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Zelenskyy warns Russia is 'planning something' in south while upping aggression in northern Ukraine

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warned that Russia is 'planning something' in the south as Russian forces up their aggression in the north.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warned during an overnight address that Russia is "planning something" in Ukraine’s southern regions as Russian forces bolster their aggression in the north. 

Despite significant advances Ukrainian forces made in completely repelling Russian troops from the northern Kharkiv region and pushing Russian forces east across the Dnieper River in the southern Kherson region, Zelenskyy looked to sound the alarm in his overnight address Tuesday.

"The situation at the front is difficult," he warned. "Despite extremely big Russian losses, the occupiers are still trying to advance in the Donetsk region, gain a foothold in the Luhansk region, move in the Kharkiv region, they are planning something in the south."

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Intense fighting in the Donbas – which includes parts of Luhansk and Dontesk regions – has raged for months. Fighting has intensified in the two regions since Ukraine pushed the front lines further east in September. 

Fox News could not independently verify Zelenskyy’s suggestion that Russian forces are once again looking to advance in Kharkiv, though the northern region has once again seen an increase in shelling according to local reports this week.

Defense officials have repeatedly pointed to Russia’s inability to advance its ground forces in Ukraine following Kyiv’s recent military gains.

Russia has instead rapidly increased its bombing campaign across Ukraine and has turned to international allies like Iran to assist it as its resources begin to wane. 

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The British defense ministry on Saturday assessed that Russian forces were using unarmed cruise missiles to continue to hit Ukrainian targets. 

The ministry said open source imagery showed that Russian troops were relying on the destruction caused from the blast rather than the larger impact that a warhead would create to continue their bombardment on civilian targets. 

"Whatever Russia's intent, this improvisation highlights the level of depletion in Russia's stock of long range missiles", the ministry said.

When asked about this assessment Tuesday, a senior defense official told reporters that "it's certainly something that they're trying to do to mitigate the effects of the air defense systems that the Ukrainians are employing."

"We are watching Russia continue to double down on its strategy to try to inflict pain on the Ukrainian people to try to break their will," the official said. "We do not believe that they will succeed, but they continue to draw on what stocks they have."

Ukrainian defense officials assess that nearly 89,000 Russian soldiers have been killed in Ukraine over the last nine months and Zelenskyy said Tuesday that Kyiv believes 100,000 Russian soldiers will have died by the year's end.

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