‘Full security is being restored,’ Ukraine President Zelenskyy tells his nation
Pressure is piling up on retreating Russians as Ukrainian troops press deeper into occupied territory, consolidating the swathes of recent gains.
Pressure is piling up on retreating Russians as Ukrainian troops press deeper into occupied territory, consolidating the swathes of recent gains.
As the advance continued, Ukraine’s border guard services said the army had taken control of Vovchansk – a town just two miles (three kilometres) from Russia, and perhaps crucially for morale, one that was seized on the first day of the war.
Moscow has acknowledged it recently withdrew from areas in the north-eastern region of Kharkiv – and that troops were also pulling out from Melitopol, the second-largest city in Ukraine’s southern Zaporizhzhia region.
The city’s pre-occupation mayor Ivan Fedorov wrote on Telegram the Russian troops were heading toward Moscow-annexed Crimea.
And he said columns of military equipment were reported at a checkpoint in Chonhar, a village marking the boundary between the Crimean Peninsula and the Ukrainian mainland.
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Melitopol has been occupied since early March. Capturing it would give Kyiv an opportunity to disrupt Russian supply lines between the south and the eastern Donbas region, the two major areas where Moscow-backed forces hold territory.
In his nightly address to his nation, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said “stabilisation measures” had been put in place in the liberated towns and villages.
“Remnants of occupiers and sabotage groups are being detected, collaborators are being detained, and full security is being restored,” he said, adding that border guards had been sent to protect “the state border in the liberated territory”.
“It is very important that together with our troops, with our flag, ordinary, normal life enters the de-occupied territory,” he said.
The country’s officials were buoyant, releasing footage showing their forces burning Russian flags and inspecting abandoned, charred tanks.
In one video, border guards tore down a poster that read: “We are one people with Russia.”
British intelligence reports said one of Russia’s premier force’s, the 1st Guards Tank Army, had been “severely degraded” during the invasion, along with the conventional Russian forces designed to counter NATO.
“It will likely take years for Russia to rebuild this capability,” officials said.
The setback might renew Russia’s interest in peace talks, said Abbas Gallyamov, an independent Russian political analyst and former speechwriter for Putin.
But even if Putin were to sit down at the negotiating table, president Zelenskyy has made it clear Russia must return all Ukrainian territory, including Crimea, Gallyamov said.
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Experts are also cautioning that momentum has switched back and forth before, and Ukraine’s allies were careful not to declare a premature victory, since Russian President Vladimir Putin still has troops and resources available.
In Washington, President Biden told reporters it was clear the Ukrainians had made “significant progress”.
However he stopped short of saying recent successes marked a turning point in the war saying “the question is unanswerable, it’s hard to tell”.
“I think it’s going to be a long haul,” he added.
In the face of its largest defeat since its botched attempt to capture Kyiv early in the war, Russia’s Defence Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov said troops were hitting back with “massive strikes” in all sectors.
But there were no immediate reports of a sudden increase in Russian attacks.
In the wake of the apparent retreat, Ukrainian authorities moved into several areas to investigate alleged atrocities committed by Russian troops against civilians.
The consolidation of territory gains comes as the US state department revealed more than £260 million has been covertly spent by Russia to try to influence politicians and other officials in more than two dozen countries since 2014.
The department took the unusual step of releasing a diplomatic cable signed by Secretary of State Antony Blinken that was sent on Monday to many US embassies and consulates abroad, many of them in Europe, Africa and South Asia, laying out the concerns.
The cable, which was marked “sensitive” and was not intended for foreign audiences but was not classified, contained a series of talking points that US diplomats were instructed to raise with their host governments regarding alleged Russian interference.