Miami Herald

Ukraine suffers one of its roughest days of war so far

- BY ELLIE COOK Newsweek World

Ukraine secured fresh military aid from the U.S. on Wednesday, but the good news for Kyiv has been tempered by multiple Russian advances across hundreds of miles of frontline territory.

Washington will give

Kyiv a further $2 billion in financing for its military, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, said during a press conference with Ukrainian Foreign Minister, Dmytro Kuleba, on Wednesday. Part of the funding will go into developing Ukraine’s domestic military production, Blinken said.

In late April, U.S. lawmakers passed a significan­t new military aid package for Ukraine after long months of political infighting. President Joe Biden then announced $1 billion in aid “to urgently meet Ukraine’s critical security and defense needs,” followed last week by another package worth $400 million.

U.S. aid, including the more than $60 billion passed last month, is coming at a “critical time” for Ukraine, Blinken said on Wednesday. “We’re rushing ammunition, armored vehicles, missiles, air defenses,” Blinken added. Pledged U.S. aid is now reaching Ukraine’s soldiers, the Pentagon said on Monday.

But before the bulk of the resources arrives, Russia has opened up a new front in the war, attacking across the border into Ukraine’s northeaste­rn Kharkiv region—a deliberate move to overstretc­h Kyiv, Ukrainian officials and Western analysts say. Kyiv, already contending with fatigue and scarce ammunition supplies, rushed to move troops and weapons from the eastern and southern front lines further north.

On Wednesday, Russia said its forces had claimed another two villages north of Ukraine’s second-largest city, Kharkiv. The settlement­s of Hlyboke and Lukyantsy were seized by Russia’s northern group of troops, Moscow said in a statement. Newsweek has contacted the Ukrainian military.

Ukraine said late on Tuesday that it had pulled some of its troops from positions in the border city of Vovchansk. In an updated statement on Wednesday afternoon, the General Staff said its forces had “partially expelled” Russian fighters from Vovchansk. Dmytro Lazutkin, a spokespers­on for Ukraine’s Defense Ministry, said small groups of Russian infantry had entered the settlement and were trying to establish a “foothold” in the north of the city.

Russia’s Defense Ministry then said its forces had captured Robotyne, one of a smattering of villages in the southern Zaporizhzh­ia region that Kyiv retook from Russian control in its 2023 counteroff­ensive.

Ukraine’s military said on Wednesday that Russia was trying to advance around Robotyne, and 15 “combat clashes” had taken place close to the settlement since the start of the day.

Yet Ukraine’s military also reported on Wednesday afternoon local time that much of the heaviest fighting was taking place in the eastern Donetsk region, to the west of the former Ukrainian stronghold city of Avdiivka.

 ?? MADIYEVSKY­Y VYACHESLAV TNS ?? Rescue workers search a multi-story residentia­l building damaged by Russian shelling in Kharkiv, in northeaste­rn Ukraine, on Tuesday, after a Russian air strike hit the building as Russian forces continued to make deeper advances.
MADIYEVSKY­Y VYACHESLAV TNS Rescue workers search a multi-story residentia­l building damaged by Russian shelling in Kharkiv, in northeaste­rn Ukraine, on Tuesday, after a Russian air strike hit the building as Russian forces continued to make deeper advances.

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