Ukrainian Marines have evacuated a key bridgehead village on the left/south bank of the Dnipro River, in a tactical defeat for Kyiv’s campaign to liberate and hold ground in the strategically critical southern sector, Wednesday news reports said.

The village of Krynky, opposite the major city of Kherson, was first grabbed by Ukrainian amphibious troops in a dramatic river-crossing operation in mid-October 2023.

The now-ruined fishing and summer vacation community was evacuated over the past week, ending more than seven months of Ukrainian force presence there, the DeepState military information platform reported.

The Ukrainian troops used small boats to cross to the Kyiv-controlled right/north bank of Dnipro and reached friendly positions near the city of Kherson, other news reports said. Substantial Russian interference with the evacuation was not reported.

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Krynky and the swampy, wetland terrain around it had been widely profiled in national media as the scene of months of bitter but successful defensive battles fought by elite Ukrainian Marines, backed by omnipresent crowd-sourced drones, against more numerous Russian forces deploying a massive firepower advantage.

Kyiv Post composite of drone images showing damage to the Dnipro River shoreside village of Krynky. The upper left and right shots are from an April 24 Focus magazine report. A destroyed Russian BMD-3 paratroop infantry fighting vehicle is visible in the foreground. The lower left image is from government footage recorded in June 2023 showing flooding following the Russian army’s destruction of the giant Kakhovka hydroelectric dam upstream.

Russian Forces Briefly Enter Former Occupied Ukrainian Town
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Russian Forces Briefly Enter Former Occupied Ukrainian Town

The head of the Kupiansk military administration said the Russian assaults one day earlier as "very difficult" but said the Russian troops retreated and the situation was again under control.

Ukraine army official statements on Tuesday made no direct reference to retreat from Krynky. However, a report by the state-run Suspilne Novyni confirmed the village had been abandoned “a few weeks ago.”

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On Wednesday, a Ukrainian Army Chief of Staff (ACS) daily situation report stated Kyiv troops still were present and holding positions on the left bank of the Dnipro in Kozachi Laheri, a village adjacent to Krynky.

Russian forces attempted a single assault against Kozachi Laheri on Tuesday, which failed, that official statement said. The last time Ukraine’s military reported ground combat in Krynky was July 11.

Soldiers and volunteers describing combat conditions inside the village in recent months reported less than 200 fighters. Most members of Ukraine’s Marine Corps along with a small number of territorial defense unit volunteers, had been holding out in Krynky since March.

Embattled Ukrainian troops for months had only able to receive food and ammunition, and evacuate wounded, aboard small boats targeted by Russian strike drones. Kyiv’s abandonment of Krynky village marked a possible end to months of attempts by Ukrainian forces to hold liberated territory and expand it.

Kyiv Post graphic using DeepState map from July 16th. According to that source, Krynky village is fully under Russian control and Kozachi Laheri may be under Russian control, but control also may be disputed. A Ukrainian army statement said Kyiv forces are still defending Kozachi Laheri.

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The Ukrainian military possesses tactical bridging equipment, among it NATO-standard assault bridges donated by Germany. In the more than six months since the capture of the Krynky toehold, top Ukrainian commanders never attempted to bridge the Dnipro River, a major water obstacle comparable to the Rhine. Any crossing attempt would have been destroyed by Russian Air Force bombers operating mostly freely in air space over the Kherson sector, military analysts say.

Powerful glide bombs launched by the Russian Air Force pounded  Marine positions with near-impunity for months, because Ukrainian air defenses in the sector are too thin and short-ranged to interfere with the long-range Russian air strikes against the bridgehead.

That Russian air bombardment and ground assaults against Ukrainian positions have left Kryky village, once a pleasantly green waterfront hamlet with some 200 individual family homes and cottages, almost totally flattened.

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According to Russian battle reports, fighting was still in progress in the Dnipro River lowlands near Kherson. Most engagements were infantry skirmishes amidst the lower river’s labyrinth of low-lying islands and canals, but Russian air strikes were continuing, the pro-Russia Dva Majora milblogger reported on Wednesday.

Official, Kremlin-controlled information platforms in March declared the Dnipro River’s entire left/south bank cleared of Ukrainian forces, angering milbloggers who said it was fake news and that the Ukrainian Marines were still holding out there.

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