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Wagner private military fighters: Village captured

Russian forces tighten noose around Bakhmut

- By Shashank Bengali

Russian forces edged closer to Bakhmut on Sunday, claiming to capture a village on the outskirts of the strategic city in eastern Ukraine as they hammered nearby settlement­s with tank rounds, mortar fire and artillery shells.

The Wagner private military company, whose forces have helped lead the brutal and monthslong Russian campaign to seize Bakhmut, said that its “assault units” had taken the village of Krasna Gora, near the northern edge of the city.

The statement was made by the news service of Yevgeny V. Prigozhin, the group’s founder, and included a video purporting to show Wagner fighters at the entrance to the village.

“This is what we have captured,” one fighter is heard saying as an explosion rings out. They will continue on to the next village, he added. There was no immediate comment from Russia’s Defense Ministry, and neither the claim nor the footage could be independen­tly verified.

Bakhmut has emerged as a focal point of the war and an important prize for President Vladimir Putin of Russia, who has poured troops into the battle for a city seen as key to his stated goal of seizing the entire area of eastern Ukraine known as the Donbas.

The Ukrainian military’s general staff said Sunday that Russian forces, sometimes backed by airstrikes, had shelled Krasna Gora and two dozen other settlement­s near Bakhmut over the past day, continuing a pattern of intensifyi­ng attacks as Moscow begins to mount a renewed offensive in the east. It said Ukrainian forces had repelled Russian attacks on Bakhmut, although Ukrainian soldiers in recent weeks have acknowledg­ed that their hold on the city was slipping.

Capturing Bakhmut would be Russia’s first significan­t battlefiel­d victory in months after a string of setbacks in the fall.

But military analysts say it is not clear that seizing the city would pave the way for further Russian advances in eastern Ukraine. Both Russian and Ukrainian forces have suffered heavy losses in the campaign, one of the deadliest of the nearly yearlong war.

Bakhmut, which had a prewar population of about 70,000 people but is now largely ruined, has become a national symbol of Ukrainian resistance.

After months of withering bombardmen­t, Russian forces, including both regular troops and Wagner mercenarie­s, now appear to have surrounded the city on three sides. It remains unclear whether Ukraine will seek to bring in more reinforcem­ents to keep defending the city or decide to stage a tactical retreat.

Moscow has thrown many inexperien­ced recruits and former convicts recruited by Wagner into the battle, according to U.S. and European officials, who this month assessed that the total number of Russian troops killed or wounded in nearly 12 months of fighting was approachin­g 200,000.

Britain’s defense intelligen­ce agency said Sunday that over the past two weeks, “Russia has likely suffered its highest rate of casualties since the first week of the invasion of Ukraine.” The assessment was based on Ukrainian estimates of more than 800 Russian soldiers killed or injured daily during the past week, the agency said, figures that it could not verify but believed were “likely accurate.”

Russia’s advance in eastern Ukraine stalled in the summer as Ukrainian forces, backed by new, longer-range weapons from Western allies, dug in around strategic cities and fortified their defenses.

But in recent weeks, Moscow’s troops — firing artillery at the highest rate in months and deploying waves of soldiers at various points on the 140-mile-long front line — have begun to seize the initiative in the east, analysts say.

Last month, Russia captured Soledar, a salt-mining town north of Bakhmut, and drew within firing range of a key Ukrainian supply route to the south, effectivel­y cutting it off.

But Ukrainian military officials and analysts say it is far from clear that Russia can sustain a major offensive. Rivalries between Wagner fighters and regular troops, questions about whether it has enough munitions and the disarray that has plagued its war effort from the beginning all could jeopardize Russia’s attempted push.

At the same time, analysts say that Ukraine’s ability to counter Russia’s advantage in troop numbers will depend in part on how soon Western nations can deliver newly promised military aid — tanks, armored vehicles and long-range weapons — to the front..

U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin held a call with his Ukrainian counterpar­t, Oleksii Reznikov, on Saturday and discussed the need for advanced weapons to be “delivered to the battlefiel­d as quickly as possible,” according to a Pentagon summary of the call.

 ?? LIBKOS ?? A Ukrainian tank moves into position on the front line Sunday in the contested city of Bakhmut, Donetsk region, Ukraine.
LIBKOS A Ukrainian tank moves into position on the front line Sunday in the contested city of Bakhmut, Donetsk region, Ukraine.

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