The Daily Telegraph

General ‘fired’ for failing to take Kharkiv in leader’s latest purge

- By James Kilner

VLADIMIR PUTIN has reportedly sacked a top-level commander for “failing” to capture Kharkiv, the latest purge of senior officers who he blames for botching his war in Ukraine.

Lt Gen Serhiy Kisel was head of the elite 1st Guards Tank Army, which was charged with taking Ukraine’s secondbigg­est city.

But he has now been “suspended for his failure to capture Kharkiv”, according to the Ministry of Defence.

Vice-adml Igor Osipov, the commander of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, is also believed to have been suspended following the sinking of the flagship the Moskva last month.

Mr Putin may also have already lost confidence in Valery Gerasimov, his most senior general in Ukraine, as his Ukraine campaign falters, according to the MOD.

“In recent weeks, Russia has fired senior commanders who are considered to have performed poorly during the opening stages of its invasion of Ukraine,” the MOD said yesterday.

“A culture of cover-ups and scapegoati­ng is probably prevalent within the Russian military and security system,” it added. “Many officials involved in the invasion of Ukraine will likely be increasing­ly distracted by efforts to avoid personal culpabilit­y for Russia’s operationa­l set-backs.”

“This will likely place further strain on Russia’s centralise­d model of command and control, as officers increasing­ly seek to defer key decisions to their superiors.”

The 1st Guards Tank Army can trace its roots back to the Soviet Union’s defence of Stalingrad in the Second World War, a battle credited with turning the war against Nazi Germany.

It was disbanded in 1999 but reformed in 2014 as an elite unit.

But Russian forces have been forced to retreat from around Kharkiv over the past week after months of heavy bombardmen­t failed to break stiff Ukrainian resistance, leading to Moscow’s second major defeat of the war.

At the end of March, Russian forces also retreated from around Kyiv.

Kharkiv had been considered to be a key early objective for the Russian army, which subjected it to a sustained bombardmen­t. Intelligen­ce agencies have said that Russia may have pulled back its forces from Kharkiv to relocate them to the eastern Donbas region, now a priority target.

The poor performanc­e of the Russian army has shocked Western analysts.

They have said that the military has appeared to lack direction, motivation and the proper equipment to achieve its objectives of capturing Ukraine.

A lack of experience and empowermen­t among the Russian army’s cadre of non-commission­ed officers, so important in modern Western armies, and battlefiel­d tactical tinkering by Putin, have also hampered the troops’ performanc­e.

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