Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said his country's military operation in Kursk province was a success, helping to pull Russian troops away from the Pokrovsk direction in Donetsk.
Russian soldiers on March 14 in an area of Kursk that they have just regained control of.
The New York Post on March 15 quoted Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as saying that his military campaign in Kursk province was a success, in the context that Ukrainian soldiers were leaving Russian territory that they had controlled since August 2024.
Ukraine shocked the region with a daring offensive in the summer, seizing control of an area of about 1,250 square kilometers. One of the goals of the Kursk offensive was to deny Russian forces access to the strategically important city of Pokrovsk in southeastern Ukraine, a goal Mr. Zelensky said he had achieved.
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"I believe that the mission has been accomplished. I think that the situation in the Pokrovsk direction is now stable and it will be very difficult [for Russia] to find an opportunity to capture Pokrovsk again," according to the leader.
He said the Kursk offensive achieved its main goal of drawing Russian troops away from the directions of attacking Pokrovsk in the east, as well as Kharkiv and Sumy in northeastern Ukraine.
"First, the pressure decreased in the Kharkiv direction. The Russian army transferred a large number of ground troops from there to Kursk. Then Russia began to withdraw its troops from the east, but did not abandon its main target - Pokrovsk," he said. President Zelnesky declared that the situation in the Pokrovsk region and Kharkiv sectors "is now stabilized".
Ukraine has been attacking the Kursk region since August 2024, and Ukrainian leaders have repeatedly stated that they will use the controlled territory there as a bargaining chip in future negotiations.
Mr Zelensky's declaration of success came as most of Ukraine's forces completed their withdrawal from Kursk, starting on March 5.
President Zelensky has not confirmed whether all Ukrainian troops have left the area, but at least some remained as of the morning of March 14, according to expert John Hardie of the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (USA).
“Some Ukrainian soldiers appear to still be in the western suburbs of Sudzha and the Guyevo area,” Mr Hardie said.
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But the total, he said, was still far lower than the estimate of “thousands” of soldiers that US President Donald Trump mentioned on the social network Truth Social on March 14. The White House boss added that he “strongly recommended” President Putin spare the lives of those besieged soldiers.
Responding to Trump's offer, Putin said Russia would spare the lives of Ukrainian soldiers in Kursk if they surrendered. Deputy head of Russia's Security Council Dmitry Medvedev also said that the soldiers would be "mercilessly destroyed" if they did not surrender.
Many US and Ukrainian officials and experts on March 14 denied information that Ukrainian soldiers were surrounded in Kursk, because the withdrawal had been going on for more than a week.
Source: https://thanhnien.vn/binh-si-ukraine-rut-khoi-kursk-ong-zelensky-tuyen-bo-su-menh-hoan-tat-185250315092812611.htm
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