Ukrainian soldier admits some of the marines trying to defend a key river against Russian attack 'can't even swim'
- A Ukrainian soldier told the BBC about problems they were facing on a key part of the frontline.
- The soldier said Ukrainian forces were being reinforced by inexperienced conscripts.
A Ukrainian soldier told the BBC that soldiers sent to help defend recent Ukrainian advances on the Dnipro river were so inexperienced they couldn't even swim.
The soldier, whom the BBC did not name, provided a vivid account of the obstacles facing Ukrainian forces in defending their foothold on the Russian-occupied east bank of the Dnipro in south Ukraine.
The advance has been hailed as a triumph by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and came after weeks of stalemate in fighting between Russian and Ukrainian forces near Kherson.
But the soldier said Ukrainian forces were experiencing serious shortages in equipment and reinforcements as they defended their positions, which were under relentless Russian attack.
"Several brigades were supposed to be posted here, not individual companies — we just don't have enough men," said the soldier.
In a recent essay for The Economist, Valery Zaluzhny, Ukraine's supreme military commander, admitted troop shortages were hampering Ukraine's campaign against Russia.