‘Main’ goal is to capture Ukraine’s Donbas

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Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday said his main aim in Ukraine after 30 months of fighting was to capture the eastern Donbas area — and claimed that Ukraine’s Kursk counter-offensive had made that easier.

Putin was speaking a day after Russia attacked Ukraine’s western Lviv region with deadly strikes, and after recent advances by Moscow’s forces in the Donbas.

Since the start of its offensive in February 2022 when it failed to capture the Ukrainian capital Kyiv, Russia has adapted its aims, concentrating instead on trying to conquer eastern Ukraine.

While Ukraine’s surprise push into Russia’s Kursk region last month caught Russian forces off-guard, Putin stressed that the move had failed to slow Moscow’s advance in occupied Ukraine.

“The aim of the enemy (in Kursk) was to force us to worry, hustle, divert troops and to stop our offensive in key areas, especially in the Donbas, the liberation of which is our main primary objective,” Putin said at a forum in Vladivostok, in Russia’s far east.

Russia claims the eastern Donetsk region and three other Ukrainian regions, as its own.

Moscow has this summer advanced strongly and its troops are now around a dozen kilometres from the city of Pokrovsk — a key logistics hub in east Ukraine from where thousands have now fled.

Putin said Ukraine had sent “quite well-prepared units” into Kursk and so had made Moscow’s advance in Donbas quicker.

“The enemy weakened itself in key areas, our army has accelerated its offensive operations,” he argued.

Putin also claimed that Moscow’s army has begun to push out Ukrainian forces from the Kursk region, where Kyiv’s forces have held on to towns and villages for almost a month.

Earlier this week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told US TV channel NBC that Ukraine would hold on to the territory captured in the Kursk region.

While Russian officials have rushed in recent weeks to say that the Kursk incursion makes any talks with Ukraine impossible, Putin appeared to roll back those statements.

But Putin has repeatedly said that Moscow can only negotiate with Ukraine if Kyiv surrenders four of its regions — Donetsk, Lugansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson.

“Are we ready to negotiate with them? We have never refused to do so,” Putin said yesterday.

“But not on the basis of some ephemeral demands, but on the basis of those documents that were agreed and actually initialled in Istanbul,” he added.

The Kremlin has claimed Russia and Ukraine were on the verge of a deal in the spring of 2022, shortly after Moscow launched its offensive in Ukraine.

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s parliament yesterday approved the nomination of Andriy Sybiga as foreign minister, part of the biggest government reshuffle since the full-scale Russian invasion.

He replaces Dmytro Kuleba who pressed the West to come to Ukraine’s aid after Russia’s invasion and to provide it with weapons to fend it off.

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