Ukraine’s Zelensky says fighting ‘very difficult’ in Russia’s Kursk

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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukraine’s offensive in Russia's Kursk had forced Russia to pull troops from other embattled areas of the front.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Ukraine’s offensive in Russia's Kursk had forced Russia to pull troops from other embattled areas of the front.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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KYIV - Ukrainian forces are coming under mounting pressure from the Kremlin’s army in the western Russian region of Kursk, President Volodymyr Zelensky acknowledged on March 14, adding fighting was no easier elsewhere on the front.

Since Kyiv launched

its cross-border assault into Kursk

in August 2024 – the largest by a foreign army into Russia since World War II – Moscow has been pushing back.

“The situation in the Kursk region is obviously very difficult,” Mr Zelensky told reporters – including AFP journalists – in Kyiv.

He said, however, that Ukraine’s offensive had forced Russia to pull its troops from other embattled areas of the front, easing pressure on Ukrainian troops fighting to keep control of the eastern logistics hub of Pokrovsk.

“I think the situation in the Pokrovsk sector is now stable, and it will be very difficult to find an opportunity to occupy Pokrovsk again,” Mr Zelensky said.

His comments came hours after the Russian army said its units had “liberated” the village of Goncharovka on the outskirts of Sudzha, a larger town Moscow that claimed on March 13.

The Russian counteroffensive in Kursk has wrested much of the land Ukraine originally captured, denying Kyiv a vital point of leverage over Moscow in any potential peace talks.

In some sectors of the border region, Russian troops have crossed the frontier into Ukrainian territory in the Sumy region facing Kursk.

Mr Andriy Demchenko, spokesman for the Ukrainian border guard service, told Ukrainian state media that Russian forces were trying to enter Sumy.

“We continue to detect attempts by small assault groups to enter our territory and approach our border,” he said.

Moscow claimed last week to have captured the village of Novenke, which lies kilometres from a vital resupply route for Ukrainian forces still in Kursk. AFP

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