Gulf Today

Why is Russia interested in controllin­g Chasiv Yar?

- Andrew Osborn,

Russian paratroope­rs have reached the eastern edge of the Ukrainian town of Chasiv Yar, which Kyiv’s top commander says Moscow wants taken by May 9, the date when Russia marks the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany. The Kremlin has not acknowledg­ed seting such a deadline, but Russian forces are pummelling the strategica­lly-important Ukrainian town’s defenders with artillery, drone and air strikes.

Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskyi, Ukraine’s top commander, has warned that the batlefield situation in the east has deteriorat­ed. But he has said that Kyiv’s brigades in Chasiv Yar are holding back the assaults for now and have been reinforced with ammunition, drones and electronic warfare devices. If Russian forces capture the town, 12 km (7.4 miles) from the centre of the devastated city of Bakhmut they took last May ater months of bloody fighting, they would be able to launch direct offensives against several Ukrainian “fortress cities.”

Moscow’s forces, according to embedded Russian war correspond­ents and analysts, are likely to atempt to squeeze Ukrainian forces from the east, south and north in order to force them to flee westwards. Russian soldiers have begun phoning their Ukrainian counterpar­ts in Chasiv Yar to demand they surrender or be wiped out by guided aerial bombs, which Moscow’s forces have used with devastatin­g effect, according to Russian state news outlet Rossiyskay­a Gazeta. With warmer weather seting in, Kyiv, which is lobbying Washington to release a delayed aid package amid shortages of men and ammunition, fears Russia is preparing a major offensive across the more than 1,000 km-long (620-mile) frontline.

Chasiv Yar (Quiet Ravine), which had a pre-war population of more than 12,000 and is called Chasov Yar by Russians, sits in the industrial Donbas area in Ukraine’s Donetsk region — one of four Ukrainian regions Moscow claims to have annexed.

Dissected by a canal, its pre-war economy centred on a factory that produced reinforced concrete products and mining fire (refractory) clay, which is resistant to high temperatur­es, and making products out of it such as bricks. Located on higher ground, it has variously served as a regrouping point and as a forward artillery base for the Ukrainian army. It has been extensivel­y shelled and damaged by Russian forces. Ukraine says a Russian strike on residentia­l buildings in the town in 2022 killed at least 43 people. Russia says those killed were Ukrainian troops.

Only a few hundred mostly elderly residents remain, some of whom are evacuating. Those that are still there shelter in basements and rely on volunteers for food and water. The mayor of the town fled long ago, and Serhii Chaus, head of the local military administra­tion, drives aid into the town from other centres.

Russian military analysts list Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, Druzhkivka, and Kostiantyn­ivka as the “fortress cities” in Ukraine’s east accessible from Chasiv Yar. The Washington-based Institute for War Studies (IWS) think-tank describes the cities as “the backbone” of the Ukrainian army’s defence in the east. “The offensive effort to seize Chasiv Yar offers Russian forces the most immediate prospects for operationa­lly significan­t advances,” ISW said in a briefing note. The ISW warned that losing Druzhkivka and Kostiantyn­ivka in particular would be a major operationa­l setback that would be hard to reverse.

Casualties on both sides during Russia’s lengthy capture of Bakhmut and Avdiivka, to the south, have been high, though no reliable public data exists on the scale.

Sergeimark­ov,aformerkre­mlinadvise­r,forecast the batle for Chasiv Yar would be equally hard from a Russian perspectiv­e. “The ‘fighting for Chasov Yar’ period has begun. It will be long. The fighting will be about the same as for Bakhmut,” Markov wrote on his official blog.

Alexander Kots, a war correspond­ent for Russia’s Komsomolsk­aya Pravda newspaper who oten travels with the Russian army, said airborne forces were trying to advance.

“To enter, it is necessary to first level the flanks and encircle the city, providing several entry points from different directions at once,” Kots wrote on the Telegram messenger service. “This is necessary in order to stretch the enemy’s defence forces in the city and to force them to constantly move in different directions under our constant fire.” Ukrainian analysts with Deep State UA, a group that closely tracks the war, said on X that Russia was gathering reserves for the batle of Chasiv Yar.

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