Battle of anger in Russia, with waves of tanks, drones and North Koreans of the north

Trump Administration 

Trump Administration

Trump administration

Ukrainian infantry men describe fierce clashes, while Russian forces review to resume the territory in the Kursk region, which can be the key in the imaginable conversations of high fire.

A Ukrainian reservoir destroyed Thursday a few kilometers from the border with the Russian region of Kursk.

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By Marc Santora and Liubov Sholudko

Photographs by Finbarr O’Reilly

Five months after Ukrainian forces swept the border into the first invasion of the Russian box since World War II, the two armies are engaged in some of the war’s peak engagements there, fighting on the ground and leverage in the conflict.

The intensity of the battles is reminiscent of some of the worst seats in eastern Ukraine in the years and beyond, adding towns like Bakhmut and Avdiivka, names that now evoke mass memories for infantrymen on either side.

The fight, in the Kursk region in Russia, gave importance to the perspective of the territory to play a role in any negotiation of high fire. Faced with the perspective of a new unpredictable US president, who promised to end the war quickly, clarifying the terms, Ukraine hopes to use the Russian territory as a negotiation currency.

Russia, founded on North Korea reinforcements, expects this territory from the reach of Ukraine.

“Here, the Russians will have to take this territory at all costs and pay for their entire strength there, while we give everything we have to hold it,” the sergeant said. Oleksandr, 46, leader of a Ukrainian infantry platoon. “We sustain, we destroy, we destroy, we destroy, so much so that it’s hard to understand. “

He and other soldiers, asking to be known through a first call or an appeal sign in accordance with Army Protocol, said North Korea’s infantry attack had made the battles much fiercer than before.

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