The Daily - Inside Ukraine’s Invasion of Russia
Episode Date: August 21, 2024Warning: this episode contains descriptions of war.When Ukrainian troops crossed over into Russia two weeks ago, it appeared at first to be a largely symbolic gesture. But in the time since, it has em...erged as a potentially pivotal moment in the war.Andrew Kramer, the Kyiv bureau chief for The Times, explains what’s behind the audacious Ukrainian operation, and Anton Troianovski, the Moscow bureau chief, explains how Russia’s response could reshape the conflict.Guest: Andrew E. Kramer, the Kyiv bureau chief for The New York Times.Anton Troianovski, the Moscow bureau chief for The New York Times.Background reading: Planned in secrecy, the incursion was a bold move to upend the war’s dynamics and put Moscow on the defensive — a gambit that could also leave Ukraine exposed.President Volodymyr Zelensky wants to hold Russian territory as leverage in future talks. In Moscow, many doubt the strategy.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
Transcript
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My name is Andrew Kramer. I'm a reporter for the New York Times. I'm standing on the highway
where Ukrainian troops are moving tanks and armored vehicles into Russia. Every few minutes
we have tanks, trucks with soldiers rumbling past and in the direction of Russia.
From the New York Times, I'm Michael Bobarro.
This is The Daily.
Ukraine sliced through the border area,
pushed through minefields and thinly manned defenses,
and has been pressing deeper into Russia.
When Ukraine's military crossed over into Russia
two weeks ago, it appeared at first
to be a largely symbolic gesture.
But in the time since, it's emerged as a defining moment in the two-year-old war.
This is the first major military incursion into Russia since World War II. Today, Andrew Kramer on what's behind
the audacious Ukrainian operation,
and Anton Troinovsky on how Russia's response
could reshape the conflict.
It's Wednesday, August 21st.
It's Wednesday, August 21st.
Andrew, I wonder if you can take us back to the moment when you discovered that this pretty unimaginable thing had occurred. Ukrainian troops entering Russian territory and turning the basic equation of this war upside down.
What the entire operation was shrouded in secrecy.
So the first reports were actually from Russian social media posts and everything was a little bit vague.
We were seeing reports of fighting along the border, but nothing indicating the scale of what was to come.
The secret was very well guarded.
but nothing indicating the scale of what was to come. The secret was very well guarded.
It wasn't clear until the second day
that this was more than a border skirmish,
that this was a full Ukrainian military invasion of Russia
and that Ukraine had taken control of a rural area
in the southwestern part of Russia.
So what do you do there in Kiev,
where I imagine you're absorbing this information,
once you realize that such
a major turning point in this conflict has just begun to unfold.
Well, we decided to head out to the border region in northeastern Ukraine and have a
look at how this appeared on the ground. And this required a little bit of logistics. We
used an armored car that the bureau has.
I don't think I knew that we had an armored car that the Bureau has and I don't think I knew that we had an army car
We do and initially we were watching and talking to soldiers and officers about this incursion
And then also creeping forward toward the border to get a firsthand look
And we drove you know over a very high plane where the road passes into Russia
And it's a very rural area of corn fields and country roads.
And then ahead of us was the border,
completely unguarded, seemingly deserted,
at least from a distance.
So this was a remarkable moment.
As somebody who covered Russia,
the idea of the Russian border being open
and deserted by the Russian military was really remarkable.
And once you get inside, what are you seeing?
We got out of the car and looked around and saw really a tableau of destruction.
This was a Russian administrative building, maybe three stories tall at one point before
it was bombarded.
Now sheet metal was just flapping in the wind.
All the windows were blown out.
And we looked around and there were craters in the ground
from artillery and debris.
Shells from a firefight were tinkling underfoot
when we walked and there were customs forms
and other administrative documents blowing on the ground.
And a little bit farther on,
there was a sign over the road that said Russia.
It was a very eerie scene and what we were looking at was the detritus of a lost battle
to defend the Russian border.
So we walked around this site and we noticed some Ukrainian soldiers who were wearing surgical masks, and it became clear
that what we were seeing was a grim task by these soldiers of clearing the bodies of dead
Russians from this building that had been destroyed in the initial attack on the Russian
border.
We watched them load bodies and zip them into body bags.
And this was really, you know, a grim scene of just what a difficult fight and losing
fight this had been for Russian border guards at this site.
This section of the border had likely been chosen in part because it was guarded by Russian
conscript soldiers.
And these are very green, inexperienced soldiers who've been drafted after high school.
And in almost all cases that we know of, they retreated, abandoned their positions, or they
surrendered.
There were small arms, cartridges, and there were sandbags in this location, firing positions.
But there was no indication that they were expecting an army to come across the border at them.
So after about 40 minutes, we decided it was time to go and got back in our armored car and drove back into Ukraine,
back into the relative safety of the cities far from the front line. Once you return to Ukraine, Andrew, what do you end up learning about
the scope of this operation? Clearly you had just witnessed one place where
Ukrainian troops had crossed the border and clearly done a significant amount of
damage to the Russian administrative border crossing, but how much territory
was involved in this and how many Russian troops were killed or taken?
The ultimate scale of the invasion was significant.
By some estimates, about 10,000 Ukrainian soldiers were involved.
This one border post was not the only target.
They crossed in multiple locations and once they had breached the border, quickly fanned
out on the highways and captured towns and villages.
Ultimately, by now occupying about 400 square miles
of Russian territory, around 120,000 Russian civilians
were displaced.
More thousands, although we don't know the precise number,
are now under Ukrainian occupation.
And the fighting has continued,
moving both deeper into Russia and
also spreading out along the border to widen this area that's under Ukrainian control.
What you're describing in no way feels like a gesture or something that's meant to be
fleeting but clearly something longer term, this invasion of Russia.
Do you have the sense, Andrew, that this kind of operation at
this scale was allowed under the terms of the West's military aid to Ukraine? We've talked a lot about
this on the show with you, with our colleagues who cover Russia, that it's been understood that
Ukraine could not really use Western military equipment as it has done here clearly to go after
Russia itself with very few exceptions. Well the fact is Zelensky has said he
didn't tell the US in advance of this operation. He didn't ask permission. The
Biden administration's policy is to avoid escalation. Russia is a nuclear armed
country and to allow American missiles, American weapons
to be used inside of Russia was a significant step. But once Ukraine launched this operation,
this ground invasion of Russia, we heard from the Germans, we heard from the Americans that
this was in fact in their assessment within the bounds of using Western weaponry to defend
Ukraine. There had been an exception that weapons could be used in the border region
for defensive purposes and this was interpreted in that light.
Soterios Johnson Interesting. Well, with that in mind, what do we know about Ukraine's objective
here, its goals for undertaking such a risky invasion of Russia.
The Ukrainian government didn't initially articulate any goals, but it's clear there
were several layers to this. One was strategic and military. The Ukrainians wanted to strike
where Russia was weakest and force Russia to divert its troops and its weapons from inside Ukraine
to defending its own territory inside Russia.
It was a strategy of taking the war to Russia and in this way relieving pressure on their
own soldiers who are fighting desperately in Eastern Ukraine to hold territory.
So basically to strengthen Ukraine's own hand on the main battlefield, which is Russian
occupied Ukraine.
That's right.
What else? You said this is multi motivational. Well there seemed to be
another larger geopolitical goal and this was a goal to hasten the end of the
war. There was a sense that if they were to strike inside of Russia, if they were
to capture territory, this would provide leverage in possible peace talks. Right
because for the first time Ukraine has something that Russia wants, not the other
way around.
Exactly.
And there was also an idea that this could have an effect on public opinion in Russia,
that by showing Russians what it's like to be occupied, what it's like to be attacked,
Putin could no longer present to his society the operation in Ukraine
as something distant and something that would continue even as they live their ordinary
lives.
Right.
We know that Ukraine has pursued that approach before bringing the pain of this conflict
to Russia through sporadic drone attacks on Russian communities, even in Moscow, but this seems by far the most ambitious and
successful version of that tactic, a whole other order of magnitude.
Exactly.
Ukrainians I talked to said that maybe this is what would be needed to end the war, to
show Russians what the war was like inside of Ukraine.
I spoke with one woman who said that only when the Russians hear what it's like to hear a child crying in a bomb shelter would they want an end to the war.
So this was the Ukrainian sentiment.
This was a bold military move that would help them in their war.
But it's an open question whether this will bring Russia to the bargaining table or just
more pain to Ukraine in a Russian retaliation. After the break, Anton Tronofsky brings us the Russian side of the story.
We'll be right back.
Anton, you cover Russia for the Times and you have been tracking the Kremlin's response to this large-scale invasion by Ukraine.
So how has Russia reacted to this, especially once the dust settled and this sneak attack was more or
less over.
Well, let's start with the military response.
There it was clear that Russia was completely unprepared for this.
Ukraine was able to march miles deep into the country facing minimal resistance and
was able to take, it appears, hundreds of Russian soldiers prisoner.
In the two weeks since, Russia has been able to dispatch forces there, but Russia is not
mustering the forces necessary or maybe able or willing to use the firepower necessary
to end this quickly.
And in the meantime, Ukraine is obviously getting the opportunity to dig
in and this is increasingly looking like a longer term occupation of Russian territory
by Ukraine.
Wow. So this is not the kind of massive military response that you would expect pretty much
from any country being invaded, let alone a country as obsessed with those borders as Russia is.
Yeah, it's pretty stunning how two weeks in, Ukraine controlling Russian territory has
already become routine.
How does the Russian government explain that reality to the people of Russia, that they
are for now letting Ukraine occupy all this Russian territory.
Well, they're not really trying to explain it, but that does sort of bring us to the
kind of political media PR aspect of the Russian response, which has been really to treat this
as a natural disaster more than as part of this war.
So can you explain that? How are they
treating it like a natural disaster? If you turned on the Russian TV news in the
days after the invasion started two weeks ago, you were seeing pictures of
pallets of water being delivered to displaced people. You were seeing footage
of candlelight vigils around the country and people saying
things like, Kursk, we are with you.
But it was not cast as part of or let alone a consequence of Putin's invasion of Ukraine
that started in February 2022.
So I think the choice has been made so far to just play this down.
You know, they're calling it the situation in the Kursk region on Russian TV.
So the strategy is kind of self denial.
If Russia doesn't treat this like an invasion, it's not an invasion.
A little bit reminds us of what Putin has said about invading Ukraine.
Yeah, special operation, not a full-scale invasion of a neighboring country.
Yeah.
And remember, Putin is the president of an autocracy in which there is basically no free
media at this point.
So he does have the luxury to take this kind of tack and does not have to think very much
about short-term public pressure on his actions.
But while Putin hasn't responded forcefully yet, it doesn't mean he isn't planning something
or it doesn't mean he won't still respond.
Think back to last summer when the pre-Goshen mutiny march on Moscow happened in June and
two months later, pre-Gosian's plane fell
out of the sky in what we believe was a Kremlin assassination.
So there could still be a response that comes later, but his non-response or slow response
so far does remind us of how Putin has in many ways been cautious throughout the last
two and a half years to not have
this become a wider war.
Understood.
Given Russia's response so far and understanding that that response may be delayed, how should
we think about whether Ukraine is actually achieving its goals for this invasion?
Diverting Russian troops from Ukraine, who in theory would rush back to protect Russia's borders, drawing
Russia into peace talks with Ukraine, and finally bringing the pain of this war as deeply
as possible into Russia itself.
So the jury's still out on the attempt to draw Russian troops out of eastern Ukraine
and over to Kursk.
That does not seem to have worked so far.
We have reports of some Russian troops leaving, but not really that many.
And we are seeing that Russia is still pushing ahead in the Donbas region in Eastern Ukraine.
The fight there for the Ukrainians is really tough right now.
We're not seeing the Russian pressure let up in eastern Ukraine and on the contrary we're actually seeing them
taking more of Ukraine. That seems very important because the entire assumption
of this invasion would seem to be that Putin's response would have to be to
protect Russian territory. So far that doesn't seem to be his overall
imperative and now you're suggesting that instead he's using it as a chance to push further and further
into Ukraine.
That would seem like a Ukrainian miscalculation.
Right.
So we don't know what's going to happen going forward.
But for now, that part of the calculation seems to not have come through.
But then there's other aspects here.
So on pressuring Russia to go into bona fide peace talks with Ukraine, where Russia would
be ready to move back from its maximalist aims, there we still have to see.
I mean, for the first time, Ukraine is holding Russian territory.
And for the first time, you can now imagine a deal in which Ukraine pulls back troops in exchange from
Russia pulling back troops.
Right?
So, Ukraine absolutely has a new kind of leverage here.
The problem is that Putin is not someone who likes the optics of folding under pressure.
But there is one test case that we're watching closely.
Our colleagues at the Washington Post have done some good reporting on this and that
is negotiations around both sides committing to not striking each other's energy infrastructure.
There was supposed to be a round of talks about this potential deal this month after the Kursk
incursion, Russian officials have said,
we don't see a point in negotiating
with Ukraine for now.
So they're not ruling it out entirely,
but they're saying, for now, we won't talk.
So if this invasion was supposed to represent a potential major
breakthrough in the peace talks with Russia,
based on the evidence so far, that is not happening.
But what about that third prong of Ukraine strategy, inflicting pain on the Russian people
in their own country?
That seems self-evidently to have already happened.
Yes, this is really a humiliation for Putin.
That's clear.
We are seeing yet again that Russia's vaunted security apparatus has failed in its basic
task of maintaining security inside Russia's borders.
But at the same time, you have to remember that Ukraine occupies a few hundred square
miles of territory right now.
That's a very, very small sliver of the Kursk region and obviously microscopic if you think
about the six plus million square miles that Russia occupies on the globe. So Russians
have become more worried, have become more anxious, but it's not a drastic, dramatic shift.
Well, Anton, that makes me wonder if there's a universe where Ukraine
pushes day after day, bridge after bridge, mile after mile,
and starts to take so much Russian territory
that this message gets delivered to all of the people of Russia very, very
loudly and in a way that becomes pretty hard to ignore.
I mean, so one problem here is that there's another potential response you could see from
a public in this kind of situation, which is the rally around the flag effect, right?
That as Ukraine pushes forward, more and more Russians might actually become further energized
to support Putin's war.
We haven't seen a ton of that yet, but that's certainly one other thing to watch.
And the other question mark is, at what point do Ukraine's Western allies step in here and
try to get the Ukrainians to stop or pull back because they are worried about escalation
risk?
I think that that concern still clearly does exist in Western capitals.
The Biden administration obviously so far still hasn't allowed Ukraine to use long-range
missiles to strike Russian territory beyond the immediate
border areas.
So we'll have to see about that.
But certainly you now hear President Zelensky saying that Putin's lack of response over
the last two weeks shows that in Zelensky's words, this whole idea of Russia having red
lines that can't be crossed is naive. So it feels like at the moment, two weeks into this invasion, there are two, let's call them fictions,
for lack of a better word, guiding how everyone is seeing and responding to this military action by Ukraine.
The first is that Putin's acting as if this invasion never really happened at all and
how long can he really keep that up? And for Ukraine the alleged fiction here is
that there really is a red line that they can't cross in bringing this war
back to Russia and the Russian people without triggering a wider conflict. So
far Ukraine seems to be saying
that that red line doesn't exist and we just proved it.
So how should we think about those two fictions together?
Well, for one thing, they show how unpredictable
this war is, just like who could have thought
that we would be sitting here in August 2024
talking about a Ukrainian invasion onto Russian territory and talking about
Putin doesn't seem to be all that concerned about it.
So you're seeing this competition between these two big, almost guiding principles for these
two men fighting this war.
Putin's constant signaling that he's ready to bear more costs to get what he wants.
And Zelensky's showing us that he's willing to take risks and do the unexpected and take the fight to Russia and test what some thought
would be Russia's red line.
And that just reminds us of how intractable this war is, how two and a half years in,
people still don't understand how it ends or when it ends. Perhaps the invasion brings us closer to that,
or perhaps it extends it even more.
Well, Anton, thank you very much.
Thank you, Michael.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
The Times reports that President Biden has approved a highly classified plan to, for the first time, reorient America's strategy for deterring nuclear weapons
to focus on China.
The plan is an acknowledgement of China's rapid expansion
of its nuclear arsenal, which will rival that
of the United States and Russia over the next decade.
And. over the next decade. And... Yeah!
Ladies and gentlemen,
we are here tonight to officially nominate
Kamala Harris for president in...
5 July, another round of shots!
D.H.C. turn out for what?
On the second night of the Democratic National Convention, Vice President Kamala Harris was
formally nominated by her party's delegates during a jubilant roll call featuring the
rapper Lil Jon.
A few hours later.
Something wonderfully magical is in the air, isn't it?
Yeah.
You know, we're feeling it here in this arena, but it's spreading all across this country.
We love a familiar feeling that's been buried too deep for far too long.
You know what I'm talking about. It's the contagious power of hope.
Former first lady Michelle Obama and former president Barack Obama
forcefully endorsed Harris in back-to-back speeches.
America's ready for a better story.
We are ready for a president, Kamala Harris.
If you want more news, and I suspect you do,
check out our other daily news show.
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Today's episode was produced by Nina Feldman, Luke Vanderplug, and Muge Zadie. It was edited
by M.J. Davis-Lynn, contains original music by Rowy Nymisto and Dan Powell,
and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Lansfork of Wonderly.
That's it for the Daily. I'm Michael Boborio.
See you tomorrow.