Missiles target Ukraine's cities as Russian forces advance in east and
south
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[February 10, 2023]
By Olena Harmash
KYIV (Reuters) -Russia launched a wave of attacks on Ukrainian
infrastructure in the cities of Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia on Friday
morning as Ukrainian officials said a long-awaited Russian offensive was
under way in the east.
At least 17 missiles hit the southeastern city of Zaporizhzhia in an
hour, acting mayor Anatolii Kurtiev said, and the state grid operator
said high-voltage facilities across the country had been hit and
electricity supplies shut down.
Russia has repeatedly struck civilian infrastructure far from the front
lines over the last four months, leaving millions of Ukrainians in major
cities without power, heat or water for days at a time in the middle of
winter.
Air raid sirens blared across the country during the morning rush hour
and local officials urged weary civilians to heed them and take shelter.
Kyiv's city administration said air defences were working as explosions
were heard in the capital.
Kharkiv regional governor Oleh Synehubov reported about 10 explosions
and said power had been cut in some areas.
Critical infrastructure was also hit in Khmelnitskyi in the west and the
Dnipropetrovsk region in central Ukraine, regional officials said.
Air force spokesperson Yuriy Ihnat told Ukrainian television that
Ukrainian air defenses had shot down five of seven drones and five out
of six Kaliber missiles.
However, the air force also said Russia had launched 35 S-300 missiles,
which Ukraine's air defences are unable to shoot down, at the Kharkiv
and Zaporizhizhia regions.
ANNIVERSARY APPROACHES
Ukraine has been bracing itself for a new Russian offensive in the
belief that, after months of reverses, President Vladimir Putin wants to
be able to tout a battlefield success before the anniversary of the
invasion he launched on Feb. 24.
Russia's main focus has been the town of Bakhmut in the eastern Donetsk
province, a region whose capture has been one of Moscow's declared
priorities since the start of the war.
After months of static artillery battles that have become known to both
sides as the "meat grinder", Russian forces, including the Wagner
private army which has recruited tens of thousands of convicts with a
promise of pardons, have finally begun to encircle the town.
Britain's Defense Ministry said Wagner forces appeared to have advanced
two to three km around the north of Bakhmut since Tuesday - a remarkably
rapid push in a battle where front lines have barely moved for months.
It said they were now threatening the main western access road to
Bakhmut, a now largely deserted town with a pre-war population of about
70,000, although Ukrainian officials said their supply lines had not
been cut.
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Smog is seen during a shelling, amid
Russia's attack on Ukraine, in the front line city of Bakhmut in
Donetsk region, Ukraine February 9, 2023. REUTERS/Yevhen Titov
While Wagner has bolstered its numbers with prisoners, Russia's
regular army is now able to deploy many of the 300,000 or more men
enlisted in a forced mobilization late last year.
Britain also said Russian forces had made some advances near
Vuhledar, a strategically important Ukrainian-held bastion at the
intersection of the southern and eastern fronts. The British report
said the limited Russian gains there had most likely come at a high
cost in inexperienced units, including at least 30 Russian armored
vehicles abandoned in one failed assault.
Reuters could not verify the battlefield reports.
Asked on Ukrainian television if he agreed that the Russian
offensive had already begun, Pavlo Krylenko, governor of the Donetsk
region, said on Thursday: "Yes, definitely."
COUNTEROFFENSIVE TO COME?
Ukraine has made clear it plans its own major counteroffensive in
the coming months to reclaim more of the roughly one-fifth of
Ukrainian territory that Russia occupies.
But it appears likely to wait until it has received at least some of
the main battle tanks and longer-range missiles that the United
States, Germany and other NATO allies have promised.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on Thursday night met Polish
President Andrzej Duda to brief him about his tour to London, Paris
and Brussels to ask for more weaponry, notably fighter planes.
None of the leaders he met gave any public undertaking that they
were ready to offer the jets, a step certain to be seen in Moscow as
further evidence of direct Western involvement in the war. Britain
promised to help train Ukrainian pilots to fly NATO jets but stopped
short of offering to provide them.
French President Emmanuel Macron said he did not rule out sending
combat aircraft to Ukraine at some point but that, in the short
term, artillery would be more use to Kyiv.
President Volodymyr Zelenskiy suggested that he had, however,
received some form of commitments on planes.
"Europe will be with us until our victory. I've heard it from a
number of European leaders...about the readiness to give us the
necessary weapons and support, including the aircraft," he told a
news conference after attending a European Union summit in Brussels.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaus; Writing by Cynthia Osterman and
Michael Perry; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Peter Graff)
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