Russian Forces Push Deeper Into Northern Ukraine
With Ukrainian troops outnumbered, exhausted and now
in retreat near Kharkiv, many Ukrainians wonder if the war has taken a
significant turn for the worse.
Jeffrey
Gettleman Constant Méheut
By Jeffrey
Gettleman and Constant Méheut
Jeffrey
Gettleman reported from Kharkiv, Ukraine, and Constant Méheut from Kyiv.
May 12,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/12/world/europe/russia-ukraine-kharkiv.html
In the past
three days, Russian troops, backed by fighter jets, artillery and lethal
drones, have poured across Ukraine’s northeastern border and seized at least
nine villages and settlements, and more square miles per day than at almost
any other point in the war, save the very beginning.
In some
places, Ukrainian troops are retreating, and Ukrainian commanders are blaming
each other for the defeats.
Thousands
of Ukrainian civilians are fleeing to Kharkiv, the nearest big city. A
reception center that hummed with a sense of order and calm on Saturday had
transformed into a totally different scene on Sunday, as exhausted people
shouted at each other and families with no place to go spilled out onto the
grass.
As anxiety
spreads, some hard questions loom: How far will this go? Is it just a momentary
setback for the underdog Ukrainians? Or a turning point?
Military
experts say the Russian advance has put Ukraine in a very dangerous spot.
Ukrainian troops have been complaining for months about severe shortages of
ammunition — exacerbated by the tangles in the U.S. Congress that delayed the
delivery of key weapons. And Ukrainian soldiers, by all accounts, are
exhausted.
More than
two years of trying to fight off a country with three times the population to
draw from has left Ukraine so depleted and desperate for fresh troops that its
lawmakers have voted to mobilize convicts, a controversial practice that
Ukraine had ridiculed Russia for using in the first half of the war.
One
Ukrainian commander took the unusual step on Sunday of blasting his colleagues
for what he said were terrible border defenses.
“The first
line of fortifications and mines just didn’t exist,” Denys Yaroslavsky, a
reconnaissance commander, wrote on Facebook. “The enemy freely entered the gray
area, across the border line, which in principle should not have been gray!”
(“Gray”
areas are the contested zones between the Russian and Ukrainian front lines.)
Other
Ukrainian officials denied that the country’s forces were unprepared, saying
that reports suggesting so were outright disinformation benefiting Russia.
Commander
Yaroslavsky added that street fights had broken out in Vovchansk, a small town
near Kharkiv, and that it was now surrounded. “I say this because we can die
and no one will hear the truth,” he wrote. “Then why is it all for?!”
The city of
Kharkiv itself is safe — at the moment. It sits about 20 miles from the border.
But just outside the city, people are running for their lives. The Russians are
pressing on Lyptsi, another small town that is even closer to Kharkiv than
Vovchansk. Residents who fled in evacuation vans on Sunday said the situation
in Lyptsi was not looking good.
“For the
last three days they were shelling us every 10 minutes,” said Halyna Surina,
who escaped on Sunday afternoon. “There was artillery, airplane bombs and
drones flying around. I could hear helicopters — and they were not our
helicopters.”
Her voice
was shaking and she could barely choke out the words.
Taking
Lyptsi would put the Russians within artillery range of Kharkiv, a metropolis
of more than a million people that was just struggling to come back to life.
All this, for the Ukrainians, is a bad case of déjà vu.
The
Russians created a similar situation in early 2022, storming across the
northern border, occupying villages and small towns, and reaching the ring road
that circumscribes Kharkiv. For months, the people of this city endured
artillery and missile strikes, and hundreds were killed. The tall, empty
apartment buildings on the eastern side of town stand as scorched monuments to
those deadly days.
Part of the
Russians’ plan with this overall attack, military analysts said, is to threaten
Kharkiv and force Ukraine to divert troops from other battlefields, especially
those in the eastern Donbas region.
And that’s
exactly what is happening. A group of Ukrainian special forces soldiers were
huddling at a gas station on Sunday afternoon, swigging energy drinks and
trying to get the lay of the land. They looked tired. And they said they had
just been redeployed from Donbas.
“The
Russians have understood, just as a lot of analysts have, that the major
disadvantage that Ukraine is currently suffering from is manpower,” said
Franz-Stefan Gady, a Vienna-based military analyst. “By thinning out the front
line, you are increasing the odds of a breakthrough.”
There may
be an even bigger, more strategic motive. President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia
is fresh off an election victory that he billed as a referendum on launching
this war. For his troops to threaten Kharkiv, again, and send miles of cars
full of terrified civilians fleeing down the highways, again, and turn
Ukraine’s second largest city into a shell of itself, again, could demoralize
Ukrainians and its allies.
That hasn’t
happened yet, but if it does it could give the impression that after two years
and hundreds of thousands of casualties and billions of dollars, little has
changed. That, in turn, would perhaps intensify pressure on Ukraine’s leaders
to negotiate a truce with Russia, which they have so far insisted would achieve
nothing but cementing Mr. Putin’s appetite for aggression.
With
fighting raging in the area, cross-border fire has intensified and Russia on
Sunday accused Ukraine of shelling Belgorod, a mid-sized Russian city just
across the Ukrainian border, killing 11 people, the regional governor said on
Telegram.
In
particular, an explosion collapsed part of an apartment building, leaving a
gaping hole in its structure. The Russians blamed the Ukrainians; the
Ukrainians denied it and provided videos that they said showed what was an
explosion within the building and not an airstrike.
The
Russians have cited previous strikes on their cities to justify taking more
Ukrainian territory. Russian leaders want to push Ukrainians back from the
border and carve out a buffer zone, a mission they began on Friday at dawn.
Russian
infantry, supported by tanks, artillery and aircraft, crossed the international
frontier, and by Saturday, they had taken a handful of towns. By Sunday, more
had fallen.
Another
Ukrainian soldier serving near Kharkiv who spoke by telephone on Sunday said he
and his comrades hadn’t slept in days and were in shock at how fast the
Russians were moving.
Gen.
Oleksandr Syrsky, Ukraine’s top military commander, conceded that the situation
had “significantly worsened” but said that Russian attempts to break through
Ukrainian defensive lines had been unsuccessful so far.
Some
analysts believe that however bad the situation looks at the moment for
Ukraine, it won’t change the overall direction of the war.
Thibault
Fouillet, the deputy director of the Institute for Strategic and Defense
Studies, a French research center, said it would have “little impact on the war
in general” and for now, the fighting remained at a “general tactical
stalemate” with Russia making limited and costly gains.
The
civilians in Russia’s path are not taking chances. Ukrainian officials reported
on Sunday that 4,500 people had been evacuated from the border towns north of
Kharkiv; that doesn’t count many more who have jumped into their own cars and
gotten out.
“We could
hear machine gun fire coming closer and closer,” said Zhenia Vaskivskaia, who
had just arrived in Kharkiv from Vovchansk.
The
Russians, she said, were “about to break in.”
Oleksandra
Mykolyshyn contributed reporting from Kharkiv.
Jeffrey
Gettleman is an international correspondent based in London covering global
events. He has worked for The Times for more than 20 years. More about Jeffrey
Gettleman
Constant
Méheut reports on the war in Ukraine, including battlefield developments,
attacks on civilian centers and how the war is affecting its people. More about Constant Méheut


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