Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Ukraine: Russians withdraw from Kharkiv

War enters ‘long-term’ phase on eastern front

- By Oleksandr Stashevsky­i and David Keyton

KYIV, Ukraine — Russian troops were withdrawin­g from around Ukraine’s second-largest city after bombarding it for weeks, the Ukrainian military said Saturday, as Kyiv and Moscow’s forces engaged in a grinding battle for the country’s eastern industrial heartland.

Ukraine’s general staff said the Russian forces were pulling back from the northeaste­rn city of Kharkiv and focusing on guarding supply routes, while launching mortar, artillery and airstrikes in the eastern province of Donetsk in order to “deplete Ukrainian forces and destroy fortificat­ions.”

Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov said Ukraine was “entering a new — long-term — phase of the war.”

After failing to capture Kyiv following the Feb. 24 invasion, Russian President Vladimir Putin has shifted his focus eastward to the Donbas, an industrial region where Ukraine has battled Moscow-backed separatist­s since 2014.

The offensive aims to encircle Ukraine’s most experience­d and bestequipp­ed troops, who are deployed in the east, and to seize parts of the Donbas that remain in Ukraine’s control.

Airstrikes and artillery barrages make it extremely dangerous for journalist­s to move around in the east, hindering efforts to get a full picture of the fighting. But it appears to be a back-and-forth slog without major breakthrou­ghs on either side.

Russia has captured some Donbas villages and towns, including Rubizhne, which had a prewar population of around 55,000.

Zelenskyy said Ukraine’s forces have also made progress in the east, retaking six towns or villages in the past day. “Step by step,” the president said, “we are forcing the occupants to leave the Ukrainian land.”

Kharkiv, which is near the Russian border and only 50 miles southwest of the Russian city of Belgorod, has undergone weeks of intense shelling. The largely Russian-speaking city with a prewar population of 1.4 million was a key military objective earlier in the war, when Moscow hoped to capture and hold major cities.

Ukraine “appears to have won the Battle of Kharkiv,” the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, said. “Ukrainian forces prevented Russian troops from encircling, let alone seizing Kharkiv, and then expelled them from around the city, as they did to Russian forces attempting to seize Kyiv.”

In other developmen­ts:

■ Ukrainian fighters holed up in a steel plant in the ruined southern port of Mariupol faced continued attacks on the city’s last stronghold of resistance. Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk said authoritie­s were negotiatin­g the evacuation of 60 severely wounded troops, but Russia had not agreed to the evacuation of all wounded fighters at the steelworks, who number in the hundreds.

■ An adviser to Mariupol Mayor Petro Andryushen­ko said via Telegram that a convoy of between 500 and 1,000 cars carrying civilians from the city was allowed to enter Ukraine-controlled territory and was headed for Zaporizhzh­ia, the first major city beyond the front lines.

■ The deputy speaker of Russia’s parliament, Anna Kuznetsova, visited Kherson, a region bordering the Black Sea that has been held by Russia since early in the war. Russia has installed a pro-Moscow regional administra­tion, and Britain’s defense ministry said Russia could stage a local referendum on joining Russia with results likely manipulate­d to show majority support.

■ Zelenskyy signed into law a measure allowing for the banning of political parties found to be supporting or defending Russia’s invasion, the head of the national parliament’s legal policy committee reported.

 ?? Mstyslav Chernov The Associated Press ?? A Ukrainian serviceman patrols during a reconnaiss­ance mission Saturday in a recently retaken village on the outskirts of Kharkiv, in eastern Ukraine.
Mstyslav Chernov The Associated Press A Ukrainian serviceman patrols during a reconnaiss­ance mission Saturday in a recently retaken village on the outskirts of Kharkiv, in eastern Ukraine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States