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Ukraine war
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Ukrainian soldiers fire toward Russian position on the frontline in the Zaporizhzhia region in June. Photo: AP

Ukraine counteroffensive is far from failure, top US general Mark Milley says

  • The Joint Chiefs of Staff chair warns the road ahead will be long and bloody, and ‘there’s a lot of fighting left to go’
  • Kyiv has recaptured some villages in the south and territory around the ruined city of Bakhmut in the east, but has yet to attempt a breakthrough
Ukraine war

Ukraine’s counteroffensive against Russia is far from a failure, but the fight ahead will be long and bloody, the top US general said on Tuesday, even as casualties on both sides mount and the front lines have moved only incrementally.

The United States and other allies have spent months building Ukraine a “mountain of steel” of weaponry and training Ukrainian forces in combined arms techniques to help Kyiv pierce formidable Russian defences during its counteroffensive.

Asked whether the counteroffensive was a failure, at least so far, General Mark Milley, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said: “It is far from a failure. I think that it’s way too early to make that kind of call.

“I think there’s a lot of fighting left to go and I’ll stay with what we said before: this is going to be long. It’s going be hard. It’s going to be bloody,” Milley told reporters.

Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark Milley speaks during a news conference at the Pentagon in Washington on Tuesday. Photo: AP

Since Ukraine began its counteroffensive last month, Kyiv has recaptured some villages in the south and territory around the ruined city of Bakhmut in the east, but has yet to attempt a breakthrough across heavily defended Russian lines.

Kyiv says it is deliberately advancing slowly to avoid high casualties on fortified defensive lines strewn with landmines, and is focused for now on degrading Russia’s logistics and command. Moscow says the Ukrainian counteroffensive has failed.

Six weeks since Ukraine launched a counteroffensive in the east and south, Russia is mounting a ground offensive of its own in the northeast.

Russia also spent months digging into defensive positions, surrounding them with landmines and building heavily armed fortifications that have made Ukrainian advances in the east and south slow and bloody.

Milley said various war games had predicted certain levels of Ukrainian advances, but conflict on paper was different from the reality of facing complex minefields, barbed wire and Russian trenches.

“Real war is unpredictable. It’s filled with fear, fog and friction,” Milley said

Russia’s defence ministry said its forces had advanced 2km (1.2 miles) in the vicinity of Kupiansk, a frontline railway hub recaptured by Ukraine in an offensive last year.

Kyiv acknowledged a “complicated” situation in the area. Reuters could not independently verify the situation.

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