The head of Ukraine’s army, Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, has said his troops have stopped Russian advances in the northeastern border region of Sumy.
During a visit to the front yesterday, Syrskyi said the line of combat had been “stabilised” and that the Russian summer offensive in the area had been “choked off”.
However, Syrskyi also added that he had personally gone to check on fortifications in the region and that more were urgently needed.
Syrskyi’s comments on the successes of the Ukrainian troops in Sumy back recent statements by Ukrainian officials that Russia’s pressure on the region was declining.
However, the situation remained “volatile”, Border Guard spokesperson Andriy Demchenko said earlier this week.
Sumy borders the Russian region of Kursk, parts of which were seized and occupied last year by Ukrainian forces in a surprise offensive before being almost totally driven out months later.
The Kursk incursion was an embarrassment for Russia and in April President Vladimir Putin announced a plan to create “security buffer zones” along the border to provide “additional support” to areas in Russia which border Ukraine’s Kharkiv, Sumy and Chernihiv regions.
Moscow has been pushing in the Sumy area with renewed effort since then. In late May Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky said 50,000 of Russia’s “largest, strongest” troops were concentrated along the border and were planning to create a 10km buffer zone.
There has been criticism about the lack of fortifications in some areas of the Sumy region - and in his statement yesterday Syrskyi tried to quell growing public concerns over delays in their construction.
“Additional fortifications, the establishment of ‘kill zones’, the construction of anti-drone corridors to protect our soldiers and ensure more reliable logistics for our troops are obvious tasks that are being carried out,” he said.
However, Syrskyi acknowledged that these improvements had to be done better and more efficiently.
In the early days of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the lack of fortifications in certain parts of Ukraine allowed Moscow to make advances across the country – from its northern borders and from the illegally annexed Crimean peninsula.