Southern Ukraine campaign
Southern Ukraine campaign | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Russian invasion of Ukraine | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Ukraine | |||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Vladimir Putin Valery Gerasimov Gennady Zhidko Oleg Salyukov Nikolai Yevmenov Sergey Dronov Andrey Mordvichev (killed per Ukrainian claim)[10] Yakov Rezantsev (killed per Ukrainian claim)[11][12] Arkady Marzoyev[12] |
Volodymyr Zelenskyy Valerii Zaluzhnyi Oleksandr Syrskyi Andrii Sokolov Serhii Kotenko †[13] Vitaliy Nevinsky[14] Vyacheslav Dimov †[15] Dmytro Marchenko | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
See order of battle | See order of battle | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
Up to 20,000 in 25 BTGs (invasion force, 24 February 2022) 7 brigades (west bank Kherson, May 2022)[12] 20,000–25,000 (west bank Kherson, August 2022, per Ukraine)[16] 40,000 (west bank Kherson and support units, October 2022, per Budanov)[17] 152,000 (Kherson and Zaporizhzhia Oblasts, May 2023, per Ukraine)[18] |
1,800 (24 February 2022, pre-invasion) 8 brigades (west bank Kherson, May 2022)[12] 20,000 (west bank Kherson, August 2022)[19] |
The southern Ukraine campaign is an ongoing theatre of operation in the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which began on 24 February 2022. The Russian military invaded Kherson Oblast in southern Ukraine from Russian-occupied Crimea, quickly entering Mykolaiv Oblast and Zaporizhzhia Oblast amid battles with the Armed Forces of Ukraine.[20][21]
Elements from the southern Russian offensive joined forces with elements advancing from the Donbas to jointly surround and bombard the city of Mariupol in Donetsk Oblast, which fell after months of siege.
Kherson was surrounded two days into the war, after which Russian forces advanced to the outskirts of Mykolaiv, which they failed to capture. The front then stabilised until a Ukrainian offensive in August. Ukrainian forces retook all of the territory west and north of the Dnieper river, and the front stabilised again just south of Kherson in November 2022. Kherson, the only oblast capital captured by Russia after its 2022 invasion, was liberated on 11 November.[22]
Background
In the aftermath of the Maidan Revolution in 2014, Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine.[23][24] Russian troops occupied the self-proclaimed Republic of Crimea for the next eight years. The Chonhar Peninsula bordering Crimea was under Russian control until December 2014; the Ukrainian military began fortifying it the following year, placing explosives on several bridges in the area, though most of these failed to detonate on the first day of the invasion.[25]
The Russian military presence in Crimea significantly increased during the pre-war military buildup on Ukraine's borders, with over 10,000 additional troops deployed in late January and early February.[26] On the eve of the invasion, Russian manpower in Crimea was estimated at 90,000.[27]
Ukrainian plans called for Operational Command South, under Major General Andrii Sokolov , to be assigned two brigades of 3,000-5,000 men each, and a battalion of 500 troops stationed directly on the border with Crimea. In case of active hostilities, the formation was to be reinforced with two brigades of territorial defense: the 110th and 124th.[25][28]
In reality, the Ukrainian force in the south mostly consisted of the main units of the 59th Motorized Infantry Brigade and the 137th Marine Battalion of the 35th Marine Brigade. The planned second brigade was never assigned, the territorial defense brigades had yet to be staffed, and the existing units were only at about 50-60% strength due to losses from fighting in the east and training assignments for various sub-units in different parts of the country. As a result, the Ukrainian force at the beginning of the invasion comprised about 1,300 men of the 59th Brigade stationed at a camp in the Oleshky Sands, 250-300 marines of the 137th Battalion positioned at the entrances to mainland Ukraine from Crimea, and various supplementary forces numbering "a couple hundred".[25][28]
Russian documents captured by the Ukrainian military indicated plans to bypass Mykolaiv and land at Odesa within five days, capture Bilhorod-Dnistrovsky by the ninth day of the invasion, and reach the Moldova–Ukraine border by the eleventh day.[25]
By 3:30 on 24 February, Ukraine closed all commercial shipping in the Sea of Azov, leaving more than 100 ships stuck in port.[29] Starting at 4:00, the Ukrainian military observed over thirty Russian military aircraft taking off from Crimea. The planes flew over the Black and Azov Seas, launching strikes on Ukrainian military targets at 5:00, including "almost all" the military facilities in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia Oblasts. Col. Vadym Rymarenko , commanding the 137th Battalion, then reported that the Russian forces in Crimea had opened fire on the battalion's positions on the border.[28]
According to Sokolov, up to 20,000 Russian troops in 25 battalion tactical groups took part in the subsequent invasion, including the entire 22nd Army Corps, at least one division of the 58th Combined Arms Army, and around half of the 7th Air Assault Division.[28]
Timeline
Russian invasion
Kherson and Mykolaiv Oblasts
Shortly after Russian President Vladimir Putin announced a military operation in Ukraine, the Russian Air Force began to launch cruise and ballistic missiles at targets in several cities in Kherson Oblast. With air support, Russian Armed Forces then crossed into Kherson Oblast from Crimea.[30][31][32] The Russian Navy used a naval blockade in the Black Sea to prevent Ukraine from providing support to units located near Kherson Oblast, and restrict commercial trade and the flow of goods to southern Ukraine.[33]
By evening, the Russians had reached Kherson and engaged the Ukrainians in the battle of Kherson. The Russians initially crossed the Dnieper River over the Antonovskiy Bridge, but Ukrainian mechanized forces were able to recapture the bridge.[34][35]
Combat engineers of Ukraine's 137th Battalion were ordered to destroy a bridge connecting Henichesk with the Arabat Spit, in an attempt to slow the advance of Russian troops from Crimea, allowing the Ukrainians to retreat and regroup.[25][28][36] Vitalii Skakun, the combat engineer who planted the explosives on the bridge, did not have enough time to retreat from the bridge, and so detonated the mines, killing himself and destroying the bridge.[37][38][39][40]
Russian troops moved towards Nova Kakhovka and established control over the North Crimean Canal on 24 February.[41][42][43] Following Russia's 2014 annexation of Crimea, Ukraine had blocked the canal,[44][45][46] which had provided 85% of Crimea's drinking water.[47] Sergey Aksyonov, head of the Republic of Crimea, told local authorities to prepare the canal to receive water from the Dnieper and resume the supply of water to Crimea the following day.[48]
Russian forces recaptured the Antonovskiy Bridge on the evening of 25 February.[49]
On 26 February, according to Kherson mayor Ihor Kolykhaiev, a Ukrainian airstrike forced the Russians to retreat from Kherson, leaving the city under Ukrainian control.[50][51] Ukrainian forces later recaptured the bridge.[52] A Ukrainian official said that Russian forces had killed a journalist and an ambulance driver near the village of Zelenivka, a northern suburb of Kherson.[53]
Another Ukrainian official later claimed that a Russian army column was defeated between the towns of Radensk and Oleshky, just south of Kherson.[54]
In the afternoon of 26 February, 12 Russian tanks managed to break through in Kakhovka on the Dnieper and began advancing towards Mykolaiv.[55] Vitaliy Kim, the governor of Mykolaiv Oblast, said the city had had five hours to prepare.[56][57] Artillery and other arms were prepared.[58]
By evening, Russian tanks were in the outskirts of Mykolaiv. Oleksandr Senkevych , the mayor of Mykolaiv, ordered citizens to stay indoors, as far away from windows as possible.[59] Shortly after, Russian troops entered the city and a battle erupted outside of a shopping mall about 10 minutes later.[60] According to some reports, tanks "passed through the city".[61] There were also sightings of large fires.[62] The next day, Ukrainian officials claimed that Russian forces were fully driven away from Mykolaiv.[63] The city was extensively damaged.[64][65][66]
Russian Ministry of Defense spokesperson Igor Konashenkov announced that the city of Henichesk and Kherson International Airport had surrendered to Russian forces in the morning.[67][68][69] Later, Russian forces encircled and captured a part of Kherson,[70][71] with Ukrainian officials corroborating this claim.[72]
On 28 February, Ukrainian official Vadim Denysenko accused Russian forces of trying to use civilians from villages around Kherson as human shields to cross the bridge into Kherson.[73] The same day, Russian troops advanced from Kherson towards Mykolaiv, reaching the city's outskirts and launching an assault at 11:00.[74][75]
Russian forces also shelled Bashtanka and Mykolaiv on 1 March. Ukrainian officials later claimed that a large Russian convoy was attacked and defeated by Ukrainian forces during the night near Bashtanka, forcing the Russians to retreat towards the neighboring city of Novyi Buh. They claimed that "several dozen [Russian] armored vehicles" were destroyed in the attack.[76] Kim stated that during the operation, a Ukrainian helicopter was destroyed, but its pilots survived.[77]
The next day, Russian forces bombarded Voznesensk, which has a bridge that can be used to cross the Southern Bug instead of the one near Mykolaiv, during the morning. Russian paratroopers then landed at a forested ridge near the town, and an armored column approached it. Forces from the 126th Coastal Defence Brigade were attacked while trying to reach them.[78]
The Russian troops, estimated to be 400 by Ukrainian officials, then captured the village of Rakove, whose houses it used to create a sniper nest. Afterwards, they set up a base at a gas station near the town's entrance and assaulted the base of the Territorial Defense Forces. Ukrainian forces struck back with artillery that night with the help of local volunteers who gave them coordinates.[78] Local volunteers and Ukrainian soldiers were able to repel Russian troops from Voznesensk the next day, forcing most of them to retreat 40 miles (64 km) to the east and others to flee into nearby forests, where ten of them were later captured. Ukrainian officials stated that Russian forces had lost 30 vehicles in the battle, in addition to around 100 soldiers. Ten civilians were killed in the fighting.[78]
In the early morning of 1 March, Russian forces began assaulting Kherson from the west, advancing from Kherson International Airport towards the highway to Mykolaiv. They were able to surround the city and reached the neighboring settlement of Komyshany.[79] Later in the day, Russian forces entered Kherson.[80]
In the early morning of 2 March, Russian forces seized parts of Kherson, including the city's central square.[81] Later that evening, Kolykhaiev announced that he had surrendered the city to Russian forces, and that the Russian commander planned to set up a military administration in the city.[82] Kherson became the first major Ukrainian city to fall to Russian forces in the invasion.[83]
On 2 March, Kim announced that Ukrainian forces carried out strikes on Chornobaivka and in the Yelanets area, and that a Russian column left Snihurivka.[84]
Russian troops attacked Mykolaiv on 4 March. Local officials stated that Russian forces had captured some of the outskirts of the city. Ukrainian forces repelled the attack, recapturing Mykolaiv International Airport.[85][86]
On 8 March, the Ukrainian Air Force struck the military airbase at Kherson International Airport during the day, with Ukrainian officials claiming that more than 30 Russian helicopters were destroyed. Satellite imagery however showed that the number was fewer.[87]
On 9 March, Russian troops entered the town of Skadovsk. According to local residents they entered at 08:45 and stationed themselves in the central square before being driven away by protesters. They then took over a building of the National Police of Ukraine in addition to vandalizing the city council building. The mayor Oleksandr Yakovlev stated that they took away computers from the city council building and had ordered that no political rallies be held.[88]
The next day, the Ukrainian General Staff reported that Russia deployed a battalion of the Baltic Fleet's 336th Naval Infantry Brigade toward Mykolaiv. The Institute for the Study of War opined that "Russian forces are likely experiencing difficulty advancing northwest beyond the Inhul River."[89] Heavy shelling hit Mykolaiv during the evening, causing several fires, and Vitaliy Kim reported "active hostilities" near Hur'ivka north of the city.[90]
Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk Oblasts
Russian columns advancing from Crimea moved towards Melitopol, which surrendered to Russian forces after a small skirmish on 25 February.[91][92][93]
The Russian 22nd Army Corps approached the city of Enerhodar on 26 February.[94][95] A Ukrainian official stated that the Russians were deploying Grad missiles and warned of an attack on the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, which is located in the city.[96] The Zaporizhzhia Regional State Administration later stated that the Russian forces advancing on Enerhodar had returned to Velyka Bilozerka, a village 30 kilometres (19 mi) from the city.[97] Russian forces tried to enter Dniprorudne on 27 February, but were forced to turn back after being confronted by protesting locals.[98]
On the morning of 25 February, Russian units from the Donetsk People's Republic (DPR) advanced towards Mariupol and were defeated by Ukrainian forces near the village of Pavlopil.[99][100][101] By evening, the Russian Navy reportedly began an amphibious assault on the coast of the Sea of Azov 70 kilometres (43 mi) west of Mariupol. A US defence official said that Russian forces might be deploying thousands of marines from this beachhead.[102][103][104] Russian forces advanced from Melitopol towards Mariupol, where a battle had gone on since 25 February. The siege of Mariupol began the next day, as the Russian attack from Crimea moved east, linking the front to separatist-held regions in Donbas.[105][106] Russian forces captured the coastal city of Prymorsk by 13:40 on 26 February.[107]
Russian forces were also able to enter and capture Berdiansk, west of Mariupol,[105][108][109][110] capturing its port and the Berdiansk Airport.[111][112] During the takeover, local authorities reported that one person was killed and another was wounded.[113][114] At least eight Ukrainian warships were seized in Berdiansk; two Gyurza-M-class artillery boats, two Zhuk-class patrol boats, a Sorum-class tugboat (converted to a patrol vessel[115]) and six small patrol boats. Russia Today did not mention the second Zhuk-class patrol boat or the six small patrol boats, but claimed that among these vessels captured were a Polnocny-class landing ship, a Ondatra-class landing craft, a Grisha-class corvette, a Matka-class missile boat, and a Yevgenya-class minesweeper (officially, the Ukrainian Navy had none of these assigned to bases west of the Kerch Strait prior to the war and no recent reporting of them crossing it was available).[116] Two of the smaller boats were later revealed to be UMS-1000 patrol cutters, three were Kalkan-M boats[117] and one was an Adamant-315 motor yacht.[118] On 28 February, mayor Oleksandr Svidlo said that Russian forces had left Berdiansk, leaving a Russian military police detachment in the city.[119] Russian forces advanced towards Mariupol.[120] By reaching Mariupol, Russian forces established a land connection linking Crimea and the Donetsk People's Republic.[121]
On 28 February, Russian troops began a siege at Enerhodar in an attempt to take control of the nuclear power plant.[122] On the same day, the Russian Ministry of Defense claimed that Russian forces had captured the city and surrounded the power plant, but this was denied by mayor Dmitri Orlov.[123][124] A video later emerged showing local civilians preventing a Russian convoy from entering Enerhodar by barricading the entrance, forcing them to leave.[125]
Elsewhere, according to Ukrainian media reports, Russian sabotage and reconnaissance groups stole Ukrainian military uniforms from a military depot and engaged Ukrainian forces in Tokmak, northeast of Melitopol.[126][127][128] According to the Center for Strategic Communications and Information Security, the Russians were identified because they wore bulletproof vests that were used by the Russian army, and not the Ukrainian vests.[129][130] Ukraine claimed Russian forces suffered many casualties and retreated to the southern outskirts of the town.[131]
On 1 March, the mayor of Melitopol, Ivan Fedorov, announced that the Russian forces had occupied the city.[3][132][133] A United States Department of Defense official also confirmed that Russian forces had captured the city.[134]
Ukrainian officials stated that Russian forces had surrounded Enerhodar on 1 March, with a Russian convoy advancing into the city around 14:00.[135] According to the mayor, the city had difficulties obtaining food.[135]
On 2 March, Anton Herashchenko said that Russian shelling hit many homes in Mariupol, with four people killed.[136] Heavy resistance was still raging in the city of Mariupol the next day, as officials alleged that hundreds of civilians had been killed in the city.[137][138][139]
On 3 March, Orlov stated that a large Russian convoy had entered Enerhodar.[140] Later, Russian forces took control of the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. During the heavy fighting a fire broke out in a training facility outside of the main complex, which was quickly extinguished,[141] though other sections surrounding the plant sustained damage.[142] Initial reports said that the radiation levels remained normal during this time and the fire did not damage essential equipment.[143][144] However, firefighters were unable to reach the fire due to the fighting.[145]
Clashes at the power plant on 4 March caused a fire to break out.[146] The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) subsequently said that essential equipment was undamaged.[147] By 4 March, the nuclear power plant fell under Russian control. Despite the fires, the power plant recorded no radiation leaks.[148]
The next morning, after confirming that there were no changes to radiation levels, Russian forces captured Enerhodar and the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant.[149][150][151] On 5 March, Orlov stated that Russian forces controlled the perimeter of Enerhodar and the power plant, while the local authorities were allowed to remain in control in the operation of the city.[8] Russian forces briefly entered Huliaipole, but were pushed back.[152] The city was later attacked overnight amid shelling and airstrikes.[153]
On 7 March, the Ukrainian regional military administration of Zaporizhzhia Oblast stated that Russian forces had thus far captured the cities of Berdiansk, Enerhodar, Melitopol, Vasylivka, Tokmak and Polohy in this oblast.[154]
On 9 March, during the battles for Zaporizhzhia, Colonel Serhii Kotenko, commander of the 9th Separate Motorized Infantry Battalion "Vinnytsia Scythians", a unit of Ukraine's 59th Motorized Brigade, was killed.[13]
Fall of Mariupol, Ukrainian counterattacks, and stalemate
On 11 March, Governor Kim stated that Ukrainian forces had pushed Russian troops eastwards by 15–20 kilometres (9.3–12.4 mi) and had also surrounded some units who were negotiating for a surrender.[155] The Ukrainian forces stated that they had destroyed two Russian helicopters in Skadovsk Raion the following day, and one of the pilots survived.[156] A video was published on social media showing one of the destroyed helicopters.[157] Yakovlev later stated that Skadovsk had been "liberated" from Russian forces as they had left the city on 10 March, but settled on its outskirts.[158]
A column of Russian forces re-entered Skadovsk during the afternoon, according to its mayor, and settled in one of the children's camps on its outskirts.[159]
Kim later claimed that 200 Russian vehicles were destroyed and surrounded in Melitopol.[160] Anton Gerashchenko later clarified that this had occurred near Vasylivka and the Ukrainian forces had destroyed the 200 vehicles of Russian forces stationed near Melitopol using artillery. He added that their headquarters was destroyed as well.[161]
On 15 March, the Russian Defense Ministry stated that Russian forces had captured all of Kherson Oblast.[162] The Ukrainian Air Force later struck the military airbase at Kherson International Airport again, destroying multiple Russian helicopters.[87] On 16 March, the Ukrainian government said that its forces had begun a counteroffensive near Mykolaiv towards Kherson and captured the town of Posad-Pokrovske.[163][164] Ukrainian troops in the village said their objective was to retake Kherson International Airport.[165]
Gennady Korban, head of Staff of Dnipro Oblast's Territorial Defense Forces, stated that the region was prepared for a Russian offensive, unlike Kherson and Zaporizhzhia oblasts. He added that Russian forces were staging in the settlements of Velyka Oleksandrivka, Novovorontsovka and Arkhanhelske.[166] On 17 March, the Ukrainian military reported that Russian forces achieved "minor successes" in attacks towards Kryvyi Rih, capturing the village of Mala Shestirnia .[167]
Landing ships of the Russian Navy meanwhile approached the coast of Odesa in three groups, including the Ivan Gren-class landing ship Pyotr Morgunov.[168] Russian fighter jets and warships attacked settlements in Odesa Oblast during the day, according to Ukrainian officials. Attacks on one of the settlements in the morning wounded two people.[169]
According to the Mariupol City Council, 2,357 civilians had been killed during the city's siege.[170] Following a renewed missile attack on 14 March in Mariupol, the Ukrainian government claimed more than 2,500 deaths in the city.[171] By 18 March, Mariupol was completely encircled and fighting reached the city centre, hampering efforts to evacuate civilians.[172] The Russians demanded a full surrender, which several Ukrainian government officials including Zelenskyy refused.[173][174][175] On 24 March, Russian forces entered central Mariupol,[176] seizing the Church of the Intercession of the Mother of God. The city administration alleged that Russians were trying to demoralize residents by publicly shouting claims of Russian victories, including statements that Odesa had been captured.[177] On 27 March, Ukraine's deputy prime minister, Olha Stefanishyna, stated that Mariupol "simply does not exist anymore," and that Russia's objectives have "nothing to do with humanity." Stefanishyna summarized that: "They (Mariupol's inhabitants) don’t have access to water, to any food supplies, to anything. More than 85 percent of the whole town is destroyed."[178]
In a telephone conversation with Emmanuel Macron on 29 March, Putin stated that the bombardment of Mariupol would end only when Ukrainian troops fully surrendered Mariupol.[179]
On 1 April, a rescue effort by the United Nations (UN) to transport hundreds of civilian survivors out of Mariupol with 50 allocated buses was impeded by Russian troops, who refused the buses safe passage into the city while peace talks continued in Istanbul.[180] On 3 April, following the retraction of Russian forces from Kyiv at the end of phase one of the military invasion, Russia expanded its attack on southern Ukraine further west with increased bombardment and strikes against Odesa, Mykolaiv, and the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant.[181][182]
By 10 April, Ukrainian forces had made significant advances and pushed back the Russian military in the area around Kherson, gaining ground at Osokorivka and Oleksandrivka. Russian counter-attacks failed to retake the lost territory, while Ukraine continued to harass local Russian airfields.[183] The Ukrainian counteroffensive had put Russia on the defensive in southern Ukraine, forcing it to focus on fortifying Kherson and improving its air defenses.[184] Guerrillas also began attacking Russian targets in the south, with one group reportedly operating in Melitopol.[185] By 18 April, fighting continued, and Ukraine claimed that its 80th Air Assault Brigade had retaken a number of villages near Mykolaiv.[186] Two days later, Russia counter-attacked and made minor gains at Oleksandrivka.[187] Gerashchenko announced that Ukrainian forces captured three villages near Snihurivka on 27 April.[188][189]
By May, the situation in right-bank Kherson Oblast had become a stalemate, with the opposing forces evenly matched and unable to go on the offensive. Units of the Russian 49th Combined Arms Army and the Crimea-based 22nd Army Corps held a bridgehead over the Dnieper approximately 160 km wide and 50 km deep.[12] According to Ukrainian military expert Viktor Kevliuk, the strategic purpose of the Russian bridgehead was to protect the North Crimean Canal and the "land bridge" between Crimea and mainland Russia, as well as to serve as a staging area for a future Russian operation aimed at reaching Transnistria and cutting off Ukrainian access to the Black Sea.[12] Russian forces were said to be preparing second and third lines of defense, fortifying airfields, ports and railway stations, and mining the coast of the Kakhovka Reservoir in anticipation of a Ukrainian counterattack.[12]
On 1 June, according to a Ukrainian regional governor, Vitalii Kim, Russian forces started blowing up bridges near Kherson in anticipation of a counterattack by the Ukrainian army.[190]
On 9 June, Reuters reported Ukrainian and British claims that Ukrainian forces had made gains in a counteroffensive towards Kherson, including establishing a bridgehead across the Inhulets River.[191] This offensive led to fierce fighting around Davydiv Brid, which saw positional warfare for the village due to its location on the river.[192][193]
On 10 June, Oleksiy Arestovych, an advisor to Zelenskyy, claimed that shelling on a Russian base in Stara Zburivka killed two generals, one of whom was preparing a referendum in the Kherson region. Arestovych also claimed that a recent artillery attack on another Russian base killed at least 200 troops, including Arabs, who were "presumably from Syria." He said it was the first confirmed case of Arabs fighting with Russia in Ukraine.[194]
On 8 July, Russia's ambassador to the United Kingdom, Andrey Kelin, said during a Reuters interview that Russia was unlikely to withdraw its forces from southern Ukraine as part of any future deals to end the war, saying, "...we have already experienced that after withdrawal, provocations start and all the people are being shot and all that."[195]
On 12 August, UN Secretary-General António Guterres asked for a demilitarized zone to be created around the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant after shelling struck an area used to store radioactive material.[196] This echoed earlier calls by Ukraine.[197] Russia refused, saying that it was protecting the plant from "terrorist attacks",[198] though it has invited officials from the IAEA to visit.[196] Two plant workers told the BBC that the staff were hostages and shelling prevented them from doing their normal work.[199]
2022 Kherson counteroffensive
This section needs to be updated.(December 2022) |
On 10 July, Iryna Vereshchuk, the Deputy Prime Minister of Ukraine and the Minister of Reintegration of Temporarily Occupied Territories, urged civilians in the Kherson region to evacuate ahead of an upcoming Ukrainian counterattack there, without specifying when the offensive would take place.[200] Ukraine's defence minister Oleksii Reznikov also signalled an upcoming offensive in the region.[201]
On 11 July, Ukrainian forces launched a missile attack with HIMARS rockets on the Russian-occupied city of Nova Kakhovka. Ukrainian officials claimed that the strike killed the chief of staff for the 22nd Army Corps, Major General Artyom Nasbulin, along with five colonels and a total of 150 soldiers. Russian forces confirmed the strike but did not confirm the death of the officers claimed by Ukraine, claiming that the Ukrainian rocket hit a warehouse that contained chemicals which then exploded.[202][203]
On 29 August, Ukraine launched a counteroffensive on the Kherson front.[204] During a 3 day period from 2 October to 4 October, Ukraine liberated 11 settlements in northern Kherson.[205] On 9 November, Russia announced the withdrawal of troops from Kherson,[206] with Ukrainian troops reportedly entering Snihurivka the next day.[207][208][209] On 11 November, Ukrainian troops entered the city of Kherson,[210] and were met by crowds of Ukrainian citizens chanting "Slava Ukraini!" and "Glory to the ZSU,"[211] expressing their gratitude by lifting up soldiers and waving Ukrainian flags.[212][213]
Russian entrenchment and beginning of Dnieper campaign
This section needs to be updated.(December 2022) |
In the aftermath of Ukraine's recapture of right-bank Kherson Oblast, Ukrainian forces began conducting a small-scale military campaign on the Dnieper, conducting raids and incursions on the left bank and on the Kinburn Spit.[214]
In December 2022, following previous successful counteroffensives, speculation among Western analysts and media about a prospective Ukrainian campaign to retake Crimea abounded. In the event of such an offensive, observers and analysts suggested Ukraine could attack along the Zaporizhzhia front and advance towards the strategic city of Melitopol to cut Russia's "landbridge to Crimea." Throughout the month, Russia reinforced its defense lines in southern Ukraine, particularly along the Zaporizhzhia and Kherson fronts.[215] Attacks on "collaborators" and Russian agents by apparent Ukrainian partisans and saboteurs continued.[216]
On 23 December, Ukraine's mayor of Melitopol Ivan Fedorov said the Russians were transforming the city into a fortress, replete with dragon's teeth defenses.[216] Meanwhile, satellite imagery showed that Russian troops had established trenches around the perimeters of Tokmak in Zaporizhzhia Oblast, considered a strategic city on the approach towards Melitopol.[217] On 15 May 2023, Ukrainian military intelligence estimated that the Russians had stationed 152,000 troops in Kherson and Zaporizhzhia oblasts in anticipation of a potential Ukrainian counteroffensive.[218]
2023 Ukrainian counteroffensive and continued Dnieper incursions
As Ukraine prepared to launch its counteroffensive in the south, there were signs of activity on the Dnieper front.[219] However, on June 6, 2023, the Kakhovka Dam in Nova Kakhovka was purposefully destroyed while under Russian control since March 2022, massively flooding the region. Experts assess that Russian forces likely blew the dam up.[220][221] This forced combat to stop along the river for a time.[219]
In early June 2023, Ukrainian forces launched their counteroffensive on the eastern part of the southern front, focusing on multiple directions, including Orikhiv[222] and Velyka Novosilka,[223] which are located in eastern Zaporizhzhia Oblast and western Donetsk Oblast, respectively. By 11 June, Ukraine had recaptured the front line settlements of Neskuchne, Blahodatne, Storozheve, Makarivka, and Novodarivka.[224] The progress of the offensive slowed as time progressed, despite the capture of several more villages. By December 2023, prominent Ukrainian figures and Western analysts began giving negative assessments of the success of the counteroffensive; statements by Ukrainian general Valerii Zaluzhnyi in early November 2023 that the war had arrived at a "stalemate" were seen by observers as an admission of its failure,[225] and followed more definite assessments made by analysts, especially with regard to operational success, from several weeks earlier.[226] Ukrainian forces did not reach the city of Tokmak, described as a "minimum goal" by Ukrainian general Oleksandr Tarnavskyi,[227] and the probable initial objective of reaching the Sea of Azov to split the Russian forces in southern Ukraine remained unfulfilled.[228][229][230]
As the floodwaters from the Dnieper receded, Ukraine resumed its incursions across the river on a larger scale. In December 2023, Ukraine established a foothold on the left bank at the village Krynky.[219]
The Ukrainian military announced on 3 March 2024 that it was spending a record amount of funding on fortifying the Zaporizhia region on the southern front.[231]
Order of battle
Russia and pro-Russian separatists
- 8th Guards Combined Arms Army
- 49th Combined Arms Army[238] (Nova Kakhovka)[12]
- 58th Combined Arms Army
- 336th Naval Infantry Brigade
- Russian Airborne Forces
- Spetsnaz GRU
- Russian Air Force[250]
- Russian Navy
- 109th Regiment[253]
Ukraine
- Ukrainian Ground Forces
- 1st Special Operations Brigade[249]
- 17th Tank Brigade[238]
- 28th Mechanized Brigade[164]
- 42nd Separate Mechanized Infantry Brigade[249]
- 54th Motorized Brigade[249]
- 59th Motorized Brigade[254]
- 60th Infantry Brigade[238]
- 128th Mountain Assault Brigade[238][14]
- 98th Infantry Battalion[255]
- Territorial Defense Forces
- 98th Territorial Defence Battalion 'Azov-Dnipro'
- 103rd Separate Territorial Defense Brigade[249]
- 123rd Territorial Defense Brigade (Mykolaiv Oblast)[256][257][258]
- 124th Territorial Defense Brigade (Kherson Oblast)[259]
- 126th Brigade of the Odesa Territorial Defense[261]
- 220th Battalion[261]
- 129th Kryvyi Rih Defense Brigade[262]
- International Legion of Territorial Defense of Ukraine
- Ukrainian Air Assault Forces
- Ukrainian Air Force
- 160th Anti-Aircraft Artillery Brigade (Odesa Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade)[250]
- Ukrainian Navy
- Ukrainian guerrillas[185]
Environmental impact
The war has had a disruptive and destructive impact on the unique plants and wildlife of the Kinburn Spit such as the Сentaurea breviceps and Сentaurea Paczoskii cornflower species,[268] and their sensitive ecosystem.[269] Bombs, and the pollutants that came from them, killed nearby dolphins, and opened the sand and soil to the threat of chemicals seeping in and invasive species, according to the research and policy director at the UK-based Conflict and Environment Observatory Doug Weir.[270] In May 2022 a 4,000 hectares (10,000 acres) fire, started by rockets, inflicted lasting habitat damage to the perennial forests and salt marshes of the spit.[269][270][271]
See also
- Crimea attacks (2022–present)
- Russian occupation of Kherson Oblast
- Russian occupation of Zaporizhzhia Oblast
- Northern Ukraine campaign
- Eastern Ukraine campaign
- Snake Island campaign
- Pavel Filatyev
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{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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Oleksiy Vasyliuk, head of the NGO Ukrainian Nature Conservation Group, said that there are unique plants on the Kinburn Spit that grow only there and nowhere else on the planet, for example, two cornflower species – Сentaurea breviceps and Сentaurea Paczoskii.
- ^ a b Quaoar (30 October 2022). "Why is Russia fortifying an environmentally sensitive Ukrainian peninsula of sand and lakes?". dailykos.com. Daily Kos. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
- ^ a b Cundy, Antonia (7 June 2022). "Dead dolphins: how nature became another casualty of the Ukraine war". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
- ^ Kottasová, Ivana (22 May 2022). "Ukraine's natural environment is another casualty of war. The damage could be felt for decades". cnn.com. CNN. Retrieved 24 November 2022.
Precious perennial forests and salt marshes in the Kinburn Spit Reserve in the Mykolaiv region were on fire for more than a week, its unique habitats were left devastated, according to Zinoviy Petrovich, the head of Kinburn Spit Reserve.
- Southern Ukraine campaign
- February 2022 events in Ukraine
- March 2022 events in Ukraine
- Kherson Oblast in the Russian invasion of Ukraine
- Zaporizhzhia Oblast in the Russian invasion of Ukraine
- Mykolaiv Oblast in the Russian invasion of Ukraine
- Donetsk Oblast in the Russian invasion of Ukraine
- Theatres of operation of the Russian invasion of Ukraine
- April 2022 events in Ukraine