KYIV ‘NEARS BREAKING POINT’ AMID FIERCE MOSCOW BARRAGE
Kremlin forces look for opening to advance after unleashing firepower on key targets as Ukrainian defences face collapse, officials say
Russia’s missile attacks on Ukraine’s energy system, the bombardment of its secondlargest city and advances along the front are stoking worries that Kyiv’s military effort is nearing breaking point.
A dire shortage of ammunition and manpower along the 1,200km front and gaps in air defence show that Ukraine is at its most fragile moment in over two years of war, according to Western officials with knowledge of the situation.
The risk was a collapse of Ukrainian defences, an event that would give Kremlin an opening to make a major advance for the first time since the initial stages of the conflict, at least one official said.
The next few months will amount to Ukraine’s toughest test, with a public growing exhausted of war, especially in the city of Kharkiv in the country’s east, which has been particularly targeted.
Krystyna Malieieva, who fled the city after Russia invaded and then returned, said the unpredictability of the attacks had struck fear into residents, even if most did not believe the Kremlin could take a metropolis whose pre-war population was 1.5 million.
“There is very depressive mood in Kharkiv now,” Malieieva, the owner of a family centre who returned in 2023 after a year in Croatia and the UK, said in an interview. “People started to return last year, new restaurants opened – and now I see people are fleeing again.”
Russian forces are benefiting from a widening gap in ammunition supplies, with Moscow set to secure 6 million shells this year with ramped-up production and supplies from North Korea and Iran, according to one official.
Hanging above it all is the stalled US$60 billion US aid package, a victim of infighting as House Republicans demand concessions on immigration from President Joe Biden. Should those funds not come through, there was no alternative for Ukraine at its darkest moment, the officials said.
Far from being able to seize back occupied territory, which was last year’s objective, Kyiv’s forces are struggling to hold the line on Russia’s advance. President Volodymyr Zelensky said last week that Russia might be able to mobilise as many as 300,000 new troops by June 1.
The US did not see any signs of an imminent breakthrough by Russian forces, a US official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. But Ukraine’s morale was low and the possibility of a collapse in its army could not be ruled out, another unnamed official said.
The destruction early Thursday of a thermal power plant some 45km south of Kyiv – the biggest producer in the region around the capital – drove home the country’s vulnerability to missile strikes.
Zelensky called the military’s lack of air defence “the biggest challenge” in the hours after the attack.
The demise of the Trypilska power plant was part of a nationwide missile and drone barrage that hit targets, including plants and gas-storage facilities, in five regions.
Russian forces have also unleashed their firepower along the front line and made marginal gains since capturing the eastern city of Avdiivka in February.
Kremlin troops are seeking to close in on strategically key spots, such as the town of Chasiv Yar, west of Bakhmut in Ukraine’s Donetsk region.
After months of stalling, Zelensky and Ukrainian lawmakers have expedited contested legislation to bolster the ranks of fighting forces, approving a lower conscription age and tightened rules for the draft.
A key worry is Kharkiv, which Russian forces tried and failed to seize in the opening campaign of the war.
The proximity of the city to the Russian border makes it vulnerable to Russian shelling. Kremlin forces have pelted it with S-300 ballistic missiles and glide bombs, laying waste to swathes of residential areas and destroying nearly all local power-generating capacity.
For the first time since the invasion began, fewer than half of Ukrainians believe the country can recover all territory seized by Russia, a February survey by Kyivbased Rating Group found. And while most Ukrainians still believe in victory, they are increasingly questioning what it may entail.
So far there has been no mass exodus out of Kharkiv. Oleksandr Savchuk, the owner of a boutique publishing house, said the daily attacks would not force him out until Russia pulled artillery up to the city limits.
“The fact that we’re here is also a form of resistance,” he said.