Second time unlucky
Why experts consider a new large-scale offensive on Kharkiv impossible

Reports of an upcoming major Russian offensive on Ukraine’s second city Kharkiv fail to take into account how capable of launching a large-scale assault Russia may be in the foreseeable future.
Ukrainian military expert Roman Svitan also dismissed the reports of a Kharkiv offensive as “speculative”, suggesting it was a deliberate hoax spread by Russia to put psychological pressure on Kharkiv’s population and on Ukrainians in general.
Svitan noted that it made “zero sense” to discuss the capture of big cities by Russia at this stage of the war, adding that in launching any kind of offensive on Kharkiv, Russia risked “biting off more than it can chew”.
“When there’s a city in the way, the Russian army simply perceives it as more difficult terrain for an offensive,” Kirill Mikhailov said. “This tactic inevitably leads to war crimes.”
“Encircling Kharkiv looks like an overly ambitious strategic goal,” Sharp noted.
“Such a serious breakthrough of AFU defences is only possible if Ukraine stops receiving allied aid altogether and runs out of ammunition,” Mikhailov explained.

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