Kherson: Ukrainian troops enter key city after Russian forces retreat, dealing blow to Putin | CNN
By: Mick Krever,Anna Chernova,Teele Rebane,Gianluca Mezzofiore (CNN)
It's Liberation Day in Kherson!
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Ukrainian forces swept into the key city of Kherson on Friday as Russian troops retreated to the east, delivering a major victory to Kyiv and marking one of the biggest setbacks for President Vladimir Putin since his invasion began.
Elated civilians who had survived months of Russian occupation descended on Kherson's central square, hugging newly arrived Ukrainian soldiers, snapping selfies with them, and waving Ukrainian flags.
Footage of the jubilant scenes emerged hours after Russia announced it had withdrawn from the west bank of the Dnipro River in the strategic southern region of Kherson, leaving the regional capital of Kherson and surrounding areas to the Ukrainians.
The retreat represents a major blow for Putin's war effort in Ukraine. Kherson was the only Ukrainian regional capital that Russian forces had captured since February's invasion. Their withdrawal east across the Dnipro cedes large swathes of land that Russia has occupied since the early days of the war, and that Putin had formally declared as Russian territory just five weeks ago.
"The Ukrainian flag is raised in Kherson city. From now on, the Ukrainian flag will appear on all buildings in Kherson. This is what we have dreamed of from the first days of occupation," said Serhiy Khlan, a member of Ukraine's Kherson regional council.
Ukrainian forces advanced through much of the Kherson region Friday, apparently encountering little or no resistance. Social media video from towns and villages thoughout the region's west bank shows troops being greeted by civilians.
Crowd cheer and chant as they surround a car with Ukrainian soldiers in Kherson's main square on Friday. Reuters Residents raised Ukrainian flags in Kherson city, which was occupied by Russia until Friday morning. Twitter
Russia's Defense Ministry announced earlier on Friday that its forces have completed their partial withdrawal from the Kherson region, after Moscow ordered the retreat Wednesday,
"In the Kherson direction, the move of Russian military units to the left bank of the Dnieper River was completed at 0500 [Moscow time] this morning," the ministry said on its official Telegram channel, using the Russian spelling for the river.
"Not a single piece of military equipment or weaponry was left behind on the right [west] bank," the statement added. "All Russian servicemen have moved to the left bank of the Dnieper."
Earlier Friday, the Ukrainian military's southern operational command said Russian forces had been "urgently loading into boats that seem suitable for crossing and trying to escape" across the river.
It was unclear whether all Russian troops had left Kherson and the wider region; Khlan said the city was "almost under the control of the Armed Forces of Ukraine" but warned that some Russian troops may have remained behind in civilian clothing.
He cautioned that many Russian troops "threw away their military uniforms, and are now hiding with civilian clothes on."
"They will be plotting provocations, false-flag operations in the city," he said. "There is a lot of work ahead on demining and clearing the city." Residents of Kherson city with whom CNN has spoken in recent weeks confirmed that many Russian soldiers were using civilian clothing.
Ukraine's military said it would proceed cautiously through Kherson region, and warned Russian troops were mining roads and destroying critical infrastructure as they retreated from the Kherson region.
"The Russian invaders continue their looting of settlements from which they are retreating," spokesman for the General Staff of Ukraine's Armed Forces Oleksandr Shtupun said. "The enemy is also trying to damage power lines, other transport and critical infrastructure facilities of Kherson region."
Images and video on social media Friday also showed that the Antonivskyi Bridge, the main conduit over the Dnipro in the Kherson region, had been destroyed.
Alexander Kots, a reporter for the Russian pro-government tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda embedded with Russian forces, posted a video on his Telegram channel standing on the crossing, showing the entire center section of the bridge destroyed. "Behind me are the two collapsed spans of (the) bridge," Kots said. "They were likely blown up during the withdrawal of the Russian group of forces from the right bank to the left," or western bank to eastern bank.
The entire center section of the bridge appears to have been destroyed. Twitter
Sweeping losses
Russian forces have ceded about 40% of the Kherson region, which straddles the Dnipro, within a few days.
Now that Ukrainian forces have recaptured Kherson as far as the Dnipro river, the two sides face each other across the river over a distance of some 250 kilometers - from the area around the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant to the edge of the Black Sea.
As Russian forces have fled, Ukrainian troops have pushed forward in their wake, capturing dozens of villages and settlements in Kherson region above the Dnipro.
The Ukrainian military on Friday recaptured another part of Kherson region, the village of Tyahinka near the strategic town of Nova Kakhovka, despite Russian forces destroying bridges to the village.
A video circulating on social media on Friday, geolocated and authenticated by CNN, showed Ukrainian forces being greeted by residents on the main highway in Tyahinka. The village is just 14 miles (20 km) west of the hydroelectric dam and bridges that stretch across the Dnieper river at Nova Kakhovka.
A number of photos, also geolocated and authenticated by CNN, show that the Ukrainian forces were able to make their way into the village despite the main highway's bridge and a pedestrian bridge being destroyed by the Russians as they withdrew. Dozens of bridges across the Kherson region have been destroyed or disabled during the conflict.
Residents of the town of Bilozerka, on the western outskirts of Kherson city, raised a Ukrainian flag and ripped down Russian propaganda billboards on Friday, according to videos on social media geolocated by CNN.
One video showed a Ukrainian flag flying over a World War II memorial, while another showed residents tearing down a propaganda billboards with a young girl holding a Russian flag, which read: "Russia is here forever."
The scenes of people greeting Ukrainian troops across the region were in sharp contrast to claims by Russian-appointed officials in Kherson six weeks ago that 87% of voters there supported integration into the Russian Federation, in a referendum widely condemned by the international community as a sham. Kherson was one of four Ukrainian regions illegally annexed by Russia in September.
Kyiv officials had warned that retreating Russian troops could turn the regional capital of Kherson into a "city of death" on the way out, and an official in southern Ukraine warned residents Friday to be wary of quickly returning to recently liberated territory due to the threat of mines.
"There are a lot of mines in the liberated territories and settlements," Vitaliy Kim, head of Mykolaiv region military administration, said on Telegram. "Don't go there for no reason. There are casualties."
Putin's spokesperson on Friday insisted that the region remains part of Russia, despite the Russian withdrawal.
"This is a subject of the Russian Federation," Dmitry Peskov said during a regular briefing with journalists. "It has been legally fixed and defined. There can be no changes here."
Russia still controls a large portion of the Kherson region - the area east of the Dnipro River.
When asked directly whether Russia's retreat was "humiliating" for President Vladimir Putin, Peskov replied: "No."
Wanna bet? Sorry, but NO!
Putin's spin is getting caught up in his borsch.
Slava Ukraine
all of the other puppet gov't leaders in the region are freaking out and looking for an escape hatch.
Putin is in a bad place and he knows it. He's losing face with the Russian elites and the Russian "man-in-the-street". The question is whether he's losing his grip on power.
We can certainly hope that's the case
I sure hope that he is losing his grip on power.
Yes, we hope that's the case but then the question becomes what follows next? Does Russia turn even more militantly authoritarian and unfriendly, liberalize or maintain the presently unsatisfactory status quo? It's anybody's guess as far as I can tell.
I'm not sure that the Russians know, G.
I agree. No one knows how it's all going to turn out.
This morning's news it showed the drone boats that Ukraine used to attack the Russian fleet at Sebastapol a few weeks ago. They are building them in Ukraine. The Ukrainians are really inventive people.
there's a youtube video of one with a camera mounted on it that took out the russian cruiser.