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Ukrainian forces gain foothold in Russia’s Kursk region following cross-border incursion 

Houses in the Kursk region village of Sudzha, following a Ukrainian attack, 6 August 2024. Photo: Telegram, Alexey Smirnov

The Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) have gained a foothold inside Russian territory for the first time since the war began, having made a cross-border incursion into Russia’s southwestern Kursk region on Tuesday, Russian pro-war Telegram channel Rybar reported on Wednesday. 

A Novaya Europe source in the Russian military said that the UAF had managed to extend its penetration into Russian territory by a further 5 kilometres overnight, and that Ukrainian troops were now 15 kilometres behind enemy lines, having opened up a 10-kilometre-wide front.

The AFU are now in control of the Russian border villages of Nikolaevo-Daryino, Daryino, and Sverdlikovo, while fighting is ongoing for control of the settlements of Goncharovka and Oleshna, according to Rybar. 

The operation appeared to have been “planned for a long time” and involved some 400 Ukrainian troops, with up to another 2,000 troops concentrated along the border, Rybar said, adding that it expected the AFU to attempt to “expand their area of control further” over the coming days.

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday afternoon, Putin called the Ukrainian incursion “a large-scale provocation” before claiming without evidence that the AFU were “firing indiscriminately from various types of weapons, including missiles, at civilian buildings, residential buildings and ambulances”. 

The Russian Defence Ministry had earlier denied reports that the AFU had successfully managed to gain a foothold in the Kursk region and that enemy troops had continued their advance deep into Russian territory, adding that Russian forces had killed some 260 Ukrainian troops and destroyed over 100 pieces of artillery and other military hardware, including seven tanks, in just one day.

Photo: Rybar

Russian independent news outlet Pepel published drone footage appearing to show at least six Russian soldiers being taken prisoner by Ukrainian forces, with other videos circulated by Ukrainian Telegram channels showing at least two Russian men who said they were conscripts captured by the AFU in the region.

The Kursk regional authorities reported that two people were killed when a drone hit an ambulance on Tuesday evening as AFU incursions into the region continued overnight.

The region’s acting governor, Alexey Smirnov, said that an ambulance driver and a paramedic had been killed and a doctor had been injured when a drone launched by what he called “Ukrainian Nazis” hit the vehicle near the border town of Sudzha, which was the scene of intense battles between the AFU and Russian Armed Forces on Tuesday, and from which residents are reportedly continuing to evacuate.

On Wednesday morning, Smirnov called on local residents to give blood “due to the situation in the border areas of the region”, which he said continued to “heroically resist attacks by Ukrainian Nazis”. 

Although the Kursk regional authorities said they had evacuated some 200 residents from areas of under heavy shelling, Kursk residents said that no evacuation effort had been made. 

“I called emergency services and asked them to evacuate my dad. They told me that there is no evacuation going on at present, but that when the situation allows, they will be able to do something,” one resident told independent news outlet IStories.

However, the regional authorities were forced to deny that Smirnov had called on fighting-age men to report to their local military draft office amid the worsening situation on the border, saying that a video showing him urging residents to “collect weapons and defend our homeland”, which circulated on Monday, had been a deepfake.