Russia has decided to withdraw its troops from the right bank of the Dnieper River, including the regional capital of Kherson. The Defense Ministry explained that it wants to avoid unnecessary losses among its forces and spare the lives of civilians.

While admitting that the decision is not an easy one, the commanders see little sense in keeping the troops on the right bank, the chief of the Russian military operation in Ukraine, General Army General Sergey Surovikin, told Defense Minister Sergey Schoigu on Wednesday. The general pointed to continued Ukrainian attacks on the Kakhovskaya hydroelectric dam on the Dnieper River, arguing that it could leave the Russian troops in Kherson cut off from the rest of the force with no way to escape.

A pullout would help save lives of the Russian soldiers and keep the combat effectiveness of the force grouping in the area, Surovikin said.

This is a very difficult decision. Yet, we would be able to preserve the most important thing: lives of our soldiers.

“Start the pullback of forces,” Shoigu told Surovikin in a video released by media outlets. The minister ordered the general to organize secure relocation for both soldiers and civilians.

Over the past weeks, the local authorities have launched an effort to bring as many civilians as possible to the left bank of Dnieper, citing a threat posed by Ukrainian forces located on the opposite side. Over 150,000 people had been moved out of the city as of today, according to Sorovikin.

Russia incorporated Kherson Region last month, after residents voted in a referendum to break away from Ukraine and seek accession to Russia. Kiev rejected the vote as a “sham” and pledged to use military force to recapture all territories it considers to be under its sovereignty.

      • @Shrike502
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        31 year ago

        I don’t understand the question

        • dinomug
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          41 year ago

          Regarding your previous comment, I don’t understand what you mean.

          • @Shrike502
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            131 year ago

            This part:

            What I see here is a huge booby trap

            Pretty sure that’s what people said about Kharkov situation. Then MoD basically admitted they had no resources to hold it due to fuck ups. Then mobilization got announced and Wagner recruitment spiked. So yes, I hope you are right and we’re not just huffing copium over a capitalist system’s incompetence.

            • dinomug
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              121 year ago

              Ok ok.

              Regarding Kharkov: How much did the Ukrainians advance in effective terms?, that is, number of kilometers, positions, large cities, strategic areas, critical civil/military infrastructure (note, not villages or small semi-abandoned towns) almost nothing, several square kilometers with no strategic value . Where was that great Kyev offensive? combative dispositions lacking. How many oblasts have recovered since that? Zero

              In the case of the Wagners, they are a separate thing: they are special units created especially for unconventional war conflicts (mainly behind enemy lines) with an autonomous administrative structure. Now, how many mobilizations has Russia carried out? 1 Partial, only a small fraction of eligible personnel have been called up. And Ukraine? 7 General mobilizations (practically any civilian, with or without military experience).

              In the Ukrainian forces a good part of the personnel is militant or regular soldiers of the NATO countries and vassals, not to mention the weapons and resources. In Russia, almost everyone is from Russian territory, except for some internationalist comrades, but the cases are very few.

              • @KlargDeThaym
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                61 year ago

                How much did the Ukrainians advance in effective terms?

                Not much, perhaps, but the whole thing has been a major reputation blow to the Russians. They’ve left a lot of people to the wolves, and the second UAF rolled in, executions of “collaborators” started. People who previously waited for the Russians to come and liberate them now view them with suspicion and disappointment.

                Time will tell if that’s an acceptable loss.

              • @Shrike502
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                61 year ago

                In the Ukrainian forces a good part of the personnel is militant or regular soldiers of the NATO countries and vassals, not to mention the weapons and resources

                That’s the thing - there are more of those than there are us. Even if UAF runs out of bodies to throw at the wall, there’s plenty of Poles, Balts, Brits, etc