Berliner Boersenzeitung - As Ukrainians advance, Russians risk losing prized Kherson city

EUR -
AED 4.285119
AFN 80.76562
ALL 97.823575
AMD 448.159214
ANG 2.087966
AOA 1069.824622
ARS 1492.628616
AUD 1.78155
AWG 2.100566
AZN 1.981706
BAM 1.951088
BBD 2.355611
BDT 141.169036
BGN 1.955435
BHD 0.43981
BIF 3372.222589
BMD 1.166657
BND 1.494204
BOB 8.090528
BRL 6.519977
BSD 1.166682
BTN 100.239751
BWP 15.566536
BYN 3.818111
BYR 22866.480799
BZD 2.34356
CAD 1.598157
CDF 3366.972413
CHF 0.930872
CLF 0.02944
CLP 1129.755747
CNY 8.361723
CNH 8.36737
COP 4678.878635
CRC 588.882725
CUC 1.166657
CUP 30.916415
CVE 110.832259
CZK 24.673048
DJF 207.338347
DKK 7.465431
DOP 70.354322
DZD 151.448228
EGP 57.720945
ERN 17.499858
ETB 159.307069
FJD 2.650993
FKP 0.862223
GBP 0.868979
GEL 3.161935
GGP 0.862223
GHS 12.138234
GIP 0.862223
GMD 83.415558
GNF 10098.584809
GTQ 8.962353
GYD 243.992778
HKD 9.157874
HNL 30.741275
HRK 7.535794
HTG 153.130146
HUF 399.941503
IDR 18979.295729
ILS 3.910663
IMP 0.862223
INR 100.291393
IQD 1528.320911
IRR 49130.863116
ISK 142.391125
JEP 0.862223
JMD 186.906963
JOD 0.827182
JPY 172.342145
KES 151.081632
KGS 102.020206
KHR 4691.129193
KMF 492.621031
KPW 1049.990984
KRW 1612.845626
KWD 0.356577
KYD 0.97226
KZT 612.206591
LAK 25123.96243
LBP 104474.150834
LKR 351.022179
LRD 234.498447
LSL 20.883276
LTL 3.444835
LVL 0.7057
LYD 6.31741
MAD 10.529666
MDL 19.763435
MGA 5168.291004
MKD 61.46686
MMK 2449.979399
MNT 4181.538167
MOP 9.433297
MRU 46.317155
MUR 53.047757
MVR 17.970242
MWK 2025.90219
MXN 21.847955
MYR 4.961207
MZN 74.619358
NAD 20.883727
NGN 1782.862338
NIO 42.934288
NOK 11.836379
NPR 160.384001
NZD 1.952875
OMR 0.448596
PAB 1.166692
PEN 4.160885
PGK 4.724087
PHP 66.148487
PKR 332.088682
PLN 4.260939
PYG 9038.17019
QAR 4.247335
RON 5.078928
RSD 117.145783
RUB 91.122261
RWF 1672.986401
SAR 4.375373
SBD 9.706074
SCR 16.974849
SDG 700.58042
SEK 11.225727
SGD 1.495307
SHP 0.916809
SLE 26.24828
SLL 24464.222416
SOS 666.762999
SRD 43.406061
STD 24147.448229
SVC 10.208344
SYP 15168.859464
SZL 20.894751
THB 37.89335
TJS 11.26429
TMT 4.094967
TND 3.379784
TOP 2.732428
TRY 46.867833
TTD 7.918941
TWD 34.275339
TZS 3023.802723
UAH 48.78974
UGX 4180.901906
USD 1.166657
UYU 47.415478
UZS 14822.379199
VES 133.213327
VND 30478.918922
VUV 139.587221
WST 3.039734
XAF 654.382086
XAG 0.030603
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.15295
XDR 0.813782
XOF 654.494548
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.572784
ZAR 20.882496
ZMK 10501.318891
ZMW 27.066858
ZWL 375.663137
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

As Ukrainians advance, Russians risk losing prized Kherson city
As Ukrainians advance, Russians risk losing prized Kherson city / Photo: STRINGER - AFP

As Ukrainians advance, Russians risk losing prized Kherson city

Advancing Ukrainians have vowed to wrest back the southern city of Kherson from the Russians but analysts say Moscow may be reluctant to give up one of its biggest trophies since the February invasion.

Text size:

On March 3, barely a week into the cross-border assault, Russian troops captured Kherson, the regional centre of the southern Ukrainian province of the same name.

It was the first major city to fall to Moscow's forces, providing them with a bridgehead on the western banks of the Dnipro river from which Russian troops could launch attacks for more territory further west.

"It's a strategic point. It's a connexion point between the Dnipro and the rest of the country," said Olga Chiriac, a researcher at the Middle East Institute.

But today a Ukrainian counteroffensive is creeping closer to the city, threatening to deprive Moscow of the only provincial capital it has occupied in the invasion.

Pro-Russian authorities in the city have ordered residents to evacuate. And on Friday they accused Kyiv's forces of killing four people when they shelled a bridge linking both sides of the river, though a Ukrainian military spokeswoman denied that they had killed any civilians.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has in turn accused Russia of planning to destroy a hydroelectric dam upstream from the city, in what would amount to a "catastrophe on a grand scale".

He said hundreds of thousands of people around the Dnipro would be in danger of flash flooding.

And cutting water supplies could also impact the cooling systems of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, Europe's largest.

- Russians 'at a dead end' -

It is not yet clear whether the Russians will hold on to Kherson or retreat eastwards across the river.

For the moment, Russia controls a strip around 140 kilometres (90 miles) long along the western bank of the Dnipro river.

It has bolstered its presence with a huge number of seasoned soldiers, who would have the advantage and be able to inflict terrible losses if the Ukrainians decided to attack the city.

But with a river within Ukrainian artillery range separating the Russians from their fall-back positions, they also risk being encircled.

In short, said former Romanian military intelligence officer Valentin Mateiu, Russia had troops that were competent "but at a dead end".

Its forces were at a "strategic disadvantage", after Ukrainian soldiers managed to seize their own foothold beyond a Dnipro tributary to the north of the city, from which they might cut off Russian-held territory.

Ukrainians earlier in the war "systematically prepared the battlefield", destroying bridges and command centres for example, he said, and could likely do the same again.

He and Chiriac nevertheless thought the Russians would do their best to hold on to the city.

"The Russians will try to avoid being encircled and turn Kherson into a centre of resistance," Mateiu said.

- 'Risk a new Mariupol'? -

Ukrainian analyst Mykhailo Samus said Moscow's troops should have been evacuated "a long time ago".

But he thought it was unlikely that the Ukrainians would want to attack the Russian-held city, where tens of thousands of residents remain.

"The Ukrainians won't conduct any battle for Kherson. They don't attack and destroy cities like Russia, like Mariupol," he said, referring to the city pounded to rubble by the Russians earlier in the war.

Retired US general Ben Hodges agreed the Ukrainians were likely to avoid a "giant fight inside the city".

Instead, they are "keeping these Russian troops fixed there so that they cannot escape, and at some point... they'll be ready to bypass the Russians inside Kherson", he said.

Pierre Grasser, a researcher tied to Paris' Sorbonne University, said the Ukrainians were having to carefully weigh up their movements outside the city.

Any closer and "they will be entering the Kherson suburbs, and that could be dangerous", he said.

"Urban warfare always leads to many deaths on the attacker's side" and "it would risk a new Mariupol" in terms of damage.

Mateiu said the commander-in-chief of Ukraine's armed forces, Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, was facing a dilemma.

"The president wants this strategic victory", especially since it would pave the way towards retaking Ukraine's Crimea peninsula annexed by Russia in 2014, he said.

That leaves the army chief with what retired French general Michel Yakovleff described as a terrible choice -- "besiege (the city) for as long as it takes or annihilate it and reduce it to rubble".

(Y.Berger--BBZ)