Russia's Gameplan For Ukraine: Where It Has Failed
NDTV
Early capture of the cities of Melitopol, Berdyansk and Kherson allowed Russian forces to start carrying out what looks like a template for the war's stated goals -- repeated on Wednesday by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov -- of the "demilitarization" and "denazification" of Ukraine.
Nowhere in Ukraine has Russia's invasion gone to plan, but a combination of geography, better troops, shorter supply lines and weaker opposition means Moscow's campaign has progressed enough in the south to show what President Vladimir Putin at least intended.
Early capture of the cities of Melitopol, Berdyansk and Kherson allowed Russian forces to start carrying out what looks like a template for the war's stated goals -- repeated on Wednesday by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov -- of the "demilitarization" and "denazification" of Ukraine.
On Wednesday, both sides also indicated they were inching toward a potential cease-fire deal, even as major differences remain and Putin gave a televised speech about the "self-cleansing" power of current events for Russia that offered little obvious cause for hope.
After initial gains, the Russian military's southern advance has met resistance in Mariupol, Ukraine's easternmost port city, and Mykolayiv, the gateway to Odesa in the west, where the wide Bug river estuary makes a natural defensive barrier.