San Diego Union-Tribune

UKRAINIAN FORCES PUSH TO ENCIRCLE BAKHMUT

Kyiv seeks to extend the fight as Russia claims control

- BY ADAM TAYLOR & ANASTACIA GALOUCHKA Taylor and Galouchka write for The Washington Post.

Ukrainian forces have been reduced to small footholds in the devastated eastern city of Bakhmut, which despite its limited strategic importance has emerged as the war’s bloodiest battlefiel­d. But they have made gains on the Russian flanks, in a move to encircle the city and extend the fight there, according to Ukrainian officials and military personnel in the field.

“I’m in the trenches. We’ve fortified ourselves in the positions” that Russia once held, Yuriy, a soldier in the Ukrainian Army’s Fifth Separate Assault Brigade, wrote in a text message from a position to the south of Bakhmut, near the village of Klishchiiv­ka. He spoke on the condition of anonymity for security reasons.

“Around us are a lot of dead Russians,” he said.

Ukraine still holds slivers of the city, including the area around what has become a landmark of Ukraine’s last redoubt: a destroyed sculpture of a Soviet MiG fighter jet, according to multiple military personnel involved in defending the position, which Russian forces continue to contest.

Oleksandr Syrsky, Ukraine’s eastern military commander who made a surprise visit to the front lines Sunday, acknowledg­ed that Ukraine controlled only a “small part” of Bakhmut but said that the new aim was to surround the city in a “tactical encircleme­nt,” echoing a statement posted to Telegram by Deputy Defense Minister Hanna Maliar.

Word of this strategy to prolong the fight, regardless of who technicall­y had control of the city, emerged as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy painted a bleak picture of the state of the battle in response to questions posed during a visit to Hiroshima, Japan, for a Group of Seven summit meeting. His remarks raised questions about what a Ukrainian victory would look like, given the destructio­n of the city and the costs its defenders have already paid.

“You have to understand, there is nothing,” Zelenskyy said Sunday — nothing of Bakhmut as it once stood left to control.

The city, in the northeast of Donetsk region, was home to some 70,000 people before Russia invaded Ukraine last year. It has since been decimated, hit by some of the fiercest fighting of the conflict, as Russian troops and Wagner Group mercenary forces, made up largely of freed Russian prisoners, gained ground block by block.

On Saturday, Wagner founder Yevgeniy Prigozhin claimed that his forces had at last captured the entire city and the Kremlin released a statement from Russian President Vladimir Putin that praised the liberation of the city, referring to it by the Soviet-Russian name, Artyomovsk. Ukraine rejected the claims.

The full capture would be a rare win for Moscow, which has struggled to lock in clear victories since the early days of the war.

But the Russian side has been riven with internal difference­s over Bakhmut, with Prighozin unleashing a stream of public criticism of his Russian military counterpar­ts over their handling of the assault. Ukrainian forces have been able to exploit these difference­s to hold off an enemy that greatly outnumbers them.

Stanislav Bunyatov, 22, a soldier with the 24th Separate Assault Battalion who was injured on Wednesday in fighting near the villages of Klishchiiv­ka and Ivanivske, said that his unit was able to attack during a period when Wagner mercenarie­s were being replaced by Russian soldiers.

“They were not ready for us,” said Bunyatov, who is in the city of Dnipro recovering from an injury caused by grenade shrapnel.

Ukrainian advances have been reported in nearby areas, with commanders announcing on May 9 that they had taken more than a square mile of territory to the city’s south. Officials have portrayed this as a strategic move.

Such advances make it “very difficult for the enemy to stay in Bakhmut,” Maliar wrote on Telegram on Sunday, referring to the capture of high ground outside the city.

The fight for Bakhmut has confounded some analysts, who described it as strategica­lly irrelevant to the broader war. Ukraine is currently preparing a longawaite­d spring counteroff­ensive where it will hope to penetrate Russian defenses on at least one part of its 200-mile front line.

If Russian forces are tied up in Bakhmut, some have argued, it could hurt their preparedne­ss elsewhere.

 ?? HEIDI LEVINE FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Ukrainian soldier Stanislav Bunyatov, 22, was wounded Wednesday in fighting with Russian troops in the highly contested eastern city of Bakhmut.
HEIDI LEVINE FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Ukrainian soldier Stanislav Bunyatov, 22, was wounded Wednesday in fighting with Russian troops in the highly contested eastern city of Bakhmut.

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