The New Zealand Herald

‘It’s time’: Ukraine ready to ounteratta­ck

Kyiv bombarded as top military figures signal imminent counteroff­ensive

- — New York Times

Ukraine’s top military commander has signalled that the nation’s forces were ready to launch their longantici­pated counteroff­ensive following months of preparatio­ns, including recently stepped-up attacks on logistical targets as well as feints and disinforma­tion intended to keep Russian forces on edge.

“It’s time to get back what’s ours,” Ukraine’s supreme military commander, General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, wrote in a statement.

The blunt statement, accompanie­d by a slickly produced video of Ukrainian troops preparing for battle and released on social media on Sunday, appeared intended to rally a nation weary from 15 months of war and to deepen anxiety within the Russian ranks. But Zaluzhnyi offered no indication of where and when Ukrainian forces might try to break Russia’s hold on occupied territory.

Other senior Ukrainian officials also suggested that the counteroff­ensive was imminent.

Oleksiy Danilov, the head of the Ukrainian National Security and Defence Council, told the BBC that Ukraine’s forces were “ready” and that a large-scale assault could come “tomorrow, the day after tomorrow or in a week”.

Yesterday Moscow launched a pre-dawn attack on Kyiv as its air defences worked to stop drones in the third Russian bombardmen­t on the capital in 24 hours.

According to Kyiv Military Administra­tion, more than 20 Shahed drones were destroyed by air defence forces in Kyiv’s airspace. One person died and three were injured when a high-rise building in the Holosiiv district caught fire. The two upper floors are destroyed, and there may be people under the rubble, the Kiyv military administra­tion said.

Ukraine has spent months amassing a powerful arsenal of Western-supplied weapons and training tens of thousands of soldiers in sophistica­ted offensive manoeuvres for the impeding campaign, which military analysts have suggested will most likely focus on Russianocc­upied areas of southern and eastern Ukraine.

Both Ukraine and Russia have engaged in robust informatio­nal campaigns using videos and social media throughout the war. But the statements from Zaluzhnyi and Danilov come as a growing number of senior Ukrainian officials — including the head of military intelligen­ce — have said in recent days that Ukraine has what it needs to attack.

In many ways, military analysts have noted, the counteroff­ensive may already have begun.

For weeks, Ukraine has apparently been setting the stage for the campaign and “shape” the battlefiel­d through a series of co-ordinated strikes deep behind enemy lines aimed at underminin­g critical Russian logistical operations, degrading Russia’s combat abilities and compromisi­ng Moscow’s capacity to move its forces around the battlefiel­d.

In the past week, the tempo and range of attacks deep inside Russianhel­d territory have increased. While Ukraine’s military has not explicitly claimed responsibi­lity, local Russian proxy officials in occupied areas have reported strikes.

Adding to speculatio­n that the start of a counteroff­ensive was near, internet and telecommun­ications went down in Russian-occupied parts of Ukraine on Saturday.

NetBlocks, which tracks internet outages around the world, said internet service was disrupted on the Crimean Peninsula and in parts of the Zaporizhzh­ia region in southern Ukraine — including in the town of Enerhodar, where Russian forces are occupying Europe’s largest nuclear power plant.

Internet service also went down in Berdiansk and Melitopol, two strategica­lly important cities that Russia has turned into military stronghold­s, according to NetBlocks.

Ukrainian officials have been deliberate­ly vague in outlining their military plans, most likely in hopes of maintainin­g an element of surprise in what has become a widely telegraphe­d campaign.

They have said that the counteroff­ensive would not be marked by a single event and would probably feature feints and deceptions at the outset.

At the same time, Ukrainian officials also have sought to temper expectatio­ns, warning of a long and bloody fight in the months to come.

Russia still controls more than 100,000 sq km of land across southern and eastern Ukraine, which amounts to about 17 per cent of the country, and has had months to fortify its defensive positions.

While Ukraine continues to seek more advanced weapons for its forces, senior Ukrainian and Western officials have said in recent days that Ukrainian forces have what they need to launch the counteroff­ensive.

And the arsenal will continue to grow. A week after President Joe Biden told United States allies that he would allow Ukrainian pilots to be trained on US-made F-16 fighter jets, a step towards eventually letting other countries give the planes to Ukraine, Ukrainian soldiers started training in Germany on how to operate and maintain US M1 Abrams tanks, according to the Pentagon.

While the timing of the counteroff­ensive remained unclear, the statement from Zaluzhnyi was the most direct indication that the hour was drawing near. The video that accompanie­d his statement was broadcast on national television and quickly spread across social media platforms.

Titled “Prayer for the Liberation of Ukraine” — a nod to a nationalis­t poem from the 1920s — it featured Ukrainian soldiers preparing for battle and vowing to “destroy” their enemies.

“Bless our decisive offensive!” the soldiers chant.

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 ?? Photo / AP ?? Ukrainians shelter at a subway station in Kyiv during a Russian drone and rocket attack yesterday, the third such attack in 24 hours.
Photo / AP Ukrainians shelter at a subway station in Kyiv during a Russian drone and rocket attack yesterday, the third such attack in 24 hours.

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