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Ukraine’s leadership doubles down on Bakhmut defence as Russians get closer

Ukrainian commanders say they are sapping Russian strength in the eastern city to give their planned offensive a better chance of success.

Ukrainian servicemen fire with a S60 anti-aircraft gun at Russian positions near Bakhmut this week. Picture: AFP
Ukrainian servicemen fire with a S60 anti-aircraft gun at Russian positions near Bakhmut this week. Picture: AFP

Every time Pvt. Viktor Daletskiy drives into the besieged eastern city of Bakhmut to pick up the injured and dead, the front line is a bit closer and the route in more precarious.

“It’s really tough. They’re getting closer and closer,” he said of the Russians during a pit stop this week outside a gas station 14 miles west of Bakhmut. “But their losses are still greater than ours.”

The battle for Bakhmut is reaching a critical point as Russian forces throw assault troops on suicide missions, capturing territory inch-by-inch and closing around the city like a vise.

As recently as January, Ukrainian commanders said the city wasn’t strategically important. In the past two weeks, they have changed their minds, rejecting the idea of withdrawal even as casualties have mounted.

Ukrainian T64 tanks move towards Bakhmut. Picture: AFP
Ukrainian T64 tanks move towards Bakhmut. Picture: AFP

Bakhmut, the generals say, is a key element in their efforts to weaken Russia’s army ahead of a critical Ukrainian offensive using fresh, Western-trained troops and modern equipment provided by the US and its allies.

The commander of the armed forces, Gen. Valery Zaluzhny, this week described the defence of Bakhmut as “key to the stability of the defence of the entire front.”

Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, signalled support for Ukraine’s strategy.

“Wave after wave of Russian soldiers are thrown into the chaos of war, absent any sort of synchronised co-ordination and direction,” he said.

Both sides are suffering heavy losses, but Ukraine says the ratio remains substantially in its favour. Soldiers fighting in Bakhmut this week described brutal urban combat as the battle has become an attritional slog against troops from the Wagner paramilitary group spearheading Russia’s assault there with units comprised mostly of men drafted from Russian prisons.

The Bakhmutka River that bisects the city is now the line between Russian and Ukrainian positions. Russian troops this week managed to cross the river from the south, threatening Ukraine’s hold on the city centre.

As the Ukrainians dig in with improvised foxholes beside residential blocks damaged by weeks of shelling, the Russians blast their positions with mortars and rocket-propelled grenades, soldiers say, edging forward building by building.

Both sides are now short on ammunition. As Ukraine rations shells ahead of its planned offensive, Russia is also hampered by low artillery stocks, Western officials say.

Ukrainian Colonel Serhiy Cherevatiy, spokesman for the armed forces in eastern Ukraine, said Russia is now firing 20,000 shells a day along the front line, a third the rate of just several weeks ago.

A Ukrainian serviceman takes cover in a trench near Bakhmut. Picture: AFP
A Ukrainian serviceman takes cover in a trench near Bakhmut. Picture: AFP

Ihor, a 44-year-old infantryman sent into Bakhmut for a two-day mission that ended on Saturday morning, said it doesn’t feel that way. The rate of Russian fire was so relentless that he never had a moment to pinpoint a single Russian soldier through his gunsight. Only one building stood between him and the Russian positions, and his unit ultimately had to abandon it and retreat to a rear position. “It was hell on earth,” he said.

Pvt. Daletskiy and a medic from his unit travel into Bakhmut every other day in an American-made M113 armoured personnel carrier. There is only one reliable road left into the city, a lifeline along which troops and supplies travel via the village of Ivanivske.

Ukraine makes repairs to it under Russian fire, but it is now a dirt track after constant shelling by Russian forces that have moved to within a mile of the highway.

When the rain falls, the road becomes almost impassable, a muddy quagmire that only tracked vehicles like Pvt. Daletskiy’s can navigate. On each trip, he searches the bombed-out buildings along the Bakhmutka’s western edge and drags out his comrades, most of them wounded, some of them dead.

He said the wounded tell him stories of Russian troops from the paramilitary Wagner Group launching assaults with no artillery or air support and armed only with Kalashnikov rifles, moving forward despite being pummeled by Ukrainian tanks and mortars.

Ukrainian servicemen fire a M777 howitzer at Russian positions near Bakhmut. Picture: AFP
Ukrainian servicemen fire a M777 howitzer at Russian positions near Bakhmut. Picture: AFP

One of those captured, a 48-year-old from Siberia, said he was serving a 12-year prison term for attempted murder when he joined Wagner, and was captured by Ukrainian soldiers on Friday. He said he was sent into combat without a rifle as punishment for looting alcohol from a local store after being dispatched by his commander to find food for Russian troops.

Colonel Cherevatiy, the military spokesman, said Russia as an attacking force is losing six men for each Ukrainian lost, although some Western analysts say recent Russian advances have reduced the Ukrainian superiority.

“Bakhmut is Wagner’s final frontier,” he said. “Our main goal there is to wear them out, waste them away and destroy them.”

Russia is attempting a pincer movement from the north and south that would trap Bakhmut’s Ukrainian defenders inside the city. Further west, it is pushing northwest toward Chasiv Yar, a town overlooking Bakhmut that is often seen as a second line of defence should Bakhmut fall.

A unit of Ukraine’s 17th Tank Brigade is attempting to hold back that offensive, taking up positions 800 yards from the Russians who are assaulting a key road into Bakhmut. The Wagner troops move along the tree lines, continuing to march forward even when they come under fire.

Members of Ukraine’s army prepare to fire towards Russian positions. Picture: AFP
Members of Ukraine’s army prepare to fire towards Russian positions. Picture: AFP

“Our motivation is to defend our land, but I don’t see what theirs is,” said First Lt. Mykyta Ivanov, the brigade’s deputy chief of staff. “It’s the first time I’ve seen fields covered with the bodies of dead Russians. It’s like some apocalyptic movie.”

The battle of Bakhmut is one of three major battles playing out across eastern Ukraine. To the south, Russia has largely stalled in its push to take Vuhledar.

To the north, it is moving advanced T-90 tanks, armoured personnel carriers, and mobilised troops trained for mechanised advances toward the town of Lyman, where Colonel Cherevatiy said fierce fighting is taking place.

Lt. Ivanov warns that if Ukraine can mount a successful counteroffensive and push the Russians out of Bakhmut, further — and tougher — battles will lie ahead.

“We shouldn’t think this war will end in Bakhmut,” he said. “I’m sure Russia is preparing for something much bigger.”

The Wall Street Journal

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/the-wall-street-journal/ukraines-leadership-doubles-down-on-bakhmut-defence-as-russians-get-closer/news-story/31b617aac5829b5493ab2bf28a66ff48