The eastern city of Lysychansk is a big prize for
Putin.
By
Cassandra Vinograd
July 3,
2022
Updated
1:03 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/03/world/europe/lysychansk-ukraine-putin.html
Russia’s
complete control of the Ukrainian city of Lysychansk appears to be a foregone
conclusion: Soviet flags are flying in the center and Ukrainian troops have
withdrawn.
Moscow is
boasting of victory, in statements that make clear that the battle there was
about far more than one city. Its capture gives Russia a key victory in its
drive to seize the entire Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.
Donbas,
which comprises the territories of Luhansk and Donetsk, is a prize for
President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia. After failing to topple Ukraine’s
government in Kyiv, Mr. Putin refocused his military campaign on the Donbas,
which makes up about 9 percent of Ukraine’s land but holds significance for its
industry, location and potential as a bargaining chip for Moscow.
The Donbas
borders Russia and runs from outside Mariupol in the south to the northern
border near Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city. Home to coal mines and
steel, an estimated 6.2 million people lived in the region before Russia’s
invasion, according to the most recent census data.
Kremlin-backed
separatists have held territory in the Donbas since 2014, after Russia annexed
Crimea, a move that Ukraine and its Western allies have termed illegal. The
proxy forces seized more than a third of the Donbas at the time and proclaimed
the formation of two breakaway republics; they have been waging a civil war
against Ukraine’s government ever since.
More than
14,000 people died in Donbas fighting between 2014 and last year. But the
battle was effectively at a stalemate — albeit one with sporadic and deadly
shelling along the roughly 250-mile front line known as the line of contact —
until Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24.
Now Russian
forces and their separatist allies control about 80 to 90 percent of the
Donbas, according to Ukrainian officials.
To take
complete control of Luhansk, Russia first devoted its full force at the city of
Sievierodonetsk, just across the river from Lysychansk. After battering that
city and eventually seizing control on June 24, Russian forces set their sights
on neighboring Lysychansk.
The twin
cities were the last major population centers in Luhansk Province under
Ukrainian control. Now with both in hand, Russia effectively controls all of
the resource-rich region and can regroup — with Donetsk in its cross hairs.
Controlling
Sievierodonetsk and Lysychansk means Russia could position its forces to mount
offensives on cities to the southwest, notably Sloviansk, Kramatorsk and
Bakhmut.
Kramatorsk
is one of the last major cities still under Ukrainian control in Donetsk. If
Kramatorsk falls, Mr. Putin’s forces will in effect control the whole Donbas
region.
That’s
critical from a supply standpoint as well as a symbolic one. Mr. Putin could
claim a tangible military victory and use the territory as leverage in any
future peace negotiations with Ukraine. Holding the Donbas would also expand
Moscow’s “land bridge” connecting Russian territory to Crimea.

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