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Russian News Agencies Withdraw Alerts About Troops ‘Regrouping’ in Southern Ukraine

Service members of pro-Russian troops are seen atop of an armoured vehicle in the course of Ukraine-Russia conflict in the besieged southern port city of Mariupol, Ukraine March 30, 2022. REUTERS/Alexander Ermochenko



LONDON, Nov 13 (Reuters) – Two Russian state news agencies published alerts on Monday saying Moscow was moving troops to “more favourable positions” east of the Dnipro River in Ukraine, only to withdraw the information minutes later.

The highly unusual incident suggested disarray in Russia’s military establishment and state media over how to report the battlefield situation in southern Ukraine, 20 months into Moscow’s full-scale invasion of its neighbour.

The RBC news outlet quoted the defence ministry as saying: “The sending of a false report about the ‘regrouping’ of troops in the Dnepr (Dnipro) region, allegedly on behalf of the press centre of the Russian Ministry of Defence, is a provocation.”

The Kremlin declined to comment, saying it was a matter for the military.

Russia retreated a year ago from areas it had seized on the western bank of the Dnipro, including the regional capital Kherson. If Ukrainian forces succeeded in crossing the river and establishing a secure bridgehead on the east bank, it would represent a major advance.

Natalia Humeniuk, a spokesperson for Ukraine’s southern military command, said Monday’s incident was symptomatic of information warfare.

“The enemy measures our resilience, and readiness to counteract and react,” she said in televised comments.

“There are a number of military operations (in the Kherson region) that we do not discuss, precisely so that the enemy has increased nervousness and moral disorder. This state of the enemy army satisfies us.”

ALERT ‘RELEASED IN ERROR’

In a series of three alerts on Monday, Russia’s RIA state news agency said the command of Russia’s Dnepr group of forces had decided to relocate troops to “more favourable positions” east of the Dnipro.

It said that, after the regrouping, the Dnepr force would release some troops to be deployed in offensives on other fronts.

RIA said the Russian military command had agreed with the Dnepr leadership’s conclusions and ordered the relocation of troops to start.

Minutes later, RIA withdrew all three alerts, without explanation.

Another state agency, TASS, published just one alert on troops regrouping to more favourable positions, and then withdrew it, saying it had been released in error. It apologised to its subscribers and readers.

In the past, Russia has sometimes used similar phrasing about moving troops to more advantageous positions in order to describe retreats.

Russian state media have privileged access to official briefings and typically report major military announcements shortly before they appear in the Telegram channel of the defence ministry.

Ukraine has said little about its military operations on the east bank of the Dnipro. Last week, in a statement that Reuters could not independently verify, Russia’s military said it had thwarted a Ukrainian attempt to create a bridgehead there.

The U.S.-based Institute for the Study of War said last week that Ukraine appeared to have conducted assaults across the Dnipro in Kherson region in mid-October, and noted that Russian military bloggers were reporting continued Ukrainian ground operations on the east bank.

In its latest update, the ISW reported that Ukrainian forces made a “marginal gain” on the east bank on Sunday.

President Volodymyr Zelenskiy told Reuters in an interview last week that Ukraine’s five-month-old counter-offensive was making some gradual progress in the south and east, including what he called “good steps near Kherson region”.

Source : Reuters

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