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Ukraine says Russia has started counter-offensive in its Kursk border region

Ukraine launched its daring incursion into Kursk on August 6.

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Russia has launched a counter-offensive in its Kursk region to dislodge Ukraine’s forces who stormed across the border five weeks ago and put Russian territory under foreign occupation for the first time since the Second World War, Ukraine’s president said.

Russia’s Defence Ministry said that Moscow’s forces had recaptured 10 settlements in Kursk and listed their names but did not describe the fighting as a counter-offensive.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Russia was taking “counter-offensive actions” but that Ukrainian forces had anticipated the moves and were ready to fight.

Ukraine launched its daring incursion into Kursk on August 6, partly in the hope that Russia would divert its troops there from Donetsk in eastern Ukraine where a push by the Russian army is threatening to overrun a belt of key defensive strongholds.

A close-up of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky (Leon Neal/Pool via AP)

Moscow’s muddled response suggested Russia had not planned for such a development and was caught by surprise. Assembling forces for a counterattack, given the long distances involved and other demands along the 600-mile front line, was expected to take some time.

The Russian army has been hacking its way deeper into eastern Ukraine, especially Donetsk, and has battered Ukrainian territory with relentless missile and drone attacks.

A Russian missile attack on Thursday killed three people and injured two others, all of them Ukrainian workers with the International Committee of the Red Cross, Ukraine’s human rights ombudsman, Dmytro Lubinets said.

The toll was the largest among staff at the Geneva-based humanitarian organisation since a bomb blast killed three at the Aden airport in Yemen in 2020.

A police officer looking at a burning Red Cross vehicle that was destroyed in a Russian strike in the Donetsk region
A police officer looking at a burning Red Cross vehicle that was destroyed in a Russian strike in the Donetsk region (Police of the Donetsk Region via AP)

A water filtration station in Pokrovsk was damaged in recent fighting, and more than 300 hastily drilled water wells are the city’s last source of drinking water, Donetsk regional governor Vadym Filashkin said.

The previous day, Russians destroyed a natural gas distribution station near Pokrovsk, Mr Filashkin said.

Some 18,000 people remain in the city, including 522 children, he said. More than 20,000 people have left in the past six weeks as Russian forces creep closer to residential areas, Mr Filashkin said.

“Evacuation is the only… choice for civilians,” he added.

Russian President Vladimir Putin sat at a desk
Russian President Vladimir Putin warned over allowing long-range strikes (Alexander Kazakov, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

Russian troops backed by artillery and powerful glide bombs have turned Donetsk cities and towns such as Bakhmut and Avdiivka into bombed-out shells, though the push has cost Russia heavily in troops and armour.

US secretary of state Antony Blinken ended a Ukraine-focused European tour on Thursday after hearing repeated appeals from Ukrainian officials to use western-supplied weaponry for long-range strikes inside Russia.

President Joe Biden has allowed Ukraine to fire US-provided missiles across the border into Russia in self-defence, but has largely limited the distance they can be fired. Extending the limit could bring Russian retaliation.

Russian President Vladimir Putin in turn warned that allowing long-range strikes “would mean that Nato countries, the United States, and European countries are at war with Russia… if this is so, then, bearing in mind the change in the very essence of this conflict, we will make appropriate decisions based on the threats that will be created for us”.

Ukrainian forces have held out as long as possible, even when strongholds such as Chasiv Yar appeared to be in danger of imminent collapse.

US secretary of state Antony Blinken with an American flag behind him
US secretary of state Antony Blinken visited Kyiv this week (Mark Schiefelbein/AP)

The United States and Britain pledged nearly 1.5 billion dollars in additional aid to Ukraine on Wednesday during a visit to Kyiv by their top diplomats. Much of that will go to restoring the electricity supply.

Mr Blinken said: “We’re again seeing Putin dust off his winter playbook, targeting Ukrainian energy and electricity systems to weaponise the cold against the Ukrainian people.”

An overnight drone attack on Konotop, a town in Ukraine’s northern Sumy region, largely knocked out the electricity supply, regional officials said.

The blasts also blew out an “incredibly high number” of windows in the city and damaged many of the town’s tram tracks, mayor Artem Semenikhin said.

Russia launched a total of 64 Shahed drones and five missiles over eastern, central and northern regions of Ukraine, Ukraine’s air force said in its Thursday morning report.

Ukraine has expressed frustration that its western partners will not let it use sophisticated modern weapons they supply to hit places inside Russia where the missiles and drones are launched from. Some western leaders fear that would trigger an escalation of the war.

Pentagon spokesman Lt Col Charlie Dietz said on Thursday that US long-range guided missiles would not be able to reach all the locations from where Russia launches some of its assets.

In other developments, Ukrainian Military Intelligence claimed to have shot down a Russian Su-30SM jet over the Black Sea.

A post on the agency’s social media said the warplane was hit with a portable surface-to-air missile.

Also, Mr Zelenksky posted photos of a ship loaded with grain that he said was struck by a Russian missile on Thursday shortly after leaving Ukrainian territorial waters.

The merchant ship was taking wheat to Egypt, Mr Zelensky wrote on his Telegram page, adding that nobody was injured in the strike.

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