
KYIV: Kyiv’s army has broken through Russian lines in southern Ukraine, the general leading the counteroffensive there told US media this weekend, in the latest Ukrainian claims that it is making progress in the Zaporizhzhia area.
Ukraine launched its counteroffensive to claw back territory from Russian forces in June.
Progress has been slower than expected, with heavily mined territory, but Kyiv has in recent weeks reported making strategic advances in the Zaporizhzhia region.
“On the left flank (near the village of Verbove) we have a breakthrough and we continue to advance further,” general Oleksandr Tarnavskiy told CNN.
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“Not as fast as it was excepted, not like in the movies about the Second World War,” he said in the CNN interview.
But he said it was important “not to lose this initiative.”
Last month Kyiv declared a strategic victory when it recaptured the southern village of Robotyne.
Tarnavskiy said a major breakthrough for the counteroffensive would be if Kyiv recaptured the city of Tokmak—some 20 kilometres (12 miles) from the front line—which fell to Russian forces at the start of their invasion.
Retaking Tokmak would allow Ukrainian forces to push further towards occupied Melitopol and annexed Crimea.
“I think it (a breakthrough) would happen after Tokmak,” he said, but warned:
“At the moment (Russian forces) are relying on the depth of their defensive line there.”
Tarnavskiy disagreed with some predictions that Ukraine’s push could be further slowed by the upcoming winter months.
“The weather can be a serious obstacle during advance, but considering how we move forward, mostly without vehicles, I don’t think (it) will heavily influence the counteroffensive,” he said.
He gave some insight into the type of fighting taking place in the south, 19 months into Moscow’s invasion:
“Right now, neither the enemy nor us uses large formations, companies, battalions or brigades. We use assault squads, groups of 10 to 15 men,” he said.
“They conduct titanic work of concentrating enemy fire on them and using all the means they have to use to survive.”
The interview was published a day after Kyiv struck Russia’s Black Sea Fleet headquarters in Crimea, claiming to have killed “senior” commanders.
Tarnavskiy said the counteroffensive’s success depends not only on what happens on the front, but also “destroying command centres” that create “a mess on the battlefield.”
He added that strikes on Crimea improved morale for Ukrainian troops: “It helps us but it also gives us hope for the future.”
Earlier, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky met with close ally Prime Minister Justin Trudeau who pledged additional aid to the war-torn country.
Canada is home to the world’s second largest Ukrainian diaspora and Zelensky, in a speech to parliament, expressed thanks for the backing given to Kyiv since Russian troops poured over the Ukrainian borders in February 2022.
“When we call on the world to support us, it is not just about an ordinary conflict,” he said, “It is about saving the lives of millions of people—literally our salvation.”
Canada, he said, has “always defended justice and I had no doubt that you would choose the side of freedom and justice when Russia launched a full-scale war against Ukraine.”
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