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‘Demoralised’ Russian Forces Negotiating Surrender in Kherson Amid Ukraine’s Blitzkrieg

Ukraine’s Operational Command South affirmed that some Russian commanders are willing to retreat to the Russian border or lay down their arms.

September 13, 2022
‘Demoralised’ Russian Forces Negotiating Surrender in Kherson Amid Ukraine’s Blitzkrieg
IMAGE SOURCE: AP PHOTO

On Monday, Ukraine revealed that some Russian forces near Kherson in southern Ukraine are negotiating terms of surrender as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky stated that his forces have “already liberated” about 6,000 kilometres (kms) of Russia-controlled areas in the country’s east and south this month.

Ukrainian military intelligence spokesman Andrey Yusov noted that Russian units are also surrendering in Kharkiv because “they understand the hopelessness of their situation.” Kharkiv Governor Oleh Syniehubov claimed that Ukrainian troops have even reached the Russian border in some areas.

Ukrainian presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovich did not reveal the exact number of Russian prisoners of war but said that Ukraine does not have enough room to accommodate them. He also stated that the captured troops would be part of a prisoner exchange with Russia.

On Monday, Ukraine’s Operational Command South spokesperson, Nataliya Humeniuk, affirmed that some Russian units “are attempting to negotiate conditions of laying down arms under the norms of international humanitarian law.” She pointed out that the Russian forces are aware of the “astonishing” progress made by Ukrainian troops in Kharkiv, adding, “The degree of creaking resolve and demoralisation is so high, even the commanders now realise they don’t have anywhere to go.”

Humeniuk revealed that the Russian commanders are willing to retreat to the Russian border or lay down arms because they are unable to safely cross the Dnipro river, noting that the Ukrainian forces had made considerable territorial gains in Russia-controlled territories in the south.

In another interview with Espresso Television channel on Monday, Humeniuk confirmed possible communication between Russian and Ukrainian forces in Kharkiv, claiming that Russian troops “are looking for ways to get in touch with our units in order to conduct so-called negotiations on the possibility of assembling weapons and transitioning under the auspices of international humanitarian law.”

Possible talks between the two forces regarding surrender were reported on Saturday after Ukraine’s Central Directorate for Intelligence (CDI) published a telephonic transcript of a Russian troop contacting a Ukrainian hotline in an effort to learn how to surrender to the Ukrainian armed forces.

However, despite reports of Russian troops giving up their positions, pro-Russian deputy Kherson chief Kirill Stremousov maintained that “everything is calm in Kherson and there is no panic.” Though he admitted that pro-Russian locals were “at a loss about the situation in the Kharkiv region,” he declared that “Kherson is and will be a Russian city. No one is going to surrender the city and, moreover, retreat.”

Though the Russian Defence Ministry acknowledged the setback in Kharkiv and decided to “regroup” in Donetsk on Saturday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov emphasised that “the special military operation continues and will continue until all the goals that were initially set are achieved.” He also mentioned that Russian president Vladimir Putin is aware of the latest developments.

Meanwhile, the spokesperson for the Bohun Brigade of Ukraine’s special forces, Taras Berezovets, disclosed that last month’s much-anticipated southern counterattack was a “big special disinformation operation” to distract Russia from the assault in the north-eastern region of Kharkiv. “[Russia] thought it would be in the south and moved their equipment. Then, instead of the south, the offensive happened where they least expected, and this caused them to panic and flee,” he reasoned.

According to another source involved in the operation, a part of the mission was to discover Russian informants in Ukraine-controlled areas of Kharkiv in order to stop them from passing on information to Russian forces. “The Russians had no idea what was going on,” the source added.

Following the latest Russian defeat, over 40 Russian lawmakers, mainly from Moscow and St. Petersburg, signed a petition demanding Putin’s resignation. Though it went unreported in Russian state media, it gave a rare insight into public perception of the war. That being said, many pro-Kremlin supporters have called for an increase in the “level of our combat capabilities within the special military operation.”

Konstantin Zatulin, a senior lawmaker from Putin’s United Russia party, acknowledged that the Russian troops’ retreat was doing “very serious damage to the very idea of this special military operation.” However, he said criticism of Putin should “not go overboard,” warning that it “could spark an uncontrollable reaction.”