Russians tighten noose on Ukraine's Bakhmut, situation 'extremely tense'
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[February 28, 2023]
By Dan Peleschuk
KYIV (Reuters) -Russian forces on Tuesday pressed forward their
weeks-long drive to encircle and capture the eastern Ukrainian city of
Bakhmut where the commander of Ukraine's ground forces described the
situation as "extremely tense".
The Russian troops, including mercenary fighters from the Wagner Group,
are trying to cut the Ukrainian defenders' supply lines to the city,
scene of some of the war's bloodiest battles, and force them to
surrender or withdraw.
That would give Russia its first major prize in more than half a year
and open the way to the capture of the last remaining urban centres in
the Donetsk region, one of four which Moscow claims to have annexed in
what it calls its "special military operation" in Ukraine.
"Despite significant losses, the enemy threw in the most prepared
assault units of Wagner, who are trying to break through the defences of
our troops and surround the city," Ukraine's Colonel General Oleksandr
Syrskyi said in a statement.
An unnamed soldier from Ukraine's 93rd Separate Mechanised Brigade,
speaking on the Telegram messaging app as explosions boomed in the
background, struck a defiant note: "February 28, the town of Bakhmut.
The city is on fire, the enemy is pressing. Everything will be
Ukraine..."
Russia's state-run RIA news agency released a video clip which it said
showed Russian Su-25 fighter jets roaring over Bakhmut. "We are glad
they are ours," says a man in the clip identified as a Wagner fighter,
adding the jets helped them "psychologically".
Ukraine's military said Russia was shelling settlements around Bakhmut,
which had a pre-war population of around 70,000 but now lies in ruins
after months of intense trench warfare.
"Over the past day, our soldiers repelled more than 60 enemy attacks,"
the military said early on Tuesday, including on the villages of
Yadhidne and Berkhivka just north of Bakhmut.
A Reuters reporter who visited the area on Monday said he saw no sign of
Ukrainian forces withdrawing and that reinforcements were arriving
despite constant Russian shelling.
MUD
Ukrainian soldiers in the Donetsk region hunkered in muddy trenches
after warmer weather thawed out the frozen ground.
"Both sides stay in their positions, because as you see, spring means
mud. Thus, it is impossible to move forward," said Mykola, 59, commander
of a Ukrainian frontline rocket launcher battery, watching a tablet
screen for coordinates to fire.
The spring thaw has a history of ruining plans by armies to attack
across Ukraine and western Russia, turning roads into rivers and fields
into quagmires.
Reuters saw several military vehicles stuck in mud. In a zigzag trench, Volodymyr, a 25-year-old platoon commander, said his men were prepared
to operate in any weather.
"When we're given a target, that means we have to destroy it."
Russia, its forces replenished with hundreds of thousands of conscripts,
has intensified its attacks right along the eastern front but its
assaults have come at a high cost, Ukraine says.
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Ukrainian service members are seen next
an infantry fighting vehicle near the frontline town of Bakhmut,
amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Donetsk region, Ukraine February
25, 2023. REUTERS/Yan Dobronosov
Russia's defence ministry said its forces had destroyed a Ukrainian
ammunition depot near Bakhmut and shot down U.S.-made rockets and
Ukrainian drones.
It later accused Ukraine of launching attempted drone attacks
against two southern Russian regions overnight but said they had
caused no damage.
Reuters could not verify the battlefield reports.
The Russian ministry, without providing evidence, also said the
United States was planning a provocation in Ukraine using toxic
chemicals. There was no immediate U.S. response.
'CERTAIN REALITIES'
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov repeated on Tuesday Moscow's
position that it is open to peace negotiations but that Kyiv and its
Western allies must accept Russia's annexation of four Ukrainian
regions - Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia - following
referendums last September Kyiv and the West says were illegal.
"There are certain realities that have already become an internal
factor. I mean the new territories. The constitution of the Russian
Federation exists, and cannot be ignored. Russia will never be able
to compromise on this, these are important realities," Peskov told
reporters.
Ukraine's outnumbered troops repelled Russia's attack aimed at
taking Kyiv early in the war and later recaptured substantial
territory, but Russia still occupies nearly a fifth of Ukraine.
Kyiv has so far ruled out talks with Moscow and has demanded that
Russian troops withdraw to Ukraine's 1991 borders.
Separately, Russia's defence ministry said it had carried out air
defence drills involving interceptor jets on Tuesday after St.
Petersburg's Pulkovo Airport was forced to suspend all flights for
an hour. No reason was given for the suspension, while unconfirmed
media reports said an unidentified object, such as a drone, had been
spotted in the area.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen this week became the latest
senior Western official to visit Kyiv, where she announced the
transfer of the first $1.25 billion from a new $9.9 billion tranche
of U.S. economic and budget assistance.
Her boss, President Joe Biden, went there a week ago to mark the
first anniversary of Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
"America will stand with Ukraine as long as it takes," Yellen,
flanked by sandbags at the Cabinet office, told Ukrainian Prime
Minister Denys Shmyhal on Monday.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Robert Birsel and Gareth
Jones; Editing by Stephen Coates and Nick Macfie)
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