Next HIMARS target: the Kherson referendum
Why the Ukrainian army is in no hurry to launch a full-scale offensive on Kherson and how Russian logistics in the region are being destroyed

A month ago, on 10 July, Ukrainian Defence Minister Oleksii Reznikov said in an interview with The Times that Volodymyr Zelensky had tasked the military command with developing a plan for the liberation of Ukraine’s southern regions. Russian lawmakers hurried to declare the Ukrainian president’s order as evidence of the country’s “agony”. However, the potential counter-offensive of the Ukrainian Armed Forces in the south and the possible liberation of Kherson soon became a cause for concern and even panic in Moscow. What is the logic behind the fight for Kherson? Military expert and board member of PIR Centre Yury Fedorov analyses the situation in southern Ukraine in an exclusive article for Novaya Gazeta. Europe.
Seizing Mykolaiv and pushing out the Ukrainian forces to the north are one of Moscow’s key goals. It needs to make sure that HIMARS cannot reach the bridges over the Dnieper.
In other words, military units deployed on the frontlines heavily depend on transport communications with the nearest rear areas.










