The Mercury News

Shelling escalates in Ukraine

Thousands flee fearing attack

- By Steven Erlanger

Artillery fire escalated sharply in eastern Ukraine Saturday, and thousands of residents fled the region in chaotic evacuation­s — two developmen­ts rife with opportunit­ies for what the United States has warned could be a pretext for a Russian invasion.

Russia-backed separatist­s, who have been fighting the Ukrainian government for years, have asserted, without evidence, that Ukraine was planning a large-scale attack on territory they control.

Western leaders have derided the notion that Ukraine would launch an attack while surrounded by Russian forces, and Ukrainian officials dismissed the claim as “a cynical Russian lie.”

But separatist leaders on Saturday urged women and children to evacuate and able-bodied men to prepare to fight. The ginnedup panic was already having real effects, with refugees franticall­y boarding buses to Russia and refugee tent camps popping up across the Russian border.

At the same time, the firing of mortars, artillery and rocket-propelled grenades by separatist rebels along the front line roughly doubled the level of the previous two days, the Ukrainian Ministry of Internal Affairs said. Two Ukrainian soldiers were killed and five wounded, the military said.

Ukrainian officials said the shelling came exclusivel­y from the separatist­s, who are seen as a proxy for Russia.

New York Times reporters at the scene witnessed shelling from separatist­s and saw no return fire from the Ukrainian forces, although residents in the separatist regions said there was shelling from both sides.

“I have a small baby,” said Nadya Lapygina, who said her town in the breakaway region of Luhansk was hit by artillery and mortar fire. “You have no idea how scary it is to hide him from the shelling.”

In a pointed reminder of where this conflict could lead, Russia engaged in a dramatic display of military theater Saturday, testfiring ballistic and cruise missiles. President Vladimir Putin of Russia presided over tests of nuclearcap­able missiles as part of what Russia insists are nothing more than exercises and not the precursor to an invasion.

Tensions between the United States and Russia have not been this high since the Cold War, and Russia's nuclear drills appeared carefully timed to deter the West from direct military involvemen­t in Ukraine.

Western leaders gathered in Munich issued repeated calls for a diplomatic resolution to the crisis, despite President Joe Biden's claim Friday that Putin had already decided to invade Ukraine.

The leaders displayed a remarkably united front in what Vice President Kamala Harris called “a defining moment” for European security and the defense of democratic values.

But in Ukraine, the fighting edged perilously closer to a tipping point. And there were alarming signs of what U.S. officials described as possible precursors to a pretext for a Russian invasion.

Intense artillery barrages targeted a pocket of government-controlled territory around the town of Svitlodars­k, a spot that has worried security analysts for weeks for its proximity to dangerous industrial infrastruc­ture, including storage tanks for

poisonous gas.

A stray shell from returning government fire risks hitting a chemical plant about 6 miles away in separatist-controlled territory. The plant, one of Europe's largest fertilizer factories, has pressurize­d tanks and more than 12 miles of pipelines holding poisonous ammonia gas.

An explosion there could produce a toxic cloud that could serve as an excuse for a Russian invasion or, U.S. officials have warned, Russia could stage its own explosion there to justify interventi­on.

Another potential flashpoint in the area, a water network that supplies drinking water to several million people on both sides of the conflict, may have been damaged by shelling Saturday. Russia's Interfax news agency cited a spokespers­on for the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic saying that shelling had struck a pumping station and the water supply was at risk.

A loss of water for residents in the Russianbac­ked areas would reinforce Russian assertions of dire conditions for civilians and would be a setback for Ukraine, which has tried to persuade residents that the government is not their enemy. A cutoff of that water supply amid fighting in 2014 hastened a flow of refugees from the city.

In what Western officials dismissed as a baseless provocatio­n, Denis Pushilin, leader of one pro-Russia separatist region, the so-called Donetsk People's Republic, called on all able-bodied men to be prepared to fight the coming Ukrainian assault.

“I appeal to all men of the republic who are able to hold weapons in their hands, to stand up for their families, their children, wives and mothers,” he wrote on social media.

The Kyiv government denied any plans for an attack, but the warnings prompted residents to flock to bus depots in eastern Ukraine.

On Friday, Putin ordered the government to pay $130 to every refugee, and the Russian region of Rostov, which has several crossing points with the separatist areas, declared a state of emergency.

By Saturday, several thousand people had fled the separatist regions of Ukraine and crossed into Russia.

As the separatist­s stirred upheaval in eastern Ukraine, the Russian missile tests, of three ballistic and cruise missiles, were also intended to send a different message, that a conflict could quickly escalate.

 ?? TYLER HICKS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A Ukrainian soldier at a front line position near Troitske, Ukraine, on Friday. The United States said on Friday that Russia had likely amassed as many as 190,000troops near the borders of Ukraine and inside the separatist regions in the country's east.
TYLER HICKS — THE NEW YORK TIMES A Ukrainian soldier at a front line position near Troitske, Ukraine, on Friday. The United States said on Friday that Russia had likely amassed as many as 190,000troops near the borders of Ukraine and inside the separatist regions in the country's east.

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