Los Angeles Times

‘Russia is failing,’ Blinken says

After their Kyiv visit, Austin wants to see Moscow ‘weakened’

- By Nabih Bulos, Laura King and Jenny Jarvie

DNIPRO, Ukraine — U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken declared Monday that “Russia is failing” in its war aims, as new fighting flared in Ukraine’s eastern battle zone and Russian forces reportedly aimed a round of airstrikes at railway facilities in the country’s west and center.

Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III, who traveled with Blinken to the Ukrainian capital to meet with President Volodymyr Zelensky on Sunday, made it clear that Washington’s goals extend far beyond seeing Ukraine repel Moscow’s forces.

He said he wanted to see Russia “weakened to the point” where it cannot mount such aggression again.

Blinken and Austin made their remarks to reporters after crossing into Poland from Ukraine, after the first official U.S. visit to Kyiv since the war began two months ago. In a show of support, the two announced a fresh infusion of $300 million in military aid and a revived U.S. diplomatic presence in Ukraine.

“The first step in winning is believing that you can win,” Austin said after the visit. “We believe that they

can win if they have the right equipment, the right support, and we’re going to do everything we can ... to ensure that gets to them.”

Zelensky, in an address to his nation Monday, thanked President Biden and the people of the U.S. for “the strong and sincere” support.

“These are real things that strengthen not only our state, but democracy as a whole,” he said. “We share the same understand­ing with the United States: When democracy wins in one country, it wins all over the world.”

The coming weeks will probably be critical militarily, analysts say, with Russia having announced its determinat­ion to seize the entire Donbas, Ukraine’s eastern industrial heartland. Moscow last week also signaled aspiration­s to win control of the country’s southern seacoasts, which would render Ukraine landlocked, crippling it economical­ly.

The war, which has killed thousands and created an immense humanitari­an disaster, has also sparked a refugee crisis whose scale has not been seen on the European continent since World War II.

Nearly 5.2 million Ukrainians have fled the country, according to the latest figures from the United Nations refugee agency, and almost 8 million others are internally displaced, according to separate estimates from the U.N.’s Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration.

At the same time, there have been few major shifts on the battlefiel­ds. In the week since Russia embarked on a redoubled offensive in the east, its forces have made only “minor advances” along a 300-mile battle front, Britain’s military intelligen­ce said in an assessment Monday.

“Without sufficient logistical and combat support enablers in place, Russia has yet to achieve a significan­t breakthrou­gh,” the assessment said.

Zelensky lauded the successes of Ukrainian forces in his nightly video address, noting that 931 settlement­s in Ukraine had been liberated after temporary occupation by Russia.

“Many cities and communitie­s are still under the temporary control of the Russian army,” he said. “But I have no doubt that it is only a matter of time before we liberate our land.”

Russia’s missteps have inflicted a steep toll on its troops. British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said in the House of Commons on Monday that about 15,000 have been killed and that about 25% of Russian battalion tactical groups sent to Ukraine have been “rendered not combat effective” as Russia has lost more than 2,000 armored vehicles and 60 helicopter­s and fighter planes.

Still, Moscow last week claimed what would be its biggest victory of the war:

control of the strategic southern port of Mariupol, on the Sea of Azov. Ukrainian defenders continue to hold a last redoubt, a sprawling steelworks plant, which Russian President Vladimir Putin has ordered his troops to blockade.

Russia’s military on Monday said it would temporaril­y halt hostilitie­s at the plant to allow civilians also sheltering inside to be brought out safely. Col. Gen. Mikhail Mizintsev was quoted by the RIA Novosti news agency as saying civilians who emerged would be transporte­d in any direction they chose.

Ukraine swiftly spurned the Russian offer, with its deputy prime minister, Iryna Vereshchuk, saying on Telegram that a unilateral­ly announced evacuation plan “does not provide security.” Kyiv for weeks has accused Moscow of sending thousands of Ukrainians trying to flee Mariupol to Russiancon­trolled areas or to Russia.

Putin’s order to besiege rather than directly attack the giant Azovstal plant means that “many Russian units remain fixed in the city and cannot be redeployed,” the British assessment said. The fight for Mariupol, it added, has “exhausted many Russian units and reduced their combat effectiven­ess.”

Mariupol remains largely cut off from the outside world, but may prove the scene of the war’s worst mass atrocities against civilians. Municipal authoritie­s say an estimated 20,000 people have died in bombardmen­t or of hunger and privation since the city came under attack in the first days of the war.

In his remarks in Poland, Blinken hammered on the theme that Moscow, despite superior firepower, has not succeeded in subduing its smaller neighbor. So far in the war, Russia has ravaged whole Ukrainian cities but also suffered setbacks, including a failed bid to capture Kyiv and the loss of its Black Sea flagship to what Ukrainian and Western officials said was a missile attack.

“When it comes to Russia’s war aims, Russia is failing. Ukraine is succeeding,” Blinken said. “Russia has sought as its principal aim to totally subjugate Ukraine, to take away its sovereignt­y, to take away its independen­ce. That has failed.”

After Blinken’s announceme­nt of a renewed U.S. diplomatic presence in Ukraine, the White House said that Biden would nominate Bridget Brink, currently the U.S. ambassador to Slovakia, as the next U.S. ambassador to Kyiv. The post has remained officially vacant since the previous ambassador, Marie Yovanovitc­h, was removed by thenPresid­ent Trump three years ago.

Western unity over the war has been a linchpin of the Biden administra­tion’s policy toward Putin, acting in concert to punish Russia economical­ly and provide Ukraine with weapons.

Most European Union leaders were relieved after French President Emmanuel Macron won reelection Sunday over far-right challenger Marine Le Pen, who threatened to upend that solidarity.

Zelensky tweeted his congratula­tions to Macron, calling him, in French, a “true friend” of Ukraine. Putin, whose cordial relationsh­ip with Le Pen became a campaign issue, also congratula­ted Macron.

As fighting continued to rage, Russia’s Defense Ministry said that overnight and early Monday, its air force hit 56 targets it described as Ukrainian military infrastruc­ture. Moscow also claimed to have hit a big oil refinery northwest of the central city of Dnipro.

Dnipro itself — a city of almost a million people that some consider the gateway to the Donbas region — felt almost normal, with shops open, restaurant­s operating and even traffic on the streets. By contrast, another key Donbas city, Kramatorsk, heard a steady soundtrack of explosions and sirens reverberat­ing across abandoned roads.

Reflecting concerns about stepped-up Russian attacks outside the eastern battle zone, the Kyiv regional administra­tion said that starting Monday, the capital is under curfew between 10 p.m. and 5 a.m. Russia broke off its attempt to capture Kyiv nearly a month ago.

Elsewhere, Ukrainian officials took stock of death and damage from airstrikes that rained down unabated Sunday, when Eastern rite Christians celebrated Easter.

Luhansk, one of the two provinces that make up the Donbas, came under heavy shelling on the holiday, provincial Gov. Serhiy Haidai wrote Monday on the messaging app Telegram. He said structures set ablaze included three high-rise buildings and four homes.

The war also appeared to spill across Ukraine’s southweste­rn border Monday afternoon into Transnistr­ia, a Russia-aligned breakaway enclave of Moldova. Several explosions rocked a security agency building in the region’s capital, Tiraspol. The local ministry of internal affairs said in a statement there were no injuries and initial data indicated the shots were fired from rocketprop­elled grenades.

The Ukrainian Ministry of Defense’s intelligen­ce agency claimed in a Facebook post that the explosions were a “planned provocatio­n” carried out by Russian intelligen­ce services. Russia did not comment on the attacks. Last week, a senior Russian military official told state media that the goal was to seize full control of southern Ukraine and open a land corridor to Transnistr­ia.

Reports also emerged early Monday that five railway facilities in the country’s west and center had come under fire, causing a yet-undetermin­ed number of casualties. The head of Ukraine’s railways, Oleksandr Kamyshin, said informatio­n about the attacks was still being gathered.

One strike was reported to have hit not far from Lviv, Ukraine’s main western hub, which has largely escaped the brunt of the fighting. The regional governor, Maksym Kozytskyi, said a missile struck a rail facility at Krasne, about 25 miles east of Lviv, setting it ablaze.

Earlier this month, in one of the most devastatin­g single attacks of the war, about 60 people were killed at a train station in Kramatorsk as they waited for transporta­tion out of the battle zone.

In striking at critical transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, Russia probably sought to disrupt Ukrainian reinforcem­ents and logistics and demonstrat­e its ability to interfere with Western aid shipments, the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War wrote in an assessment.

However, the analysts concluded: “Russian precision strike capabiliti­es will remain limited and unlikely to decisively affect the course of the war.”

 ?? A WOMAN Alexey Furman Getty Images ?? who gave her name only as Inna, 53, cries in her destroyed house in Ozera, near Kyiv, Ukraine.
A WOMAN Alexey Furman Getty Images who gave her name only as Inna, 53, cries in her destroyed house in Ozera, near Kyiv, Ukraine.
 ?? Felipe Dana Associated Press ?? A UKRAINIAN serviceman in Kharkiv. Russia has made only “minor advances” in its new eastern offensive, a British assessment says.
Felipe Dana Associated Press A UKRAINIAN serviceman in Kharkiv. Russia has made only “minor advances” in its new eastern offensive, a British assessment says.
 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? K AT E R I NA Gubochkkna holds one of her two dachshunds as she and family members arrive in Zaporizhzh­ia from Russian-occupied territory in Ukraine.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times K AT E R I NA Gubochkkna holds one of her two dachshunds as she and family members arrive in Zaporizhzh­ia from Russian-occupied territory in Ukraine.
 ?? Felipe Dana Associated Press ?? IN KHARKIV, a Ukrainian serviceman makes his way through a building near a front-line position.
Felipe Dana Associated Press IN KHARKIV, a Ukrainian serviceman makes his way through a building near a front-line position.

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