Lodi News-Sentinel

Key eastern Ukrainian city teeters in a battle of ‘simply terrifying’ cost

- Nabih Bulos and Laura King The New York Times, Reuters, the Washington Post and CBS News contribute­d to this report.

KRAMATORSK, Ukraine — Russian forces appeared Tuesday to tighten their chokehold on a strategic eastern city that has become the scene of one of the Ukraine war’s bloodiest battles, as fears mounted over the fate of hundreds of civilians trapped in an artillery-pounded industrial zone.

Ukraine insisted that its troops had not ceded control of Severodone­tsk, a small industrial city seen as pivotal to the fight for the country’s Donbas region, but acknowledg­ed that the situation was increasing­ly dire with Russia having severed the last bridge linking it to a sister city across the Seversky Donets River.

With the Russian invasion in the middle of its fourth month, Moscow is ramping up its defense spending as it presses its campaign to seize a huge swath of eastern Ukraine, British military analysts said Tuesday.

Away from the eastern front lines, Ukrainian war-crimes investigat­ors were poring over the latest grisly evidence of atrocities against civilians committed by Russian troops who earlier in the war occupied areas near the capital, Kyiv. Ukrainian authoritie­s say they have been exhuming a newly discovered mass grave near the town of Bucha, with some of the bodies bearing signs of torture and bound hands.

Since the end of March, more than 1,300 bodies have been unearthed in the capital’s environs, pointing to the execution-style killings of large numbers of noncombata­nts.

Russia has claimed that evidence of war crimes has been fabricated, but Human Rights Watch, the New York Times, Amnesty Internatio­nal and other organizati­ons have collected witness testimony, video and satellite images that appear to support the accusation­s against Russia. A team of investigat­ors and forensic experts have been sent by the Internatio­nal Criminal Court to examine the evidence.

Hundreds of miles away in Ukraine’s east, the struggle for Severodone­tsk, which boasted a prewar population of about 100,000 people, has become one of the war’s most brutal faceoffs, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his overnight address to the nation.

“The human cost of this battle is very high for us — it is simply terrifying,” Zelenskyy said. The wider conflict in the Donbas, Ukraine’s industrial heartland, “will without doubt be remembered in military history as one of the most violent battles in Europe,” he said.

The Ukrainian military said in its daily operationa­l report Tuesday that Russian forces were “trying to gain a foothold” in the city center. British military intelligen­ce said Tuesday that Russia’s “main operationa­l effort” remains the assault on Severodone­tsk, adding that Moscow’s forces, for the first time in weeks, had likely made “small advances in the Kharkiv sector.”

Kharkiv, near the Russian border in the northeast, is Ukraine’s second-largest city, and retaining control of it and its environs remains one of Ukraine’s significan­t wartime feats, along with foiling Russian forces’ earlier attempt to seize Kyiv. The failure to subdue either city forced the Kremlin to scale back its war aims and focus instead on conquering the Donbas, where proRussia separatist­s have already fought Ukrainian defenders for eight years and establishe­d control over large chunks of territory.

The fight for the Donbas has devolved into a war of attrition that is killing up to 200 Ukrainian troops a day, Ukrainian officials say, as well as exacting a horrific civilian toll.

The Russian Defense Ministry claimed Tuesday to have struck more than 100 targets in the previous 24 hours, taking aim at troop concentrat­ions and military equipment. The claims could not be independen­tly confirmed.

Ukraine’s daily pleas for more heavy weaponry have taken on greater urgency as Russian artillery pounds targets along a battlefron­t stretching hundreds of miles. Western defense ministers are to meet Wednesday in Brussels to discuss additional military aid to Ukraine.

Zelenskyy told Danish journalist­s in a briefing Tuesday that his country’s ability to fight back was hampered by Russia’s ability to train long-range fire on Ukrainian troops and cities, with Ukraine forces unable to respond in kind.

“We have enough weapons,” he said. “What we don’t have enough of are the weapons that really hit the range that we need to reduce the advantage” of Russia’s equipment.

 ?? ARIS MESSINIS/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Maksym Katerin stands in the yard of his damaged home after his mother and stepfather were killed during shelling in the city of Lysychansk in the eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas on Monday.
ARIS MESSINIS/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Maksym Katerin stands in the yard of his damaged home after his mother and stepfather were killed during shelling in the city of Lysychansk in the eastern Ukrainian region of Donbas on Monday.

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