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Kyiv admits offensive has been slow

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The leader of Ukraine’s ground forces admitted Thursday that his country’s much-anticipated counteroffensive is not gaining back seized Russian territory as quickly as he had hoped it would.

Oleksandr Syrskyi said his forces are moving forward about a half mile daily despite encountering Russian forces that have dug in along the eastern front near Bakhmut and other hotly contested cities and towns.

“The entire large territory is fortified in terms of engineering,” Syrskyi said. “There are many strong points. Therefore, all advances are really not going as fast as we would like.” 

Syrskyi said Russia has an overwhelming advantage in troops and ammunition. But he said his military is successful because they plan their operations very carefully.

“Every operation is well thought out. Each day of such offensive actions is planned in detail, so we have much fewer losses in personnel,” Syrskyi said. ” Every day we move forward.”

Earlier this week, U.S. Army Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters the Ukrainian counteroffensive has been slowed by a complex system of defenses erected over several months by Russian troops. But he said the Russian troops manning those lines are poorly trained and equipped and suffer from poor leadership and morale.

Milley said it’s too early to assess the counteroffensive but added that “it’s far from a failure in my view.”

‘The front is a disgrace’:Prigozhin says Wagner troops won’t fight in Ukraine now. Live updates.

Developments:

∎ The Belarusian military and members of the mercenary Wagner Group will hold four-days of joint training in the region of Belarus near the Polish border, the Belarusian Defense Ministry announced. 

∎ Intensified Russian attacks across several provinces killed at least five people and wounded 38 over a 24-hour period, Ukraine authorities said Thursday.

EU policy chief says Russia creating global food crisis

Russia has triggered a major global food supply crisis by suspending the Black Sea Grain Initiative and by bombing Ukraine’s grain storage facilities, European Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell told reporters Thursday at a meeting of the EU Foreign Affairs Council in Brussels. The ministers met to discuss their support for Ukraine, including a proposal to spend up to $22 billion on weapons, ammunition and other military aid over four years.

“There is only one solution: to increase military support to Ukraine,” Borrell said. “If they are being bombed, we have to provide anti-aerial capacity. If Russia is using drones, we have to provide (Ukraine) with anti-aerial capacity.”

EU governments also are considering a plan to provide $55 billion euros in economic aid to Ukraine over the same four-year period.

Russia could be preparing to attack civilian ships

The White House warned that the Russian military could be preparing to attack civilian shipping vessels in the Black Sea. Since leaving the Black Sea Grain Deal this week, Russia has hammered Ukraine’s grain ports with missiles and drones. An estimated 60,000 tons of grain were destroyed in the attacks.

“Our information indicates that Russia laid additional sea mines in the approaches to Ukrainian ports,” White House National Security Council spokesman Adam Hodge said in a statement. “We believe that this is a coordinated effort to justify any attacks against civilian ships in the Black Sea and lay blame on Ukraine for these attacks.”

The British Defense Ministry, in its latest assessment of the war, said the Russian Black Sea Fleet will likely take a more active role in disrupting any trade which continues but that those blockade operations will be at risk from Ukrainian uncrewed surface vehicles and cruise missiles.

Contributing: The Associated Press

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