The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Russia trying to force residents to abandon Kharkiv

- By Daryna Krasnoluts­ka, Jennifer Jacobs and Alberto Nardelli

Ukrainian and Western officials see Russia’s escalated bombardmen­t of Ukraine’s No. 2 city as a way to force the evacuation of civilians, they said.

Kharkiv, a northeaste­rn city less than an hour’s drive from the Russian border, has been hit with an escalating barrage of missiles, drones and heavy guided bombs over the past month. The assault has battered power-generation infrastruc­ture and left swathes of residentia­l buildings in ruins.

The city — whose pre-war population was about 1.5 million — has come under regular attack since Russia’s invasion began in 2022. But the Kremlin’s latest action looks like a coordinate­d effort to cut off supplies and create conditions that make the city uninhabita­ble, the officials said on condition of anonymity.

The siege of Kharkiv is one of the main thrusts of Russia’s military operation, which has exploited Ukraine’s dwindling artillery supplies and air defense as well as a disadvanta­ge on manpower. Russian President Vladimir Putin’s troops are also mounting a sustained attack on Ukraine’s energy system nationwide and making some advances across parts of the front line as Western officials fear Kyiv’s military may be nearing a breaking point.

Russian forces tried and failed to capture Kharkiv in the first weeks of the war, a victory for the city’s mostly Russian-speaking population, which from the beginning has defied Putin’s justificat­ion for the invasion — that Ukrainians and Russians are one people.

But more than two years since Putin ordered the invasion, living conditions in the city are increasing­ly perilous. The damage is extensive enough, and the attacks so unrelentin­g, that authoritie­s will struggle to restore capacity before the cold sets in next winter, if indeed many locals are still there.

Key target

Earlier this month, Ukraine’s Interior Ministry warned of “hostile disinforma­tion,” citing purported notificati­ons that Kharkiv was being evacuated as Russian troops surrounded it.

“The Russian occupiers, unable to achieve what they wanted on the battlefiel­d, are trying to sow panic and chaos in Ukrainian society,” the ministry warned on Telegram on April 2.

The authoritie­s aren’t ready to give up on the city. Infrastruc­ture Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov announced a plan to restore and distribute the power supply across Kharkiv and the surroundin­g region, where some 200,000 residents are still without electricit­y, according to a statement posted on social media platform X.

Ukraine has also stepped up requests from allies to deliver more energy supplies. Energy Minister German Galushchen­ko said “almost all” local power generation has been destroyed in the barrages, which have also hit efforts to bring some power online since the assault began.

“Winter will be a challenge for us,” Galushchen­ko told journalist­s in Brussels. “We are discussing ways we can quickly increase capacity.”

President Joe Biden’s administra­tion has been discussing how the U.S. can help with energy aid, according to people familiar with the situation.

Almost nobody is predicting that Kremlin forces will be able to seize the sprawling city any time soon. Ukraine’s military is fortifying its defenses, while officials around Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy estimate that Russia doesn’t have enough resources to mount a serious offensive, according to officials familiar with the thinking in Kyiv.

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