Fighting Rages in Eastern Ukraine Over Critical Supply Routes
Russian troops mounted a fierce assault on Ukrainian forces
on Saturday in an effort to dislodge them from critical positions in eastern
Ukraine, with Moscow seeking to protect vital supply routes and both armies
jockeying for position in anticipation of new offensive campaigns.
Russia has been trying for months to break through
well-fortified Ukrainian defensive positions across the Luhansk and Donetsk
regions, throwing wave after wave of soldiers into the fight and suffering
heavy casualties but making few territorial gains.
Those efforts have taken on greater urgency as Western and
Ukrainian officials warn that Moscow plans to launch a large-scale assault
aimed at regaining the upper hand, nearly a year after Russia invaded Ukraine.
Military experts and Western officials say they also believe that Ukraine will
try to mount an offensive of its own to drive Russia out of occupied areas in
the east.
“It is no secret that they are preparing for a new wave by
Feb. 24,” Oleksiy Danilov, the head of the Ukrainian National Security and
Defense Council, told Radio Liberty on Friday, referring to Russian forces and
what will be the first anniversary of their full-scale invasion. Moscow’s
immediate goal, he said, is to capture the entire Donetsk and Luhansk regions
and then “to completely go beyond the borders of the regions.”
President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia this month abruptly
replaced the top commander of Russia’s war effort with Gen. Valery V.
Gerasimov, who American officials believe secured the top job by vowing to go
on the attack, with an initial goal of gaining ground quickly in the east.
The epicenter of the fighting in eastern Ukraine since the
summer has mainly been around the city of Bakhmut, which has taken on a
symbolic significance that military analysts say outweighs its strategic
importance.
But in recent days Russian forces have stepped up their
assaults on the town of Vuhledar, just over 90 miles south of Bakhmut. It sits
at the intersection of the eastern front in the Donetsk region and the southern
front in the Zaporizhzhia region, a location that makes it well positioned for
resupplying Russian forces moving between the two fronts.
Military analysts say that Ukrainian forces have been using
their positions in and around Vuhledar to launch attacks on the region’s main
railway hub in the occupied town of Volnovakha, less than 10 miles away,
threatening Russia’s resupply efforts. Trains are essential for moving heavy
equipment and large troop formations across the battlefield, so the more
Ukrainian forces can cut off the lines running from Russia to southern Ukraine,
the more they can isolate Russia’s forces in the region.
In that light, pushing the Ukrainians back from Vuhledar
would help Russia secure the train lines. It “guarantees Russia a stable supply
of the southern part of the occupied territories,” according to an analysis
issued on Saturday by the Conflict Intelligence Team, an independent group that
analyzes open-source intelligence.
Denis Pushilin, the Moscow-appointed leader of the Donetsk
region, said that an eventual capture of Vuhledar by Russian forces “solves
many problems,” and predicted that the town “may become a new, very important
success for us,” according to Russian news reports on Friday.
Ukrainian officials have rejected recent reports from
Kremlin proxy officials and Russian military bloggers of advances in the area.
Col. Sergei Cherevaty, the spokesman for Ukraine’s eastern military command,
reported fierce fighting around Vuhledar but said on Saturday that Ukrainian
forces had thwarted the Russian attacks.
Neither the Russian nor the Ukrainian claims could be
independently verified. Britain’s Defense Intelligence Agency said on Friday
that Russian military sources were probably “deliberately spreading
misinformation in an effort to imply that the Russian operation is sustaining
momentum.”
In his overnight address to the nation on Friday, President
Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine called the intensity of the fighting around
Bakhmut and Vuhledar “extremely acute” and destructive.
“The occupiers are not
just storming our positions — they are deliberately and methodically destroying
these towns and villages around them,” he said.
The intense fighting has led to numerous casualties on both
sides as the Ukrainian and Russian militaries pound away at one another with
artillery and missiles. At a military hospital near Bakhmut on Saturday, there
were at least eight bodies of Ukrainian soldiers in the morgue, and the sound
of incoming and outgoing artillery shells was incessant.
On Saturday evening, Russia’s Defense Ministry claimed that
Ukrainian forces had used an American-made multiple rocket launcher known as
HIMARS to strike a hospital in the Russian-controlled Ukrainian region of
Luhansk, killing at least 14 people.
But Ukrainian officials said the building, located near the
town of Novoaidar, was actually a division headquarters of the Russian
military. The building was equipped with an antenna and special communications
equipment, which is not typically found at a hospital, said a senior Ukrainian official,
who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss military operations.
The official said the Ukrainian forces spent several days
trying to determine whether the building was in fact a headquarters and whether
they would be in violation of international law in case of an attack. The
decision to fire was made only after precise confirmation, including photos and
videos of the communications equipment installed there, the official said.
The devastating toll on civilians from those attacks was
evident on Saturday morning in the village of Kostyantynivka, roughly 15 miles
southwest of Bakhmut, where a Russian missile strike killed three people and
wounded 14 others.
In the courtyard of a residential neighborhood, the body of
a man lay sprawled on the ground amid wreckage and debris. His mother knelt
over him, sobbing and stroking his side. Another corpse was covered by a sheet,
splayed out near a wheelbarrow that the man had likely been pushing at the
moment of impact.
A woman, smoking on a balcony above the courtyard, cried and
shouted out to no one in particular: “I hate you all.”