Washington will not comment on Russian advances on the Donbass front, a senior Pentagon official said on Monday, saying an explanation had to come from Kiev. The spokesman also declined to assess a continuing Ukrainian incursion into Kursk Region.
Ukrainian officials have claimed Moscow would need to move some troops from the east in response to the attack, but the pace of Russian advances does not appear affected. US Air Force Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder, the spokesman for the Department of Defense, was asked during a regular briefing what advice American military officials were giving to Ukraine on the situation.
“I’m not going to get into their planning or our advice as it relates to that, as it’s their decision,” he replied. The Americans are “communicating with [the Ukrainians] to better understand” what their declared goal of establishing a “buffer zone” in Kursk Region entails, the general added.
He was referring to a cross-border operation by Kiev involving thousands of troops, launched earlier this month. The Ukrainian army has seized some border areas, but failed to advance deeper into Russian territory.
In Donbass, Russian forces have been making “incremental gains,” Ryder acknowledged. He declined to estimate how long it would take them to reach Pokrovsk, the city that serves as the linchpin of Ukrainian fortifications and logistics in the Kiev-claimed Russian Donetsk People’s Republic. The US official urged the media to direct such questions to the Ukrainians.
The Ukrainian leadership has been inconsistent in explaining its goals for the Kursk Region operation. Initially, the office of Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky said the capture of Russian territory was necessary to get a stronger position during eventual peace talks with Russia. It also mentioned the need to apply pressure on Moscow by intimidating the Russian public, so that it would accept Ukrainian terms.
The messaging later shifted, with Zelensky declaring the creation of a buffer zone as a key achievement of his troops. Last Saturday, he claimed that the incursion had preempted a Russian attempt to enter Ukraine’s Sumy Region from Kursk Region and capture its administrative center.
When asked about peace talks, Zelensky denied any intention to use captured Russian land as a bargaining chip.
“You said somebody claimed that we are playing this as a card for dialogue. What dialogue? The only one saying anything like that is [Russian President Vladimir] Putin,” he stated. “We do not play any cards.”
Putin has said that the incursion and the harm it caused to Russian civilians has made negotiations with Ukraine impossible. Previously, he offered a ceasefire in return for political and military concessions.