Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

How Russia’s eastern offensive may unfold

-

Russia’s massive new offensive in eastern Ukraine reflects Moscow’s hope to reverse its battlefiel­d fortunes after a catastroph­ic seven weeks of war.

Russian forces have sharply intensifie­d artillery barrages and airstrikes on Ukrainian positions in the industrial heartland known as the Donbas.

A look at the war in Ukraine:

Faltering start

Russian troops rolled to the outskirts of the capital of Kyiv days after invading Ukraine on Feb. 24, but the offensive was quickly stymied by staunch resistance.

The Russian military incurred heavy personnel and equipment losses, and the failed Kyiv offensive boosted the morale of the Ukrainian forces, allowing its leaders to rally vast internatio­nal support and secure more weapons from the West. That raised the costs of war for Moscow.

Russian President Vladimir Putin switched the focus to the Donbas, where Moscow-backed separatist­s have been fighting Ukrainian government forces since 2014, after the Kremlin’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula.

After the retreat from Kyiv, Chernihiv, Sumy and other areas in northeaste­rn Ukraine, Russian forces pulled back to the territory of Moscow ally Belarus, as well as areas in western Russia, to be rearmed and resupplied for the new offensive.

Gen. Alexander Dvornikov was named the new commander for the campaign. At 60, Dvornikov is one of Russia’s most experience­d officers, credited with leading Moscow’s forces to success in Syria in a ruthless campaign to shore up President Bashar Assad’s regime in a civil war that saw whole cities flattened and millions displaced.

His appointmen­t is seen as reflecting the Kremlin’s awareness to quickly improve poor coordinati­on among various forces that hampered previous efforts

The new offensive

Ukrainian officials said the push began Monday in the Donbas, with Russia trying to press the offensive along an arc-shaped front line stretching for more than 300 miles from the northeast to the southeast.

In what appeared to be a sharp increase in bombardmen­t Tuesday, Russia said that in the last 24 hours, it struck 60 Ukrainian military facilities with its warplanes and 1,260 with its artillery, while attacking 1,214 troop concentrat­ions. The claims could not be independen­tly verified.

The Pentagon described the stepped-up campaign as “shaping operations” setting the stage for a broader offensive.

Justin Crump, a former British tank commander who leads Sibylline Ltd., a defense consultanc­y, said the Russians had escalated bombardmen­ts and appeared to be moving gradually to take chunks of territory, focusing mostly on the destructio­n of Ukraine’s most capable forces in the Donbas.

“They are hoping to destroy effectivel­y the largest part of the Ukrainian prewar regular army, the best Ukrainian forces,” Crump told The Associated Press.

Russian battle plan

Ukrainian and Western experts expect Russia to try to encircle Ukrainian forces with a pincer movement by advancing from Izyum in the north and Mariupol in the south. Once Russian forces crush the last remaining pocket of Ukrainian resistance at a giant steel mill in Mariupol, they expect that will allow those forces to be freed up to enable the offensive to gain its full tempo.

Some predict Russia also may try to use its forces north of Crimea to try to capture the industrial hubs of Zaporizhzh­ia and Dnipro

on the Dnieper River, effectivel­y cutting Ukraine in half.

During the eight years of fighting the separatist­s, the Ukrainian government forces have built multiple rows of trenches along the line of contact that the Russians have failed to penetrate. But Crump and other experts noted that Ukraine was running out of weapons and supplies.

“They are firing through a lot of supplies,” he said. “And part of the Russian strategy at this point is to keep probing, to keep searching for ways, keep shaping the battlefiel­d, to get Ukraine to fire the missiles, to use things up, to fire its artillery so they have less supplies left when the bigger blows start to fall sequential­ly.”

Ukraine has pleaded with the West for warplanes, long-range air-defense systems, heavy artillery and armor to counter the massive Russian edge in firepower. The Western allies have increased arms supplies and started providing heavy weapons, but it could take time for these to reach Ukrainian troops, which must then learn how to operate them.

“New equipment is great, really helpful in many ways, but the problem is you’ve got to learn how to use it,” Crump said, adding that Ukraine may put the new weapons in areas away from the fighting to give troops some practice with them and redeploy Sovietera weapons to the eastern front.

Challenges for Russia

The Russian offensive will probably face the same logistical challenges its troops encountere­d early in the war.

During the botched attempt to storm Kyiv, Russian convoys stretched along highways to the capital, becoming easy targets for Ukrainian artillery, drones and scouts. The operations in the east could be equally hard, especially as foliage sprouts with the arrival of spring and provides natural cover for guerrilla attacks.

While the terrain in the east is flatter and easier for the Russians, Crump noted that rain has made it difficult for off-road movement, constraini­ng maneuverin­g.

“That makes it very hard to be unpredicta­ble and to use tanks to their advantage,” Crump said, adding that Ukrainian defenses will be stretched as the ground dries, offering Russian armor more options to maneuver.

 ?? ALEXEI ALEXANDROV — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Russian military vehicles move on a highway in an area controlled by Russian-backed separatist forces near Mariupol, Ukraine, on Monday. Mariupol, a strategic port on the Sea of Azov, has been besieged by Russian troops and separatist forces in eastern Ukraine for weeks.
ALEXEI ALEXANDROV — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Russian military vehicles move on a highway in an area controlled by Russian-backed separatist forces near Mariupol, Ukraine, on Monday. Mariupol, a strategic port on the Sea of Azov, has been besieged by Russian troops and separatist forces in eastern Ukraine for weeks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States