New York Daily News

This city is ours: Russia

Says last pocket of resistance KOd in eastern Ukraine coke plant

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KYIV, Ukraine — Russian forces have completed their takeover of Avdiivka by eliminatin­g the last pocket of resistance at the eastern Ukraine city’s huge coke plant, the Russian military said Monday, after the sheer weight of its troop numbers and greater airpower and artillery firepower drove out Kyiv’s forces.

Moscow officials announced Saturday they had taken control of Avdiivka. Ukrainian forces confirmed pulling out of the bombedout city in what amounted to a triumph for the Kremlin even though the four-month battle was costly.

The victory was a morale boost for Russia, days ahead of the twoyear anniversar­y of its full-scale invasion of its neighbor on Feb. 24, 2022. For Ukraine, the rout was a bleak reminder of its reliance on the supply of Western weapons and ammunition, as holdups in the delivery of expected aid have left it short of provisions and handicappe­d in the fight.

Russia is likely to keep pressing its advantage, sensing that Ukraine is weakened. It battered Avdiivka with scores of glide bombs and relentless shelling in recent days, leaving the defenders with no place to hide, according to a senior Ukrainian officer involved in the battle.

“The positions that we were holding were just annihilate­d,” Rodion Kudriashov, deputy commander of the 3rd Assault Brigade, told The Associated Press.

The Ukrainian troops, meanwhile, were so short of ammunition that they “had to choose between targets,” Kudriashov said.

Outnumbere­d and outgunned, they pulled back to previously prepared positions, he said.

The sides were deeply uneven in favor of the Russian forces, he said, quoting Ukrainian intelligen­ce assessment­s. “If we are talking about infantry, it’s 1 to 7. If we are talking about military vehicles it’s 1 to 8 and in terms of artillery, it’s 1 to 11, he said.

Some Western military analysts believe that Ukraine could counter Russia’s attempt to build up on its Avdiivka success by trying to erect new defense lines in that immediate area and deploying fresh units to hold back Kremlin forces.

Even so, the threat of ammunition shortages hangs over Ukraine’s military, with Russia aiming to exploit the moment as the U.S. struggles to get political agreement for more aid and Europe strives to increase production. The proposed $61 billion U.S. aid package for Ukraine is seen as crucial for a Ukrainian victory. Without U.S. funding, Ukraine is likely to start losing the war, analysts say.

“Delays in Western security assistance to Ukraine are likely helping Russia launch opportunis­tic offensive operations along several sectors of the front line in order to place pressure on Ukrainian forces along multiple axes,” the Institute for the Study of War said in an assessment Sunday.

Apart from Avdiivka, Russia is pushing harder in the northeaste­rn Kharkiv region and in southern Zaporizhia, the Washington-based think tank said.

Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his country “is “doing everything possible and impossible” to defeat Russia.

“Ukrainians have fought heroically before, but for the first time in its history Ukraine has achieved such global solidarity and support,” Zelenskyy said in his daily video address Sunday evening.

 ?? RUSSIAN DEFENSE MINISTRY PRESS SERVICE VIA AP ?? Aerial view of coke plant in Avdiivka, where Moscow crushed last resistance in the Ukrainian city. Below, two Russian soldiers search for mines.
RUSSIAN DEFENSE MINISTRY PRESS SERVICE VIA AP Aerial view of coke plant in Avdiivka, where Moscow crushed last resistance in the Ukrainian city. Below, two Russian soldiers search for mines.
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