The Fiji Times

Battle for Soledar

Russia’s military says it has captured the Ukrainian salt-mine town

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RUSSIA’S military says it has captured the Ukrainian saltmine town of Soledar after a long battle, calling it an “important” step for its offensive.

The victory would allow Russian troops to push on to the nearby city of Bakhmut, and cut off the Ukrainian forces there, a spokesman said.

This was a very confident and ambitious statement from Moscow.

But Ukrainian officials said the fight for Soledar was still going on and accused Russia of “informatio­n noise”.

The battle for Soledar has been one of the bloodiest of the war.

The town is relatively small, with a pre-war population of just 10,000, and its strategic significan­ce is debatable. But if it is confirmed that Russian forces have seized control of it, then there will likely be a big sigh of relief in the Kremlin.

Divisions have emerged between regular Russian forces and the notorious Russian Wagner paramilita­ry group throughout the battle, with a jealous turfwar developing over who should take credit for the advance.

Barely any walls in Soledar remain standing, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said this week. Describing almost apocalypti­c scenes, he spoke of the nearby terrain as scarred by missile strikes and littered with Russian corpses.

His chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, compared the fight for

Soledar and Bakhmut with one of the bitterest battles of WWI, at Verdun.

Regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said on Thursday that 559 civilians including 15 children remained in Soledar and could not be moved out.

The town’s significan­ce for the Russian military is disputed by military analysts because of its relatively small size. The US-based think tank Institute for the Study of War said while it was likely that Russian forces had captured Soledar, it did not believe they would then be able to go on to encircle Bakhmut.

Neverthele­ss, if it becomes clear that Russia has taken it, then that will be seen in Moscow as progress - even a victory.

That is exactly what President Vladimir Putin needs as Russia has failed to capture a single town in Ukraine since July 2022. Since then, Moscow’s forces have suffered a whole series of embarrassi­ng defeats.

RNZ

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