Archive for the ‘Ukraine’ Category

Czech President predicts "significant shift" in the war in Ukraine in 2024 – Yahoo News

Petr Pavel, President of Czechia and former head of the NATO Military Committee, believes that in 2024, a "significant shift" may occur on the battlefield in Ukraine, and its consequences will depend on the elections in the United States and Russia.

Source: Pavel in an interview with Seznam Sprvy, European Pravda reports

Details: According to the Czech president, "the development of the conflict in Ukraine shows that we are likely to see some significant shift next year."

"And so far, everything points to the fact that it will not be in the best sense of the word, as we would like. There will be a new situation that we will have to deal with," he added.

Pavel explained that he was referring to the presidential elections in Russia, which have a predetermined outcome, and in the United States, where the outcome is not so certain.

"And we should expect that the anticipation of the elections will also lead to some changes on the battlefield. After all, President Putin has made it clear that there can be no peace talks until the outcome of the US election is clear," the Czech president said.

Pavel believes that Putin's statement was a way of expressing his expectation that Donald Trump, with whom he would be able to find common ground "regardless of what Ukraine or the rest of Europe thinks", would return to power.

"This is, of course, a situation that is certainly not favourable for us, and we will see how far the scenario that Vladimir Putin hopes for will be realised," Pavel concluded.

Background: The Estonian Defence Forces Intelligence Centre has previously estimated that the 2024 budget approved by President Vladimir Putin allows Russia to continue the war in Ukraine with the same intensity as now.

The media also found out that if Donald Trump is elected US president, he plans to appoint people loyal to him to key positions in the Pentagon, State Department and Central Intelligence Agency to implement his isolationist policy.

Support UP or become our patron!

View original post here:
Czech President predicts "significant shift" in the war in Ukraine in 2024 - Yahoo News

Ukrainian soldiers storming eastern bank of Dnipro fear their mission is hopeless – Kyiv Independent

Editors note: Full names and the deployment locations of the soldiers interviewed for this story are not disclosed since they weren't authorized to speak to the press.

KHERSON OBLAST Mortars are the first things that greet the Ukrainian soldiers who are lucky enough to make it across the Dnipro River alive.

No matter how sneaky the Ukrainian small units try to be, its not hard for the Russian forces holding the eastern bank to see them coming. Russian drones are always on the hunt, boat motors are loud and suitable troop-landing spots are few.

Once Ukrainians are spotted, the Russians either chase them with first-person-view (FPV) drones or drop mortars on them. Bodies lost to the river are nearly impossible to retrieve, the soldiers say.

Making it across is just the beginning. Plodding hundreds of meters through marsh and knee-high water, with no cover from mortars, artillery, tanks, drones and aircraft, is almost as scary.

The Ukrainian soldiers maintain distance from each other so at least one of them survives to call in an evacuation.

(KAB guided aerial bombs) are the least scary because you understand that they will hit, and you wont feel anything, reconnaissance soldier Oleksandr, 25, said.

All these risks are in service to what the soldiers call a small, high-stakes operation to probe the Russian fortifications on the eastern bank of Ukraines biggest river, around a kilometer wide in its southern parts, flowing through Kherson Oblast.

The Russians have been driven out of the western side in the fall of 2022.

Nearly half a year into its operation to strike at the occupied side, Ukraine has been able to secure a thin, long bridgehead along the coast with a width that ranges from 2.5 kilometers to 300-500 meters in some spots, according to the soldiers and officers interviewed.

The areas near the destroyed village of Krynky are where Ukraine has achieved the most success, penetrating roughly 2.5 kilometers from the river coast, according to soldiers. They need long-range artillery and missile support and strong air defenses to push farther, but these things are in short supply in the south, according to troops and experts.

Even holding on to the existing bridgehead requires soldiers to take enormous risks, as ammo, drones, boats and special equipment like thermal imaging are in short supply. Many of them have called it suicidal.

Across the river is practically impossible, 32-year-old drone operator Oleh, who observes firm Russian defense lines from the western bank, said.

You get to the other side (of the Dnipro River), and then what next? What can they (Ukrainian soldiers) do? You cant go forward because Russians are there, backward not because of the water.

Reinforcing the eastern bank is difficult. Theres no time to dig and little point in digging you can only go down half a meter before hitting water.

Acknowledging that any breakthrough on the eastern bank is unrealistic for now, especially with the lack of heavy weaponry, many soldiers and officers view the operation as more of Ukraines effort to reassure some progress to Western allies.

Observing the political theater from a distance and death in proximity, the soldiers say they are hurt that their lives are put in jeopardy for what they say they perceive as a political decision to have a symbolic success on the battlefield.

People are killed to hold on to the ruins, said 47-year-old Senior Sergeant Petro, who leads a radio intelligence platoon of roughly 20 men with the 38th Separate Marine Brigade.

After the highly-anticipated summer 2023 counteroffensive failed to achieve its goals, Ukrainian and Western politicians used this little bridgehead to peddle hope to their allies in a static war.

It coincides with the new military aid pledges to Ukraine over August-October 2023 hitting their lowest since the start of the full-scale invasion, with an 87% drop year-to-year, according to the Kiel Institute, which tracks Ukraine aid.

Against all odds, Ukraines defense forces have gained a foothold on the left (eastern) bank of the Dnipro, President Volodymyr Zelensky's Chief of Staff Andriy Yermak said during his November visit to the U.S.

Charles Michel: I dont think this counteroffensive has failed

Ten years after Ukrainians took to the streets their dissatisfaction with what many saw as a nail into the coffin of the countrys European future, the European Council president was in Kyiv promising that Ukraine would soon begin accession talks. My goal is to do everything to make a positive

During an interview with the Kyiv Independent, European Council President Charles Michel said that the bridgehead on the rivers eastern bank was one of the two reasons why he thinks Ukraines counteroffensive wasnt a failure.

The recent progress made on the left (eastern) side of the Dnipro River is very important, Michel told the Kyiv Independent.

Political and military analysts are divided on how politics interfere with operational decisions.

Oleksiy Melnyk, co-director of foreign policy and international security at the Kyiv-based think tank Razumkov Center, said that while he couldnt rule out that there was a political objective for the operation, he also saw a clear military purpose for it.

Even if there is a political objective, its unlikely that this operation is reaching it, he added.

I can hardly imagine that Ukraine can impress anyone in either Ukrainian society or among our international partners by simply reporting that, look, there is a stronghold on the left (eastern) bank, he said.

Retired Lieutenant General Ben Hodges, a former commander of the U.S. Army in Europe, said it was politically and strategically important for Ukraine to still try to retain the initiative, even if a successful offensive across the river doesnt look possible now.

Michael Kofman, defense analyst and senior fellow at Carnegie Endowment, said that the Dnipro River operation has several goals.

"Although one can identify military goals, the operation also appears to have political objectives, giving the sense that Ukrainian forces are still on the offensive, he said.

Consequently, perceptions may be the driving factor even if prospects for success appear dubious at this point, Kofman said, adding that the operation would have a stronger rationale if coordinated with a breakthrough in neighboring Zaporizhzhia Oblast, though the latter never happened.

The analyst said he is unsure what Ukraine can achieve on the eastern bank at this stage relative to its costs, especially due to the artillery ammunition shortage and the difficulty of moving equipment across the river.

Ukraines Defense Ministry and the military didnt respond to questions about the operations in Kherson Oblast by the time of publication.

Petro still remembers the shiver he felt when he saw two bodies on thermal sights, right after a Russian mortar attack.

All evening on that day in late October, Petro was nervously observing his drone operators first deployment across the river from a base near Kherson.

The 11-man group got hit by mortars shortly after the landing. It usually takes a few minutes for the Russian forces to pass the coordinates of where the Ukrainian boats landed to mortar units, according to Petro.

Two newcomers in their 20s were killed, and one was wounded.

The most painful thing was seeing everything from a distance and not being able to help, Petro said.

Once the shelling stopped, Petro and three others evacuated the KIAs. The dead are harder to carry than the living.

With a 200 (military code for the killed), its always harder, veteran soldier Petro said, recalling how they evacuated the bodies with a portable stretcher. When its a fresh 200, he is very soft, and he falls off easily.

(A fallen soldier) doesnt help you. But a 300 (military code for the wounded), he holds on to your hands, and you can carry him.

Join our community

Support independent journalism in Ukraine. Join us in this fight.

Support us

Since being transferred to the south this fall from a counteroffensive on the Velyka Novosilka axis in Donetsk Oblast without barely any break, Ukrainian marines, including the elite 35th Separate Marine Brigade and newly-formed units, have suffered extreme losses.

A reconnaissance platoon of 30 men from Petros company, for example, was gone in the first month, he said. Only two from the platoon remained in action as of late November, and most of the others were killed during the mission, he added.

Ive nearly reached a limit, there is no more strength (to keep going emotionally), said Petro, who has spent most of the last 10 years fighting in the wars hottest spots. Emotion piles up, and it will overflow at some point. Honestly, Im scared (of this).

For Petro, nothing is scarier than imagining how many more could be killed the longer the operation continues.

Still, experts say theres some sense in holding the bridgehead at all costs.

Hodges said the strategic importance of the bridgehead will depend on what Ukraine is able to do with it.

Some of the possible goals of Ukraines operation on the eastern bank could include bringing long-range weapons such as High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS) closer so they can strike occupied Crimea or distract Russian forces from another front.

Either way, its important to keep pressuring Russian forces and making it harder for them to strike civilian areas, according to Hodges.

Since their withdrawal from the western bank last November, the Russians have been heavily attacking Kherson and environs with airstrikes, drones, artillery, and tanks.

Under deadly attacks, Kherson fights to keep life going 1 year after liberation

Sitting in a pitch-dark kitchen with just the flashlight on, 70-year-old Viacheslav Bezprozvanyi warned of an incoming shelling as soon as he heard a swish over him. Split seconds later, a thick thud of shelling hit the ground a few hundred meters away. The house shook, knocking off a

Ukrainian soldiers estimate that they need to push the Russians 10 to 12 kilometers from the river to reduce the shelling and to build something that they can properly call a bridgehead.

Per military doctrine, its crucial to use air defense to protect the boats and pontoon bridges and to build up the power on the other side as fast as you can to prevent the enemy from being able to react to it or to get you when youre so vulnerable, according to Hodges.

Ukraine may hold on to the bridgehead for months before expanding it, especially as the weather worsens, but I think they will not want to give this up unless it becomes a waste, Hodges added.

Given what soldiers describe as Russias seemingly endless manpower and weapon stocks, its unclear why Russian forces have not been able to recapture this thin foothold on the eastern bank yet.

Either they can't react to it (because Russia needs to prioritize its ammunition stocks on other fronts), or they don't yet see it as a threat that has to be eliminated yet, Hodges said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin also mentioned a foothold that Ukrainian troops have acquired in the village of Krynky, during his major press conference on Dec. 15.

Putin said that Russian troops withdrew "for several meters" near Krynky to ensure their safety. He claimed that the Ukrainian foothold on the eastern bank was not an advantage for Ukraine.

"I don't even know why they're doing this," he said.

Until Western nations provide sufficient weapons and ammunition for an offensive on the eastern bank, Ukraine would need to wait, even if it is costly, according to former Ukrainian colonel and military analyst Serhiy Hrabskyi.

He said the current objective appears to be to draw away Russian supplies and manpower from other fronts. Ukraine doesnt have the resources for a large-scale offensive across the river.

The operation on the eastern bank appears to be pressuring two highways, the E97 highway leading up to Armiansk in occupied Crimea from Oleshky, and the P57 highway from Hola Prystan to Skadovsk.

Any offensive on the left (eastern) bank can only happen when we have a sufficient number of troops and resources on this left bank, Hrabskyi said, stressing that the operation is still strategically crucial to push the Russians further from the western bank to protect civilians.

Generally speaking, in modern war, up to 80% of tasks are decided by artillery.

As Bakhmut counteroffensive lags, soldiers burnt out from horrors of war

Editors note: Some soldiers interviewed for this story declined to give their last names due to security issues amid the ongoing war in Ukraine. DONETSK OBLAST More than a month after his first assault operation near Bakhmut, 23-year-old soldier Oleksandr Mikulak still blames himself for not sav

For now, Ukrainian soldiers deployed on the front said they were mostly on the defense, trying to hold on to what they had gained.

Near Krynky, Russian forces continued to heavily assault the western part of the village, according to soldiers. They have an exceptionally fortified defense east of Krynky, so moving forward is unrealistic for now, they added.

In areas near the occupied cities of Oleshky and Hola Prystan, located below Krynky, only artillery duels continue, with neither side attempting an assault, according to the soldiers fighting there.

There is no progress in some areas along the river because it is physically impossible to gain a foothold on swamps and dig positions.

The costly operation kicked off about a year ago, with Ukrainian soldiers saying that they landed on the islands between the western and eastern banks in February.

Describing the missions then as raids, the soldiers said they knew little information about where they were heading, and their job was to find out as they went.

Twenty-three-year-old Oleksandr, then serving as a reconnaissance soldier, remembers poor communication and logistics even as the battle for these islands continued.

The last time he had a river-crossing mission in March, Oleksandr said his group came under a drone attack, but they had to stay on duty for another five days despite the severe concussion.

Then came the flooding in June, caused by Russias destruction of a major dam in the south.

While both sides had to initially flee from the islands between the western and eastern banks of the river, Ukrainian soldiers said that they went back out a few days later and soon landed on the eastern bank near the Antonivskyi Bridge.

Throughout summer, heavy fighting raged near the bridge, destroyed when Russians were retreating from the west bank.

The fighting near the bridge died out in the coming months.

For the next few months in the cold weather, soldiers say they dont expect the front line to change much.

After months of storming the eastern bank and seeing their comrades killed, the soldiers are fearful of what awaits them and what it can mean for the war effort in general.

We are just being killed, Petro said. We can run out of people everywhere.

______________________________________________________

Hi, this is Asami Terajima, the author of this article.

Thank you for reading our story. It was emotionally difficult to report on this piece, knowing that these soldiers who are speaking up about the extremely costly operation on the eastern bank with very little result still have to go out there the next day to carry on their mission. It was further complicated by Ukraine's media ban on almost anything concerning the situation on the eastern bank. But I believe that these voices of the soldiers must be heard and their sacrifice remembered.

To help the Kyiv Independent continue telling stories that would otherwise not be told, please consider becoming our supporter.

Read the original:
Ukrainian soldiers storming eastern bank of Dnipro fear their mission is hopeless - Kyiv Independent

Ex-Wagner officer says Kremlin ordered ‘atrocities’ in Ukraine – POLITICO Europe

A man claiming to be a former Russian colonel and ex-member of the Wagner paramilitary group who fought in Ukraine and has since defected said he witnessed war crimes and child abductions.

Igor Salikov, who says he served in the Russian military and in the Wagner Group (which is funded by the Kremlin) for 25 years, arrived in the Netherlands on Monday to testify about alleged war crimes committed by Moscow during its war on Ukraine before the Hague-based International Criminal Court (ICC), Dutch public broadcaster NPO1 reported.

I witnessed atrocities against civilians, the 60-year-old said during an interview, adding that he saw prisoners of war being abused and executed and children being abducted.

I have seen people from the secret services take large numbers of children without parents across the border into Belarus, Salikov said.

Salikov said those carrying out these alleged war crimes were doing so on the orders of the Russian defense ministry, but also on the direct orders of the office of President Vladimir Putin.

POLITICO could not independently verify these claims, however they are corroborated by numerous reports of alleged Russian war crimes in Ukraine.

In March, the ICC issued an international arrest warrant for Putin over the forced transfer of children to Russia after the Kremlins invasion of Ukraine.

In parallel, Kyiv and several of its Western allies have been pushing for a tribunal to investigate Russias crime of aggression during the war.

Salikov said he fled the Russian forces after refusing an order to execute civilians, and that he now wants to report what he saw to the ICC because he has lost faith in the Russian cause.

He said he was also in Ukraine when the Kremlins forces invaded the eastern Donbas region in 2014, when he saw similar abuses, with civilians being threatened and murdered.

See more here:
Ex-Wagner officer says Kremlin ordered 'atrocities' in Ukraine - POLITICO Europe

Informal diplomacy could play a role in ending the war in Ukraine – The Hill

In the book “The Last Politician,” President Biden is quoted explaining diplomacy as a version of family dynamics — “emotional intelligence applied to people with names that were sometimes difficult to pronounce.”

If Biden is correct, that means trying to negotiate an end to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is going to be like dealing with the most obnoxious, hard-headed, self-righteous family member. What I explain to my students in diplomacy and international relations courses is that we need more non-military engagement with Russia.

There are reports that a small, unofficial group of former diplomats and national security officials met recently with Russian officials, including Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov. Such interactions need to grow to include influential people acting in a non-official capacity, possibly leaders of non-governmental organizations, religious leaders and business executives.

We have documented cases of where this has been attempted in other conflicts. Nahum Goldmann was president of the World Jewish Congress when he tried to advance ideas with Arab officials for a peace settlement, which included the Palestinians recognizing Israel.

In 1970, he also sought a meeting with the Egyptian president to discuss a resolution to conflicts with Israel. While the Israeli government stopped this from occurring, the two countries did eventually find a way to peace with the signing of the historic 1979 agreement, which has held for over 44 years.

Even President Ronald Reagan, at the insistence of his daughter, met during the height of the Cold War with anti-nuclear activist Dr. Helen Caldicott. Reagan wrote in his diary “I’m afraid our daughter has been taken over by that whole d–n [anti-nuclear] gang.” Yet historians credit such private citizens for the arms treaties that followed between the U.S. and then-Soviet Union.

Such second-track diplomatic activities have also been used successfully between Israelis and Palestinians, leading up to the Oslo Accords, and between U.S. and Iranian officials and academics which helped lay the groundwork for the interim agreement on Iran’s nuclear program, signed a decade ago.

Indeed in early 2022, before the Ukraine invasion, Biden said he would give diplomatic talks “every chance to succeed.” Military planners have tried to gain territory in hopes that their efforts would result in forcing Russian President Vladimir Putin to the negotiating table. This peacemaking must now intensify, and different approaches should be encouraged.

In such private citizen-led forums, strategies for de-escalation can be discussed and vetted. Ideas that appear feasible can then be fed to formal diplomatic representatives.

There are natural candidates for such a role. Former German Chancellor Angela Merkel is acknowledged as a premier Putin negotiating partner. She has both the experience in dealing with him and the freedom of not being directly tied to a sitting government.

There are others who could serve in this position. Multinational corporations and their shared financial goals create ties that can bind people across borders.

The late American businessman Armand Hammer developed numerous Russian links through his enormous business interests. Although his legacy is controversial, his work to create a settlement to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in the 1980s was admirable. Hammer said at the time, “I’m acting in a purely private capacity as a private individual,” and the New York Times reported that he was “keeping State Department officials informed of his contacts.”

In the context of today, Ukraine is proud of its aerospace industry, which includes the design, production and operation of civil, military and cargo aircraft and space technology. The very nature of the aviation industry requires multilateral relationships and negotiating skills. Could these behind-the-scenes business contacts help bring this situation in for a landing? The idea should be explored.

The issues are complex. They will include dealing with Russian war crimes committed during the war and navigating Ukrainian national pride.

Biden’s dysfunctional family view of foreign policy means that sometimes one needs a trusted aunt or uncle to step into the fray as the cousins fight. That moment has arrived for the third parties to help us find a new peace for Europe. 

Bruce Dayton is department chair and associate professor at the School for International Training in Brattleboro, Vermont.

Read the original post:
Informal diplomacy could play a role in ending the war in Ukraine - The Hill

Denmark will join Sweden in tank donation to Ukraine for over 240 million euros – Euronews

Copenhagen announced on Monday that it will join Stockholm in donating tanks to Kyiv as the country continues battling the Russian invasion.

The Danish government announced on Monday that the country will join Swedens donation of CV90 light tanks to Ukraine for a total amount of 241 million euros - the equivalent of 1.8 billion Danish crowns.

The government, together with the Swedish government, has decided to co-finance the already ongoing donation of CV90 infantry fighting vehicles as well as the production of additional tanks, the Danish Ministry of Defence wrote in a news release.

The donation package will include spare parts and ammunition and will include an agreement for Sweden and Denmark to take care of post-delivery maintenance.

The announcement is yet more good news coming from Copenhagen for Kyiv. Last week, the Danish government announced a new package of military aid to Ukraine worth nearly one billion euros, only a day after Nordic leaders met with Ukraines President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

The donation comes at a time when Ukraine needs as much help as it can get, as further crucial aid from the US appears temporarily blocked in Congress by Republicans and a new EU aid package worth 50 billion euros was blocked by Hungarys Prime Minister Viktor Orban last week.

See the original post:
Denmark will join Sweden in tank donation to Ukraine for over 240 million euros - Euronews