Days later, they are still waiting.
Britain’s Ministry of Defense said on Thursday that the convoy appeared to have stopped 30 km outside Kyiv and that it had made “notable slight progress” over the past three days, citing intelligence.
“The main body of the large Russian column advancing on Kyiv remains more than 30 kilometers from the city centre, having been delayed by heavy Ukrainian resistance, mechanical collapse and congestion. The column has not made significant progress in more than three days,” a UK statement said. .
While the convoy and the broader Russian push toward Kyiv “remain on hold,” a Pentagon spokesman, John Kirby, said Wednesday night, “there was great concern” that the window might close to be able to get aid to cities that might come under siege.
A senior US defense official told reporters that although the convoy was running short of fuel and food, the US assessed that the Russians “will once again learn from these pitfalls and these pitfalls and try to overcome them.”
A halt in the advance of the convoy could create multiple strategic problems for Russia.
First, as the main Russian supply line for any major attack on Kyiv, it is a very big target for Ukrainian forces fighting against the invasion.
Second, sitting in a 40-mile-long traffic jam for days on end could affect the morale and discipline of Russian soldiers before a major military operation was launched.
Martti Carey, who previously served as the assistant chief of Finnish Defense Intelligence, told CNN that a fall this way is bad for morale for two reasons. “Firstly, the Ukrainians have drones and planes that can attack the convoy. Second, when you are sitting in the same place you spread rumors that affect your mind. So you get nervous and tired, which is not a good combination.”
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky claimed on Wednesday night that fierce Ukrainian resistance had damaged Russian morale.
“More and more occupiers are fleeing back to Russia, from us, from you… We are a nation that shattered the enemy’s plans in a week – plans that had been built for years,” he said in a Facebook post.
The latest assessments about the convoy come after the Russian military released its first casualty toll of the war, saying 498 of its soldiers were killed and 1,597 wounded. “It is almost certain that the actual number of dead and injured will be much higher and will continue to rise,” the UK’s statement said on Thursday.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov expressed his “deep regret” for the casualties from the Russian army Thursday morning.
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