Last updated on August 7th, 2024 at 04:27 pm
Russian forces are reportedly fighting to repel a cross-border incursion in its Kursk region that began on Aug. 6.
Unconfirmed footage of the purported offensive began to spread across social media sites on Tuesday. Russia’s military has since picked up on the reports.
Sudzha, Kursk region 💥🔥 pic.twitter.com/dyLQCx5gTz
— MAKS 24 🇺🇦👀 (@Maks_NAFO_FELLA) August 6, 2024
UKRAINE IS LIBERATING RUSSIA
“Battle ongoing on the Kursk Russia – Ukraine border.
Ukraine is breaking through near the villages of Kurilovka & Goncharovka.
Videos of 🇷🇺MLRS, in action against the Ukrainians in Kursk, have been published.”
👉Long live Kursk People’s Republic! pic.twitter.com/JgLFNokRlm
— Jason Jay Smart (@officejjsmart) August 6, 2024
Russia’s Kursk region sits directly across the border from Ukraine’s northeastern Sumy region, and Russian forces have attributed the attack to Ukrainian military units. The Ukrainian government, for its part, hasn’t commented directly on the fighting across the border in the Kursk region.
Photos and videos purported to show the damage brought by fighting in Russian borders villages in the Kursk region.
the russians writes about the approach of the advanced forces of the Ukrainian Armed Forces to the village of Honcharovka, which is a suburb of the city of Suja, Kursk region in russia.
✙ Chameleon pic.twitter.com/L8NTopkvhh
— Ukraine Front Line (@EuromaidanPR) August 6, 2024
Some social media posts have suggested Russian paramilitary forces opposed to the Russian government are leading the attack. The Ukraine-based Freedom of Russia Legion (FRL), the Russian Volunteer Corps, and the Sibir Battalion have claimed responsibility for similar cross-border raids from Ukraine into Russia in throughout the spring and summer of 2023 and again in Russia’s Belgorod and Kursk regions in March of this year.
Other posts have suggested elements of Ukraine’s 22nd Mechanized Brigade are also supporting this latest incursion.
🚨#BREAKING: The Freedom of Russia Legion attempted to advance into Kursk oblast today.
The Freedom of Russia Legion (A Ukrainian-based paramilitary unit of Russian citizens that opposes the invasion of Ukraine) and elements of Ukraine’s 22nd Mechanized Brigade and possibly… pic.twitter.com/9q5MUouF33
— Wesley Marius (@WesleyMarius) August 6, 2024
As of Wednesday, Aug. 7, some social media accounts are reporting the cross-border raiders have entered 11 different Russian villages and captured a band of territory covering 15km.
Der Vorstoß der #Ukraine in der Region #Kursk, wurde zunächst als Erkundungsmission eingestuft. Mittlerweile ist aber die Frontbreite bei 11km & die Tiefe bei 15km.
11 Orte in #Russland, sind derzeit unter ukrainischer Kontrolle.
Der Sinn der Aktion wird derzeit heftig diskutiert pic.twitter.com/V5kIggquNc— Botschaften der Russischen Lügeration (@lugeration) August 7, 2024
For its part, the Russian military has reported killing hundreds of the cross-border raiders and destroying dozens of their military vehicles.
“The enemy’s losses during the past 24 hours amounted to up to 260 militants and 50 armoured vehicles, including seven tanks, eight armoured personnel carriers, three infantry fighting vehicles, 31 armoured fighting vehicles, with 12 Kozak vehicles, two Stryker vehicles, one counterobstacle vehicle, and six motor vehicles among them,” the Russian Ministry of Defense said on Wednesday. “Moreover, two Buk M1 SAM self-propelled launchers, one UR-77 mine clearing vehicle, and one electronic warfare station have been annihilated. The operation to neutralise the AFU units is in progress.”
Footage posted online appeared to purported to corroborate some of the Russian military’s claims.
Two FrankenBuks eliminated in the Sumy region supporting the Ukrainian incursion into Kursk.
Remind me again what Ukraine is achieving with this? pic.twitter.com/BRN2rKZSfQ
— ayden (@squatsons) August 6, 2024
Yes, they will tell you how the Russians are panicking about the Kiev junta’s offensive in the Kursk region, quoting Russian Telegram channels.
On the other hand, the Russian military will provide you with materials like this: an Iskander strike on an armored column of the Kiev… pic.twitter.com/jcQ2HizYca
— MD (@distant_earth83) August 6, 2024
Russian forces have repelled past cross-border incursions of this nature. Some online commentators suggested this latest assault in the Kursk region offers little strategic upside to Ukraine, and risks exhausting critical military resources and manpower.
Rob Lee, a veteran U.S. Marine infantry officer and researcher at the Foreign Policy Research Institute said the prior two cross-border raids into Russia had little efficacy and didn’t force Russia to pull a significant number of its troops away from frontline fighting in Ukraine. Following the first 2023 raids, Lee said subsequent cross-border attacks have had diminishing success.
Lee also postulated that Ukraine’s military wouldn’t be able to support the cross-border raid with U.S.-donated long-range strike systems.
The Biden administration recently permitted Ukrainian forces to use U.S.-donated weapons systems to strike positions in Russia that are used to attack Ukrainian territory. Still, the Biden administration has characterized this position as an extension of Ukraine’s defense, rather than broad permission to attack inside Russia.
“A limited operation might be able to achieve limited goals, but a more ambitious operation carries greater risks. It is unlikely this operation will have a significant effect on the course of the war, and previous crossborder operations did not have serious domestic political ramifications for Putin,” Lee wrote on Tuesday.
Are the Ukrainians self sabotaging to end the war quicker?
Only reasonable explanation for the Kursk disaster. pic.twitter.com/eySL7qgP2c
— ayden (@squatsons) August 6, 2024
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