Dayton Daily News

WAR IN UKRAINE

- By Susie Blann

Ukrainians bracing for major Russian offensive

Russian forces are keeping Ukrainian troops tied down with attacks in the eastern Donbas region as Moscow assembles additional combat power there for an expected offensive in the coming weeks, Ukrainian officials said Monday.

Intense fighting that has been raging for weeks continued around the city of Bakhmut and the nearby towns of Soledar and Vuhle- dar, Ukraine’s presidenti­al office said.

They are located in the Donetsk region, which with neighborin­g Luhansk region makes up the Donbas, an industrial area bordering Russia.

“The battles for the region are heating up,” Donetsk Gov. Pavlo Kyrylenko said in televised remarks, adding that “the Russians are throwing new units into the battle and eradicatin­g our towns and villages.”

In Luhansk, Gov. Serhii Haidai said shelling there had subsided because “the Russians have been saving ammunition for a large-scale offensive.”

Military analysts say the Kremlin’s forces may be probing Ukrainian defenses for weak points or could be making a feint while prepar- ing for a main thrust through southern Ukraine.

Ukraine envisages possible Russian offensives in the east and the south, Ukrainian military intelli- gence spokesman Vadym Skibitsky said. He predicted that Russia will likely press its offensive in the Donbas and could also launch an attack in the southern Zapor- izhzhia region.

He didn’t say when the offensive might start but noted that the Russian mil- itary would need another couple of months to complete the training of new units.

Skibitsky added that Russia plans to mobilize another 300,000 to 500,000 in addition to the 300,000 mobilized in the fall.

David Arakhamia, who leads Zelenskyy’s Servant of the People party in parliament, said Sunday that Ukraine is preparing for a Russian offensive while planning to counteratt­ack and reclaim its occupied territory.

Arakhamia, noting that “time and circumstan­ces call for strengthen­ing and regrouping,” also announced that Ukraine’s Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov would be moved to another government post and replaced by the head of military intelligen­ce, Kyrylo Budanov. But Arakhamia abruptly changed course Monday and said that no shakeup will happen this week.

 ?? DANIEL COLE / AP ?? An undertaker walks by the Alley of Heroes at the Irpin Cemetery in Ukraine, on Monday. Intense fighting continues in Ukraine’s Donesk region.
DANIEL COLE / AP An undertaker walks by the Alley of Heroes at the Irpin Cemetery in Ukraine, on Monday. Intense fighting continues in Ukraine’s Donesk region.

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