Zelensky visits border area from which Ukrainian forces entered Russia - Los Angeles Times
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Zelensky visits border area from which Ukrainian forces entered Russia

Zelensky looks over a table map with two other men
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, center, and Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi, right, look at a map during their visit to Sumy, Ukraine, on Thursday.
(Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP)
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President Volodymyr Zelensky made his first visit Thursday to the northeastern Ukrainian border area from which his forces launched their surprise offensive into Russia more than two weeks ago, seizing dozens of settlements.

Zelensky said Ukrainian forces have claimed control of an additional village in the Russian region of Kursk and have taken more Russian prisoners of war for what he calls an “exchange fund” to swap for captured Ukrainians.

“Another settlement in the Kursk region is now under Ukrainian control, and we have replenished the exchange fund,” Zelensky wrote on the social media platform X after hearing a report from the military commander, Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi.

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Zelensky did not name the newly captured village and did not cross over into Russia itself, which would have been regarded by Moscow as a major provocation. He previously has said that Ukraine has no plans to occupy the area long term but wants to create a buffer zone to prevent further attacks from that area into Ukraine.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has indirectly acknowledged ongoing military actions in Russia’s Kursk border region to ‘push the war out into the aggressor’s territory.’

Aug. 11, 2024

Zelensky said the Kursk operation launched Aug. 6 has led to a decrease in Russian shelling and a reduction in civilian casualties in Ukraine’s northern Sumy region.

The daring Ukrainian foray has rattled the Kremlin, showing Russia’s vulnerability and shattering President Vladimir Putin’s efforts to pretend that the country has been largely unaffected by the 2 1/2-year war. But the foray comes as Ukraine continues to lose ground in its eastern Donetsk region.

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Authorities in the city of Kursk, the capital of the Kursk region, began to put up concrete shelters at bus stops and other locations around the city to protect it from shelling. They plan similar work in Zheleznogorsk and Kurchatov, where the Kursk nuclear power plant is located, the region’s acting Gov. Alexei Smirnov said on his Telegram channel.

Putin has ordered the creation of self-defense units in Russian regions bordering Ukraine, the Russian leader said in a video call with officials.

Smirnov reported to Putin that over 133,000 people have left areas affected by the fighting in the Kursk region, while more than 19,000 have stayed.

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says Kyiv’s troops have full control of the town of Sudzha in Russia’s Kursk region in their cross-border incursion.

Sept. 1, 2024

The governor of Bryansk, another Russian region bordering Ukraine, said authorities in the region have conducted training for emergency evacuation from border areas in case it is needed.

Separately, the Defense Ministry reported repelling Ukrainian attacks near the villages of Komarovka, Malaya Loknya, Korenevka and several other settlements in the Kursk region.

Education Minister Sergey Kravtsov said 114 schools in Russia’s border regions will start teaching remotely when the school year begins at the start of September.

Ukraine’s push into Russia marks the first capture of Russian territory since World War II, but it comes as Kyiv continues to lose ground in eastern Ukraine.

The Russian Defense Ministry said Thursday that its military has claimed control of the village of Mezhove in Donetsk, part of the industrial Donbas region that Moscow seeks to take entirely.

The drone attacks come as Ukrainian forces are continuing to push into Russia’s western Kursk region.

Aug. 21, 2024

Both sides in the war have been using drones to attack far within enemy lines.

Ukraine attacked Russia overnight with 28 drones, Russia’s Defense Ministry said. Thirteen were shot down over the Volgograd region, seven over the Rostov region, four over the Belgorod region, two over the Voronezh region, and one each over the Bryansk and Kursk regions, the ministry said.

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Andrei Bocharov, governor of the Volgograd region, said Thursday that a military facility caught fire after being attacked by drones in the area of Marinovka, where a Russian military air base is located. He did not specify what was damaged.

Videos shared on Russian social media showed an explosion in the night sky, reportedly near the base. Marinovka is about 185 miles east of the Ukrainian border.

Ukraine claimed responsibility for the attack. Ukraine’s Security Service and the Special Operation Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine conducted the drone attack Wednesday night, striking the Marinovka airfield, a law enforcement official told the Associated Press. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak publicly.

Russian sources say that Ukrainian forces have either destroyed or damaged all three of the bridges over the Seim River in western Russia as Kyiv’s incursion into western Russia enters its third week

Aug. 20, 2024

The Baza Telegram channel, which is close to Russian law enforcement, said one drone was taken down several miles from the airfield near Marinovka and that wreckage from another fell on a trailer near the air base, causing it to catch fire.

Data from NASA fire satellites, which monitor Earth for forest blazes, showed fires breaking out around the air base’s apron, where fighter jets were previously seen parked.

Another fire burned Thursday in Russia’s Rostov region, where firefighters struggled for the fifth day to put out a fire at an oil depot following a Ukrainian attack in the town of Proletarsk. State news agency Tass said 47 firefighters have been injured while putting out the blaze.

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Satellite photos from Planet Labs PBC analyzed Thursday by the Associated Press showed the fire at the oil depot still intensely burning as of Wednesday. Storage tanks at the facility appeared engulfed in flames. Flames could be seen in the images, with a thick black smoke cloud drifting west over the city of Proletarsk.

Novikov writes for the Associated Press. AP writers Emma Burrows in London and Jon Gambrell in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, contributed to this report.

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