally surrender territory, the
country’s leadership know it is unable to win back much land on the
battlefield.
Prokudin
said he thought Russia was trying to “tick a box” to show that “we are present
on the right bank”, and so press a claim for the whole region. He added that
the struggle had become particularly urgent as various peace negotiations
began. Last month, the US began direct discussions with Russia, largely
marginalising Ukraine.
Russian
offensives are taking place in four locations: across the marshy islands at the
mouth of the Dnipro, a treacherous grey zone; the Antonivka road and rail
bridges east of Kherson city; and beyond that, the villages of Lvove and
Zmiivka, the latter of which is upstream of the destroyed Nova Kakhovka dam.
The Kherson
governor said he thought there were three possible future scenarios for the end
of the war, including one where Zelenskyy was replaced by a pro-Russian
president and the country ended up ceding territories to Moscow, meaning that
“the borders of Russia would shift closer to Europe”.
The most
favourable, he added, was one in which Ukraine received firm security
guarantees from Europe and elsewhere as part of a negotiated peace settlement,
but he questioned if Europe was ready to do so without the US.
That left
what he said was the “most probable” scenario – “a freezing of the conflict at
the existing frontline”, though he feared that the danger for Ukraine there
would be that it would allow Russia “time to regroup and restock ammunition”.
Prokudin was
in the UK to sign an economic partnership agreement with Lincolnshire council.
Both Kherson and Lincolnshire are predominantly agricultural regions and the
English county has a small Ukrainian population, having taken in 1,000 refugees
under the Homes for Ukraine scheme.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário