Ukrainian forces threaten Russian supply lines after breakthrough
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[September 09, 2022]
By Max Hunder and Tom Balmforth
KYIV (Reuters) - Swiftly advancing
Ukrainian troops were approaching the main railway supplying Russian
forces in the east on Friday, after the collapse of a section of
Russia's front line caused the most dramatic shift in the war's momentum
since its early weeks.
In a video address, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said troops had
"liberated dozens of settlements" and reclaimed more than 1,000 square
km (385 square miles) of territory in Kharkiv region in the east and
Kherson in the south in the past week.
Zelenskiy posted a video in which Ukrainian soldiers said they had
captured the eastern town of Balakliia, which lies along a stretch of
front stretching south of Kharkiv, Ukraine's second largest city.
The Ukrainian military said it had advanced nearly 50 km through that
front after an assault that appeared to take the Russians by surprise.
It was the first lightning advance of its kind reported by either side
for months, in a war mainly characterised by relentless grinding
frontline battles since Russia abandoned its disastrous assault on the
capital Kyiv in March.
Nearly 24 hours after Ukraine announced the breakthrough on the Kharkiv
front, Russia had yet to comment publicly. The Kremlin declined to
comment on Friday and referred questions to the Russian military.
Ukraine has not allowed independent journalists into the area to confirm
the extent its advances. But Ukrainian news websites have shown pictures
of troops cheering from armoured vehicles as they roar past street signs
bearing the names of previously Russian-held towns, and Russian forces
surrendering on the side of the road.
"We see success in Kherson now, we see some success in Kharkiv and so
that is very, very encouraging," U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin
told a news conference with his Czech counterpart in Prague.
The Institute for the Study of War think tank said the Ukrainians were
now within just 15 km of Kupiansk, an essential junction for the main
railway lines that Moscow has long relied on to supply its forces on the
battlefields in the east.
Since Russia's forces were defeated near Kyiv in March, Moscow has used
its firepower advantage to make slow advances by bombarding towns and
villages. But that tactic depends on tonnes of ammunition a day reaching
the front line by train from western Russia. Until now, Russia had
successfully fended off Ukraine's attempts to cut off that train line.
The Ukrainian general staff said early on Friday retreating Russian
forces were trying to evacuate wounded personnel and damaged military
equipment near Kharkiv.
"Thanks to skilful and coordinated actions, the Armed Forces of Ukraine,
with the support of the local population, advanced almost 50 km in three
days."
Tens of thousands of people have been killed, millions have been driven
from their homes and Russian forces have destroyed entire cities since
Moscow launched what it calls a "special military operation" in February
to "disarm" Ukraine. Russia denies intentionally targeting civilians.
In the latest reported strike on civilians, Ukrainian officials said
Russia had hit a hospital near the international border in the
northeastern Sumy region on Friday morning. Reuters could not
independently confirm the report.
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U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken receives an Order of Prince
Yaroslav the Wise of the 2st degree from Ukraine's President
Volodymyr Zelenskiy during his visit in Kyiv, Ukraine September 8,
2022. Genya Savilov/Pool via REUTERS
"Russian aviation, without crossing the Ukrainian border, fired at a
hospital. The premises were destroyed, there are wounded people,"
regional governor Dmytro Zhyvytskyi said on Telegram.
BREAKTHROUGH
The surprise Ukrainian breakthrough in the east came a week after
Kyiv announced the start of a long-awaited counter-offensive
hundreds of km away at the other end of the front line, in Kherson
province in the south.
Ukrainian officials say Russia moved thousands of troops south to
respond to the Kherson advance, leaving other parts of the front
line exposed and creating the opportunity for the lightning assault
in the east.
"We found a weak spot where the enemy wasn't ready," presidential
adviser Oleksiy Arestovych said in a video posted on YouTube.
Less information so far has emerged about the campaign in the south,
with Ukraine keeping journalists away and releasing few details.
Ukraine has been using new Western-supplied artillery and rockets to
hit Russian rear positions there, with the aim of trapping thousands
of Russian troops on the west bank of the wide Dnipro River and
cutting them off from supplies.
Arestovych acknowledged progress in the south had not yet been as
swift as the sudden breakthrough in the east.
Russia's state news agency RIA quoted Russian-appointed Kherson
authorities as saying some Ukrainian troops were captured during the
counterattack and some Polish tanks they were using were destroyed.
Reuters could not verify those reports.
The United Nations accused Moscow of denying access to thousands of
prisoners of war, with the head of a U.N. human rights monitoring
team in Ukraine, Matilda Bogner, describing documented cases of
torture and ill-treatment of prisoners held by Russian forces and
their proxies.
U.N. monitors had also documented incidents of torture and
ill-treatment of POWs by Ukraine, which had given them unimpeded
access, she said. Ukraine has said it will investigate any
violations and take appropriate legal action.
Moscow denies abusing prisoners. Dozens of Ukrainian troops died in
a fiery blast while being held by pro-Russian authorities in July in
what Kyiv called a massacre. Moscow blamed Ukrainian shelling.
North of the battlefield, Russian missiles struck multiple areas in
Kharkiv on Thursday, causing widespread damage and casualties,
according to the regional prosecutor's office.
"We are scared ... You can't get used to it, never," resident Olena
Rudenko told Reuters.
(Reporting by Reuters reporters; Writing by Peter Graff; Editing by
Philippa Fletcher)
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