The Boston Globe

Ukraine tries to puncture stalemate

Strikes Russian forces at several eastern positions; Kyiv elusive on calling attacks a counteroff­ensive

- By Andrew E. Kramer, Thomas Gibbons-Neff, and Julian E. Barnes

KYIV — Ukrainian forces have intensifie­d artillery strikes and ground assaults in a flurry of military activity that US officials said Monday could signal Ukraine’s long-planned counteroff­ensive against Russia had begun.

The fighting, which started Sunday, was raging along several points on the front line, but farther to the east of where many analysts had expected Ukraine’s counteroff­ensive to launch. Even if it has started in that eastern area, experts said, the battle would allow Ukraine’s troops to try to accomplish the same goal: Head south toward the Sea of Azov and cut off the land bridge connecting occupied Crimea to mainland Russia.

The Russian Ministry of Defense said Monday that a major Ukrainian operation had begun at five locations in the eastern Donetsk region and that it had repelled the assaults and inflicted casualties on Ukrainian forces. Moscow’s account could not be independen­tly corroborat­ed.

Ukraine’s deputy minister of defense, Hanna Malyar, said on the Telegram messaging app that Ukraine’s forces in some areas were “moving to offensive actions” in the war, which began when Russia invaded its neighbor 15 months ago. But she stopped short of saying it was a decisive new phase in the war.

“A defensive operation includes everything,” she said, “including counteroff­ensive actions.”

Pro-Russian bloggers noted that a strong Ukrainian attack had begun Monday morning near the town of Velyka Novosilka, in Donetsk. Mikhail Zvinchuk, a pro-Russian blogger who writes under the pseudonym Rybar, described intense fighting as Ukrainian soldiers in German-made Leopard tanks seized control of the village of

Novodonets­ke on Monday evening, a possible sign that Ukraine had pushed its NATO-trained forces into the battle.

He said the battles were being contested “under heavy artillery fire.”

Aleksandr Khodakovsk­y, the commander of a Russian proxy group, also described seeing Leopard tanks during the fighting near Novodonets­ke, where, he said, Ukrainian forces had “felt out our weak spots.”

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, in his overnight address, expressed gratitude “to all our defenders who gave us the news we expect.”

“We see how hysterical­ly Russia perceives every step we take there, every position we take,” he added. “The enemy knows that Ukraine will win. They see it. They feel it thanks to your strikes, soldiers, and in particular in the Donetsk region.”

Ukraine has long said it will make no formal announceme­nt about the start of its counteroff­ensive. And Ukrainian officials have not told their American counterpar­ts exactly when the battles will start, but provided them with a time frame for when they intended to begin the push against Russian forces. Sunday fell within that time frame, said US officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive intelligen­ce.

These officials based their assessment that Ukraine had most likely begun its counteroff­ensive partly on informatio­n from US military satellites, which had detected increased movement from the Ukrainian military positions. The satellites have infrared capabiliti­es to track artillery fire and missile launches.

US military analysts also said they believed that Ukrainian units had begun an initial push to determine the positions and strength of Russia’s forces — a traditiona­l tactic that Americans had been training Ukrainian forces to use.

A US official said that testing for potential weaknesses in Russian defenses, manpower, and morale — what the US military calls “reconnaiss­ance by force” — would most likely continue for several days. If successful, the official said, the main thrust of the Ukrainian counteroff­ensive would become more evident during that time.

US and Ukrainian officials would also be watching closely to see how Russia reacts to these attacks spread out along the front lines.

At the White House, John Kirby, a spokespers­on for the National Security Council, said he would not go beyond the statement that Ukrainian officials made.

“What I can speak to is how hard we worked to prepare them to be ready,” Kirby said. “The president is confident we did everything we could over the last seven, eight months or more to make sure they had the capabiliti­es to be successful.”

Much is riding on Ukraine’s ability to reclaim territory lost to Russia since the war began. Ukrainian officials say they must move as quickly as possible to liberate people living under Russian occupation and subject to abuses, including torture and the forced deportatio­n of children to Russia.

Success could also support Ukraine’s push for longer-term commitment­s from the West for additional military aid and security guarantees. It could also strengthen the hand of Zelensky in any peace talks with Russia. Failure, or a lack of demonstrab­ly quick progress, could complicate Ukraine’s push for additional security guarantees at a NATO summit this summer.

The front line in southern and eastern Ukraine has been largely static for months, with the exception of intense fighting in the eastern city of Bakhmut and operations by small Ukrainian units. In northeaste­rn Ukraine, anti-Kremlin forces have been staging cross-border raids into Russia.

Weeks after Russian forces captured Bakhmut, the commander of Ukraine’s ground forces said Monday that Ukraine’s troops were making an advance near the ruined city, although the extent of any gains was unclear.

Tanks from an assault brigade destroyed enemy positions, the commander, General Oleksandr Syrsky, said on Telegram. The post also said that Ukrainian forces had made progress in a small wooded area during an assault on enemy positions.

Malyar, Ukraine’s deputy minister of defense, said on Telegram that Bakhmut remained “the epicenter of hostilitie­s.”

“There, we are moving along a fairly wide front,” she continued, adding, “The enemy is on the defensive.”

One difficulty in determinin­g the exact start of a counteroff­ensive is that the fighting could begin with feints or diversions. And to carry out a successful counteratt­ack after months of planning, Ukrainian troops must navigate mostly flat, unforgivin­g terrain and staunch Russian defenses.

The operation is expected to involve thousands of Ukrainian troops, including many equipped with newer and more advanced Western equipment like armored personnel carriers and tanks.

Western officials have long thought that a counteroff­ensive would focus on southern Ukraine as part of a strategy to sever the land bridge between western Russia and Crimea. But no matter where Ukraine attacks along a front line stretching hundreds of miles, Russia’s defenses will be formidable.

Moscow’s forces have had months to dig in, lay minefields, and prepare entrenchme­nts. The Pentagon has trained new Ukrainian units with the hope that they have the power to turn the tide, but some US officials have noted that dug-in Russian defenders could be difficult to dislodge.

Ukrainian forces have also faced challenges as Russian formations have become adept at using drones to pinpoint targets for artillery strikes. Ukraine’s troops have found it difficult, often under withering fire, to coordinate troop movements, tanks, and artillery support effectivel­y enough to achieve a breakthrou­gh.

Igor Girkin, a pro-Russian former paramilita­ry commander who uses the nom de guerre Igor Strelkov on Telegram, said Russia’s forces had had time to prepare for a Ukrainian counteratt­ack — unlike last year, he wrote, when they created “ideal conditions” for Ukraine’s forces to advance in Kharkiv.

But he said a significan­t breakthrou­gh by Ukrainian forces in the Novodonets­ke area would give Ukraine an opening to drive a wedge between Donetsk and Mariupol and cut off communicat­ions between the two Russian-held cities.

“If the enemy manages to break through deep enough and on a wide sector of the front (which it is trying to do),” Girkin wrote, “then its advantage in number of units and formations will be difficult to stop.”

 ?? IRYNA RYBAKOVA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Ukrainian soldier took up a position on the front line near Bakhmut, in the Donetsk region, Ukraine, on Monday.
IRYNA RYBAKOVA VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS A Ukrainian soldier took up a position on the front line near Bakhmut, in the Donetsk region, Ukraine, on Monday.

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