Kiev’s hybrid offensive under pressure in the south

With the announcement of a major offensive, of which there is hardly anything to be seen even weeks later, the Ukrainian government has embarked on a communication tightrope act. Before the fall, she needs to show at least some limited success.

The position of the Russian occupiers in the city of Cherson is becoming increasingly precarious.

AP

Political communication in times of war is complex. So ask themselves experts from all over the world for weeks, which is why the Ukrainian leadership loudly announced a major offensive in the south of the country in July, of which little can be seen to this day. The armed forces were able to retake a few dozen villages, and the Russian occupiers’ supply lines on the right bank of the Dnipro River have come under severe pressure from the destruction of bridges and railway lines. With spectacular attacks and acts of sabotage once morest the headquarters of the Black Sea Fleet, a military airport and ammunition depots in Crimea and in Russia, the Ukrainians have also exposed the enemy’s critical weak points.

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