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During the Russo-Ukrainian War and Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Armed Forces of Ukraine occupied parts of Russia's Kursk Oblast. It was the first time since World War II that Russian territory was occupied by a foreign military. Ukrainian forces occupied several settlements, including the town of Sudzha.
On 16 August, Putin's aide Nikolai Patrushev claimed, without providing evidence, that the invasion of Kursk Oblast was "planned with the participation of NATO and Western special services", [234] calling the offensive "a desperate act, driven by the impending collapse of the neo-Nazi regime in Kyiv." [235] [better source needed]
Ukrainian officials confirmed that Russian forces had established a bridgehead across the Oskil River in Kharkiv Oblast near Dvorichna. [39] In Kursk Oblast, geo-located footage showed that Russian forces captured the towns of Alexandriya and Leonidovo. Russian forces claimed to have captured the towns of Pogrebki, Maryevka and Naidenov. [40]
Viktor Trehubov, a Ukrainian Eastern Forces spokesperson, said around 7,000 people are believed to remain inside Pokrovsk, which had around 60,000 residents before the invasion. Its loss would be ...
In Belgorod Oblast, Russian authorities alleged on Telegram that another attack was directed at Grayvoron, near the border with Ukraine, with an air raid warning being initiated, and civilians in the district apparently being evacuated. [25] Anti-Putin armed groups also staged another incursion into Kursk Oblast. [26]
Ukraine has renewed its offensive in the Russian Kursk Oblast, catching the Russian military and Kremlin off-guard, while the incoming Trump administration is preparing to send a fact-finding trip ...
Ukraine has lost over 40% of the territory in Russia's Kursk region that it captured in a surprise incursion in August as Russian forces have mounted waves of counter-assaults, a senior Ukrainian ...
The village is situated on the Sudzha River, 17.5 kilometres (10.9 mi) from the Russian-Ukrainian border, 75 kilometres (47 mi) south-west of Kursk, 16 kilometres (9.9 mi) north-east of the district centre — the town of Sudzha, 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) from the centre of the village council — Cherkasskoye Porechnoye.