‘They Can Visit Each Other, Dig Potatoes, Work in the Garden’ – Ukraine at War Update for Sept. 19

A military spokesman on Wednesday told the AFP that the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) have “stopped” Russia’s counteroffensive to regain AFU-held territory in the Kursk region, while Moscow has repeated the claims that its defense of the southwestern Russian region continues to be successful.

Last week, the Kremlin insisted that it had regained several villages from Ukrainian forces in the region, but Kyiv’s military administrator in Kursk said that those advances now have been halted.

“They tried to attack from the flanks, but they were stopped there,” the military administration’s spokesman Oleksiy Dmytrashkivsky told AFP. “The situation was stabilized and today everything is under control. They are not successful,” he said.

An unnamed Ukrainian official later played down the claim to the French news service. “The Russian operation in the Kursk region is still ongoing, so it is too early to say that it has failed completely,” the official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Still, Dmytrashkivsky continued that there were “several thousand” Russian civilians still living in areas under AFU control. He claimed that Russian strikes in the area have killed 23 of their own civilians, adding that “they are dying with the Ukrainian military.”

The remaining inhabitants, he said, are not allowed to leave, but insisted they can “move around” the area, unhindered by Ukrainian forces.

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Yuri Kokhovets, 38, accused Russian soldiers of shooting civilians in Bucha “for no reason at all” in a spontaneous interview he gave to US-funded news outlet Radio Liberty in July 2022.

“They can visit each other, eat there, unite somewhere, dig potatoes, work in the garden”, Dmytrashkivsky said. “The Sumy regional administration allocates funds for bread [for those Russian inhabitants] on a weekly basis. The armed forces provide water, the administration gives food packages,” he said. “Nothing works there, no shops, no pharmacy, nothing,” he added.

On that topic, the Kremlin has said only that about 130,000 Russian citizens have evacuated the Kursk region.

Meanwhile, Zelensky’s evening address on Wednesday focused on his latest peace plan, which he refers to as a “victory plan,” that he officially will present to US President Joe Biden at this month’s UN General Assembly. The US Ambassador to the UN said Tuesday that the White House has already reviewed the plan this week, giving it the thumbs-up.

Zelensky also promised that he was planning another international peace summit, in November, to discuss these goals. His administration organized a similar summit in Switzerland in June of this year, but produced few tangible results as Russia was not invited and Chinese delegates did not attend.

The president said that this time Moscow would be invited to have a seat at the table.

Ukrainian regions working on independent agreements with several US states

One of President Zelensky’s top staffers, Viktor Mykyta, has been tasked with “strengthening cooperation between Ukrainian regions and U.S. states,” state news Ukrinform reported on Wednesday, citing a press release from the president’s office.

“We have a task from President Volodymyr Zelensky to introduce a single, comprehensive communication mechanism between the regions of Ukraine and the regions of other countries, including the U.S. states. We have to systematically work on the establishment of effective interaction,” Mykyta is quoted as saying in the release.

He reported that nine regions of Ukraine are negotiating with various representatives at the state level.

It may seem an unusual initiative in war time insofar as US states cannot independently contribute military aid or craft their own foreign policies, but certainly they can drum up humanitarian aid, and fostering economic ties between a state’s businesses and foreign entities is commonplace.

A meeting on Wednesday between Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha, Ukraine’s Ambassador to the United States Oksana Markarova, and the heads of regional military administrations resulted in an agreement to create a platform for direct contacts between the heads of regional military administrations, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and Ukraine’s Embassy in Washington.

Ukrinform reported that “the cooperation will include cultural, educational, healthcare, social and humanitarian spheres. There will be a separate mechanism for interaction between universities, hospitals, cultural institutions, sports schools and rehabilitation centers.”

So far, the initiative has resulted in four such partnerships: There are signed agreements between the Kyiv region and the US states of Washington and Utah, the Zhytomyr region and the state of Indiana, and the Chernihiv region and the state of Minnesota.

The political affiliations of those respective governors are evenly split between Republicans and Democrats. The governor of Minnesota, for example, is Democratic Vice Presidential nominee Tim Walz, and the governor of Indiana, Republican Eric Holcomb, last week became the first sitting governor to visit Ukraine since the start of the full-scale Russian invasion in 2022.

An agreement with the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (which happens to be a battleground state in this election year, a big producer of artillery shells, and the birthplace of President Joe Biden) is reportedly in the works.

Pennsylvania also has the third-largest population of Ukrainian-Americans among all US states after New York and California. It is famously the setting of the 1978 film “The Deer Hunter,” which centers around Ukrainian- and Russian-American friends in the Pittsburgh area during the Vietnam War.

In Slovakia, Ukraine’s foreign minister tasked with signing bilateral security agreement with pro-Kremlin Fico

On his first foreign visit since taking over as Ukraine’s foreign minister, Andriy Sybiha, proposed the goal of signing a bilateral security agreement with Slovakian Prime Minister, Robert Fico, when they sit down together in Bratislava on Thursday, Sept. 18 at Zelensky’s suggestion.

It could be a fairly tall order for Ukraine’s top diplomat to achieve on his first mission. Fico won his country’s latest elections on an anti-Ukraine platform, and, alongside his neighbor and counterpart, Viktor Orban of Hungary, has railed against the EU’s policy of member states contributing military aid to Kyiv.

Sybiha said that he had discussed the Ukrainian peace formula with top officials in Bratislava, and asked for their collaboration.

“I also proposed to the Slovak side that they join the G7’s Vilnius declaration on security guarantees for Ukraine and sign a bilateral security agreement,” Sybiha added, noting that Kyiv has signed 26 such agreements.

He also urged Slovakia to support Ukraine’s EU and NATO membership.

“Ukraine in the EU is in the joint interest of Kyiv and Bratislava,” Sybiha said at a joint press conference on Wednesday with Slovak Foreign Minister Juraj Blanár . “It will lead to a lasting peace and strong security. We are counting on Bratislava’s support.”

Blanár stated at the same press conference that, in his estimation, Ukraine’s NATO membership would “create more conflicts.”