Business Day

Russians have mixed views on withdrawal from Kherson

• ‘General Armageddon’ is under growing pressure to prove the retreat from the Ukrainian city was justified

- Andrew Osborn and Mark Trevelyan

Russia’s leading war hawks rallied behind the decision for Moscow’s forces to retreat from the Ukrainian city of Kherson in November, but the commander who argued in favour of the move is under growing pressure to prove it was worth it.

Sergei Surovikin, nicknamed “General Armageddon” by the Russian media for his reputed ruthlessne­ss, on November 9 recommende­d Moscow’s forces quit Kherson and the west bank of the River Dnipro where they were dangerousl­y exposed.

Surovikin, a 56-year-old veteran of wars in Chechnya and Syria who has been decorated by President Vladimir Putin, argued the withdrawal, completed two days later, would allow Moscow to save equipment and redeploy forces there — estimated by the US at 30,000-strong — to offensives elsewhere.

Some of those troops have since been moved from southern to eastern Ukraine, where fierce fighting is raging, and the Hero of Russia recipient is under pressure on the cusp of winter to show his bet was the right one.

“We await your brilliant results and pray for you, I pray for you every day,” Margarita Simonyan, the hawkish editorin-chief of RT TV and one of the main public proponents of the war, told Surovikin in a TV broadcast last week.

Simonyan urged Surovikin, a hulking shaven-headed figure who has been shown on TV speaking in clipped Russian military language, to ignore “nonsense” from critics, a reference to influentia­l military bloggers unhappy about his retreat.

One of those bloggers, Vladlen Tatarsky, who has more than half-a-million followers on the Telegram messaging service, had fumed over Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s post-retreat visit to Kherson, questionin­g why Moscow had not killed him.

“What are we spilling our blood for? Why can Zelensky calmly come to Kherson?” Tatarsky asked in a video post.

“Symbolical­ly, it would have been great if a Geran [type of drone] had landed on his stupid head but it didn’t happen. Why? Either we fight a full-on war or ... nothing will work out.”

LIMIT REACHED

Russian arch-nationalis­t Alexander Dugin, whose daughter Darya was murdered outside Moscow in August in what Russia says was a Ukrainian state assassinat­ion, has piled more pressure on Surovikin, saying Kherson is the last chunk of Ukrainian territory that Russia can afford to give up.

“The limit has been reached,” Dugin told the nationalis­t online news outlet Tsargrad.

Russian war hawks say they want Kherson back at some point, which looks hard to achieve anytime soon.

Nor is taking new ground in the east against a motivated and Western-equipped Ukrainian military an easy task, especially in the winter. Kyiv itself has vowed to continue retaking territory, with Russian officials warning they suspect it may try to open a third front in the west with forces redeployed from Kherson.

Surovikin is also being asked by some to step up Moscow’s bombing campaign of Ukrainian energy infrastruc­ture, a tactic the Kremlin has suggested is designed to bring Ukraine to the negotiatin­g table.

Vladimir Solovyov, one of Russia’s ultranatio­nalist political TV talk show hosts, said last week: “I appeal to the Hero of Russia Army General Surovikin: Comrade Army General, I ask you to complete the total destructio­n of energy infrastruc­ture of the Nazi Ukrainian junta.”

Other state TV commentato­rs have begun to publicly question the handling of the war, albeit in what may be choreograp­hed performanc­es designed to create the impression of genuine public debate. One, Dmitry Abzalov, complained of what he called an informatio­n vacuum, saying he would like to know “for a change, just once” what Moscow’s goals are in Ukraine.

Another, Maxim Yusin, complained on air about what he said were lies being peddled by some politician­s on state TV boasting that Russian forces are so strong they are able to reach “the Polish border, Berlin, the English Channel and Lisbon. It’s a clown show,” said Yusin.

Some of the wives and mothers of newly mobilised men have organised to put pressure on the defence ministry over what they say is inadequate training and equipment. Their numbers are relatively modest so far, but some of their complaints, largely rejected by the defence ministry, chime with those made by public figures who support the war.

The Kherson withdrawal went faster and more smoothly than many Western military analysts had expected, with a US military official saying it had been “relatively orderly” compared with previous Russian retreats. British military intelligen­ce concurred, saying in a statement that Moscow’s forces had probably been successful at limiting the loss of military hardware while destroying what they had left behind.

GREATER DISCIPLINE

While the Russian army continues to suffer from poor junior and mid-level leadership, it said, “this relative success is likely partially due to a more effective, single operationa­l command under Surovikin”.

The appointmen­t of Surovikin on October 8 was the first time Russia had publicly named an overall commander for its forces in Ukraine.

Ukraine’s defence minister and Western diplomats say the general appears to have brought greater discipline, as well as more brutality with his steppedup infrastruc­ture attacks.

“Surovikin has made a big difference to the way they are functionin­g,” said Anthony Brenton, Britain’s former ambassador to Russia. “There’s more of a sense of coherence and sensible purpose about what Russia is now up to militarily.”

In some Russian circles, his appointmen­t was seen as setting up a potential fall guy while insulating Putin and, to a lesser extent, defence minister Sergei Shoigu, from direct criticism. “It’ was obvious that Surovikin s appointmen­t and the praise heaped upon him were at least partly due to the need to create a figure with a mandate for ‘shameful’ actions that Putin didn’t want to take in his own name,” said Alexander Baunov, a former Russian diplomat who is a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace think-tank.

BRUTAL TACTICS

Surovikin fitted the bill, Baunov said, because his image as a Siberian willing to use brutal tactics to get results appealed to Russian nationalis­ts and he had the authority in their eyes to oversee a retreat without opening up too many dangerous internal divisions.

“The general has used half his mandate. Now he will be expected to use the other half,” said Baunov. “For some, this will be seen as a new offensive that will prove that all the retreats were actually a tactical manoeuvre. For others, it will be seen as a way of forcing Ukraine to enter into peace talks using the formula: the city of Kherson in exchange for peace, electricit­y, water and heating in Ukrainian cities.”

Konrad Muzyka, a Polish defence analyst who recently returned from Ukraine, said after Kherson the moment of truth has arrived for the Russian army. With the exception of the city of Lysychansk, in eastern Ukraine, all the territory Russia holds looks defensible.

“Everything now depends on the military commanders, the quality of the equipment, and the ability of their troops to take a punch from Ukraine, hold the line, and then try to counteratt­ack in some way,” Muzyka said.

 ?? /Reuters ?? No-nonsense general:
Gen Sergei Surovikin, centre, has urged Russians to ignore the ‘nonsense’ from his critics unhappy about his order for Russian troops to retreat from the Ukrainian city of Kherson.
/Reuters No-nonsense general: Gen Sergei Surovikin, centre, has urged Russians to ignore the ‘nonsense’ from his critics unhappy about his order for Russian troops to retreat from the Ukrainian city of Kherson.

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