Months after first incursion, Ukrainian troops fighting in second Russian region
Just as Ukrainian forces are losing their grip on the pocket of Russia's Kursk region they captured last year, they have staged a little-publicised incursion into the adjacent Belgorod region, according to Russian military bloggers.
Several
Russian military correspondents said on Friday that Ukrainian troops
were inside Belgorod and fighting battles with Russian forces there.
Neither
Kyiv nor Moscow has confirmed the reports, though Russia's Defence
Ministry said 10 days ago its forces had thwarted five Ukrainian
attempts to push across the border in Belgorod.
Ukraine's military has not commented on any thrust into Belgorod region, though that could be for operational security reasons.
Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, addressing reporters in Kyiv, said
Ukrainian forces had taken "certain steps" in Russia outside the Kursk
region to ease pressure on Ukrainian troops in the area.
Zelenskiy
said the action was intended to "reduce the accumulation" of Russian
troops and had occurred "a little below the Kursk region." He did not
elaborate.
Andrii
Kovalenko, an official at Ukraine's National Defence and Security
Council, suggested in a March 18 statement that Ukrainian forces could
act in the Belgorod region, "neutralising threats" from Russian forces
that might mass near the border.
Rybar,
a Russian military blog with 1.3 million subscribers, said there had
been heavy clashes in a settlement called Popovka and each side was
hitting the other with drones. Another Telegram account, Two Majors,
said Russian forces were conducting "defensive operations."
"There
are constant strikes on concentrations of Ukrainian Armed Forces, but
the enemy still has serious offensive potential for this direction and
has not abandoned plans for further breakthroughs, including in new
areas of the front," it said.
A
third military blog, Arkhangel Spetsnaza, reported fighting in a
village called Demidovka and said some Ukrainian soldiers were
surrounded there.
The Ukrainian operation may be an attempt to distract Russian forces as they try to drive out the last Ukrainian forces
from neighbouring Kursk. One of the Russian blogs, Rybar, said Russia
had moved reinforcements to Belgorod from Goptarovka in the Kursk
region.
Emil
Kastehelmi, a military analyst with the Finnish-based Black Bird Group,
said Ukrainian forces had penetrated the first Russian defences and
advanced most likely to a depth of three to four km (1.9 to 2.5 miles).
But
he said it was unlikely they could stage a serious breakthrough and
threaten any important Russian logistical routes or cities.
"The
Ukrainians can, in theory, take some more villages from the border
area, but that's not what a breakthrough means - it'd be a small
tactical success, but there's very little to be achieved in the
Demidovka direction at operational or strategic level," he told Reuters.
"There's
no proper element of surprise, and the Russian presence in the area is
strong enough to at least conduct mostly successful defensive
operations."
In
Kursk, the Russian Defence Ministry said on Friday its forces had
recaptured the village of Gogolevka, one of only a handful of
settlements still held by Ukraine out of around 100 that it seized last
August.
Ukraine's General Staff said its military had stopped 18 Russian assaults in Kursk region over the past day.
Open
source mapping from Deep State, an authoritative Ukrainian military
blogging resource, showed Russian forces in control of some but not all
of Gogolevka, and indicated Kyiv's troops still controlled just under 80
sq km (31 sq miles) of Kursk.
President Vladimir Putin visited Kursk
this month in a sign of increasing confidence that Russia will shortly
win it back, depriving Ukraine of a bargaining chip in future peace
talks.
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