Ukraine is advancing deeper into Russia: Zelenskiy

Russia has failed to expel Ukraine's forces more than week after they crossed the border. (EPA PHOTO)

Ukrainian forces have advanced further into Russia's Kursk region, Kyiv says, in the biggest foreign incursion into Russia since World War II, which US President Joe Biden says poses a dilemma for President Vladimir Putin.

Thousands of Ukrainian troops rammed through the Russian border in the early hours of August 6 into Russia's western Kursk region in what Putin called a major provocation aimed at gaining a stronger hand in possible future ceasefire talks.

Ukraine has carved out a slice of the Russian border region of Kursk and though Putin said the Russian army would push out the Ukrainian troops, more than a week of intense battles have so far failed to oust them.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Kyiv's forces continued to gain ground in the Kursk region and had taken another 1km-2km on Wednesday.

"We continue to advance further in the Kursk region," Zelenskiy wrote on Telegram, "from one to two kilometres in various areas since the start of the day. And more than 100 Russian prisoners of war in the same period."

People flee Ukrainian forces in the Kursk region, Russia
Ukraine's invasion has forced almost 200,000 Russians to flee border regions.

Russia's defence ministry said 117 Ukrainian drones had been shot down within its territory overnight, mostly in the Kursk, Voronezh, Belgorod and Nizhny Novgorod regions. 

It said missiles had also been downed, and showed Sukhoi Su-34 bombers striking Ukrainian positions in the Kursk region.

Later, the ministry said Russian forces had repelled a series of Ukrainian attacks inside the Kursk region, including at Russkoye Porechnoye 18km from the border, and pro-Russian war bloggers said the front had been stabilised.

The Ukrainian drone attack included strikes on four Russian military airfields in an attempt to undermine Russia's ability to attack Ukraine with gliding bombs, a Ukrainian security source told Reuters.

Russia's National Guard said it was beefing up security at the Kursk nuclear power plant, which is just 35km from the fighting.

The Ukrainian assault into Russian territory has dramatically changed the narrative around the two-and-a-half-year-old war. 

Russia had been advancing in eastern Ukraine since the failure of Kyiv's 2023 counteroffensive to make major gains against Russian forces.

But Ukraine's unprecedented incursion comes with major risks for Russia, Ukraine and the West, which is keen to avoid a direct confrontation between Russia and the US-led NATO military alliance that has helped arm Kyiv against Moscow.

Biden said US officials were in constant touch with Ukraine over the incursion, which he said had "created a real dilemma" for Putin, who ordered thousands of troops into Ukraine in February 2022.

The White House said Ukraine gave no advance notice of its incursion and the United States had no involvement in the operation. 

Russian President Vladimir Putin
The incursion has "created a real dilemma" for Vladimir Putin, President Joe Biden says.

Russian state television said Russian forces were turning the tide on the Ukrainian forces, showed footage of successful attacks on Ukrainian positions and gave wide coverage of the evacuations of Russian civilians from the border zone.

Ukraine's top commander, Oleksandr Syrskyi, said the Russian town of Sudzha, a transhipment hub for Russian natural gas flowing to Europe via Ukraine, was fully under Ukrainian control. 

By bringing the war to Russia, Ukraine has forced almost 200,000 Russians to flee border regions.

Putin said on Monday that Ukraine "with the help of its Western masters" was aiming to improve Kyiv's negotiating position before possible peace talks.

But he questioned what negotiations there could be with an enemy he accused of firing indiscriminately at Russian civilians and nuclear facilities.

Russian officials say Ukraine is trying to show its Western supporters that it can still muster major military operations as pressure mounts on both Kyiv and Moscow to agree to talk about halting the conflict, Europe's biggest since World War II.

Zelenskiy has said the incursion is meant to pressure Russian forces and "restore justice" after Russia's invasion.

The offensive brings risks for Kyiv: Ukraine may leave other parts of the front on home soil exposed by dedicating forces to fighting in Russian sovereign territory. 

Russia controls 18 per cent of Ukrainian territory and has been gradually advancing recently.

In Russia's border region of Belgorod, the governor, Vyacheslav Gladkov, declared a regionwide state of emergency.

with DPA

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