NewsPutin redeploys troops amid intense fighting in Kursk region

Putin redeploys troops amid intense fighting in Kursk region

Putin withdraws troops. First effects of Ukraine's offensive
Putin withdraws troops. First effects of Ukraine's offensive
Images source: © PAP | GAVRIIL GRIGOROV / SPUTNIK / KREMLIN POOL
Radosław Opas

14 August 2024 07:31

The Politico service reports that some units of Vladimir Putin's army have been withdrawn from Ukraine's occupied territories. Analysts indicate that this is the result of Ukraine's ongoing offensive. The withdrawn units will be redeployed to Russian regions where fierce battles occur.

Since 6 August, Ukraine has been conducting operations in the Russian Kursk region. Dozens of villages have been captured, and fighting is taking place, among other places, in the Sudzha area. Russia had to evacuate over 120,000 residents. Ukraine has not publicly disclosed the goal of the operation, which surprised Russia after months of gradual advances by the Russian army in eastern Ukraine.

The Politico portal writes that Moscow decided to withdraw some units from the occupied Ukrainian lands to redirect them to the Kursk region. "Russia moved some of its units from the Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions in southern Ukraine," said Ukrainian army spokesman Dmytro Lykhovyi in an interview with the service.

Meanwhile, Lithuania's Defence Minister Laurynas Kasciunas warned Volodymyr Zelensky that Russia is also sending soldiers from Kaliningrad. The Lithuanian politician is currently visiting Kyiv, where he met with the Ukrainian president. During the meeting, the Ukrainian army's current needs and the development of the defence industry were discussed.

How will Putin respond?

According to Col. (res.) Piotr Lewandowski from the Territorial Defence Forces Training Centre, two Russian responses are to be expected. "One is the expulsion of Ukrainian troops from the area that they have taken after entering the territory of the Russian Federation. The other is a likely massive airstrike on targets in Ukraine," he said in an interview with WP.

"These could be large cities: Kyiv, Kharkiv, Lviv, Odessa, Sumy. The Kremlin will probably claim that since Kyiv committed an act of terror, Russia might respond with a bombing attack," the expert assessed.

As he recalls, Russia will insist that it is an anti-terrorist operation, and the terrorists are the Ukrainians. "In Russian doctrine, any attack on their territory must be met with a response using nuclear weapons. But Putin will not respond that way. He will not say that the Ukrainian operation is a full-scale war because he would be criticised for not using nuclear weapons. So he will manoeuvre," said the former military man.

Source: Politico

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