
Russia claimed on March 6 that its forces had seized the village of Basivka in Sumy Oblast, however Ukraine's State Border Guard Service denied the report, describing it as a part of a "disinformation marketing campaign."
The Russian Protection Ministry stated models from its "Sever" (North) navy grouping captured the settlement, positioned roughly 29 kilometers northeast of Sumy metropolis and close to the Russian border.
Russia's state-run information company TASS reported the seizure might disrupt provide strains to Ukrainian forces nonetheless working in Russia's Kursk Oblast.
Ukrainian officers rejected the declare. "Russia continues its disinformation marketing campaign relating to the seizure of settlements in Sumy Oblast or the breakthrough of the border," border guard spokesperson Andrii Demchenko informed Ukrainian Pravda.
Demchenko confirmed ongoing Russian makes an attempt to ship small assault teams throughout the border within the Novenke-Basivka path, however stated these teams are being "destroyed to the utmost extent potential" by Ukraine's Protection Forces.
Basivka stays marked as a "grey zone" on the DeepState monitoring map, indicating contested or unclear management.

President Volodymyr Zelensky warned in a March 26 interview with Le Figaro that Russia is making ready a brand new offensive in Sumy and Kharkiv oblasts this spring. Each border areas have been vital to Ukraine's protection since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in 2022.
Whereas Russian advances have largely stalled in Donetsk Oblast, notably round Pokrovsk, Ukraine has misplaced floor in Russia's Kursk Oblast.
In accordance with DeepState, Ukraine's managed space shrank from 407 sq. kilometers in early March to simply 70 sq. kilometers by month's finish.
Ukraine initially seized 1,300 sq. kilometers earlier than Russian forces — bolstered by North Korean models — launched a counteroffensive.


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