‘Victory closer’: Kyiv residents welcome Ukraine’s offensive on Russia’s Kursk region
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox
Damaged buildings in the town of Sudzha after an incursion of Ukrainian troops into Russia's Kursk region.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Follow topic:
KYIV – As Ukraine’s major assault on the Russian border region of Kursk entered a third day, residents in the capital Kyiv praised the offensive as “bringing victory closer”.
The cross-border incursion
“To be honest, I feel proud of our guys and happy,” said Ms Tetiana Krapyvka, a financier in the Ukrainian capital.
“I believe that it was a prepared operation and maybe personnel reserves were used, but it was prepared well.”
Ukraine has not officially taken responsibility for the operation, which began on the morning of Aug 6, but officials have blamed Moscow for inciting the attack.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said
Russian President Vladimir Putin has called it a “large-scale provocation” by Kyiv and Russia’s top general vowed on Aug 7 to crush the incursion.
“With these actions, Ukraine is strengthening its defence capabilities and its ability to defend itself,” said Ms Anastasia Volkova, a cultural manager in the Ukrainian capital
“This is a success of our military, including in the most difficult areas of the front line.”
The independent US-based Institute for the Study of War said Ukraine had made significant territorial gains in the first two days of the incursion.
The Russian Defence Ministry said its troops were “continuing to destroy” armed Ukrainian units and were using air strikes and rocket and artillery fire to try to push them back.
Show them ‘what war is’
Many residents praised the attack as payback for Russia’s invasion, now in its third year.
A local resident in Kyiv, Ms Rita Simon, told AFP that the Kursk region operation was “necessary” to show Russia the consequences of war.
“They came to our land, and now let them feel what our mothers, our boys who are fighting now, feel,” she said.
“Let them feel what it’s like to live and lose their children, and let their children feel what we feel.”
Mr Volodymyr Borodyansky, a worker in the tourism sector, had the same sentiment.
“Let those in Moscow also know what war is,” he said.
Another resident, 27-year-old Volodymyr Pyatov, said the operation would give Ukraine the upper hand in the war.
“It seems to me that the military leadership knows better what is best for bringing victory closer,” he said.
“I hope that this will somehow help to withdraw enemy forces from other fronts and make it easier for the Ukrainian military on the eastern and southern fronts,” he added. AFP

