Putin vows to ‘squeeze out the enemy’ as Ukraine pushes deeper into Russia

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The Kremlin rushed reinforcements to the area last week, and Moscow’s defense ministry said later Monday that Ukraine had now lost about 1,600 troops in the operation, more than the number that military chief Gen. Valery Gerasimov said last week had attempted the incursion.

Putin said Monday that Ukrainian losses were “dramatically increasing.”

But the ongoing battles are a major blow to Putin’s internal standing, with the country’s influential military bloggers suggesting Monday that fighting inside Russia continued and that regions neighboring Kursk could also be at risk.

NBC News could not confirm any of the details. Ukraine has not commented on the number of its troops involved in the Kursk region.

Some images of Ukrainian troops inside Russia have started trickling in on social media.

NBC News was able to verify a video showing a Ukrainian flag being raised in the settlement of Guevo in the southern part of the Sudzha district in the Kursk region and a video of soldiers removing a Russian flag from the administration building of the village of Sverdlikovo, right on the border with Ukraine.

A national emergency was declared last week and tens of thousands of people have been evacuated from border communities in Kursk, amid reports of civilian casualties and destruction.

New evacuations were announced Monday in the Belovsky district, where the Russian defense ministry said Sunday that Ukrainian troops had tried to break through.

Acting Kursk governor Aleksei Smirnov reported to Putin Monday that 28 settlements in his region were under Ukraine’s control.

About 180,000 people in the region are subject to evacuation, Smirnov said, and more than 120,000 have already been evacuated or left on their own.

Meanwhile, Vyacheslav Gladkov, the governor of the neighboring Belgorod region, warned about a rise in “enemy activity” and said officials were starting to proactively evacuate people from the district.

District officials said later Monday that 11,000 people had been evacuated.

Putin warned that more Russian border regions could be attacked as he said Kyiv will try to further destabilize the situation inside the country, including in the Bryansk region bordering the north of Ukraine.

Meanwhile, the two sides accused each other of endangering Europe’s largest nuclear plant after a major fire broke out at the site.

Handout footage released by the Ukrainian Presidential Press Service on August 11, 2024, shows a fire at the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant in Energodar, Southern Ukraine.
Handout footage released by Ukraine on Sunday shows a fire at the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in southern Ukraine.Ukrainian Presidential Press Service / AFP – Getty Images

Zelenskyy shared a video Sunday appearing to show smoke billowing from one of the towers at the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant. He said that Russian forces, who have occupied the site since the early weeks of the Feb. 2022 invasion, had started the fire.

Moscow blamed the Sunday incident on Ukraine.

The Kremlin-installed governor of the Zaporizhzhia region, Evgeny Balitsky, said on Telegram that one of the cooling towers was hit by a Ukrainian drone. 

Both Ukrainian and Russian officials have said radiation levels at the plant remained normal.

The International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations’ nuclear watchdog, said in a statement on X Sunday that its experts witnessed “strong dark smoke” coming from the plant’s northern area “following multiple explosions heard in the evening” but that there was no impact on nuclear safety.



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