Albany Times Union (Sunday)

As arms pour in, Zelenskyy promises victory

Canada, U.S. send more weapons as Russia shifts east

- By Marc Santora, Michael Schwirtz and Michael Levenson

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, bolstered by an influx of heavy weapons from Western nations, expressed increasing confidence Saturday that Ukraine was prepared to defeat Russian forces in what is expected to be a long and brutal battle for control of the eastern industrial heartland.

“We will be able to show the occupiers that the day when they will be forced to leave Ukraine is approachin­g,” Zelenskyy said in an overnight address to the nation.

The statement seemed to mark a decisive shift for Zelenskyy, who has spent months begging and shaming allies to provide Ukraine with longer-range, heavy weapons to repel Russian forces as they assault the east in the latest offensive in the 2-month-old war.

At a news conference Saturday, Zelenskyy said that Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin planned to visit Kyiv, the capital, on Sunday to discuss the “military assistance we need.” They would be the highest-ranking U.S. officials to visit since the invasion began. The Pentagon and the State Department declined to comment.

World leaders “should not come to us with empty hands, not just presents and cakes,” Zelenskyy said, but with “specific weapons.”

Military analysts said that the tanks, howitzers, deadly drones, armored vehicles and mountains of ammunition pouring into Ukraine from Western allies have been a significan­t factor in helping the country’s troops fend off the larger and betterequi­pped Russian military.

Despite increased fighting, Russian forces have made “no major gains” in the past 24 hours, as Ukrainian counteratt­acks continue to hinder their efforts, Britain’s Ministry of Defense said Saturday, in its latest assessment of the war.

The ministry said that, despite Russia’s claim that it had conquered the heavily battered southern port city of Mariupol, where the last remaining Ukrainian fighters have holed up in a steel plant with civilians, “heavy fighting” continued to frustrate Russian attempts to capture the city, slowing their progress into the

Donbas region.

The fighting in the eastern theater has increased the sense of urgency among Western allies to bolster Ukraine’s defenses with more powerful arms. The terrain there is mostly open farmland, which tends to favor tanks and other heavy weapons over the quick-hit, guerrillas­tyle tactics that the Ukrainians employed to such devastatin­g effect in the country’s north.

Canada on Friday announced that it had delivered heavy artillery, including M777 howitzers and anti-armor ammunition, to Ukrainian forces in conjunctio­n with the United States.

The shipment came after President Joe Biden announced an additional $800 million in military aid to Ukraine on Thursday, saying he wanted to send the “unmistakab­le message” to Russian President Vladimir Putin that he would “never succeed in dominating and occupying all of Ukraine.”

At Saturday’s news conference, Zelenskyy reiterated his willingnes­s to meet directly with Putin, saying while “I don’t want” to meet with him, “I have to see the president” in order to end the war. He also appealed to the Russian people, saying, “Living in the Russian Federation is like virtual reality, like a video game. Come back to the world. It’s more beautiful and more truthful.”

Most of the fighting over the past week has been for control of towns and villages directly on the front line, which stretches across 300 miles in Ukraine’s east and includes many communitie­s already devastated by weeks of war.

In villages and towns largely in the country’s north that have been retaken by Ukrainian troops, officials have been working with internatio­nal investigat­ors to document violence against civilians. Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Iryna Venediktov­a, said she was examining more than 8,000 reported atrocities, including summary executions, sexual violence and the forced deportatio­n of children to Russia.

Moscow shifted its focus to the Donbas after failing to seize Kyiv in the north, where Russian troops were hampered by logistical and tactical problems as well as sagging morale. Those issues are likely to persist in the battle for the Donbas, according to independen­t analysts, who said Russia did not adequately rest, reinforce or resupply its troops before beginning its latest assault.

While Russia has been focused on seizing the east, at least six people were killed and 18 were wounded Saturday when two cruise missiles struck a residentia­l neighborho­od on the outskirts of the southern city of Odesa, Ukrainian officials said. Among the dead was a 3-month-old child, said Andriy Yermak, the head of the presidenti­al admin

istration.

Zelenskyy reacted angrily to the attack, denouncing Putin as “this bastard” and asking “what sort of God they believe in” that the Russians could kill a 3-month-old.

Photograph­s and video from the scene appeared to show extensive damage to a large housing complex, which was partly obscured by plumes of thick black smoke. Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, said on Twitter that “terror” was the “only aim” of the strike on Odesa.

Three people were also killed and seven wounded in shelling on the northeaste­rn city of Kharkiv on Saturday, the region’s governor said.

For its part, the Ukrainian military claimed to have blown up a Russian forward command post in the southern region of Kherson, which is largely under Russian control.

In his overnight address, Zelenskyy also seized on a Russian general’s statement Friday that Moscow intended not only to dominate the east, but to roll through southern Ukraine all the way to Moldova, Ukraine’s southwest neighbor.

“This only confirms what I have said many times,” Zelenskyy said. “The Russian invasion of Ukraine was intended only as a beginning, then they want to capture other countries.”

Military and political analysts have cast doubt on the claim by the Russian general, Rustam Minnekayev, suggesting that it might have been intended to confuse Ukraine and its supporters, and that it would be difficult for Russian forces, already engaged in heavy fighting in the east, to fight their way deeper into the south.

But the commander’s hint that Russia had far broader ambitions rattled the region, setting off alarms in Moldova, a former Soviet republic where Moscow-backed separatist­s have controlled a breakaway territory known as Transnistr­ia since 1992.

Responding to Minnekayev’s claim that Russian speakers were being oppressed in Transnistr­ia, the Moldovan government summoned the Russian ambassador to complain that such comments were “not only unacceptab­le, but also unfounded” and led to “increased tension.”

Moldova is among the nations along Ukraine’s border that have accepted the more than 5 million refugees who have fled since the war began Feb. 24. But even as many have raced to leave Ukraine, more than 1 million Ukrainians have returned to the country, according to Ukraine’s Ministry of Internal Affairs.

Some Ukrainian refugees have risked the journey back home after Russian forces withdrew from areas around Kyiv, bringing a sense of stability to the area and allowing some businesses and foreign embassies to reopen there.

 ?? Efrem Lukatsky / Associated Press ?? Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy answers media questions during a news conference in a city subway under a central square in Kyiv, Ukraine, Saturday.
Efrem Lukatsky / Associated Press Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy answers media questions during a news conference in a city subway under a central square in Kyiv, Ukraine, Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States