Dismissing Kursk, Putin Says Ukraine’s East Is Russia’s Main Goal

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Dismissing Ukraine’s recent invasion of Kursk, the Russian leader said Kyiv made a mistake in trying to force Moscow to divert its forces from the Donbas region.

Two soldiers wearing battle uniforms talk with a woman outside of a country home.
Policemen with the White Angels evacuation team, a special unit of Ukraine’s National Police, assisted in the evacuation of a woman in a village near the frontline in the Pokrovsk district, Ukraine, this week.

Sept. 5, 2024, 12:01 p.m. ET

As Kyiv raced reinforcements to eastern Ukraine to try and stabilize its buckling defensive lines there, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia amplified his threats against the region on Thursday, calling Moscow’s offensive in the area his military’s “first-priority goal.”

Mr. Putin, speaking at an international conference in Vladivostok, sought to portray his army’s grueling advance in the Eastern Donbas region as evidence of a failed Ukrainian military strategy. He largely dismissed Ukraine’s capture of hundreds of square miles of Russian territory in the Kursk region as little more than a distraction that would be dealt with over time.

Kyiv made a mistake, he said, in deploying “fairly large and well-trained units” to the Kursk offensive.

“The enemy’s goal was to make us nervous and worry and to transfer troops from one sector to another and stop our offensive in key areas, primarily in the Donbas,” Mr. Putin said at the conference. “Did it work or no? No.”

Analysts have said that diverting troops was not the only goal of Ukraine’s incursion into Russia, noting that it provided a morale boost and created a buffer zone that Ukraine might leverage in future cease-fire negotiations. It also punctured the notion that Russia was immune from troops invading and capturing its territory.

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A resident walked past the destruction of the Druzba Hotel after two missiles struck overnight in Pokrovsk, on Saturday.

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