Ukraine strikes third bridge in Kursk region, says Russia, as it seeks to carve out buffer zone

Kyiv says its troops have seized over 80 settlements in area covering more than 1,150 sq km of Russian territory

A building damaged by falling missile debris in Russian regional capital of Kursk on August 13th. Photograph: Nanna Heitmann/The New York Times
A building damaged by falling missile debris in Russian regional capital of Kursk on August 13th. Photograph: Nanna Heitmann/The New York Times

Moscow said on Monday Ukraine had struck a third bridge in an assault on Russia’s Kursk region which Kyiv says is aimed at carving out a buffer zone and wearing down Russia’s war machine.

Ukraine says it has seized over 80 settlements in an area covering more than 1,150 sq km of Kursk since its surprise strike on the Russian region on August 6th, the biggest invasion of Russia since the second World War.

But Ukrainian forces are on the defensive elsewhere and face a battle to protect the strategic eastern city of Pokrovsk, where Russia has steadily advanced in recent weeks in heavy fighting more than two years since Russia’s full-scale invasion.

“We are achieving our goals,” Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy wrote of the two-week-old incursion into Kursk on the Telegram messaging app on Monday, adding that more Russian soldiers had been taken prisoner.

READ MORE

‘People are horrified’: Moscow turns to reluctant conscripts to defend KurskOpens in new window ]

Russia said a third bridge had been struck and damaged on the Seym river that winds through the Kursk region bordering northeastern Ukraine.

Ukraine has not yet commented on the strike, but Kyiv’s air force chief has previously said his forces have destroyed two bridges to weaken enemy logistics.

Military analysts said the bridges were part of critical supply lines for Russian troops defending the area. Reuters could not independently confirm the damage to the bridges or the battlefield situation in Kursk.

Mr Zelenskiy said on Sunday his troops were unleashing what he described as “maximum counteroffensive actions” aimed at creating a buffer zone and hurting Moscow’s military potential.

“Everything that inflicts losses on the Russian army, the Russian state, their military industrial complex and their economy – all this helps us to prevent the widening of the war,” Mr Zelenskiy said.

More than 121,000 people have been evacuated from nine border districts in the Kursk region, Russia’s emergencies ministry said.

Russian presidential aide Yuri Ushakov said Moscow was not ready to hold peace talks with Ukraine for now, given Kyiv’s Kursk attack. Ukraine has demanded a full withdrawal of Russian troops from its territory before it sits down for any talks.

Ukrainian forces face a tough battle near Pokrovsk, a transport hub for Ukrainian forces. Russian troops are now around 10km from the outskirts of the city, said Serhiy Dobriak, head of the local military administration.

A strategically important bridge over the river Syem has been destroyed by Ukrainian troops. Photograph: Ukrainian Defence Ministry Press Office via AP
A strategically important bridge over the river Syem has been destroyed by Ukrainian troops. Photograph: Ukrainian Defence Ministry Press Office via AP

He said up to 600 people were leaving on a daily basis, and that municipal services could be cut off within a week as Russian forces close in.

Regional governor Vadym Filashkin said a curfew in settlements close to Pokrovsk had been tightened and the situation was “very difficult”.

Ukraine’s top general said Kyiv was also “doing everything necessary” to defend the eastern city of Toretsk as Moscow tries to threaten Ukrainian supply lines. Russia said its forces had captured the nearby town of Zalizne.

The war, which has killed tens of thousands and devastated cities across Ukraine, shows no sign of letting up. Kyiv expects Moscow to boost its forces in Ukraine by year’s end to 800,000, up from around 600,000 now, Ukrainian deputy defence minister Ivan Havryliuk told Ukrainian media.

Ukraine has been backed by arms from its allies but is worried that support may drop as the war grinds on.

Britain reiterated support for Ukraine on Monday, and Indian prime minister Narendra Modi is set to visit Kyiv on August 23rd.

In a new sign of tensions over explosions in 2022 that ruptured the Nord Stream gas pipelines transporting gas under the Baltic Sea, Russia’s RIA news agency said Moscow had complained to Germany over its investigation into the incident.

Ukraine’s air defence units repelled Russia’s overnight air attack, including on Kyiv, destroying all 11 drones that Moscow launched, targeting Ukraine’s territory, Ukraine’s air force said on Monday.

The drones were destroyed over the Mykolaiv, Cherkasy, Vinnytsia, Kyiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Kharkiv, Sumy and Donetsk regions, the air force said on the Telegram messaging app.

Russian marines have captured a group of 19 Ukrainian soldiers in Russia’s Kursk region, the state RIA news agency reported on Monday, describing the Ukrainians as “saboteurs”. RIA published what it said was video of the captured troops.

Reuters could not independently confirm the incident.

Meanwhile, Russian ally Belarus has massed “nearly a third” of its army along its border with Ukraine, according to authoritarian president Alexander Lukashenko.

Mr Lukashenko told Russian state TV that Minsk was responding to the deployment of more than 120,000 Ukrainian troops to the 1,084km frontier. – Reuters/AP