Ukraine troops hold out as Russia assaults Sievierodonetsk wasteland
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[May 31, 2022] By
Pavel Polityuk and Max Hunder
KYIV (Reuters) -Ukrainian forces were still
holding out in Sievierodonetsk on Tuesday, resisting Russia's all-out
assault to capture a bombed-out wasteland that Moscow has made the
principal objective of its invasion in recent days.
Both sides said Russian forces now controlled between a third and half
of the city. Russia's separatist proxies acknowledged that capturing it
was taking longer than hoped, despite one of the biggest ground assaults
of the war.
Western military analysts say Moscow has drained manpower and firepower
from across the rest of the front to concentrate on Sievierodonetsk,
hoping a massive offensive on the small industrial city will deliver
something Russia can call a victory in one of its stated aims in the
east.
"We can say already that a third of Sievierodonetsk is already under our
control," Russia's TASS state news agency quoted Leonid Pasechnik, the
leader of the pro-Moscow Luhansk People's Republic, as saying.
Fighting was raging in the city, but Russian forces were not advancing
as rapidly as might have been hoped, he said, claiming that pro-Moscow
forces wanted to "maintain the city's infrastructure" and were moving
slowly because of caution around chemical factories.
The Ukrainian head of the city administration, Oleksandr Stryuk, said
the Russians now controlled half of the city.
"Unfortunately ... the city has been split in half. But at the same time
the city still defends itself. It is still Ukrainian," he said, advising
those still trapped inside to stay in cellars.
Ukraine says Russia has destroyed all of the city's critical
infrastructure with unrelenting bombardment, followed by wave after wave
of mass ground assault involving huge numbers of casualties.
Thousands of residents remain trapped. Russian forces are advancing
towards the city centre, but slowly, and have not succeeded in
encircling the Ukrainian defenders holding out there.
Regional governor Serhiy Gaidai told Ukrainian television there did not
appear to be a risk of Ukrainian forces being encircled, though they
could ultimately be forced to retreat across the Siverskiy Donets river
to Lysychansk, the twin city on the opposite bank.
Stryuk, head of the city administration, said evacuating civilians was
no longer possible. Authorities cancelled efforts to evacuate residents
after an attack on Monday that killed a French journalist.
Jan Egeland, secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council aid
agency which had long operated out of Sievierodonetsk, said he was
"horrified" by its destruction.
"We fear that up to 12,000 civilians remain caught in crossfire in the
city, without sufficient access to water, food, medicine or electricity.
The near-constant bombardment is forcing civilians to seek refuge in
bomb shelters and basements, with only few precious opportunities for
those trying to escape."
Elsewhere on the battlefield, there were few reports of major action on
Tuesday. In the east, Ukraine says Moscow is trying to assault other
areas along the main front, including pressing towards the city of
Solviansk. In the south, Ukraine claimed in recent days to have pushed
back Russian forces on a bank of the Inhulets River that forms a border
of Russian-held Kherson province.
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A local resident walks next to a building destroyed by a Russian
military strike, as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues, in the
town of Bakhmut, in Donetsk Region, Ukraine May 29, 2022. REUTERS/Serhii
Nuzhnenko
OIL BAN
After having failed to capture Kyiv, been driven out of northern
Ukraine and made only limited progress elsewhere in the east, Moscow
has concentrated the full force of its armed might in recent days on
Sievierodonetsk, which had a pre-war population of around 110,000.
Victory there and in adjoining Lysychansk would let Moscow claim
control of Luhansk province, one of two eastern regions it claims on
behalf of separatist proxies, partly achieving one of President
Vladimir Putin's stated war aims.
But the huge battle has come at a massive cost, which some Western
military experts say could hurt Russia's ability to fend off
eventual Ukrainian counterattacks elsewhere, regardless of who wins
the battle for Sievierodonetsk.
"Putin is now hurling men and munitions at the last remaining major
population centre in (Luhansk), Sievierodonetsk, as if taking it
would win the war for the Kremlin. He is wrong," the
Washington-based Institute for the Study of War think tank wrote
this week.
"When the Battle of Severodonetsk ends, regardless of which side
holds the city, the Russian offensive at the operational and
strategic levels will likely have culminated, giving Ukraine the
chance to restart its operational-level counteroffensives to push
Russian forces back."
The EU on Monday agreed its toughest sanctions against Russia since
the war began, for the first time targeting Russian sales of oil, by
far Moscow's main source of income.
The EU will now ban import of Russian oil by sea. Officials said
that would halt two-thirds of Russia's oil exports to Europe at
once, and 90% by the end of this year as Germany and Poland also
phase out imports by pipeline.
Hungary, which relies on Russian oil through a huge Soviet-era
pipeline, secured an exemption, though EU officials said they
expected this would be "temporary".
Ukraine says the sanctions are taking too long and are still too
full of holes to stop Russia: "If you ask me, I would say far too
slow, far too late and definitely not enough," said Ihor Zhovkva,
deputy head of President Volodymyr Zelenskiy's office.
Moscow, meanwhile, has switched off gas supplies to several EU
countries in a dispute over how to receive payments, although the
moves so far, during warm months when demand is lower, have yet to
have the severest impact. On Tuesday, Russia switched off the main
Dutch gas buyer, GasTerra, which said it would find supplies
elsewhere.
Putin launched his invasion of Ukraine in February claiming Moscow
aimed to disarm and "denazify" its neighbour. Ukraine and its
Western allies call this a baseless pretext for a war to seize
territory.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Simon Cameron-Moore and
Peter Graff; Editing by Stephen Coates and Alison Williams)
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