The Palm Beach Post

Ukrainian official: Eastern front under intense assault

- Tom Balmforth

KYIV, Ukraine – Ukraine’s army chief said on Saturday the situation on the eastern front had worsened in recent days as Russia has intensifie­d its armored assaults and battles rage for control of a village west of the devastated city of Bakhmut.

The statement by Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi more than two years since Russia’s invasion reflected the grim mood in Kyiv as vital U.S. military aid that Kyiv expected to receive months ago remains stuck in Congress.

Syrskyi said he traveled to the area to stabilize the front as Russian assault groups using tanks and armored personnel carriers took advantage of dry, warm weather that has made it easier to maneuver.

“The situation on the eastern front in recent days has grown considerab­ly more tense. This is linked primarily to the significan­t activizati­on of offensive action by the enemy after the presidenti­al elections in Russia,” he wrote on the Telegram app.

Since President Vladimir Putin won a new term in a stage-managed mid-March election, Russia has stepped up its attacks on Ukraine and unleashed three massive aerial strikes on its energy system, pounding power plants and substation­s.

The slowdown in military assistance from the West has left Ukraine more exposed to aerial attacks and heavily outgunned on the battlefiel­d. Kyiv has made increasing­ly desperate appeals for supplies of air defense missiles in recent weeks.

Moscow’s forces, Syrskyi said, were taking significan­t losses during their attacks in the east but were also making tactical gains.

Social media channels reported the fall of Ukraine’s eastern village of Bohdanivka to the west of the occupied city of Bakhmut, prompting Kyiv’s defense ministry to deny them.

The settlement lies a few miles northeast of the town of Chasiv Yar, a Kyiv-controlled stronghold that Russia has been trying to reach after seizing the town of Avdiivka to the south in February.

Russia’s defense ministry said on Saturday its forces had captured Pervomaisk­e, a village to the south also located in Ukraine’s Donetsk region where Moscow has focused its offensive operations for months.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who has warned Russia may be preparing a big offensive push in late May or June, inspected domestical­ly produced weapons at an event outside Kyiv where he presented state awards to Ukrainian arms producers.

At the event, Ukraine’s military drone forces chief said supplies of drones to the front lines this year were already three times higher than the volume supplied over all of last year, the Interfax-Ukraine news agency reported.

He also said Ukraine had strike drones capable of flying about 745 miles.

In his statement, Syrskyi said only a technologi­cal edge over Russia in sophistica­ted weapons would allow Kyiv “to seize the strategic initiative” from a better equipped and larger foe.

He called for better training for soldiers and in particular infantry, a clear reference to Ukraine’s manpower challenges.

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