Russia admits Ukraine troops have moved onto Moscow-held side of Dnipro river
- ‘Small groups’ of soldiers are stretched out along the bank, an official says, but are facing ‘fiery hell’ from Russian attacks
- A sustained breakthrough across the waterway would mark a significant tactical success for Kyiv

Russia said Wednesday for the first time that some Ukrainian troops had established positions on the Moscow-held side of the Dnipro river, the vast waterway that splits the front line in southern Ukraine.
The admission came as President Volodymyr Zelensky said it had been a “difficult day” for Kyiv due to deadly Russian strikes in the east of the country.
A sustained Ukrainian breakthrough across the river would mark a significant tactical success for Kyiv, whose wider counteroffensive has so far failed to turn the tide of the 21-month war.
“Small groups” of Ukrainian soldiers were stretched along the eastern bank of the Dnipro river, and had been “blocked” in the tiny village of Krynky, the Moscow-installed head of Ukraine’s Kherson region, Vladimir Saldo, said in a post on Telegram.

But he insisted they were facing a “fiery hell” from Russian artillery, rockets and drones, and were suffering heavy losses.