The Maui News - Weekender

Putin calls his actions in Ukraine ‘correct and timely’

- By SABRA AYRES

KYIV, UKRAINE — Russian President Vladimir Putin said Friday he expects his mobilizati­on of army reservists for combat in Ukraine to be completed in about two weeks, allowing him to end an unpopular and chaotic call-up meant to counter Ukrainian battlefiel­d gains and solidify his illegal annexation of occupied territory.

Putin — facing domestic discontent and military setbacks in a neighborin­g country armed with increasing­ly advanced Western weapons — also told reporters he does not regret starting the conflict and “did not set out to destroy Ukraine” when he ordered Russian troops to invade nearly eight months ago.

“What is happening today is unpleasant, to put it mildly,” he said after attending a summit of the Commonweal­th of Independen­t States in Kazakhstan’s capital. “But we would have had all this a little later, only under worse conditions for us,

that’s all. So my actions are correct and timely.”

Russia’s difficulti­es in achieving its war aims have become apparent in one of the four Ukrainian regions Putin illegally claimed as Russian territory last month. Anticipati­ng an advance by Ukrainian forces, Moscow-installed authoritie­s in the Kherson region

urged residents to flee Friday.

Even some of Putin’s own supporters have criticized the Kremlin’s handling of the war and mobilizati­on, increasing pressure on him to do more to turn the tide in Russia’s favor.

In his comments on the army mobilizati­on, Putin said the action he ordered last month had registered 222,000 of the 300,000 reservists the Russian Defense Ministry set as an initial goal. A total of 33,000 of them have joined military units, and 16,000 are deployed for combat, he said.

Putin ordered the call-up to bolster the fight along a 684mile front line where Ukrainian counteroff­ensives have inflicted blows to Moscow’s military prestige. The mobilizati­on was troubled from the start, with confusion about who was eligible for the draft in a country where almost all men under age 65 are registered as reservists.

Opposition to the order was so strong that tens of thousands of men left Russia, and others protested in the streets. Critics were skeptical the draft would end in two weeks. They predicted only a pause to allow enlistment offices to process regular conscripts during Russia’s annual fall draft for men aged 18-27, which was postponed from Oct. 1 to Nov. 1.

 ?? AP photo ?? Volunteers of the Georgian legion pay their last respect, during the funeral ceremony for Georgian volunteer Edisher Kvaratskhe­lia killed in a battlefiel­d in St. Volodymyr Cathedral in Kyiv, Ukraine on Thursday.
AP photo Volunteers of the Georgian legion pay their last respect, during the funeral ceremony for Georgian volunteer Edisher Kvaratskhe­lia killed in a battlefiel­d in St. Volodymyr Cathedral in Kyiv, Ukraine on Thursday.

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