The Guardian

‘If they don’t die, Ukraine’s infantry will’

Battle could decide future of eastern front

- Luke Harding Pokrovsk

The Russian soldiers sent to storm Ukrainian positions arrived at a graveyard. Around them was the ruined village of Mykhailivk­a. From above, Ukrainian spy drones watched. One soldier vanished under a tree. Another jogged towards a shellwallo­ped cottage. Back at a control observatio­n centre, Maj Oleksandr Fanagey muttered a few words.

Seconds later, a Ukrainian kamikaze drone hit a moving Russian. A live video stream showed that he survived but his left leg was injured. The soldier shuffled towards a patch of grass and tried to pull a bandage from a green backpack. “He will die for sure,” Fanagey predicted. “The enemy doesn’t bother evacuating its wounded.”

Late last month, Russian units seized a mine just outside Mykhailivk­a, in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk oblast. Their mini-advance was part of a sweeping Russian offensive. It began in February with the capture of Avdiivka. Its goal: to expand a salient deep into Ukraine and overrun the city of Pokrovsk, 11 miles away.

Pokrovsk is a transport hub. Multiple road and rail lines intersect here. Without it, Kyiv will struggle to move troops, food and ammunition to other parts of an overstretc­hed frontline. The city’s fate is bound up with that of Donetsk province as a whole.

A bloody battle looms. Russian troops are a mere six miles away. There is continual noise from incoming and outgoing shells. Last week, Russian warplanes smashed bridges in and around the city, setting the stage for a future frontal attack. One downed bridge had linked the T0504 highway with the neighbouri­ng town of Myrnohrad. Engineers in orange jackets were building an alternativ­e dirt route.

Another enemy bomb clipped the bridge above Pokrovsk’s railway station, now closed and boarded up, as are supermarke­ts, restaurant­s and banks. Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad were once home to 100,000 people. Most but not all have fled. Bombs have hit many central buildings, including the office of Ukraine’s pension fund.

The Russians are pressing from two directions. They swallowed up the town of Novohrodiv­ka – population 18,000 – when its Ukrainian defenders retreated last week. Russian forces are also moving forward from the southeast and from Ukrainsk, which fell a few days ago.

The Kremlin’s creeping progress comes at a significan­t human cost. Sitting in front of a bank of monitors, Fanagey, the artillery commander of the national guard’s 15th brigade, zoomed in on grisly images. Six dead Russians could be seen near a row of old graves marked with blue wooden crosses. Another soldier, bloated and missing a head, lay in a vegetable patch. “The whole village is a cemetery for them,” the major said.

A dozen bodies could be seen in an anti-tank ditch. Around them was the debris of war: a machine gun, helmets, provisions. The gully leads from Mykhailivk­a’s abandoned mine to an avenue of shattered houses. Artillery strikes have dinted yellow fields. “Over the last two weeks Russia’s momentum has nearly stopped. They are moving forward but with less potential,” Fanagey said.

His comments confirm – in this sector – claims by Ukraine’s commander-in-chief, Oleksandr Syrskyi, that Russia’s assault on Pokrovsk has weakened. In August, Syrskyi attacked Kursk oblast. This has relieved pressure on other parts of the frontline, including the Zaporizhzh­ia region and neighbouri­ng Kherson. Moscow had pulled only “a few troops” from the Pokrovsk area, the major said. He added: “They have a huge collection of forces.”

The Russians have changed tactics. These days they rarely use armoured vehicles in a battlefiel­d saturated with drones. Instead, small groups of 10 to 15 soldiers sneak forward on foot, day and night, the commander said, using different paths. If undetected, they assemble at a rendezvous point and try to infiltrate Ukrainian lines. “It’s quantity with the Russians, not quality. We see so many ‘meat attacks’,” Fanagey said.

Two weeks ago, the Russians sent a mechanised column into Mykhailivk­a, consisting of a Sovietera T-72 tank and two infantry fighting vehicles. Ukrainian soldiers opened fire. The tank’s crew – driver, gunner and mechanic – bailed out and hid in some shrubs. A drone finished them off. The Ukrainians drove away in the tank.

According to Stanislav, the major’s deputy, Russia is able to advance because its army is much bigger. “We don’t have enough ammo. For every one shell we fire, they fire seven. Or more. We lack infantry,” he said. “The situation is a bit better than six months ago [when the US Congress blocked deliveries of weapons]. But with this tempo of fighting it isn’t enough. Russia is a big country. It has money and resources. It funds its military with oil and gas.”

The battle for Pokrovsk is likely to be the culminatio­n of Moscow’s campaign this year. A decade ago, Russian forces covertly seized the eastern regional capitals of Donetsk and Luhansk. Vladimir Putin’s objective is to capture the whole of Donetsk oblast, as well as three other Ukrainian provinces he “annexed” in 2022. Stanislav said taking Pokrovsk would not be easy. “We can hold it,” he said.

If Russian forces do occupy Pokrovsk, they would be able to menace and possibly cut off a chain of Ukrainian garrison cities to the north: Kostiantyn­ivka, Druzhkivka, Kramatorsk and Sloviansk. Already they are shelling the road between Pokrovsk and Kostiantyn­ivka.

Vitalii Milovidov, the 15th brigade’s press officer, said the west was partly to blame for Ukraine’s reversals in 2024. He cited White House restrictio­ns on the use of US-supplied long-range weapons. Milovidov said that if deep strikes were permitted, Ukraine could hit weapons dumps and aerodromes. “It will make enemy logistics more difficult. They will have to move everything 250-300km back from the frontline,” he noted. “If we had got a green light earlier … there would be no advance on Pokrovsk.”

Fanagey said he was optimistic Ukraine could still win. He cited the accurate work of his experience­d artillery and drone units, as well as the contributi­on made by neighbouri­ng brigades. “We’ve had three years of war.

If we receive enough weapons, victory is absolutely possible.” And what about Putin’s threats to use nuclear weapons? “He’s lying,” the commander said, cheerfully.

Back in Mykhailivk­a, smoke rose into the sky. A Ukrainian shell had hit a cottage. None of the village’s inhabitant­s – 1,300 of them, once – remain. The only souls are Russian intruders. Did the commander feel remorse for killing so many of them? “No. If they don’t die, our infantry will die instead. I never thought I would be glad to kill someone, but I hate them.”

 ?? ??
 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: ALESSIO MAMO/THE GUARDIAN ?? The 15th brigade of Ukraine’s national guard prepare to launch a surveillan­ce drone near Pokrovsk
PHOTOGRAPH: ALESSIO MAMO/THE GUARDIAN The 15th brigade of Ukraine’s national guard prepare to launch a surveillan­ce drone near Pokrovsk
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? PHOTOGRAPH: ALESSIO MAMO/ THE GUARDIAN ?? ▲ The 15th brigade’s control centre, into which surveillan­ce drones feed informatio­n about the Russian advance. Right, drone footage of the battlefiel­d
PHOTOGRAPH: ALESSIO MAMO/ THE GUARDIAN ▲ The 15th brigade’s control centre, into which surveillan­ce drones feed informatio­n about the Russian advance. Right, drone footage of the battlefiel­d

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom