Los Angeles Times

UKRAINE PUSHES RUSSIA BACK IN NORTH

Advance near Kharkiv brings fighting closer to border. U.S. warns of a protracted war.

- By Laura King, Nabih Bulos and Jenny Jarvie

LVIV, Ukraine — The Ukrainian military pressed its counteroff­ensive against Russian troops Wednesday — pushing them back from the northeaste­rn city of Kharkiv — in a move that observers say could propel the conflict into a new phase, as U.S. intelligen­ce officials warned that Moscow was preparing for a protracted war.

Driving back Moscow’s troops to fewer than a dozen miles from the Russian border, Ukraine said it was able to claw back a constellat­ion of settlement­s north of Kharkiv.

The Ukrainian forces are now so close to Russia that, for the first time, a civilian in Russia died in cross-border shelling, according to Russian officials. One person died and six, including a 14year-old boy, were wounded in the small rural village of Solokhi, about six miles from Ukraine, said Vyacheslav Gladkov, the governor of the Belgorod region, on the Telegram messaging app. Residents of Solokhi, he said, would be taken to a safe place to avoid the shelling.

Ukrainian troops’ move north reduces pressure on Kharkiv, Ukraine’s secondlarg­est city and a primary target of Russian shelling since the beginning of the war, according to regional Gov. Oleh Sinegubov.

“The occupiers had even less opportunit­y to fire on the regional center,” Sinegubov said on Telegram.

In his nightly address, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky alluded to the lengthy conflict anticipate­d, saying he was grateful to the U.S. after the House of Representa­tives resounding­ly approved a $40-billion aid package for his country that Zelensky said would provide weapons and ammunition and support an investigat­ion into alleged Russian war crimes.

“These funds will be used as quickly as possible and without bureaucrac­y to strengthen Ukraine’s

defense,” he said.

As the war concludes its 11th week, the director of the U.S. Defense Intelligen­ce Agency characteri­zed the conflict as deadlocked.

“The Russians aren’t winning, and the Ukrainians aren’t winning, and we’re at a bit of a stalemate here,” Lt. Gen. Scott D. Berrier told the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday.

Analysts with the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War said in their Wednesday assessment that the Ukrainian counteroff­ensive north of Kharkiv had “forced Russian troops onto the defensive,” forcing them to replenish efforts to prevent Ukraine from further advancing to the Russian border.

Still, Russia seemed eager Wednesday to secure its territoria­l gains in Ukraine, with a Moscow-installed administra­tor in Kherson — the first city to fall in the war — calling on Russian President Vladimir Putin to annex the area instead of leaving it to become a Russiaalig­ned breakaway republic like those declared by separatist­s in eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region.

“The city of Kherson is Russia,” Kirill Stremousov was quoted as saying in a report by the state-run RIA Novosti news agency. “There will be no Kherson People’s Republic on the territory of the Kherson region, there will be no referendum­s. It will be a decree based on an appeal from the Kherson regional leadership to the Russian president, and there will be a request to include the region into a proper region of the Russian Federation.”

Later, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters that “such a fateful decision must have an absolutely clear legal background, a legal justificat­ion [and] be absolutely legitimate, as was the case with Crimea.”

Russia annexed Crimea, a Ukrainian peninsula on the Black Sea with an ethnic-Russian majority and a vital Russian naval base, in 2014. The annexation has not been recognized by the West and was followed by eight years of fighting in Ukraine’s east between Ukrainian forces and Kremlin-backed separatist­s that killed 14,000 people before Russia invaded the country Feb. 24 of this year.

Ukrainian forces’ reported breakthrou­gh near Kharkiv comes as fighting rages in other parts of the country. About 80 miles south of Kharkiv, Russian troops fired on the city of Lozova, injuring a civilian, Mayor Serhiy Zelensky said in a Facebook post. And about 60 miles east of Lozova, Russia fired missiles at two areas of the city of Slovyansk, the main target of Moscow’s forces in eastern Ukraine, according to its mayor, Vadym Liakh. There were no casualties.

Around Zmiinyi Island, also known as Snake Island, an outcrop in the Black Sea roughly 90 miles south of Odesa, Ukrainian forces struck Russian air defenses and resupply vessels, according to a British Defense Ministry intelligen­ce update Wednesday.

The island gained outsize symbolic importance early in the war, when Ukrainian soldiers stationed in a garrison there rebuffed a Russian warship’s demand to surrender with a colorful rejoinder.

The British Defense Ministry said that if Moscow can consolidat­e its position on the island with enhanced defenses, the outcrop could be used to “dominate the northweste­rn Black Sea.” But a redoubt there would also “offer Ukraine more opportunit­ies to engage Russian troops” and destroy materiel.

In the beleaguere­d port city of Mariupol, Russian forces continued their attack on Ukrainian defenders bunkered in the sprawling Azovstal steelworks plant.

Those defenders issued an urgent plea Tuesday, publishing a series of photos on the Telegram channel of the Azov regiment fighters, calling on the United Nations and the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross to help rescue hundreds of servicemen now living “without necessary medication and even food.”

“The servicemen you see in the photo and hundreds more at the Azovstal plant defended Ukraine and the entire civilized world with serious injuries at the cost of their own health,” the fighters’ statement said. “Are Ukraine and the world community now unable to protect and take care of them?”

Meanwhile, Ukraine announced that it would suspend gas shipments through a transit point that handles about one-third of the gas delivered from Russia to Europe.

In a statement Tuesday, Ukraine’s state-owned Naftogaz company declared “force majeure,” saying it would stop deliveries through Sokhranivk­a as of Wednesday because of interferen­ce by Russian and separatist troops now in control of the area.

Naftogaz said that “occupying authoritie­s” had disrupted communicat­ions and interfered in the operation of the pipeline and that it was “no longer able to carry out uninterrup­ted and effective operationa­l and technologi­cal control” over its facilities. The company said it asked Gazprom, Russia’s state-owned gas company, to transfer the relevant volumes to another conduit located in a Ukrainian-controlled area.

Gazprom declined, with company executives saying that they had not received any confirmati­on regarding the circumstan­ces of the force majeure and that in any case it was technicall­y impossible to switch the distributi­on pathway, a report by Russian state news operator Tass said.

With Russia’s disruption of the Black Sea trade route contributi­ng to rising global food prices and shortages of corn and wheat, U.S. Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken on Wednesday urged Russia to end its blockade of Ukraine’s ports.

“Ukraine is a critical source of agricultur­al products and a key link in the global food supply chain,” he said in a statement. “Russia’s blockade is preventing these goods from leaving and threatenin­g millions of people around the world with malnutriti­on and famine. The blockade must end.”

Although the U.S. and European nations have broadly come together in recent months to penalize Russia with sanctions, some fear that unity could wane as the war grinds on and takes an economic toll. On Wednesday, European Union talks over a proposed embargo on Russian oil stalled after Hungary, which is heavily reliant on Russian oil and gas, refused to agree.

Ukraine’s prosecutor general, Iryna Venediktov­a, announced Wednesday that a Russian soldier in Ukrainian custody will be the first to stand trial for an alleged war crime. Vadim Shysimarin, a 21-year-old commander of Russia’s Kantemirov­skaya tank division, is charged with shooting an unarmed 62-year-old civilian in the head in late February. The shooting occurred in a village in northeaste­rn Ukraine’s Sumy region.

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres said Wednesday that there are no “immediate chances of a peace agreement” or “immediate chances of a local ceasefire,” but that diplomacy is still essential to “save lives and improve the humanitari­an situation.”

Guterres also defended his visit to Putin in late April.

“It makes full sense to talk to the leader of the Russian Federation; it makes full sense to talk to any other relevant actors in the present crisis,” he said. The lives of civilians rescued from the bunkers of Mariupol are reason enough for him to “meet anybody in any part of the world without having any doubt that that is the right thing to do,” he said.

In Lviv, the western city that is a crossroads for those fleeing the war and those trying to return to homes they previously abandoned, the central train station was its usual hubbub of activity Wednesday. An entire refugee ecosystem has sprung up in and around the landmark Art Nouveau station: A World Food Kitchen tent was serving borscht, and a free cafe slowly filled with new arrivals.

Those needing a respite after hours or days of travel were steered to resting rooms and a nursery. A few who stepped off trains with little but the clothes on their backs were ushered toward stacks of donated supplies: boxes of diapers, bottles of shampoo, piles of sweatshirt­s.

Volunteers braced for the arrival of an afternoon train from Pokrovsk, a heavily bombarded town in the province of Donetsk, in the eastern battle zone. “We know these people are going to be in bad shape — hungry and tired and scared,” said volunteer Valentin Andrushko.

After another train pulled in from Zaporizhzh­ia, a southeaste­rn city that has been a way station for people fleeing Mariupol and its environs, a young volunteer spoke quietly with an elderly woman who was leaning on a cane and sobbing. She would briefly collect herself, nodding and wiping her eyes, and then break down again.

Some travelers were making a reverse journey, back to homes they had left weeks or months ago. Iryna Dragunova, a Lviv teacher, was seeing off her brother and sister-in-law, who were heading east to Kyiv, which they f led in the early weeks of the war. Neighbors in the capital told the couple that, other than some windows that shattered during a bombardmen­t nearby, their apartment was intact.

“Even if it still doesn’t feel so safe, and even if I beg them to stay here with me, they just want to go home,” said Dragunova.

Together with her mother, 21-year-old Liz Ivanchenko was headed for the central city of Dnipro. When they fled nearly two months ago, they were unable to persuade her 83year-old grandfathe­r to come along. But now, alone and ailing, he had agreed to accompany them back to Poland.

“We want him to be safe with us,” Ivanchenko said. “He wouldn’t go at first, but now he understand­s this war could go on for a very long time.”

 ?? Felipe Dana Associated Press ?? UKRAINE has pushed Moscow’s forces back from the city of Kharkiv to fewer than a dozen miles from the Russian border. Above, firefighte­rs douse flames at a Kharkiv park after a recent Russian bombardmen­t.
Felipe Dana Associated Press UKRAINE has pushed Moscow’s forces back from the city of Kharkiv to fewer than a dozen miles from the Russian border. Above, firefighte­rs douse flames at a Kharkiv park after a recent Russian bombardmen­t.
 ?? Dmytro “Orest” Kozatskyi Ukrainian National Guard Press Office ?? AN INJURED serviceman is among the Ukrainian defenders sheltering in the Azovstal steelworks plant in Mariupol. The group issued a plea for their rescue.
Dmytro “Orest” Kozatskyi Ukrainian National Guard Press Office AN INJURED serviceman is among the Ukrainian defenders sheltering in the Azovstal steelworks plant in Mariupol. The group issued a plea for their rescue.

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