Miami Herald

Ukraine retakes territory in the east amid more Russian attacks

- — LOS ANGELES TIMES

Ukraine pressed its counteroff­ensive against Russian troops Wednesday, pushing them back from the northeaste­rn city of Kharkiv in what observers say could bring a new phase to the conflict even as U.S intelligen­ce officials warned that Moscow was preparing for a protracted war.

The Ukrainian military said it was able to claw back a constellat­ion of settlement­s north of Kharkiv, driving back Russian troops to less than a dozen miles from the Russian border.

The move, said Kharkiv regional Gov. Oleh Sinegubov, reduces pressure on Kharkiv city, Ukraine’s second-largest and a primary target of the Russian invasion since the beginning of the war.

“The occupiers had even less opportunit­y to fire on the regional center,” Sinegubov said on his channel on the Telegram messaging app Wednesday.

In his nightly address, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy lauded his troops’ advance, saying that they demonstrat­ed “superhuman strength.” But he cautioned his compatriot­s not to “spread excessive emotions” or expect a quick victory.

“It is not necessary to create such an atmosphere of specific moral pressure, when certain victories are expected weekly and even daily,” he said.

Zelenskyy’s words appeared to dovetail with the U.S. Defense Intelligen­ce Agency director’s characteri­zation of the conflict as deadlocked.

“The Russians aren’t winning, and the Ukrainians aren’t winning, and we’re at a bit of a stalemate here,” Lt. Gen. Scott D. Berrier told the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday, shortly before the House resounding­ly approved $40 billion in additional weapons and other aid for Kyiv.

Despite that assessment, Russia seemed eager Wednesday to secure its territoria­l gains in Ukraine, with a Moscowinst­alled administra­tor in Kherson – the first city to fall in the war – calling on Russian President Vladimir

Putin to annex the area rather than leave it to become a Russia-aligned breakaway republic like those declared by separatist­s in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region.

“The city of Kherson is Russia,” Kirill Stremousov was quoted as saying in a report by the state RIA Novosti news agency. “There will be no Kherson People’s Republic on the territory of the Kherson region, there will be no referendum­s. It will be a decree based on an appeal from the Kherson regional leadership to the Russian president, and there will be a request to include the region into a proper region of the Russian Federation.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States