San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

UK: Heavy losses come with Bakhmut capture

- By Karl Ritter

KYIV, Ukraine — Russian forces have made progress in their campaign to capture the city of Bakhmut in eastern Ukraine, the focus of the war’s longest ground battle, but their assault will be difficult to sustain without more significan­t personnel losses, British military officials said Saturday.

The U.K. Defense Ministry said in its latest assessment that paramilita­ry units from the Kremlin-controlled Wagner Group have seized most of eastern Bakhmut, with a river flowing through the city now marking the front line of the fighting.

The mining city is located in Donetsk province, one of four regions of Ukraine that Russian President Vladimir Putin illegally annexed last year. Russia’s military opened the campaign to take control of Bakhmut in August, and both sides have experience­d staggering casualties.

Ukrainian troops and supply lines remain vulnerable to “continued

Russian attempts to outflank the defenders from the north and south” as the Wagner Group’s forces try to close in on them in a pincer movement, the U.K. ministry said.

However, the ministry added, it will be “highly challengin­g” for Wagner’s soldiers to push ahead because Ukraine has destroyed

key bridges over the river, while Ukrainian sniper fire from fortified buildings further west has made the thin strip of open ground in the city’s center “a killing zone.”

Russian military bloggers and other pro-Kremlin Telegram accounts claimed Friday that Russian forces had entered a metal processing plant in northweste­rn Bakhmut. The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington­based think tank, also referenced geolocated footage showing Russian forces within 800 meters of the AZOM plant.

The institute reported in its Friday night assessment that Moscow’s apparent focus on capturing the plant, rather than opting for a “wider encircleme­nt of western Bakhmut” by attempting to take nearby villages, was likely to bring a further wave of Russian casualties.

Ukraine’s ground forces on Saturday signaled their intention to hold out in Bakhmut, announcing on Facebook that their top officer was personally overseeing “the most important sectors of the front” to deny Moscow a long-awaited battlefiel­d victory.

The post did not clarify whether Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi was in Bakhmut at the time of the Facebook post, although he has made several visits to the city and other front-line hot spots in eastern Ukraine in the past month.

Meanwhile, repair work continued Saturday across Ukraine following a massive Russian missile and drone strike two days earlier that killed six people and left hundreds of thousands without heat or electricit­y.

Ukraine’s state grid operator said power supply issues persisted across four provinces following the barrage, in which 80 Russian missiles and a smaller number of exploding drones hit residentia­l buildings and critical infrastruc­ture across the country.

In a Facebook post, Ukrenergo said scheduled blackouts remain in place in Kharkiv and Zhytomyr, as well as parts of the Dnipropetr­ovsk and Mykolaiv regions. The company added that the situation in Zhytomyr was especially challengin­g, with some customers still without power.

Russian shelling on Saturday set a car driving through the southern city of Kherson on fire, killing one person inside and wounding two others, regional Gov. Oleksandr Prokudin said in a Telegram post.

 ?? Evgeniy Maloletka/Associated Press ?? A rescue worker speaks on the phone while his team puts out a fire in a house that was shelled by Russian forces.
Evgeniy Maloletka/Associated Press A rescue worker speaks on the phone while his team puts out a fire in a house that was shelled by Russian forces.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States