Battle in Russia's Kursk region escalates

Battle in Russia's Kursk region, initially seen as minor incident, takes larger scale

By Elena Teslova

MOSCOW (AA) - Russia announced on Friday that intense fighting continues in its Kursk region, which borders Ukraine, as its armed forces work to repel a Ukrainian offensive.

The Russian Emergency Ministry has declared a federal state of emergency in the region, initially downplaying the clashes as a minor incident involving a sabotage group.


- Current situation

The clashes began overnight on Aug. 5-6 when Ukraine escalated its shelling of the Russian Kursk region, followed by a full-scale offensive near the city of Sudzha.

The Russian Defense Ministry reported on Friday that in the past 24 hours, Russian aviation and artillery have successfully halted the advancement of Ukrainian troops deeper into Russian territory.

Currently, Russian forces are targeting Ukrainian reserves in Ukraine’s Sumy region, which is being used as a resource base for the assault.

According to the ministry, major clashes are occurring near the settlements of Daryino, Gogolevka, Melovoy, Nikolsky, and in the western suburbs of Sudzha, where Kyiv has concentrated a significant portion of its manpower.

Meanwhile, Ukraine launched attacks on other Russian regions Thursday night, allegedly to create multiple hot spots and prevent Russia from concentrating its efforts on the situation in Kursk.

Russia’s Lipetsk region suffered a massive drone attack overnight, which set a military airfield on fire and damaged energy infrastructure, according to regional authorities.

Additionally, a group of Ukrainian troops attempted an attack near the Kinburn Spit in the Kherson region, which was “successfully repelled,” according to the Russian Defense Ministry.


- Assault objectives

Experts suggest several possible objectives for the Ukrainian assault, including the destruction of the Sudzha gas station, through which Russia pumps gas to Europe, diverting Russian command attention from Donbass, disrupting railway supply routes to Russian forces in Ukraine's Kharkiv region, and boosting the morale of the Ukrainian army.

Russian authorities have also expressed concern for the Kursk nuclear power plant, located near the fighting, and have reportedly strengthened its security, according to the Russian Guard Corps.

Some analysts speculate that Ukraine may seek to leverage any territory it captures in the Kursk region to demand the return of Ukrainian land currently under Russian control. This could include the possibility of exchanging the Kursk nuclear power plant for the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, which has been under Russian control since 2022.

A successful operation could also strengthen Kyiv's position in long-anticipated peace talks with Russia.

Local authorities in the Kursk region reported that six civilians, including a paramedic, an ambulance driver, and a 24-year-old pregnant woman, were killed, and 66 others, including six children, were injured in Ukraine's attack, while a major evacuation of several thousand people has been ordered from the combat zone.


- Forces involved

Initially, the Russian Defense Ministry reported on Tuesday that 300 Ukrainian troops, 11 tanks, and 20 armored vehicles had crossed the Russian border. However, on Wednesday, Chief of the Russian General Staff Valery Gerasimov stated that around 1,000 Ukrainian servicemen were involved in the battle.

Ukrainian sources claim that up to three brigades, totaling around 10,000 troops, are participating in the clashes on Ukraine’s side. They also allege that as of Aug. 7, the Russian armed forces had lost a Ka-52 helicopter, with its commander killed, and two T-62 tanks.

A video published by Ukraine’s military purportedly shows six Russian soldiers captured during the assault.

In its latest report, the Russian Defense Ministry claimed that during the fighting in the Kursk region, Ukrainian forces lost up to 945 military personnel and 102 armored vehicles, including 12 tanks, two Buk M1 anti-aircraft missile systems, and three field artillery guns.

The number of Russian servicemen participating in the operation is estimated to be several thousands.


- Official statements

Russian President Vladimir Putin described Ukraine's actions on Wednesday as a "major provocation" and condemned the "indiscriminate attack with a variety of weapons, including missiles, against civilian facilities, residential buildings, and ambulances."

On Thursday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said: "Russia brought the war to our land, and it should feel what it has done," adding that "Ukrainians know how to achieve their goals."

Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak commented on X that "any escalation, shelling, military actions, forced evacuations, and destruction," including those within Russia itself, are the result of Moscow's “unequivocal aggression.”

Ukrainian lawmaker Oleksii Honcharenko also commented on Telegram, noting that a "foreign army" is carrying out a "military operation" in Russia for the first time since World War II. A day later, Honcharenko claimed that Ukrainian troops had taken control of the Sudzha gas transmission hub, Europe’s sole transmission route for Russian natural gas supplies, marking the first official confirmation of a Ukrainian incursion into Russian territory.

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