The Riverside Press-Enterprise

Ukraine will soon be facing a violent stage from Russia

- By Marc Santora, Josh Holder, Marco Hernandez and Andrew E. Kramer The New York Times

For much of the winter, the war in Ukraine settled into a slow-moving but exceedingl­y violent fight along a jagged 600-mile-long front line in the southeast. Now, both Ukraine and Russia are poised to go on the offensive.

Russia, wary of the growing Ukrainian arsenal of Western-supplied weapons, is moving first.

Using tens of thousands of new conscripts in the hope of overwhelmi­ng Ukraine, its forces are attacking heavily fortified positions across bomb-scarred fields and through scorched forests in the east. They are looking for vulnerabil­ities, hoping to exploit gaps, and setting the stage for what Ukraine warns could be Moscow’s most ambitious campaign since the start of the war.

Ukraine must now defend against the Russian assault without exhausting the resources it needs to mount an offensive of its own.

Kyiv is training thousands of its own soldiers outside the country and scrambling to amass heavy weapons and ammunition, in advance of an assault meant to “break the bones” of Russia’s army, said Olexander Danylyuk, a former director of Ukraine’s national security council.

Military analysts say it is likely to try to split the enemy forces into two zones, hoping to smash through Russian lines in the south and put its supply lines running out of Crimea in jeopardy.

“There is little doubt that both sides want to go on the offensive,” said Mick Ryan, a retired Australian army major general who is a fellow at the Lowy Institute, a research institute, “but it really comes down to how much capacity both sides have to do that.”

Russia's options

Aided by Western intelligen­ce, commercial satellites and a network of partisans working to undermine the Russian occupation, senior Ukrainian officials said Moscow’s immediate intentions are coming into focus.

Russia is massing tens of thousands of soldiers, including conscripts from a mass mobilizati­on last fall, just outside the range of American-made precision missiles. The formations suggest they could be preparing to encircle Ukrainian forces arrayed across the Donetsk and Luhansk regions.

Andriy Zagorodnyu­k, a former Ukrainian minister of defense, said he expected the Russian army to attempt the capture of the Donbas and then “announce the completion of their special military operation” and call for negotiatio­ns.

Britain’s defense intelligen­ce agency said Tuesday that Russia had been trying to launch “major offensive operations” since early last month, but it had “only managed to gain several hundred meters of territory per week,” because of a lack of munitions and maneuver units.

Any battle to score a major break through Ukrainian lines would begin with even more intense Russian artillery barrages, bombing by ground-attack jets and sorties by low-flying helicopter­s, said Serhiy Hrabsky a former colonel in the Ukrainian army and commentato­r on the war for Ukrainian media. That would probably be followed by tank and infantry ground assaults across the buffer zone between trench lines, he said.

Ukraine's options

Military analysts and former Ukrainian security officials point to Russia’s socalled land bridge — stretching across southern Ukraine from the Russian border to the Crimean Peninsula — as the most tempting target for a Ukrainian counteroff­ensive.

Russia also believes that will probably be the line of attack, said Nataliya Gumenyuk, spokespers­on for Ukraine’s southern military command.

Moscow is bringing in more soldiers to defend hastily erected defensive positions, but she said Ukraine has been able to limit its ability to bring in heavy equipment.

“We can see that they accumulate some equipment around Melitopol and in Crimea, but they can’t bring it closer,” she said in an interview. “They would like to, but our forces don’t give them a chance.”

Kyiv is hoping the West will quickly provide longerrang­e artillery that will allow its forces to once again disrupt Russian positions, the way it did when Ukraine recaptured swaths of the south, including Kherson city, in November.

Ukraine, said Hrabsky, will combine a ground offensive with long-range strikes, first softening defenses by firing precision artillery shells and rockets at command bunkers, garrisons and ammunition depots.

It would then seek to break through Russian lines and maneuver quickly, although the Russians are firmly entrenched in the south and would probably put up stiff resistance.

 ?? LYNSEY ADDARIO — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Soldiers with the Free Russia Legion train in the Kyiv region in Ukraine on Tuesday.
LYNSEY ADDARIO — THE NEW YORK TIMES Soldiers with the Free Russia Legion train in the Kyiv region in Ukraine on Tuesday.

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