Russia said on Tuesday that his party carried out a “massive attack” in the entire frontline of Ukraine and accused the Ukraine army of abuse civilians in the area captured again with a dramatic counterattack.
Moscow’s revenge occurred after being forced to withdraw his troops from the northeast plot, especially in the Kharkiv region, following the Kyiv lightning attack to win the back terrain.
The territorial shift marked one of Russia’s biggest setbacks since his troops were rejected from Kyiv in the early days of the war for almost seven months, but Moscow hinted that it was not closer to approve of negotiated peace.
“Air forces, rockets, and artillery carry out massive attacks on the Ukraine armed forces unit to all operational directions,” the Russian Defense Ministry said in a daily briefing on conflict.
The “high precision” strike has also been launched in the position of Ukraine around Sloviansk and Konstantinovka in the East Donetsk region, he added.
Kremlin accused Kyiv’s troops of abuse civilians in the area that had been captured again.
Spokesman for President Vladimir Putin said that in the Kharkiv region, reports arose “outrageous” treatment of civilians.
“There are many punishment steps … people are tortured, people are persecuted and so on,” Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
Russian accusations came after the Ukraine authorities claimed to have found four civilian bodies with “signs of torture” in the village of East Zaliznychne who were arrested again.
‘Too early to tell’
Residents reported that Russian troops had killed villagers, said the Regional Prosecutor’s Office, announced an investigation of war crimes.
Ukrainian troops launched their counterattack in early September, apparently capturing the Russian military careless.
The image posted by the Ukraine military shows the coffin of ammunition and military hardware scattered throughout the region left by Russian troops.
Around the city of Balakliya in the northeast, AFP journalists saw evidence of fierce battles, with buildings destroyed or damaged and most of the roads were quiet.
On Monday, Volodymyr President Zelensky said that Ukraine forces had re -seized a total of 6,000 square kilometers (2,320 square miles) from Russian control.
In northeast, dozens of regions including Izyum cities, butterflies and Balakliya, have been recognized, said Ukraine.
Ukraine has also claimed a significant profit in the South Kherson region, where the Ukrainian army also said that he had reclaimed 500 square kilometers.
US Foreign Minister Antony Blinken considered that Ukraine had made “significant progress”, because of their resilience and US support.
“It’s still too early to find out exactly where it is. Russia maintains a very significant power in Ukraine as well as equipment and weapons and ammunition.
“They continue to use it indiscriminately on not only the Ukrainian armed forces but also civilians and civil infrastructure as we have seen,” Blinken said on Monday.
‘Turned the tide’
A Think Tank As Institute, Institute for the Study of War, Tweeted: “Ukraine has changed waves, but the current counter-famous will not end the war.”
Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov told French daily Le Monde in an Monday interview that the war had entered a new phase with the help of Western weapons.
Nevertheless, Kyiv increased its call so that western allies to hunt for more sophisticated weapons to help in the battle.
“Weapons, weapons, weapons have been our agenda since spring. I thank the partners who have answered our calls: The success of the Ukraine battlefield is what we are with,” said Foreign Minister Ukraine Dmytro Kuleba.
But Germany was once again under the spotlight because it failed to give a tanks of the leopard battle that Kyiv sought.
“There is not a single rational argument about why these weapons cannot be provided, only concerns and abstract reasons,” Kuleba said, after the Chancellor Olaf Scholz avoided questions about this problem on Monday, saying only that Germany would not “go alone “On weapons delivery.
Far from the battlefield, the Ukraine allies wrestled with the energy crisis after Russia limits the delivery to the block.
Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin requested the European Union unity in facing Russia’s “extortion” of energy supply, and for further sanctions against Moscow.
Looking for emergency steps to drop the soaring energy price, the Czech Republic, which holds the rotating president of the EU, called an extraordinary meeting on September 30.