'Klishchiivka was cleared of Russians,' Oleksandr Syrsky, commander of the Ukrainian military's ground forces, posted on social media. AFP Photo
Ukraine said Sunday that its forces had retaken
Klishchiivka, a tactically important town south of the key frontline city of
Bakhmut, as it pursues a counter-attack against Russia's grinding offensive.
Battlefield victories are especially important for Ukraine
as President Volodymyr Zelensky prepares his second wartime visit to Washington
next week in a bid to rally support.
But the advances came as two senior western figures
cautioned against hopes of a swift end to the conflict.
"Klishchiivka was cleared of Russians," Oleksandr
Syrsky, commander of the Ukrainian military's ground forces, posted on social
media.
Zelensky praised the soldiers fighting near Bakhmut and
singled out those who had retaken Klishchiivka, saying "Well done!"
in his evening address to the nation.
Zelensky also said that Kyiv was "preparing new defence
solutions for Ukraine", saying that "air defence and artillery are
the priority", without providing details.
Klishchiivka, which was home to several hundred people
before Moscow launched its offensive in February 2022, was captured by Russian
troops in January.
Ilya Yevlash, spokesman for Ukrainian troops in the east,
said that control over Klishchiivka could help the Ukrainian army encircle
Bakhmut, captured by Russian forces in May after one of the war's longest and
bloodiest battles.
"We have now gained a staging ground, which will in the
future allow us to continue to develop offensive actions and liberate our land
from the occupiers," Yevlash said in a televised statement.
The capture of the village would allow Ukrainian forces to
advance more easily towards Russian forces and deliver more accurate artillery
strikes, he added.
Words of caution
The latest news from Kyiv came as the United States's
highest-ranking military officer said Sunday that Ukraine's broader goal of
ousting Russian forces from its territory faced a "very high bar".
General Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, said that while the current counteroffensive by Ukraine was "slower
than the planners had anticipated, it has been steady."
He dismissed commentary from some quarters that the
offensive had failed, arguing that Ukraine has "a lot of combat power
remaining. The Ukrainians are not a spent force".
However, he warned: "It'll take a considerable length
of time to militarily eject all 200,000 or plus Russian troops out of
Russian-occupied Ukraine. That's a very high bar. It's going to take a long
time to do it."
NATO chief Jens Stoltenberg also warned there would be no
swift end to the conflict, in an interview published Sunday.
"Most wars last longer than expected when they first
begin," Stoltenberg told Germany's Funke media group.
"Therefore, we must prepare ourselves for a long war in
Ukraine," even if everyone is wishing for a swift peace.
The claimed recovery of Klishchiivka came after Ukraine's
armed forces said Friday that the village of Andriivka, also located south of
the eastern city of Bakhmut, had been retaken.
On Saturday, Russia denied its forces had been pushed out of
the frontline village.
Kyiv began pushing back against Moscow's forces in the south
and east of the country in June after building up Western weapons and
recruiting assault battalions.
Ukrainian forces initially focussed on the northern and
southern flanks of Bakhmut and have since been posting incremental gains.
/KN/
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