Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Ukrainian forces have crossed the Dnieper in small groups to create a foothold near the Kherson bridge (Alex Babenko/AP/PA
russian invasion

Ukrainian troops establish position on occupied bank of Dnipro river

A sustained Ukrainian breakthrough across the river would mark a significant tactical success for Kyiv.

RUSSIA HAS SAID that for the first time, some Ukrainian troops have established positions on the Moscow-held side of the Dnipro river, the vast waterway that splits the frontline in southern Ukraine.

A sustained Ukrainian breakthrough across the river would mark a significant tactical success for Kyiv, whose wider counteroffensive has so far failed to turn the tide of the 21-month war.

“Small groups” of Ukrainian soldiers were stretched along the eastern bank of the Dnipro river, and had been “blocked” in the tiny village of Krynky, the Moscow-installed head of Ukraine’s Kherson region, Vladimir Saldo, said in a post on Telegram.

But he insisted they were facing a “fiery hell” from Russian artillery, rockets and drones, and were suffering heavy losses.

Russian and Ukrainian forces have been entrenched on opposite sides of the Dnipro river since Moscow withdrew from the western part of Kherson region last November.

That was the last major territorial change in the conflict, with both sides having since failed to make any significant progress despite staging multiple offensives.

Russia’s Saldo said that “about one and a half enemy companies, mostly in small groups,” were currently on the Russian-held side.

According to Russia’s TASS news agency, a company in the Russian military system consists of 45-360 soldiers.

“Our additional forces have now been deployed. The enemy is blocked in Krynky. A fiery hell has been arranged for them: bombs, rockets, heavy flamethrower systems, artillery shells and drones are flying at them,” Saldo said.

His comments were the first admission by a senior Russian official that Ukraine had managed to secure some positions on the Russian-controlled side of the river.

AFP was not able to verify his reports and the scale of Ukraine’s crossing was unclear.

Since mid-October, Russian military bloggers close to the armed forces have been reporting that small groups of Ukrainian troops were successfully crossing the river.

The Kremlin earlier this week refused to comment on those reports, deferring questions to the defence ministry.

The ministry has not spoken about it either, but said separately that it had captured a small group of Ukrainian soldiers “trying to land on the left bank”.

Both Kyiv and Moscow regularly claim to have killed high numbers of “enemy” soldiers, though neither side comments on their own losses.

Despite a relatively static frontline, both Kyiv and the Kremlin have denied the conflict has ground to a stalemate.

Andriy Yermak, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s chief of staff, said Tuesday Ukrainian forces had “gained a foothold on the left bank of the Dnipro,” without providing details.

Krynky, where Saldo said the Ukrainians had been trapped, is a small village 35 kilometres to the east and upstream of the city of Kherson.

Holding and strengthening any position on the Russian-controlled side of the Dnipro river could present a tough challenge for Ukrainian troops.

Boggy, swamp-like terrain makes amphibious landings difficult, and Russia has significant access to manpower and equipment on the eastern side of the river.

The claims came as Russia continued to pound southern and eastern Ukraine, in attacks that Kyiv said targeted civilian infrastructure.

Two rescue workers arriving at the scene of a Russian strike in Zaporizhzhia region were killed by a second strike, Interior Minister Igor Klymenko said on social media.

“Rescuers were at the scene in a matter of minutes. Then the occupiers struck again. As a result of the enemy shelling, unfortunately, two employees of the State Emergency Service were killed,” he said.

The victims were 31 and 34 years old, he added.

It was not immediately clear where or when the attack took place. The region’s governor had said earlier that Russia launched three rocket attacks at a town in Zaporizhzhia region today, killing one person and injuring seven others.

“The blast wave and shrapnel damaged houses, two cars and outbuildings located near the site of the strikes,” governor Yuriy Malashko said.

In a separate attack, the interior ministry said overnight Russian shelling of a high-rise building killed two people in the eastern town of Selydove in Donetsk region.

“As of now, there are two dead in Selydove,” it said.

The bodies of a 59-year-old local man and an 85-year-old woman had been pulled from the rubble, it added.

Zelensky warned Sunday it was possible Moscow would ramp up attacks on infrastructure, including power facilities, ahead of the winter.

Moscow has repeatedly denied targeting civilians during the more than 600-day war.

© AFP 2023