The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Ukraine recaptures key towns as Putin’s forces hit by lightning advance

- By IAN BIRRELL

UKRAINE has made stunning advances in a rapid counter-offensive that has caught the Kremlin by surprise, with intelligen­ce experts hailing a ‘major turning point’ in the six-month war.

It has led to the recapture of several key towns in the east as Vladimir Putin’s forces fled in disarray from a collapsing frontline.

The speed of advance, with photograph­s shared by Kyiv officials of their troops raising the Ukrainian flag in liberated towns after advancing more than 30 miles, has sparked open talk in Moscow that their invasion will end in humiliatin­g defeat.

Towns entered by Ukrainian troops include Kupiansk, a key rail centre whose loss would severely hinder Russian supply lines. There are also reports of Putin’s troops and collaborat­ors fleeing Izyum, another crucial logistics hub for the invasion.

Natalia Popova, adviser to the head of Kharkiv regional council, shared images on social media of Ukrainian troops holding their flag in front of Kupiansk city hall with a crumpled Russian flag at their feet.

The town was seized by Russia within days of their invasion in February. ‘Kupiansk is Ukraine. Glory to the armed forces of Ukraine,’ wrote Popova.

Russian military journalist­s yesterday reported that their troops fled Izyum on the only remaining road in another sign of the apparent rout, which has seen Putin’s forces lose control of an estimated 3,000 square kilometres in days.

The dramatic advances follow President Volodymyr Zelensky’s declaratio­n last Friday night that 30 settlement­s had been liberated in Kharkiv region over the past few days as his forces sliced through a weak spot in Russian lines.

The capture of Kupiansk, if confirmed, is a huge setback for Putin that potentiall­y leaves up to 10,000 Kremlin troops cut off from supplies. Abandoned boxes of ammunition in the town underlined the speed of their retreat.

In Hrakove, one of the recaptured villages, eyewitness told of seeing burned-out military vehicles bearing the hated ‘Z’ symbol of the Kremlin invasion.

There was also more evidence of Russian atrocities. One local man disclosed that the occupiers forced him to bury two bodies at gunpoint. He then led police to a grave that contained a pair of corpses showing signs of torture.

Maria Avdeeva, a security analyst who visited Hrakove after it was liberated three days ago, told The Mail on Sunday that the 50 remaining residents were in ‘very bad condition’ after spending six months ‘terrified’ while hiding in basements. ‘They could hear the generators providing electricit­y for the Russians but they had no power, no phone connection, their village is almost totally destroyed and they have had no idea what has been happening.’

Ukraine’s unexpected advance in the east came as a surprise as it is just one week since Kyiv announced the start of a long-awaited counteratt­ack to reclaim Russian-occupied terrain hundreds of kilometres away at the opposite end of the battlefron­t in Kherson in the south.

Phillips O’Brien, professor of strategic studies at St Andrews University, said Kyiv has exploited Russia’s movement of its strongest forces to shore up defences in Kherson. ‘This is big,’ he said. ‘Once troops start being pushed back, then it can be hard to stop. If Russia cannot mobilise more forces, they are in serious trouble.’

Even one Russia-appointed stooge official in the Kharkiv region, Vitaly Ganchev, admitted: ‘The very fact of a breach of our defences is already a substantia­l victory for the Ukrainian armed forces.’

The Institute for the Study of War, an influentia­l US-based think-tank, said Kupiansk’s recapture would ‘severely degrade’ Russian ground lines of communicat­ion.

Russian social-media channels published footage of traffic jams formed by cars fleeing the fighting, admitting they included panicking collaborat­ors who feared reprisals from Ukrainian police or partisans. In another setback for Putin, pictures emerged last week of an officer on his knees after being captured.

He is thought to be Lieutenant General Andrei Sychevoi, the highest-ranking Russian officer taken prisoner since the Second World War. Oleksandr V Danylyuk, an intelligen­ce expert and head of the Centre for Defence Reforms thinktank, said: ‘We are witnessing a major turning point. You can expect some more surprises soon.’

Putin’s officials have not commented on the counter-offensive, though Moscow’s defence ministry published video footage that purported to show reinforcem­ent troops rushing towards the Kharkiv region. But there is increasing dissent from prominent pro-war and nationalis­t figures, often with military

‘There is evidence of more Russian atrocities’ ‘We are witnessing a major turning point’

links, who accuse defence chiefs of bungling the invasion.

These include the influentia­l Igor Girkin, a former intelligen­ce colonel involved in the pro-Russian separatist insurgency in Donbas eight years ago, who cited military sources in discussing the ‘outstandin­g audacity’ of Ukrainian attacks.

He has predicted the war will end with the ‘complete defeat’ of Russia.

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 ?? ?? VICTORIOUS: Ukrainian troops in the recaptured town of Kupiansk in a picture released yesterday. Left: Gains made in the counter-offensive
VICTORIOUS: Ukrainian troops in the recaptured town of Kupiansk in a picture released yesterday. Left: Gains made in the counter-offensive

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