Is Russia’s retreat from Kherson actually a trap laid for Ukraine?

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Ukraine sees no sign that Russia is leaving Kherson without a fight, a senior adviser to President Zelensky has said, amid fears in Kyiv that Moscow’s heavily stage-managed announcement of retreat is actually a carefully laid trap.

Mykhailo Podolyak, one of President Zelensky’s most-senior advisers, said last night that Russian troops remain in the city and that Kyiv believes reinforcements are on their way. ‘Actions speak louder than words,’ he tweeted, ‘Ukraine will liberate territories based on intelligence data, not staged TV statements.’ 

Oleksiy Arestovych, another senior adviser and former head of military intelligence, was a little more optimistic but still cautious – saying that Russian forces do appear to be leaving the region ‘but not as much as would be taking place if it was a full pullout or regrouping.’

Russian forces are destroying bridges as they flee and mining roads, according to Arestovych, who added: ‘For the moment, we don’t know their intentions – will they engage in fighting with us and will they try to hold the city of Kherson? They are moving very slowly.’

Just two days ago, Ukraine’s generals said Russian troops dressed in civilian clothes are being positioned inside houses in Kherson and are ‘strengthening positions for street battles’. Kyiv has also voiced fears that Russia could blow up a dam upstream from the city and flood it, or destroy the nearby Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. 

Ukraine’s forces are now expected to proceed with caution into the area that Russia said it was evacuating yesterday in a heavily stage-managed state TV appearance by General Sergei Surovikin – Putin’s top commander in Ukraine – and defence minister Sergei Shoigu. 

Is Russia’s retreat from Kherson actually a trap laid for Ukraine?

A Ukrainian soldier based in Kherson takes part in a training exercise as Kyiv’s men get ready to advance into the region that Russia has said it is evacuating, amid fears the ‘retreat’ is actually a trap

Ukrainian soldiers from the 63 brigade train for trench warfare in the northern Kherson region, as they prepare to advance towards the regional capital in the south after Russia said it was evacuating

Ukrainian soldiers from the 63 brigade train for trench warfare in the northern Kherson region, as they prepare to advance towards the regional capital in the south after Russia said it was evacuating

Ukrainian soldier from the 63 brigade seen having military training simulating an attack in the trenches for the counteroffensive to recapture Kherson

Ukrainian soldier from the 63 brigade seen having military training simulating an attack in the trenches for the counteroffensive to recapture Kherson

Ukrainian servicemen fire a 2S7 Pion self-propelled gun on the frontlines in the Kherson region, after Russia announced it would be withdrawing troops from the region

Ukrainian servicemen fire a 2S7 Pion self-propelled gun on the frontlines in the Kherson region, after Russia announced it would be withdrawing troops from the region

Ukrainian servicemen shoot from a self-propelled 203mm cannon 'Pion' at Russian troops as they begin withdrawing from the Kherson region after Putin's top commander signalled a retreat

Ukrainian servicemen shoot from a self-propelled 203mm cannon ‘Pion’ at Russian troops as they begin withdrawing from the Kherson region after Putin’s top commander signalled a retreat

A Russian military boat is seen crossing the Dnipro River after Moscow announced it would retreat from the city of Kherson, amid suspicion in Kyiv that the 'withdrawal' is actually a trap

A Russian military boat is seen crossing the Dnipro River after Moscow announced it would retreat from the city of Kherson, amid suspicion in Kyiv that the ‘withdrawal’ is actually a trap

Russia says it will withdraw from the west bank of the Dnipro River and the city of Kherson, but that announcement was greeted with suspicion by Ukraine

Russia says it will withdraw from the west bank of the Dnipro River and the city of Kherson, but that announcement was greeted with suspicion by Ukraine 

Surovikin gave a report in which he said his troops are in danger and civilians are being killed, before recommending a retreat. Shoigu agreed, to which the squirming general replied: ‘Yes sir. The troop manoeuvres will be made as soon as possible.’ 

Putin – always on hand to cheer Russia’s ‘victories’ – was nowhere to be seen. 

Witnesses say Russian men have already abandoned key checkpoints around Kherson and have destroyed bridges in an apparent effort to stop Ukrainian soldiers pursuing and capturing them. 

Giving up Kerson – the capital of a region Putin annexed to Russia just weeks ago, his only toe-hold west of the Dnipro River, and a key checkpoint on the road to Crimea – is the most-humiliating loss his military has yet suffered.

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The order for Russian troops to abandon the city came just hours after the Russian-installed ‘deputy head’ of the Kherson region was killed in a car crash.

The regional governor’s press service confirmed that Kirill Stremousov, 45, died when his Lexus was involved in a collision with a truck.

Pro-Kremlin Telegram channels reported that the crash happened near Henichensk in Kherson, his personal driver told the @wargonzo project, as images emerged of the twisted remains of the car left on the road in the wake of the accident.

Stremousov was a driving force in organising and supporting the referendum on Kherson’s illegal annexation by Russia.

Recently, he had evacuated civilians from the west bank in Kherson as Ukrainian forces advanced towards the Dnipro River. 

The 45-year-old, who was appointed two months after the invasion of Ukraine, was wanted in Kyiv for treason.

Shoigu

Surovikin

Defence minister Sergei Shoigu (L) was hauled on Russian state TV today to give an order to retreat from the city of Kherson. Shoigu was accompanied by General Sergei Surovikin (R) for the heavily stage-managed ordeal, which saw him admit that Kherson had become indefensible in the face of Ukrainian attacks

A Ukrainian tank advances towards the front line in Kherson after Russian commanders said they would be withdrawing, giving up the only regional capital they have taken since the February invasion

A Ukrainian tank advances towards the front line in Kherson after Russian commanders said they would be withdrawing, giving up the only regional capital they have taken since the February invasion

A Ukrainian soldier makes a 'V for victory' sign from the cockpit of a tank as attacks on Russia continue in Kherson

A Ukrainian soldier makes a ‘V for victory’ sign from the cockpit of a tank as attacks on Russia continue in Kherson

Ukrainian troops load an artillery shell and powder charges into the back of a howitzer as they prepare to fire on the Russians

Ukrainian troops load an artillery shell and powder charges into the back of a howitzer as they prepare to fire on the Russians

Ukrainian troops take a cigarette break between firing artillery rounds at Russian troops in the Kherson region, where heavy fighting has been going on in recent weeks

Ukrainian troops take a cigarette break between firing artillery rounds at Russian troops in the Kherson region, where heavy fighting has been going on in recent weeks

A destroyed Russian tank in the outskirts of Ivanivka, a liberated village by Ukrainian army after the Russian occupation in Kherson province

A destroyed Russian tank in the outskirts of Ivanivka, a liberated village by Ukrainian army after the Russian occupation in Kherson province

British soldier is killed fighting in Ukraine 

A British soldier has been killed in Ukraine after travelling to the country to help with their fight against Russia.

Simon Lingard, 38, who served in Afghanistan, died on 7 November and is believed to be the third British national to die so far in the war in Ukraine.

The father-of-two, a former member of the UK’s Special Forces Support Group, died ‘fighting for what he believed in’, his family said.

Lingard, who is known as ‘Grimmy’ and described by friends as a ‘warrior’, is believed to have been fighting alongside Ukrainian troops on the front line for months following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February. 

But his son, Jackson, wrote on Facebook that his father died after his troupe was attacked by Russian soldiers in Ukraine. 

Lingard, a former machine gunner, was killed when a trench he was sheltering in came under attack from Russian artillery strikes.

He was part of a band of British volunteers defending the town of Bakhmut in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region. 

Two other Brits are thought to have been injured in the strike. 

Ten people were killed and 20 injured, including a former Guards officer and at least two former paratroopers. 

Simon Lingard, who had served in the UK's Special Forces, died on Monday and is believed to be the third British national to die so far in the war in Ukraine

Simon Lingard, who had served in the UK’s Special Forces, died on Monday and is believed to be the third British national to die so far in the war in Ukraine

Ukraine has been attacking towards Kherson since early August, and recently broke through Russian defensive lines to the north of the city.

But it has been hard to track the progress of the assault ever since, as Ukraine has imposed a news blackout on the region.

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Last week, Western officials briefed that Russia appeared to be in the final stages of preparing for a retreat which was being disguised as a civilian evacuation.

They said ‘reinforcements’ being moved to the area were actually conscripts covering the backs of regular troops as they withdrew.

The officials said Russia’s commanders had concluded the city was ‘not worth defending’ and would try to out-last the winter by building a strong defensive line over the other side of the Dnipro.

However, the waters have been muddied by briefings from Kyiv which suggested Russia is actually trying to lure its forces into a trap.

On Monday, Ukraine’s general staff said Russian troops are disguising themselves as civilians and hiding in homes in preparation for urban combat.

They added that defences have been beefed up and Putin’s men looked set to fight for the city. The exact situation on the ground is unclear.

While withdrawing from Kherson is the biggest defeat yet for Putin’s army, it is hardly the first it has suffered.

In April, his soldiers were forced to retreat after a botched attempt to take the capital of Kyiv that saw some of his best units wiped out.

That was followed by an offensive in the Donbas which had largely ground to a halt by late July.

Ukraine then went on the front foot and launched its counter-offensive towards Kherson, having blown up most of the major bridges that supply the city.

A surprise second attack was then launched further to the north in early September, heading east out of the city of Kharkiv, that routed Russian forces.

Almost the entire region was returned to Ukrainian control in just a few days.

Kyiv’s men then made a breakthrough to the north of Kherson in October, pushing Russian troops back to their second line of defence.

Now, In November, Russia looks to have abandoned Kherson altogether.

Taking back the city is a huge propaganda win for Kyiv, which now aims to re-take all of its occupied territory – including areas it has not controlled since 2014.

Kherson is a key waypoint on the road to Crimea, the crown-jewel of Putin’s 2014 war and where President Zelensky has said the current war ‘will end’.

While Ukraine’s troops are not expected to mount an immediate assault across the Dnipro – at least not immediately – it does put positions around Crimea within range of its HIMARS rockets.

Securing the entirety of the west bank of the river will also allow Kyiv to free up units for other attacks, possibly south from Zaporizhzhia towards Melitopol – and then into Crimea from the east. 

Women walk under a destroyed building after fighting between Ukrainian and Russian armies in Arkhanhelske, a recent liberated village after the Russian occupantion in Kherson province

Women walk under a destroyed building after fighting between Ukrainian and Russian armies in Arkhanhelske, a recent liberated village after the Russian occupantion in Kherson province

A woman tries to save some personal belongings from her destroyed flat in ruins after hard combats in Arkhanhelske, a recent liberated village by Ukrainian army after the Russian occupation in Kherson province

A woman tries to save some personal belongings from her destroyed flat in ruins after hard combats in Arkhanhelske, a recent liberated village by Ukrainian army after the Russian occupation in Kherson province

Local resident Serhii Tamara removes debris inside a house of her son, destroyed during a Russian military attack in the village of Novooleksandrivka, in Kherson region

Local resident Serhii Tamara removes debris inside a house of her son, destroyed during a Russian military attack in the village of Novooleksandrivka, in Kherson region

Kirill Stremousov, 45, Deputy Head of the annexed Kherson region, was reportedly killed in a car crash hours before Surovikin gave the order to withdraw from the city

Kirill Stremousov, 45, Deputy Head of the annexed Kherson region, was reportedly killed in a car crash hours before Surovikin gave the order to withdraw from the city

Telegram channels supporting Putin's regime reported that the crash happened near Henichensk in the Kherson region, his personal driver told the @wargonzo project

Telegram channels supporting Putin’s regime reported that the crash happened near Henichensk in the Kherson region, his personal driver told the @wargonzo project

From ‘goodwill gestures’ to routs: Russia’s retreats in Ukraine and how the military has played them off

When Vladimir Putin ordered his military across Ukraine’s borders on February 24, retreat was the very last thing on his mind.

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Russia’s mighty armed forces would sweep aside Kyiv’s troops in a matter of hours – days at most – and return the entire country to his control.

At least, that is what he had been told by his inner circle of sycophants.

Now, almost nine months into the conflict, retreat is virtually the only thing the Russian military is capable of doing.

Vladyslava Liubarets, a Bucha resident, walks with her family past destroyed Russian military machinery on a road leading into the Ukrainian capital where Russian forces where beaten back

Vladyslava Liubarets, a Bucha resident, walks with her family past destroyed Russian military machinery on a road leading into the Ukrainian capital where Russian forces where beaten back

The rot began on April 6, when Putin’s men were forced to flee from the capital Kyiv after their bungling attempt to take the capital collapsed.

Not that they were ready to admit that to the Russian public.

Instead, people were told the retreat was a ‘goodwill gesture’ to preserve the lives of innocent civilians – never mind that Putin’s troops had actually been massacring them by the hundred in places like Bucha and Irpin.

In any case, Russia’s generals told the public, the aim had never been to take Kyiv – that whole operation was a feint to pin the Ukrainian military in place and wear it down. 

The real objective, they said, was the ‘liberation’ of Donbas which would start in earnest now Kyiv’s armies had been mauled.

Another ‘goodwill gesture’ was then made on Snake Island in late June, as Putin’s men fled the tiny but strategic spit of land in the Black Sea.

But the defeat that came next was impossible to cover up, even for Russia. 

In early September, having begun a much-publicised attack towards Kherson in the south, Ukraine launched a second surprise attack in northern Kharkiv.

Russian troops in the region – their numbers depleted as reinforcements were moved to Kherson – quickly folded.

Ukraine punched through the first line of defence, then the second. 

Before long, tanks, armoured personnel carriers and jeeps were running riot behind Russian lines, causing troops to panic and scatter.

The scale and speed of what unfolded next was too much for even Moscow’s polished propaganda machine to keep under wraps.

Before Putin knew what was happening, news of the defeat was splashed across social media and then discussed openly on state TV.

Russia’s long-suffering military spokesman did attempt to play it off as a tactical repositioning of forces – but was quickly shot down. 

The fallout was hugely damaging, turning erstwhile Putin loyalists into fierce critics of the war effort almost overnight.

Head of Zelensky's office Andriy Yermak this morning shared a photo of smoke rising from the island following yet another attack last night

Head of Zelensky’s office Andriy Yermak this morning shared a photo of smoke rising from the island following yet another attack last night 

While most stopped short of going after the strongman leader himself, they were unsparing in their attacks on Russia’s generals.

Perhaps learning from that mistake, Moscow has sought to stage-manage the retreat from Kherson much more carefully.

Surovikin was not allowed to admit defeat – at least not in so many words – when he went on state TV to say his troops were massacring the Ukrainians as much as seven-to-one but, never-the-less, could not hold their positions.

The safety of civilians – Russian convenient excuse – had to be the primary concern, Surovikin said. Withdrawing was the only sensible option.

Shoigu agreed, marking the first time in the war that the Russian public has been told their army is going backwards on the battlefield – even though that is the only direction it has been headed for many months. 

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