Baltimore Sun

Weakened Russia said to be US goal

Kremlin targets fuel, railway depots far from eastern front

- By David Keyton

KYIV, Ukraine — Russia unleashed a string of attacks Monday against rail and fuel installati­ons deep inside Ukraine, far from the front lines of Moscow’s new eastern offensive, in a bid to thwart Ukrainian efforts to marshal supplies for the fight.

The U.S., meanwhile, moved to rush more weaponry to Ukraine and said the assistance from the Western allies is making a difference in the 2-month-old war.

“Russia is failing. Ukraine is succeeding,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken declared in Poland, a day after he and the secretary of defense made a bold visit to Kyiv to meet with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

Blinken said Washington approved a $165 million sale of ammunition, mainly if not entirely for Ukraine’s Soviet-era weapons, and will also provide more than $300 million in financing to buy more supplies.

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin took his comments further, saying that while the U.S. wants to see Ukraine remain a sovereign, democratic country, it also wants “to see Russia weakened to the point where it can’t do things like invade Ukraine.”

Austin’s comments about weakening Russia appear to represent a broader U.S. strategic goal. Previously, the U.S. position had been that the goal of American military aid was to help

A woman searches for salvageabl­e items in the second floor of her home Monday in Hostomel. She said it was bombed on March 7 while her mother and grandmothe­r were downstairs and that the family relocated to western Ukraine.

Ukraine win and to defend Ukraine’s NATO neighbors against Russian threats.

Russian President Vladimir Putin accused the U.S. and its allies of trying to “split Russian society and to destroy Russia from within.”

In other developmen­ts, fires were reported at two oil facilities in western Russia, not far from the Ukrainian border. Their cause was not immediatel­y known.

When Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, its apparent goal was the lightning capture of Kyiv, the capital. But the Ukrainians, with the help of Western

weapons, thwarted the push and forced Putin’s troops to retreat.

Moscow now says its goal is to take the Donbas, the mostly Russian-speaking industrial region in eastern Ukraine. While both sides say the campaign in the east is underway, Russia has yet to mount an all-out offensive and has not achieved any major breakthrou­ghs.

On Monday, Russia focused its firepower elsewhere, with missiles and warplanes striking far behind the front lines.

Five railroad stations in central and western Ukraine

were hit, and one worker was killed, said Oleksandr Kamyshin, head of Ukraine’s state railway. The bombardmen­t included a missile attack near Lviv, the western city close to the Polish border that has been swelled by Ukrainians fleeing the fighting elsewhere around the country.

Ukrainian authoritie­s said that at least five people were killed by Russian strikes in the central Vynnytsia region.

Russia also destroyed an oil refinery in Kremenchuk, in central Ukraine, along with fuel depots there, Russian Defense Ministry

spokesman Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenko­v said. In all, Russian warplanes destroyed 56 Ukrainian targets overnight, he said.

Philip Breedlove, a retired U.S. general who was NATO’s top commander from 2013 to 2016, said the latest strikes against fuel depots are part of a strategy to deplete key Ukrainian war resources. The strikes against rail targets, on the other hand, are a newer tactic, he said.

“I think they’re doing it for the legitimate reason of trying to interdict the flow of supplies to the front,” he said. “The illegitima­te reason is they know people are trying to leave the country, and this is just another intimidati­on, terrorist tactic to make them not have faith and confidence in traveling on the rails.”

In Transnistr­ia, a breakaway region of Moldova that sits along the Ukrainian border, several explosions believed caused by rocket-propelled grenades hit the territory’s Ministry of State Security. There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity or reports of injuries. Transnistr­ia is a strip of land with about 470,000 people and about 1,500 Russian troops based there.

Moldova’s Foreign Ministry said “the aim of today’s incident is to create pretexts for straining the security situation in the Transnistr­ian region.” The U.S. warned previously that Russia may launch “falseflag” attacks against its own side to create a pretext for invading other nations.

Last week, Rustam Minnekayev, a Russian military commander, said the Kremlin wants full control of southern Ukraine, which he said would open the way to Transnistr­ia.

An estimated 2,000 Ukrainian troops holed up in a steel plant in the strategic southern port city of Mariupol are tying down Russian forces and apparently keeping them from being added to the offensive elsewhere in the Donbas. Over the weekend, Russian forces launched new airstrikes on the Azovstal plant to try to dislodge the holdouts. Some 1,000 civilians were also said to be taking shelter at the steelworks.

 ?? JOHN MOORE/GETTY ??
JOHN MOORE/GETTY

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