Good morning. In September 2022, Kharkiv province was the site of the greatest Ukrainian victory of the war so far: the lightning counteroffensive that liberated at least 12,000 square kilometres from Russian control, pushed Moscow’s artillery out of range of Kharkiv city and provided real hope that Vladimir Putin could not just be slowed down, but defeated.
Over the past few days, Kharkiv has been the location of a very different shift. This time, it is the Russians who have made larger daily advances than at almost any other point in the war, and are now moving further forwards. Civilians who had come home are fleeing once more in their thousands, and even Kyiv admits that the situation is “difficult”. Further attacks could draw sparse Ukrainian resources from along the frontline, deal a heavy blow to Ukrainian morale and redraw the map before the resources belatedly provided by the US last month are in place to do anything about it.
As US secretary of state Anthony Blinken arrives in Kyiv for a speech today, US officials are working to speed up the delivery of that aid. The question is how far the Russians are able to go in the meantime. For today’s newsletter, I spoke to Guardian foreign correspondent Luke Harding about the prospects of a further advance, why Putin is focusing on Kharkiv, and what it tells us about the wider state of the war. Here are the headlines.
Five big stories
Medical research | A weight loss injection could reduce the risk of heart attacks and benefit the cardiovascular health of millions of adults in what could be the largest medical breakthrough since statins, according to a study. Trial participants who took semaglutide, sold as Wegovy and Ozempic, had a 20% lower risk of heart attack, stroke, or death due to cardiovascular disease.
Housing | Rent rises should be capped for millions of people struggling to afford soaring rates, according to a landmark report commissioned by Labour. Leaked proposals from the independent report will put pressure on Keir Starmer to adopt measures that could ease pressure on tenants who saw an average 9% increase in rates last year.
Donald Trump | Donald Trump told his one-time fixer Michael Cohen only weeks before the 2016 election to bury Stormy Daniels’s account of an alleged sexual liaison, demanding that he “just take care of it”, Cohen told the former president’s trial on Monday. In hours of testimony, Cohen linked Trump to a $130,000 hush money payment and said: “Everything required Mr Trump’s sign-off.”
Gaza | Israeli settlers attacked an aid convoy headed into Gaza on Monday, throwing packages of food into the road and setting fire to vehicles. The incident, condemned by the US as “a total outrage”, came as Israeli troops continued their offence across Gaza in the most intensive round of fighting for weeks.
Women’s health | Women in labour have been mocked, ignored, fobbed off with paracetamol and left with permanent damage by midwives and doctors, a damning report by MPs has found. The UK’s first inquiry into birth trauma called for the appointment of a maternity commissioner and the creation of new specialist postnatal services to address the problems.
In depth: ‘Russia is using its size and depth to grind out victories village by village’
Russian operations around Kharkiv (above) have been gradually intensifying for more than a month, with attacks on the regional capital’s power stations and residential areas designed to take advantage of the lack of air defences on the Ukrainian side.
At dawn on Friday, reports began to emerge of fighting in border villages and an attempt to break through the Ukrainian line. By Saturday, Moscow claimed to have captured five villages; on Sunday, amid claims of further advances, Ukraine’s top military commander Oleksandr Syrskyi denied there had been any significant breakthrough – but acknowledged “fighting fierce defensive battles” and said “the situation is difficult”. Meanwhile, the Ukrainian commander in the region has been dismissed and replaced.
This open-source map shows the direction of the Russian attacks. Last night, Russian advances were reported to have slowed down amid mass casualties – but there were reports of fierce fighting on the outskirts of the town of Vovchansk and Russian troops closing on the town of Lyptsi, within striking distance of Kharkiv city itself.
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Why is Russia attacking in Kharkiv?
There are two obvious explanations – one about the value of the territory itself, the other about the wider impact on the war. In March, Vladimir Putin said that a “buffer zone” in Ukrainian territory was needed to protect Russia from shelling and cross-border incursions; since then, Kharkiv, which has a long border with Russia to the north-east, has come under attack.
“There is obviously a desire to take control of Kharkiv,” Luke Harding said. He reported from the region in the aftermath of the 2022 counteroffensive: “You would see on bus shelters and so on the initials KPR scrawled – Kharkiv’s People’s Republic.” That mirrors the unrecognised Donetsk People’s Republic and Luhansk People’s Republic, vessels for Russian control designed to lend a veneer of democratic legitimacy.
“If the Russians have some success there now, they will try to revive that idea. The Russians are hated and despised there for the most part – and the people who supported it already left for Russia when the counteroffensive happened. But military facts can become political reality.”
The broader, and perhaps more immediately consequential, aspect of the attack is the additional pressure on Ukraine’s strained military resources. “To defend against this surge, Ukraine is having to send reinforcements to the north-east,” Luke said. “Putin’s short-term strategic objective is to reach the administrative borders of Donetsk province. If that happens, it would be an enormous moment, and a triumph for Putin.”
Luke was reporting from Donetsk last week, and in a piece from the frontline city of Kostiantynivka published yesterday described Russia’s appetite for “huge losses of tanks and men to capture tiny settlements, deploying infantry in what are known as bloody ‘meat assaults’.” “They are pushing, pushing, pushing there,” he said. Forcing Ukraine to defend elsewhere is an obvious boost for Russia on the eastern front as well.
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What could the consequences of the offensive be on the region?
If Russia secures positions in Vovchansk (above) and Lyptsi, where residents have already fled in evacuation vans after coming under sustained artillery and drone attack, it will have a solid platform for artillery attacks on the city of Kharkiv, which was once a major industrial hub and home to 1.4 million people. Before the 2022 counteroffensive, “there were endless artillery attacks there”, Luke said. “Swathes of the north-east of the city were left in ruins – you can still see the ghostly tower blocks. The people who left and came back will be forced to leave again.”
Actually taking control of the city appears very difficult, he added. “But there is a secondary objective of making life there impossible. There is a clear Russian military doctrine of terror: it has frequently been hard to tell what the possible military targets of shells that have hit parks, schools, restaurants were supposed to be. If Kharkiv comes under that kind of attack again, there is now a question about whether it can be a viable city in the future.”
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How might the Kharkiv operation affect morale?
Against a backdrop of growing pessimism that Ukraine can win the war, it isn’t hard to see why a major defeat in a region synonymous with Kyiv’s most remarkable victory would have an especially bad effect on the morale of troops and the wider population.
“It’s not that Ukrainians want to give up,” Luke said. “They know they can’t give up. But this would certainly be another blow, and add to a sense that things are unravelling.”
At the same time, he added, “the closer you get to the frontline, the more morale seems to be OK. Yes, they’re tired, and yes, they want the war to end – but they’ve become pretty good at killing Russians. The problem is that Russia is using its size and depth to grind out victories village by village, town by shattered town. And Ukraine, for all of its valour, can stop them a bit – but it can’t stop them everywhere.”
The US approval of a $61bn aid package three weeks ago has provided a vital fillip – and US secretary of state Anthony Blinken arrived in Kyiv today to underscore that the support is being brought in as quickly as possible. “The Ukrainians do feel that with this and further assistance, they can hold the line,” Luke said.
But it will be some time until the hardware paid for by the US will be operational, he added. “Not much has arrived so far in significant quantities. In the east last week the mortars, the artillery, the F16 jets were not there. And the Russians know they have a window of two or three months to try to take as much territory as they can.”
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Can Ukraine hold the Russians off?
Russia’s progress in Kharkiv so far – overrunning a so-called “grey zone” of limited strategic value because of its unfavourable terrain – does not amount to victory. “What they’ve done is take the low-hanging fruit,” Luke said. “Now they are using the classic encirclement tactics that are taught in Russian military school – advancing around targets like Vovchansk to cut them off, and then swallow them up.”
The fall of Vovchansk looks “pretty certain”, he added. “The advantage they have is that Russia is just next door, with aviation, artillery and the strategic resource of the city of Belgorod.” He also noted that because of a US aversion to letting its equipment be used to attack targets within Russia, “they’ve been able to amass troops and equipment right next to the border without being hit by weapons like Himars rockets” – satellite-guided US systems that have been highly effective in the past.
If Russia does succeed in Kharkiv, Vladimir Putin will still be an impossibly long way from his prewar ambition of replacing the Ukrainian government and subjugating the country. “There is no path to clearcut victory,” Luke said. “The problem is that the Russian alternative to not taking control of the country is destroying everything it can.”
What else we’ve been reading
ITV have launched a new reality gameshow and … wait, where are you going?! It’s got four stars in the Guardian! Apparently, The Fortune Hotel is a “fiendishly addictive” Traitors imitation with hints of The White Lotus, and Stephen Mangan as pot-stirrer-in-chief. Hannah J Davies, deputy editor, newsletters
One of my favourite genres of culture story is that of the madly ambitious auteur going much too far in pursuit of greatness, so Steve Rose’s feature about Megalopolis – Francis Ford Coppola’s forthcoming sci-fi epic (above) that he’s been working on for 40 years, through 300 rewrites, and sold his winery to finance – is absolutely my cup of tea. “Batshit crazy,” one early viewer says. Cannot wait. Archie
The latest in a series on unforgettable pets is a giant stick insect – an unassuming creature overshadowed by the vast menagerie that ruled Gwilym Mumford’s childhood home, but who made an impact nonetheless. Hannah
Every year, Guardian photographer Sarah Lee gets incredible behind-the-scenes access at the TV Baftas and produces an intimate portfolio of black-and-white images. My favourite this time around is either Timothy Spall clutching his award, or Danny Dyer pointing at the lens in a very Danny Dyer way. Archie
Guardian US continues its series on weddings with this piece about a bride who took “something new” pretty seriously, and asked her favourite brands for freebies – and they said yes! As they say: you don’t ask, you don’t get. Hannah
Sport
Premier League | A late double from Jhon Durán saved Aston Villa after Liverpool had taken a two-goal lead. Durán’s goals salvaged a 3-3 draw and brought Villa a point closer to fourth place and a berth in next season’s Champions League.
Olympics | Great Britain has never won an Olympic medal in the 40-year history of artistic swimming, previously known as synchronised swimming: Kate Shortman and Izzy Thorpe (above, swimming with turtles at the London Aquarium) are hoping to change that. After podium performances in two recent events, they tell Shaun Ingle: “Because it’s so glamorous and we put on costumes it’s a distraction from how hard it is …And, just to say, the smile is fake.”
Boxing | Tyson Fury’s father, John, was left with blood pouring down his forehead as the buildup to the undisputed world heavyweight clash with Oleksandr Usyk got off to an explosive start in Riyadh. The rival camps had to be separated by security. John Fury was left with a cut from an apparent head-butt.
The front pages
“Labour report calls for rent caps to tackle growing housing crisis” is the top story in the Guardian print edition this morning. “British nature in crisis – and every party failing to save wildlife” says the i, while the Metro has “King: I lost my sense of taste” under the banner “Chipper Charles gives cancer update”. The lead in the Financial Times is “Anglo rebuffs sweetened £34bn bid by BHP as ‘significantly’ undervalued”.
“Ozempic slashes heart attack and stroke risk” – that’s the Daily Mail, while the Times reports “Weight loss jab reduces heart attacks by a fifth”. The Daily Express is all for this news: “Game-changing ‘new statin’ cuts weight AND saves lives”. The Daily Telegraph has “China fury at arrest of ‘UK spies’”. “Find your own way to Wembley” – the Daily Mirror says Manchester United won’t treat players’ wives and girlfriends to trips to the FA Cup grand final any more.
Today in Focus
The growing tensions over immigration in Ireland
Rory Carroll, the Guardian’s Ireland correspondent, looks at what is fuelling anti-immigrant anger in the Republic of Ireland
Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings
The Upside
A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad
To kick off a new Guardian series profiling the everyday people finding creative solutions to the climate crisis, Sonya Singh speaks with Jannine Mancilla and Nicole Macias, two Mexican Americans whose radical clothing swaps across California have reduced waste, raised hundreds in charity donations and done some good for the planet in the process.
“We typically get up to 100-plus folks that visit us and, on average, about 50 of those people donate clothes to swap,” says Macias. “We’ve estimated that each of those people donates about 6 to 10lb of clothes, so we receive up to 500lb of clothes per event.
The ultimate goal? Open an events space for workshops on things like mending and fabric dyeing. “There’s no money involved. There’s no exchange. It’s community at its core, just giving back.”
Sign up here for a weekly roundup of The Upside, sent to you every Sunday
Bored at work?
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