New York Post

VLAD'S DEAD PILE UP

Zel: Ukr. casualties a fraction of his

- By CHRIS HARRIS

Russia has lost eight times as many soldiers as has Ukraine since Moscow launched its latest offensive in the northeaste­rn province of Kharkiv two weeks ago, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Saturday.

Zelensky said the mass casualties on the battlefiel­d prove Russian President Vladimir Putin “has absolutely no regard for human life,” in an interview with Kazakh media outlet Vlast.

He put the number of Russian soldiers killed in Kharkiv since May 10 as between 2,000 and 3,000.

“Their breakthrou­gh in the direction of Kharkiv,” Zelensky said, resulted in “military casualties of one to eight — one Ukrainian to eight Russians,” he said, adding that Putin “doesn’t care at all.”

Separately, Zelensky said Ukranian forces had taken back areas Russian troops attempted to conquer over the past two weeks.

“Our soldiers have now managed to take combat control of the border area where the Russian occupiers entered,” Zelensky said in his nightly video address Friday.

But he warned that the country’s second largest city, also named Kharkiv, was still vulnerable, a comment that was followed by another attack.

On Saturday, Russia launched a daylight attack against a constructi­on supplies market in Kharkiv, killing and wounding several of the 200 people at the site at the time.

“All the emergency services are already on the site and providing assistance, rescuing people, and extinguish­ing the fire that has completely engulfed the building,” Zelensky posted to X. “If Ukraine had sufficient air defense systems and modern combat aircraft, Russian strikes like this one would have been impossible. And that is why we appeal to all leaders, to all states: we need a significan­t enhancemen­t of air defense and sufficient capabiliti­es to destroy Russian terrorists.”

Saturday’s attack happened hours after Ukraine targeted Russia’s Saki airfield in Crimea — an area of Ukraine forcibly annexed by Russia in 2014 before Zelensky was elected president — and comes less than a day after reports started circulatin­g that suggest Putin is willing to discuss a cease-fire along current battle lines.

Russia could keep the fighting going, observers said, but that would mean an expansion of its highly unpopular conscripti­on program.

The rumored movement toward a fighting freeze came as more senior defense leaders were arrested in Russia on suspicion of corruption and bribery.

More than $1 million in items and cash were recovered from the home of Lt. Gen. Yury Kuznetsov, head of defense personnel, who is charged with accepting bribes.

Lt. Gen. Vadim Shamarin, deputy chief of the general staff, and Vladimir Verteletsk­y, who headed the personnel directorat­e of Russia’s Defense Ministry, are also facing accusation­s of accepting bribes.

“Corruption is deeply rooted in the Russian Ministry of Defense,” said a UK intelligen­ce update posted Saturday on X.

 ?? ?? TOLL OF WAR: Smoke rises from a Kharkiv, Ukraine, shopping mall after it was hit by Russian missiles. Also Saturday, President Volodymyr Zelensky (inset below) said Moscow’s forces are suffering eight times as many casualties as his.
TOLL OF WAR: Smoke rises from a Kharkiv, Ukraine, shopping mall after it was hit by Russian missiles. Also Saturday, President Volodymyr Zelensky (inset below) said Moscow’s forces are suffering eight times as many casualties as his.
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