Putin hails Russian advances, Blinken unveils aid in Kyiv
The Russian advances on two fronts point to the acute ammunition and manpower shortages crippling the Ukrainian military that pave the way for the Kremlin's army to eat away at Ukrainian territory.
In this pool photograph distributed by Russia's state agency Sputnik, Russian President Vladimir Putin receives winners of the Leaders of Russia national competition for public officials at the Kremlin in Moscow on 12 March 2024. Picture: AFP
KYIV, UKRAINE - President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday hailed Russian advances in the Kharkiv region and the recapture of a symbolic town further south that was one of the only prizes of Ukraine's underwhelming counteroffensive last summer.
Moscow's claims came as US Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced fresh military aid during a visit to Kyiv and said Washington had not explicitly prohibited Ukraine from using Western weapons to strike targets inside Russia.
The Russian advances on two fronts point to the acute ammunition and manpower shortages crippling the Ukrainian military that pave the way for the Kremlin's army to eat away at Ukrainian territory.
"In all directions our troops are constantly, every day, improving their positions," Putin told Russia's military leaders, including new Defence Minister Andrei Belousov, in a televised meeting.
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky has cancelled planned trips abroad over the fresh offensive and the military was sending more troops to Kharkiv to hold back Russian advances, Kyiv said.
The Russian defence ministry claims to have captured a handful of villages in the Kharkiv region, which is home to the country's second-largest city, and on Wednesday added the settlements of Glyboke and Lukyantsi to its list.
But it also said it had recaptured the southern Ukrainian village of Robotyne, one of only a handful of settlements Kyiv retook at a huge cost in its summer counteroffensive last year.
Zelensky had visited the village in February and had hailed its recapture as a major success in an operation otherwise plagued with setbacks. Later on Wednesday, he claimed Ukrainian forces had managed to "partially stabilise" the Kharkiv front.
'EXTREMELY DIFFICULT' FIGHTING
Moscow launched the surprise major ground assault on the Kharkiv region last week as it seeks to advance across the battlefield with Kyiv struggling for arms and manpower.
The Russian advances have forced the evacuation of around 8,000 civilians from the Kharkiv region under risk of being caught in the crossfire, Ukrainian emergency services said.
A military spokesman conceded earlier Wednesday on state television that Kyiv had withdrawn troops - including near Lukyantsi - citing overwhelming Russian onslaughts and the need to save soldiers' lives.
Authorities in another village under attack, Vovchansk, said there was intense street-to-street fighting in the border town that before the war had an estimated population of 20,000 people.
"We are here and are evacuating people and helping them. The situation in Vovchansk is extremely difficult," police chief Oleksiy Kharkivsky said on social media.
The interior ministry announced that three civilians had been killed in the Kharkiv region over the last 24 hours, while least three others were killed in separate attacks on the regions of Sumy and Dnipropetrovsk.
In the frontline Kherson region further south, 19 people were wounded by Russian shelling, local authorities said.
Zelensky's office said the president had postponed upcoming trips and reiterated that the military was rushing reinforcements to the area to prevent Russia from punching through.
He had been planning to visit Spain later this week.
'DIFFICULT' FIGHTING IN EAST
Some military analysts say Moscow may be trying to force Ukraine to divert troops from other areas of the front line, such as around the strategic town of Chasiv Yar in the Donetsk region, where Russia has also been advancing.
"We can clearly see how the occupier is trying to draw our forces away and make our combat work less concentrated," Zelensky said on Wednesday, referring to the Donetsk region and the front further south in Kharkiv.
Blinken's visit came just weeks after the US Congress finally approved a $61-billion financial aid package for Ukraine following months of political wrangling, unlocking much-needed arms for the country's outgunned troops.
Washington's top diplomat said the United States was releasing $2 billion from the major aid package.
He also appeared to tacitly green-light Ukrainian strikes with Western weapons on Russian territory.
"We have not encouraged or enabled strikes outside of Ukraine, but ultimately Ukraine has to make decisions for itself about how it's going to conduct this war," Blinken said.
Some Ukrainians reacted angrily to Blinken's guitar performance in a bar in Kyiv late Tuesday, chastising Washington's top diplomat for taking part in a jam session while troops are fighting in trenches, struggling to hold back a Russian advance amid a shortage of weapons.
Ukrainian officials have said that more than 30,000 Russian troops have been deployed to the northeastern region but that the main hub of Kharkiv, the country's second-largest city, was not threatened by the offensive.