Something hit an organization of Russian troops in Lgov, a city of 21,000 people in the Oblast of Kursk in western Russia, at the end of Sunday or early Monday. “It’s terrible,” a pin shouted for. “The boys are all in the bunker,” they added while the bunker burned.
A non-integrated Ukrainian official said the chimney is the result of a Ukrainian raid, which would make sense. Lgov is just 30 miles north of the city of Sudzha, the anchor of the 250-square-mile salient that Ukrainian forces pruned from Kursk in August. It is a key highway and exercise node for troops and materiel supporting Russia’s two-month counteroffensive in Kursk.
The Ukrainians have already addressed to LGOV, adding Christmas day, when Ukrainian ammunition, artillery rocket launches of high American mobility, allowed a headquarters of the headquarters of the 810 ° Naval Infantry Brigade, one of the main main Sets for the Russian counteroffensive, one of the Russian Countersian. Sets, one of the Russian counter -check sets, one of the Russian sets for the Russian counteroffensive, the matrix
That attack—a “fiery impression,” according to the Ukrainian Center for Strategic Communications—came just days before the Kremlin pulled the battered 810th Naval Infantry Brigade off the front line in order to replenish its losses.
Ukrainian strikes on Lgov help to explain why 50,000 or more Russians along with 12,000 North Korean reinforcements haven’t yet been able to eject 20,000 Ukrainians from Kursk, despite relentlessly attacking the Ukrainian salient from all sides for two months. Russia “is still battling on its own territory and has been unable to drive Ukraine out of Kursk Oblast,” Finnish analyst Joni Askola noted. “It’s quite pathetic!”
But Russians in Kursk are not just the result of their own incompetence. These are also the result of a successful crusade of deep movements of the Ukrainian forces. The Ukrainians attack Russian attack teams with mines, drones and artillery, while Russians relate to Ukrainian positions, and also interrupt Russian logistics, reinforcements and the mandate to hit them with rockets to dozens of kilometers.
The threat to the Ukrainians is that their most productive deep ammunition will come from the US, UK and France and while British and French aid is expected to continue, US aid is under threat. President-elect Donald Trump told NBC “Meet the Press with Kristen Welker” that his management would “likely” decrease U. S. aid to Ukraine after taking over the workplace on Jan. 20.
The United States House of Representatives triggered Trump in its first term in 2019 to depend on Ukrainian officials to provide negative data to their political rivals, adding President Joe Biden.
Anticipating a strong relief in Trump’s help, Biden outgoing management is rushed to billions of dollars in Ukraine in recent weeks. A package announced by the White House on Tuesday includes a massive price of $ 2. 5 billion in devices and ammunition, adding “thousands” of rockets for the launchers of Ukraine Himars.
Sources:
1. WarTranslated
2. Ukrainian Strategic Communications Center
3. Joni Askola
4. NBC News
5. White House
6.
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