New York Post

Dire Ukraine shortage

Running out of fighters to resist invaders

- By STEVE JANOSKI With Wires

The Ukrainian military is struggling to fight back against a fierce Russian assault along Ukraine’s northeast border — the first stage of what observers believe will be a massive summer offensive by the swelled ranks of Vladimir Putin’s army.

The new attacks are meant to stretch thin Ukraine’s already outnumbere­d defenders, according to The Sun.

Although Ukrainian troops ground Russia’s assault to a halt Tuesday night, Putin’s soldiers have already seized about 50 square miles of new territory northeast of Kharkiv, Ukraine’s secondlarg­est city.

And it might get worse — the Russian dictator has amassed about a half-million troops on the front lines, just as Ukrainian leaders said they’re running out of reinforcem­ents to stem the tide.

“I’ve used everything we have,” said Gen. Kyrylo Budanov, head of Kyiv’s military intelligen­ce. “Unfortunat­ely, we don’t have anyone else in the reserves.”

The grim news paints a bleak picture — especially as Ukrainian forces began pulling back from some embattled areas as they fought the Russians tooth-and-nail in others.

During a surprise visit this week, Secretary of State Antony Blinken sought to reassure the bloodied country that American support is on the way, courtesy of a $2 billion arms deal.

But that hasn’t assuaged concerns about the Russian offensive, which began last week and drove the Ukrainians from some parts of the nations’ shared border.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky canceled his planned foreign visits given the dire situation.

Putin deployed about 40,000 soldiers and 500 tanks ahead of the ground assault, but the Ukrainians couldn’t preemptive­ly attack because the United States forbade them from using certain weapons in enemy territory, the outlet added.

“Those are the only weapons that will break up Russian forces as they organize themselves for an offensive,” he said.

The eventual attack pushed thousands of residents to evacuate war-torn border towns as Russia launched human-wave assaults against Ukrainian positions, sacrificin­g lives for inches of territory.

‘Significan­t gains’

“It is a very dangerous offensive in the Kharkiv region right now; the Russians have made significan­t gains in a very short time,” said Dr. Alan Mendoza, executive director of the UK-based think tank Henry Jackson Society.

Ukraine’s general staff said Tuesday that its troops fell back from two areas in the Kharkiv region — Lukyantsi and Vovchansk — “in order to save the lives of our servicemen and avoid losses.”

Kyiv is sending more troops to the area, including army reserve units, according to the Ukrainian presidenti­al office.

And the desperatel­y needed American weapons secured in the US aid package have finally begun pouring into the front lines.

But Ukraine will need more troops to break Russia’s mammoth assault, Royal United Services Institute war expert Dr. Jack Watling said.

“The outlook for Ukraine is bleak,” he said. “Its allies must replenish stockpiles.”

Putin’s forces have also opened new fronts in their attempt to punch through Ukrainian lines, as defenders are short on manpower and ammunition along the 620-mile front.

Despite this, the Institute for the Study of War, a think tank in Washington, DC, said late Tuesday that Russia’s advance near Kharkiv has slowed.

The war — which Putin launched under dubious circumstan­ces in February 2022 — has been costly for both sides, leading to hundreds of thousands of casualties.

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