North Korean troops suffering heavy battlefield losses: Ukraine
The intelligence agency, known under its acronym GUR, on Thursday said Ukrainian strikes near Novoivanovka inflicted heavy casualties on North Korean units
AP/PTI
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Injured Ukrainian servicemen arrive from the battlefield in Ukraine on Monday. PHOTO: AP/PTI
Kyiv, 27 Dec
North Korean troops are suffering
heavy losses in the fighting in Russia's Kursk region and facing logistical
difficulties as a result of Ukrainian attacks, Ukraine's military intelligence
has said.
The intelligence agency, known
under its acronym GUR, on Thursday said Ukrainian strikes near Novoivanovka
inflicted heavy casualties on North Korean units. It said North Korean troops
also faced supply issues and even shortages of drinking water.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy said earlier this week that 3,000 North Korean troops have been
killed and wounded in the fighting in the Kursk region. It marked the first
significant estimate by Ukraine of North Korean casualties several weeks after
Kyiv announced that North Korea had sent 10,000 to 12,000 troops to Russia to
help it in the almost 3-year war.
The casualty disclosure came as the
Biden administration was pressing to send as much military aid as possible to
Ukraine before President-elect Donald Trump takes over in January.
Ukrainian forces launched an
incursion into the Kursk region in August, dealing a significant blow to
Russia's prestige and forcing it to deploy some of its troops from eastern
Ukraine, where they were pressing a slow-moving offensive.
The Russian army has been able to
reclaim some territory in the Kursk region from Ukrainian forces, but has
failed to fully dislodge them.
At the same time, Russia has sought
to break Ukraine's resistance with waves of strikes with cruise missiles and
drones against Ukraine's power grid and other infrastructure.
The latest attack on Christmas
morning involved 78 missiles and 106 drones, striking power facilities,
Ukraine's air force said. It claimed to have intercepted 59 missiles and 54
drones and jammed 52 other drones.
On Thursday, Russia attacked
Ukraine with 31 exploding drones. Twenty were shot down and another 11 didn't
reach their target due to jamming, the Ukrainian air force said.
As part of the daily barrage,
Russian forces also struck a central market in Nikopol in the Dnipropetrovsk
region with a drone, wounding eight people, according to local authorities.
Russian President Vladimir Putin
threatened Thursday that Russia could again hit Ukraine with the new Oreshnik
hypersonic ballistic missile that was first used in a Nov 21 strike on the
Ukrainian city of Dnipro.
Speaking to reporters, Putin said
Russia has just a few Oreshnik missiles, but added that it wouldn't hesitate to
use them on Ukraine. “We aren't in a rush to use them, because those are
powerful weapons intended for certain tasks,” he said. “But we wouldn't exclude
their use today or tomorrow if necessary.”
Putin said Russia has launched
serial production of the new weapon and reaffirmed a plan to deploy some of
Oreshnik missiles to Russia's neighbor and ally Belarus. Belarus' authoritarian
President Alexander Lukashenko told reporters Thursday that his country could
host 10 or more.
Ukraine struck back with drone
strikes of its own. Ukraine's Centre for Strategic Communications said the
military struck a plant in Kamensk-Shakhtynsky in Russia's southern Rostov
region that produces propellant for ballistic missiles.
“This strike is part of a
comprehensive campaign to weaken the capabilities of the Russian armed forces
to carry out terrorist attacks against Ukrainian civilians,” it said in a
statement.
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