The fog of war
On Monday, Russian state news agency RIA Novosti reported that some 800 Russian soldiers had entered Sudzha, the most significant population centre in the Kursk region under Ukrainian control, having seized the “industrial zone” on the city’s outskirts and were moving deeper into the city.
The Russian Defence Ministry claimed on Sunday that as well as recapturing seven Kursk region villages that had been under Ukrainian occupation for months, it had also seized the village of Novenke in Ukraine’s Sumy region, which borders the Kursk region directly, and from where the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) launched its offensive in August.
These claims were denied by Colonel Andriy Demchenko, the spokesperson for Ukraine’s State Border Guard Service, in an interview with Media Center Ukraine, in which he said that the AFU were “using artillery and drones to prevent the enemy from gaining a foothold on our territory,” calling the area a “kill zone where Russians die".
Ukrainian project DeepState, which publishes constantly updated maps of the fighting in real time, also marks the villages as being under Russian control. Footage released on Sunday by the Russian military apparently shows drones attacking a convoy of Ukrainian troops leaving Sudzha.