Ukrainian forces burst through Russian lines in major advance in south
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[October 03, 2022]
By Tom Balmforth
KYIV (Reuters) -Ukrainian forces achieved
their biggest breakthrough in the south of the country since the war
began, bursting through the front and advancing rapidly along the Dnipro
River on Monday, threatening to encircle thousands of Russian troops.
Kyiv gave no official confirmation of the gains, but Russian sources
acknowledged that a Ukrainian tank offensive had advanced dozens of
kilometers (miles) along the river's west bank, recapturing a number of
villages along the way.
The breakthrough mirrors recent Ukrainian successes in the east that
have turned the tide in the war against Russia, even as Moscow has tried
to raise the stakes by annexing territory, ordering mobilisation and
threatening nuclear retaliation.
"The information is tense, let's put it that way, because, yes there
were indeed breakthroughs," Vladimir Saldo, the Russian-installed leader
in occupied parts of Ukraine's Kherson province told Russian state
television.
"There's a settlement called Dudchany, right along the Dnipro River, and
right there, in that region, there was a breakthrough. There are
settlements that are occupied by Ukrainian forces," he said.
Dudchany is around 40 km (25 miles) south of where the front stood just
a day earlier, indicating one of the fastest advances of the war and by
far the most rapid in the south, where Russian forces had been dug into
heavily reinforced positions along a mainly static front line since the
early weeks of the invasion.
While Kyiv maintained almost complete silence, as it has in the past
during major offensives, some officials did describe what they referred
to as unconfirmed reports of gains.
Anton Gerashchenko, an adviser to Ukraine's interior ministry, posted a
photo of Ukrainian soldiers posing with their flag draping a golden
statue of an angel. He said it was the village of Mikhailivka, around 20
km beyond the previous front.
"In the last days, we have seen the first photo of Osokorivka... we have
seen our troops near the entrance to Mykhailivka, we have seen our
troops in Khreschenivka, next to the monument. This means that Zolota
Balka also is under the control of our armed forces, and it means that
our armed forces are moving powerfully along the banks of the Dnipro
nearer to Beryslav," Serhiy Khlan, a Kherson regional council member,
told Reuters, naming villages in the area.
"Officially, there is no such information yet, but the (Russian) social
media pages which are panicking... absolutely confirm these photos."
SIMILAR TACTICS TO EAST
The advance in the south mirrors the tactics that have brought Kyiv
major gains since the start of September in eastern Ukraine, where its
forces swiftly seized territory to gain control of Russian supply lines,
cutting off larger Russian forces and forcing them to retreat.
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A destroyed Russian tank is seen on a
road, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kharkiv region, Ukraine
October 2, 2022. REUTERS/Vladyslav Musiienko
Just hours after a concert on Moscow's Red Square on Friday where
Russian President Vladimir Putin proclaimed the provinces of
Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia to be Russian territory
forever, Ukraine recaptured Lyman, the main Russian bastion in the
north of Donetsk province.
That opens the way for it to advance deep into Luhansk province,
threatening the main supply routes to territory Moscow captured in
some of the war's bloodiest battles in June and July.
Putin has been responding to Russia's failures on the battlefield
over the past month by escalating: proclaiming the annexation of
occupied territory, calling up tens of thousands of men as
reservists and threatening nuclear retaliation.
In the south, Ukraine's advance targets supply lines for thousands
of Russian troops - perhaps as many as 25,000 - on the west bank of
the Dnipro, where it sent a large contingent to halt a
counter-attack Ukraine announced there in August.
Ukraine has already destroyed the main bridges across the Dnipro,
forcing Russian forces to use makeshift crossings. A substantial
advance along the river could bring those remaining crossings into
artillery range.
"The fact we have broken through the front means that ... the
Russian army has already lost the ability to attack, and today or
tomorrow it could lose the ability to defend," said Oleh Zhdanov, a
military analyst based in Kyiv.
"A month of our work destroying their supplies and reducing the
combat effectiveness of this group means that they are functioning
on minimal rations in terms of ammunition, fuel and food."
Russian military bloggers described a Ukrainian tank advance through
dozens of kilometers of territory along the bank of the Dnipro
River.
"When this many Russian channels are sounding the alarm, it usually
means they're in trouble," Rob Lee, a senior fellow at the Foreign
Policy Research Institute think-tank, wrote on Twitter.
The reports of Ukraine's battlefield advances have come amid chaos
back in Russia over the mobilisation, which Putin ordered 10 days
ago. Tens of thousands of Russian men have been called up, while
tens of thousands of others have fled abroad.
The Russian authorities have not spelled out what the criteria are
for who must be sent to fight. Putin has said mistakes were made and
people were called up who should not have been.
In the latest indication of confusion, Mikhail Degtyarev, governor
of the Khabarovsk region in Russia's Far East, said on Monday around
half of the men called up there had been found unfit for duty and
sent back home. He fired the region's military commissar.
(Writing by Peter GraffEditing by Gareth Jones)
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