Ukrainian troops lose ground with fewer fighters and exposed supply
lines
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[February 03, 2025]
By SAMYA KULLAB, VASILISA STEPANENKO and EVGENIY MALOLETKA
POKROVSK REGION, Ukraine (AP) — A dire shortage of infantry troops and
supply routes coming under Russian drone attacks are conspiring against
Ukrainian forces in Pokrovsk, where decisive battles in the nearly
three-year war are playing out — and time is running short.
Ukrainian troops are losing ground around the crucial supply hub, which
lies at the confluence of multiple highways leading to key cities in the
eastern Donetsk region as well as an important railway station.
Moscow is set on capturing as much territory as possible as the Trump
administration is pushing for negotiations to end the war and recently
froze foreign aid to Ukraine, a move that has shocked Ukrainian
officials already apprehensive about the intentions of the new U.S.
president, their most important ally. Military aid has not stopped,
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said.
Ukrainian soldiers in Pokrovsk said that Russian forces switched tactics
in recent weeks, attacking their flanks instead of going head-on to form
a pincer movement around the city. With Russians in control of dominant
heights, Ukrainian supply routes are now within their range. Heavy fog
in recent days prevented Ukrainian soldiers from effectively using
surveillance drones, allowing Russians to consolidate and take more
territory.
Meanwhile, Ukrainian commanders say they do not have enough reserves to
sustain defense lines and that new infantry units are failing to execute
operations. Many pin hopes on Mykhailo Drapatyi, a respected commander
recently appointed by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy as ground
forces chief, to shift the dynamic and counterattack.
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“The war is won by logistics. If there is no logistics, there is no
infantry, because there is no way to supply it,” said the deputy
commander of the Da Vinci Wolves battalion, known by the call sign Afer.
“(Russians) have learned this and are doing it quite well."
Poor weather at the worst time
A combination of factors led Kyiv to effectively lose the settlement of
Velyka Novosilka this past week, their most significant gain since
seizing the city of Kurakhove in the Donetsk region in January.
Scattered groups of Ukrainian soldiers are still present in Velyka
Novosilka’s southern sector, Ukrainian commanders said, prompting
criticism from some military experts who questioned why the higher
command did not order a full withdrawal.
The road-junction village is 15 kilometers (9 miles) from the
neighboring Dnipropetrovsk region, where authorities have begun digging
fortifications for the first time since Russia's full-scale invasion in
February 2022, anticipating further Russian advances.
Russia amassed a large number of infantry around Velyka Novosilka,
soldiers there said. As heavy fog set in in recent days, Ukrainian
drones “barely worked” to conduct surveillance, one commander near
Pokrovsk told The Associated Press. Long-range and medium-range
surveillance was impossible, he said. He spoke on condition of anonymity
in order to speak freely about sensitive military matters.
“Because of this, the enemy was amassing forces … taking up positions,
digging in. They were very good at it,” he said.
It was at that fateful moment that Russian forces launched a massive
attack: Up to 10 columns of armoured vehicles, each with up to 10 units,
moved out from various directions.
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[to top of second column]
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A Ukrainian serviceman of the 148th artillery brigade prepares 155mm
artillery shells for a M777 howitzer before firing towards Russian
positions at the frontline on Velyka Novosilka direction, Donetsk
region, Ukraine, Jan. 26, 2025. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)
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Ukrainian logistics in peril
Key logistics routes along asphalted roads and highways are under
direct threat from Russian drones as a result of Moscow's recent
gains, further straining Ukrainian troops.
Russian forces now occupy key dominant heights around the Pokrovsk
region, which allows them to use drones up to 30 kilometers (18
miles) deep into Ukrainian front lines.
The Pokrovsk-Pavlohrad-Dnipro highway is “already under the control
of Russian drones,” said the commander at Pokrovsk’s flanks. Russian
forces are less than 4 kilometers ( 2 1/2 miles) away and are
affecting Ukrainian traffic, he said. “Now the road is only 10% of
its former capacity,” he said.
Another paved highway, the Myrnohrad-Kostyantynivka road, is also
under Russian fire, he said.
This also means that in poor weather, military vehicles, including
armored personnel carriers, tanks and pickup trucks, have to trudge
through the open fields to deliver fuel, food and ammunition, as
well as evacuate the wounded.
In a first-aid station near Pokrovsk, a paramedic with the call sign
Marik said evacuating wounded soldiers once took hours, now it takes
days.
“Everything is visible (by enemy drones) and it is very difficult,”
he said.
New recruits are unprepared
Ukrainian soldiers in Pokrovsk said shortages of fighting troops are
“catastrophic” and challenges are compounded by newly created
infantry units that are poorly trained and inexperienced, putting
more pressure on battle-hardened brigades having to step in to
stabilize the front line.
Afer, the deputy commander, complained that new recruits are
“constantly extending the front line because they leave their
positions, they do not hold them, they do not control them, they do
not monitor them. We do almost all the work for them.”
“Because of this, having initially a 2-kilometer area of
responsibility, you end up with 8-9 kilometers per battalion, which
is a lot and we don’t have enough resources,” Afer said. Drones are
especially hard to come by for his battalion, he said, adding they
only have half of what they need.
“It’s not because they have lower quality infantry, but because they
are completely unprepared for modern warfare,” he said of the new
recruits.
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His battalion has almost no reserves, forcing infantry units to hold
front-line positions for weeks at a time. For every one of his
soldiers, Russians have 20, he said, emphasizing how outnumbered
they are.
Back at the first-aid station, a wounded soldier with the call sign
Fish was recovering from a leg wound sustained after he tried to
evacuate a fallen comrade. He had moved him from a dugout to load
him into a vehicle when the Russian mortar shell exploded nearby.
“We are fighting back as much as we can, as best as we can,” he
said.
——
Kullab reported from Kyiv, Ukraine. Associated Press journalist
Volodymyr Yurchuk contributed to this report.
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