US says Blinken briefed on Ukraine plan to push Russia end the war
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken was briefed last week during his trip to Kyiv on elements of a Ukrainian plan to push Russia to end the war, US State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said on Tuesday (17 September).
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy first spoke of his “victory plan” last month, saying he wanted to discuss it with US President Joe Biden. He is expected to present it on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly meeting in New York next week that he said he hopes to attend.
Earlier on Tuesday, US Ambassador to United Nations Linda Thomas-Greenfield said Washington had seen the plan. “We think it lays out a strategy and a plan that can work,” she said.
Speaking at a regular press briefing, State Department’s Miller said Blinken shared the ambassador’s assessment but declined to say more on it for now.
“I think I ought to let President Zelenskyy, whose plan ultimately this is, speak to the details of it,” Miller said.
Zelenskyy also said in late August that he would discuss the plan with Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris and probably also with Republican Donald Trump, the two nominees for the 5 November US presidential election.
Ukraine has been pushing for a follow-up summit to advance its vision of peace. The first summit, held in Switzerland in June, pointedly excluded Russia, while attracting scores of delegations.
Critical juncture
The move comes at a critical juncture in the war, with Russian troops continuing to inch forward in eastern Ukraine despite Kyiv’s forces launching a surprise incursion last month into Russia’s Kursk region.
Russian forces captured the Ukrainian town of Ukrainsk in the eastern Donetsk region on Tuesday as they advanced westwards in a bid to take the whole of the Donbas, Russian state-run RIA news agency and pro-Russian war bloggers reported.
Russian troops raised their flag on a mine ventilation shaft on the outskirts of the town, which had a population of over 10,000 people before the war, RIA said, citing an unidentified source in the Russian military.
“Ukrainsk is ours,” said Yuri Podolyaka, an Ukrainian-born, pro-Russian military blogger, adding that Russian forces had taken the city “almost intact” allowing them to use it as a base for further offensive operations.
The General Staff of Ukraine’s military, in a late evening report, said nothing about Ukrainsk changing hands, referring to it as one of several localities under Russian attack. It said 34 assaults had been recorded near the town of Pokrovsk.
Reuters was unable to immediately verify battlefield claims from either side due to reporting restrictions in the war zone.
Russian forces had encircled Ukrainsk earlier this month as they advanced westwards towards Pokrovsk, part of what President Vladimir Putin says is a primary goal to take all of the Donbas region.
Podolyaka said that Hirnyk, a town to the south with a pre-war population of over 10,000, and Selydove, a town to the north with a pre-war population of over 20,000, were the next targets.
Since Russia sent its army into Ukraine in February 2022, the war has largely been a story of grinding artillery and drone strikes along a heavily fortified 1,000-km front involving hundreds of thousands of soldiers.
Russian advance
Russia in August advanced at its fastest monthly pace in two years, according to open source maps, though Ukraine also took a chunk of Russia’s Kursk region in a surprise 6 August incursion.
Russian forces, which have taken about a fifth of Ukraine, control 98.5% of the Luhansk region and 60% of the Donetsk region, according to the same sources.
Together, the two regions make up the Donbas, which is the cradle of the war. After a pro-Russian president was toppled in Ukraine’s 2014 Maidan Revolution, Russia annexed Crimea and pro-Russian protests broke out in parts of the Donbas, where Moscow began supporting separatist forces.
Russia said on Tuesday it had repelled five new attempts by Ukrainian forces to smash through its border into the Kursk region, bringing the total number of reported attacks on the border to 26 in just the past six days.
The number of Ukrainians and Russians killed or wounded in the war has reached roughly one million, the Wall Street Journal reported.