How Russia looked the wrong way as Ukraine invaded
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[August 17, 2024]
By Mark Trevelyan, Anastasiia Malenko and Gleb Stolyarov
LONDON/KYIV (Reuters) -In the hours before Ukrainian soldiers stormed
across Russia's western border, there was no sign from Moscow that
anything was amiss.
At midnight at the start of Aug. 6, the Russian defense ministry posted
good news: more than 2,500 members of the regiment responsible for the
capture of a town in eastern Ukraine would receive state awards for
heroism.
Later that morning, as Ukraine began the biggest invasion of Russia
since World War Two, the ministry published video showing General Valery
Gerasimov, commander of the Russian war effort, visiting a different
combat zone, also in Ukraine. He heard reports from commanders and set
"tasks for further actions", it said.
The footage did not specify the exact time of the visit, but revealed no
concerns, or knowledge, of the events unfolding in Russia's western
Kursk region that threatened to upset Gerasimov's plans and shift the
course of the two-and-a-half-year war.
Panic spread quickly among local Russian residents in the early hours of
the assault, despite repeated attempts by authorities to assure them
that everything was under control, according to a timeline by Reuters of
the first two days of the incursion, based on public statements, social
media posts and analysis of video footage.
The idea that Ukraine could turn the tables on Russia and burst onto the
territory of its much bigger neighbour seemed unthinkable to most
observers before last week. The shock operation has raised questions
about the effectiveness of Russia's surveillance, as well as the caliber
of its border fortifications and the forces guarding them.
"The Russians had a complete intelligence failure here," French military
expert Yohann Michel, research fellow at the IESD institute in Lyon,
said in an interview.
With Ukraine's forces retreating in eastern Ukraine, one of the most
strategic sectors of the front line, Moscow may well have assumed Kyiv
would not make a high-stakes gamble that even now it is far from clear
will pay off, Michel said.
"I would understand if it was difficult for the Russians to think
something that big could happen," he said.
Ukrainian goals in Kursk include distracting Russian forces from the
front line in the eastern region of Donetsk. Instead, fighting has
intensified in that region in recent days, and the risks for Ukraine are
rising as it tries to hold ground in Kursk.
A Russian member of parliament and former military officer, Andrei
Gurulyov, said in a television interview two days after the incursion
that Russian military leaders had been warned in a report about a month
beforehand that there were signs of preparations for a Ukrainian attack,
but it was not heeded.
The Russian defense ministry did not reply to requests for comment.
Ukraine's armed forces declined to comment about the ongoing operations,
and the U.S. State Department, Pentagon and White House did not
immediately respond to questions.
It was not until the afternoon of the following day, Aug. 7, that
President Vladimir Putin and Gerasimov, his armed forces chief of staff,
made their first public remarks on the Kursk events, which the Kremlin
leader called "another major provocation" by Ukraine.
Gerasimov, fresh from his ill-timed trip, told Putin in the televised
comments that Russian forces had "stopped" a force of up to 1,000
Ukrainian soldiers from thrusting deep inside Kursk region.
Michel, the military analyst, said it was unclear whether Gerasimov was
misinformed by his own subordinates, or whether he felt compelled to
deliver good news to Putin in front of the TV cameras.
Russian officials in such staged settings "say what they think the boss
wants to hear or to see in public at that specific moment", Michel said.
"WE ADVISE PEOPLE TO LEAVE"
It took nearly 12 hours from the time of the incursion, which Gerasimov
stated as 5:30 a.m. on Aug. 6, for the defense ministry to publicly
acknowledge Ukraine had attacked the border, let alone broken through
it.
It was left to Kursk's acting regional governor Alexei Smirnov, only
months into the job, to fill the communications vacuum and try to
coordinate with the multiple defense and security agencies responsible
for protecting the border.
In the first of many Telegram posts on Aug. 6, Smirnov issued missile
warnings at 1:51 and 3:11 a.m. local time, urging residents to take
cover. At 3:15, he said air defences had knocked out three incoming
Ukrainian drones. At 6:16, 11 more.
Regions either side of the border have long grown used to tit-for-tat
missile and drone attacks. But strikes against the Kursk region,
recorded by Smirnov in Telegram posts, had been more than usually
persistent for the previous 10 days. Among the targets hit were oil
depots, power substations and, according to the Ukrainian military, a
storage facility for weapons and military equipment.
From about 5 a.m., alarm began to spread on social media. Locals posted
that shelling in Sudzha, a Russian town on the border, had been going on
for three hours.
"What's going on with the lights? I've got no light or water," said a
woman posting as "Ekaterina Picasa". A user called Denis reported nine
explosions in Korenevo, about 26 km (16 miles) from the border.
Reuters made multiple attempts to contact residents via social media,
but these were ignored or blocked.
A stream of posts appeared in "Native Sudzha", a community channel on
the social network VKontakte, but it was not clear whether the
information was from official sources. "We advise people to leave the
town," said one such message at 7:34 a.m. People were warned to beware
of drones and watch out for unexploded shells
By 8:15 a.m. Native Sudzha was reporting "active fighting on the border
itself". But a widely read Russian war blog was dismissive.
The "Two Majors" Telegram channel, followed by more than a million
people, said a small group of "the enemy" had managed to get only as far
as 300 meters inside Russia and was "being destroyed". It suggested the
operation was being staged by Ukrainian "TikTok units" as a media
exercise.
Ukraine's government has said little about the planning of the
incursion.
In May, shortly after Russian troops crossed the border and seized
territory in the nearby Kharkiv region, Ukraine's military intelligence
chief publicly warned of small groups of Russian forces gathering around
the Sudzha area and said Moscow had planned an operation into Ukraine's
Sumy region from there.
Reuters could not independently verify whether Russia had been preparing
an offensive into Sumy.
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A view of a damaged bridge over the Seym river in the Glushkovo
district, following a Ukrainian strike in the Kursk region, Russia,
in this still image taken from a social media video released on
August 16, 2024. Ukraine's Air Force Commander Mykola Oleshchuki/via
REUTERS
On Friday, Ukraine's paratrooper corps said its fighters spent the
first hours of the operation demining, breaching the border and
destroying defensive lines, using aviation and artillery.
"Careful preparation, planning, surprise, fighting spirit and
informational silence became decisive in the initial stage of the
operation," the Airborne Assault Troops said in an online post.
A Ukrainian soldier called Dmytro, 36, said he initially thought the
Ukrainian army's build-up was to prevent a Russian cross-border
raid.
Instead, he found himself supporting the advance toward the border
crossing near Sudzha after the assault units moved in, he said in an
interview, giving his only first name in line with military
protocol.
"We worked to pre-empt them and they did not see this coming at
all," he said.
"UNDER CONTROL"
Just after 10 a.m. governor Smirnov confirmed for the first time
that Ukraine had attempted an incursion but said Russian soldiers
and border guards of the FSB security service had "prevented" the
border from being breached.
It was the first of numerous statements that were to be quickly
disproved by events.
Just before noon, the defense ministry published its video of
Gerasimov visiting Russian forward positions in Ukraine. On events
in Kursk, it was silent.
So too was the Kremlin, with spokesman Dmitry Peskov on a summer
break and reporters left without his usual daily briefing. As of
Aug. 16, 10 days later, he had not returned to work.
"Tell me please, is it true that Ukrainian tanks have broken through
to Sudzha and Darino?", a user, "Nestik", posted on Telegram.
Smirnov posted that help was being provided to residents of areas
that had been struck overnight by missiles and drones. "The
situation is under control," he wrote at 12:46 p.m.
About an hour later, Russian news agencies published the first word
from the central authorities about the situation. It was from the
FSB, saying Russia had "repelled an armed provocation."
By now, however, an exodus was under way. Sudzha residents were
"leaving en masse", a woman called Anna said on Telegram.
"Of course. Everyone wants to live," someone replied.
In the chaos, some were left behind. A search network, Liza Alert,
said it has posted over 100 "missing" notices for people who have
disappeared since Aug. 6, including many pensioners in their 70s and
80s.
DRAGON'S TEETH
Smirnov's predecessor as governor, Roman Starovoit, had repeatedly
told the public that Russia had boosted its border fortifications in
Kursk region.
In December 2022, he posed in a snowy field beside pyramid-shaped
"dragon's teeth" anti-tank defenses. The following month, he wrote:
"Right now the risk of an armed invasion of the territory of Kursk
region from Ukraine is not high. However, we are constantly working
to strengthen the region’s defense capabilities."
Yet last fall Ukraine's National Resistance Center, created by the
special operations forces, said in an online post that
reconnaissance showed "almost all the strongholds are deserted of
personnel and equipment" along the border with Kursk, and said
corruption was a factor.
The video published by Ukraine's paratroopers showed columns of
armored vehicles pouring in through rows of dragon’s teeth, part of
fortifications in Kursk that Russia media outlets have said cost 15
billion roubles ($168 million).
Pasi Paroinen, an analyst with Finland's Black Bird Group, said the
video appeared to show mine-clearing line charges blowing paths
through minefields, dozer blades on armored vehicles used to clear
paths through the dragon's teeth and bridging vehicles to cross
ditches and small rivers.
“It's clear that substantial amounts of different engineer equipment
were prepared and used," said Paroinen, who studies publicly
available footage from the Russia-Ukraine war.
Brady Africk, a U.S. analyst mapping Russia’s defenses, said those
in Kursk region had fewer anti-vehicle ditches, obstacles and
fighting positions when compared to Russian positions in occupied
southern Ukraine, where a Ukrainian counteroffensive stalled last
summer.
"It was likely easier for Ukrainian forces to progress around and
through Russia's fortifications in the region, especially if they
were manned by fewer or poorly trained personnel," he said.
SHARED RESPONSIBILITY
Responsibility for defending the Russian border is shared between
regular troops, FSB border forces and the national guard. Governor
Smirnov was apparently referring to these various agencies when he
said on mid-afternoon of the first day that he had met with
"representatives of the security structures".
Already, he was backtracking from his initial line that they had
prevented the border from being pierced. "The situation in the
border area remains difficult, but our defenders are successfully
working to destroy the enemy," Smirnov said.
At 5:05 p.m., the defense ministry mentioned the incursion for the
first time and said Russia had transferred reserves to the area.
"Troops covering the state border, together with units of the border
troops of the FSB of Russia, are repelling the attacks and
inflicting fire on the enemy in the area of the state border and
on its reserves in the Sumy region (of Ukraine)," it said.
At the briefing on Aug. 7, Gerasimov told Putin: "The operation will
end with the smashing of the enemy, and (Russian forces) reaching
the state border."
Ten days later, with more than 100,000 Russians displaced and
Ukraine claiming control of more than 1,000 sq km (390 sq miles) of
Kursk region, Moscow's forces are still far from achieving that
goal.
($1 = 89.3705 roubles)
(Reporting by Mark Trevelyan in London, Anastasiia Malenko in Kyiv,
Gleb Stolyarov in Tbilisi; Additional reporting by Felix Light in
Tbilisi and Lucy Papachristou in London, Jonathan Landay and Idrees
Ali in Washington; Writing by Mark Trevelyan; Editing by Frank Jack
Daniel)
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