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Russian troops fight to encircle ukraine’s last eastern stronghold

- BY FRANCESCA EBEL & YURAS KARMANAU Karmanau reported from Lviv, Ukraine. Frank Griffiths and Sylvia Hui in London, Maria Grazia Murru in Kyiv, Samuel Petrequin in Brussels and Nomaan Merchant in Washington contribute­d.

KREMENCHUK, Ukraine—russian forces battled Wednesday to surround the Ukrainian military’s last stronghold in a long-contested eastern province, as shock reverberat­ed from a Russian airstrike on a shopping mall that killed at least 18 in the center of the country two days earlier.

Moscow’s battle to wrest the entire

Donbas region from Ukraine saw Russian forces pushing toward two villages south of Lysychansk while Ukrainian troops fought to prevent their encircleme­nt.

Britain’s defense ministry said Russian forces were making “incrementa­l advances” in their offensive to capture Lysychansk, the last city in the Luhansk province under Ukrainian control following the retreat of Ukraine’s forces from the neighborin­g city of Sievierodo­netsk.

Russian troops and their separatist allies control 95 percent of Luhansk and about half of Donetsk, the two provinces that make up the mostly Russian-speaking Donbas.

The latest assessment by the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, said the Ukrainians were likely in a fighting withdrawal to seek more defensible positions while draining the Russian forces of manpower and resources.

Avril Haines, the US director of national intelligen­ce, said Russia “may think time is on its side” due to the escalating costs borne by the West and fatigue as the war grows longer. The most likely scenario predicted by American intelligen­ce, Haines said, is a “grinding struggle” in which Russia consolidat­es its hold over southern Ukraine by the fall.

The US correctly predicted Russia would invade Ukraine in February, but was wrong in assessing that it would quickly seize Kyiv. Speaking at an event in Washington on Wednesday, Haines said Russian President Vladimir Putin “has effectivel­y the same political goals that he had previously, which is to say that he wants to take most of Ukraine” and push it away from Nato.

“We perceive a disconnect between Putin’s near-term military objectives in this area and his military’s capacity, a kind of mismatch between his ambitions and what the military is able to accomplish,” Haines said.

Putin also said his goals in Ukraine have not changed since the start of the war. He said they were “the liberation of the Donbas, the protection of these people and the creation of conditions that would guarantee the security of Russia itself.” He made no mention of his original stated goals to “demilitari­ze” and “de-nazify” Ukraine.

He denied Russia adjusted its strategy after failing to take Kyiv. “As you can see, the troops are moving and reaching the marks that were set for them for a certain stage of this combat work. Everything is going according to plan,” Putin said at a news conference in Turkmenist­an.

Meanwhile, crews continued to search through the rubble of the shopping mall in Kremenchuk where Ukrainian authoritie­s say 20 people remain missing.

Ukrainian State Emergency Services press officer Svitlana Rybalko told The Associated Press that along with the 18 people killed, investigat­ors found fragments of eight more bodies. It was not immediatel­y clear whether that meant there were more victims. A number of survivors suffered severed limbs.

“The police cannot say for sure how many [victims] there are. So we are finding not the bodies but the fragments of bodies,” Rybalko said. “Now we are clearing at the very epicenter of the blast. Here, we practicall­y cannot find bodies as such.”

Several families stood by what was left of the Amstor shopping center Wednesday morning in hope of finding missing loved ones.

“This is pure genocide,” local resident Tatiana Chernyshov­a said while going to lay flowers at the site. “Such things cannot happen in the 21st century.”

“We need to engage everyone to help stop the war, help us fight these scum—these Russian aggressors,” Chernyshov­a said.

Psychologi­sts working at the site with families said they were trying to help people come to terms with their loss.

“We are trying to help them release their emotions now, as later it becomes harder and much more painful,” said one psychologi­st, who did not give his name as he was not authorized to speak to the press.

After the attack on the mall, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Russia of becoming a “terrorist” state. On Wednesday, he reproached Nato for not embracing or equipping his embattled country more fully.

“The open-door policy of Nato shouldn’t resemble old turnstiles on Kyiv’s subway, which stay open but close when you approach them until you pay,” Zelenskyy told Nato leaders meeting in Madrid, speaking by video link. “Hasn’t Ukraine paid enough? Hasn’t our contributi­on to defending Europe and the entire civilizati­on been sufficient?”

He asked for more modern artillery systems and other weapons and warned the Nato leaders they either had to provide

Ukraine with the help it needed to defeat Russia or “face a delayed war between Russia and yourself.”

Russian foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova on Wednesday dismissed what she claimed was the Ukrainian government’s “blatant provocatio­n” in trying to blame the mall missile strike on Russia’s military.

Britain’s defense ministry said there was a “realistic possibilit­y” that the mall strike “was intended to hit a nearby infrastruc­ture target.”

“Russian planners highly likely remain willing to accept a high level of collateral damage when they perceive military necessity in striking a target,” the ministry said. “It is almost certain that Russia will continue to conduct strikes in an effort to interdict the resupplyin­g of Ukrainian front-line forces.”

Russia’s military also is experienci­ng a shortage of more modern precision strike weapons, which is compoundin­g civilian casualties, the British ministry said.

In southern Ukraine, a Russian missile strike on a multi-story apartment building Wednesday in the city of Mykolaiv killed at least four people and injured five, regional governor Vitaliy Kim said. Mykolaiv is a major port and seizing it—as well as Odesa farther west—would be key to Russia’s objective of cutting off Ukraine from its Black Sea coast.

Russia’s defense ministry said in a statement that the missile strike on Mykolaiv targeted a base for training “foreign mercenarie­s,” as well as ammunition depots.

In other developmen­ts Wednesday: Russian lawmaker warns lithuania

A SENIOR Russian lawmaker warned that Lithuania’s refusal to allow some goods targeted by European Union sanctions through to Russia’s Baltic exclave of Kaliningra­d could trigger a military confrontat­ion.

The statement by Vladimir Dzhabarov, a deputy head of the foreign affairs committee in the lower house of Russia’s parliament, followed the Kremlin’s warning that it will retaliate against restrictio­ns of transit to Kaliningra­d. The region borders EU and Nato members Poland and Lithuania.

Russia summons norway’s envoy

RUSSIA’S foreign ministry summoned Norway’s charge d’affaires to protest Oslo’s blocking of a shipment of supplies to a Russian coal-mining town in the Svalbard islands.

Although the Svalbards are Norwegian territory, a 1920 treaty allows all signatory countries the right to exploit its natural resources. Russia operates a coalmine in Barentsbur­g, a settlement of about 450 people, which relies on shipments from the mainland of food, machinery and other supplies. Norway imposed sanctions on shipments from Russia in April.

144 ukrainian troops released in prisoner swap

UKRAINIAN military intelligen­ce says that in the largest prisoner swap since the start of the war 144 Ukrainian troops were released from Russian captivity. Of those released, 95 were involved in defending the Azovstal steel plant in Ukraine’s devastated southern city of Mariupol before Russian forces captured it weeks ago. Denis Pushilin, the separatist leader in Donetsk, said both sides released an equal number of soldiers.

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