President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Saturday that Ukrainian forces had recaptured Andriivka village in northeastern Sumy region as part of a drive to expel Russian forces from the area.
Zelenskyy has in the past week focused on what he describes as a drive to push out Russian forces from the Sumy region, with border areas gripped by heavy fighting. He says Russia has amassed 53,000 troops in the area.
"Based on recent developments, our special thanks go to the soldiers of the 225th Separate Assault Regiment -- for offensive operations in the Sumy region and the liberation, in particular, of Andriivka," Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address.
Zelenskyy also noted "successful actions" near Pokrovsk, for months a focus of Russian attacks in their slow advance on the eastern front, and "strong results" near Kupiansk, an area in northeastern Ukraine that has come under heavy Russian pressure.
In remarks released for publication earlier on Saturday, Zelenskyy said Ukrainian forces had stopped Russian troops advancing in Sumy region and were battling to regain control along the border.
"We are levelling the position. The fighting there is along the border. You should understand that the enemy has been stopped there. And the maximum depth at which the fighting takes place is 7 km (4 miles) from the border," Zelenskyy said.
Reuters could not verify the battlefield reports.
Russia's troops have been focusing their assaults in the eastern Donetsk region, with Pokrovsk a particular target.
But since the start of the month, they have intensified their attacks in the northeast, announcing plans to create a so-called 'buffer zone' in the Sumy and Kharkiv regions.
Russia's Defense Ministry said on Saturday that its forces had seized the village of Zelenyi Kut, southwest of Pokrovsk.
The Russian war in Ukraine is in its fourth year, but it has intensified in recent weeks.
Ukraine conducted an audacious drone attack this month that took out multiple aircraft inside Russia and also hit the bridge connecting Russia to the annexed Crimean peninsula using underwater explosives.
Moscow ramped up its air assaults after the attack.
MAINTAINING DEFENSIVE LINES
Zelenskyy said Ukrainian troops had maintained defensive lines along more than 1,000 km of the frontline. He also dismissed Moscow's claims that Russian troops had crossed into the central Ukrainian region of Dnipropetrovsk.
Zelenskyy said that Russia was sending small assault groups "to get one foot on the administrative border" and make a picture or a video, but these attacks were repelled.
The popular Ukrainian military blog DeepState, which relies on open-source data, said Ukrainian troops had repelled a Russian attack in the area, but also reported Russian advances in other areas, including Pokrovsk.
Dnipropetrovsk borders three regions that are partially occupied by Russia – Donetsk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia. Russia now controls about one-fifth of Ukrainian territory.
Zelenskyy acknowledged that Ukraine was unable to regain all of its territory by military force and reiterated his pleas for stronger sanctions to force Moscow into talks to end the war.
Two rounds of peace talks in Istanbul produced few results that could lead to a ceasefire and a broader peace deal. The two sides agreed only to exchange prisoners of war.
Several swaps have already been conducted this month, and Zelenskyy said he expected them to continue until June 20 or 21.
In separate remarks made on communications platform Telegram on Saturday, he said that a new group of Ukrainian prisoners of war had come home as part of another swap with Russia.
"We continue to take our people out of Russian captivity. This is the fourth exchange in a week," Zelenskyy wrote.
Ukrainian officials responsible for exchanging prisoners said the vast majority of the soldiers released in the exchange had been held captive since 2022 with many captured during the more than 80-day siege of the Sea of Azov port of Mariupol.
The officials said Kyiv had, meanwhile, received the bodies of 1,200 of its soldiers killed in the war with Russia. The bodies were handed over to Ukraine on Friday.
Russian state media, citing sources, reported that Moscow had not received any of its war dead back from Kyiv.
© Thomson Reuters 2025.
5 Comments
JJE
Yellow brick road stuff-type fiction from him.
Categorically not true about Sumy. That village is in a zone shaded red. Moreover, new advances have been marked on the map. Indeed, apart from growing, the buffer-zone is roughly the same size as the area formerly controlled by Kyiv in Kursk.
As for mentioned SW of Pokrovsk on the main line of contact, the Russians have definitely scooped up Zelenyi Kut and a whole lot more acquisitions too. Looks like a push to roll up the Donetsk-Dnipro border region pockets in the south Donetsk sector.
Lancet
So what is the point in sending waves of Ukrainian boys to get slaughtered?
The only winner in this war seems to be Lindsey Graham and his buddies in the Neo-con establishment that want perpetual war.
max-velocity
The US is the only country Ukraine is indebted to with a mineral agreement for the $120 billion it received.
Underworld
max-velocity
The mineral deal has nothing to do with the $120 billion Ukraine that the US has given them.
JJE
We don't hear much about the 'mineral' deal these days. That's because it belongs in the fiction section too. and it has nothing to do with minerals that exist, at least not in areas controlled by a certain someone.
Now the flare up - to put it very mildly - in the Middle East will mean less finite resources for Kyiv. This especially means gear related to air defense and interceptors. The US def sec confirmed that during congressional testimony last week. He has since repeated the assertion on TV. The major unprovoked escalation in that theatre, which came in the form of a sneak attack, has opened a new priority for Uncle Sam. The climb of the escalation ladder there guarantees that Ukraine goes a few rungs down the priority ladder.