Russia takes more ground in east Ukraine, but loses another ship at sea
Ukraine’s naval drones scored another hit in the past week, but its troops continue to fall back in Donetsk
Russian troops continued a slow but relentless march in Ukraine’s east for a third straight week, giving defenders no respite since seizing Avdiivka on February 17.
Geolocated footage on Thursday [February 29] showed Russian troops had advanced 5km west of Avdiivka to the outskirts of Orlivka and Berdychi. The following day they were in central Orlivka. By Monday they had been spotted threateningly close to a road that connects Orlivka to the village of Tonenke to its south.
By the Russian defence ministry’s own estimate, it took Russian forces four months to advance nine kilometres through the Donetsk region before seizing Avdiivka. By that standard, 5km in three weeks – including 3km in the past week alone - was fast progress.
It was a similar story west of Bakhmut, another city in Donetsk, which Russian forces captured last May.
Ukrainian forces said on Sunday they were fighting fierce battles to hold onto Ivanivske, a village 2km west of Bakhmut. Geolocated footage showed Russian troops making their way into the village centre that day.
"Our military is heroically resisting and trying to repel the enemy from the occupied lines," said captain Ilya Yevlash, a spokesman for the defenders in the area.
A spokesman for the Tavria group of forces fighting in this area said troops were managing to build tank trenches, ramparts and bunkers, but these were isolated, not contiguous. It may not have been coincidence that Ukraine’s military on Sunday announced record spending on fortifications in Zaporizhia, on the southern front.
Russian troops claimed to have advanced marginally at many points along the battlefront in Donetsk. Another advance was confirmed in the village of Novomykhailivka. Geolocated footage published on Tuesday [March 5] showed Russian forces in the fields south of the settlement.
“I don’t buy… that this is going to shift the course of the war,” retired US colonel Seth Krummrich, told Al Jazeera. “Show me the map. Show me what’s been achieved in two years… I see maybe 1/18th [of Ukrainian territory] in Russian control at the cost of 250,000-500,000 casualties. I don’t see imminent victory by the Russians,” said Krummrich, who is now vice-president of Global Guardian, a security consultant.
Yet the situation was worrying enough to bring Ukraine’s newly installed commander-in-chief, Oleksandr Syrskyi, to the eastern front for three days.
On Friday Syrskyi revealed he had made command personnel changes and reinforced decision-making in some brigades around Avdiivka.
“I have sent groups of specialists to individual brigades where there are problems… to transfer experience and provide assistance,” he said. "In some cases, when… the actions and commands directly pose a threat to the life and health of subordinates, I am forced to make personnel decisions," he said.
There appear to be qualitative changes in Russia’s tactics that could spell trouble for Ukraine.
The Russian assault on Bakhmut last year relied heavily on pardoned prison inmates who were thrown into battle in continuous waves with little training and suffered heavy casualties.
A number of Ukrainian troops who fought in Avdiivka recently told the Washington Post the Russian assaults were well-prepared and the units well-manned and mostly well-trained.
They also said Russian artillery targeting was accurate and fast. Ukrainian fallback positions were being shelled soon after Ukrainian defenders reached them, and a column of retreating troops was decimated. “It was… a convoy of the best men ever. And in front of our eyes, this convoy was destroyed by artillery,” said one survivor.
Perhaps most worrying was Russia’s effective use of air support to drop satellite-guided glide-bombs – inertial bombs fitted with flight surfaces to achieve greater range and accuracy.
Ukraine’s air force has been taking out the Sukhoi-34 and Sukhoi-35 fighter-bombers that deliver those bombs in increasing numbers, including six Su-34s last Wednesday and Thursday alone.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine had shot down 15 Russian military planes from February 1 to March 3 – an unusually high number.
Russia may have decided to accept higher losses for increased firepower on the ground. Forbes and the New York Times have both reported that Russia was adopting more aggressive air tactics, conducting an increased rate of 100 or more sorties a day on the eastern front.
Observers have blamed US Congressional Republicans for holding up aid to Ukraine as the biggest cause for Russian advances.
“The collapse of Western aid to Ukraine would likely lead to the eventual collapse of Ukraine’s ability to hold off the Russian military and significant Russian advances further west, likely all the way to the western Ukrainian border with NATO member states,” wrote the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank.
Zelenskyy warned on February 25 that Russian forces were planning a major new offensive as early as May.
War in the air
Russia’s war on Ukraine’s will to fight scored a direct hit on Friday, when a Russian drone demolished a nine-storey apartment building in Odesa, killing at least 12 people. It was the worst attack of the past week and one of the worst this year.
“The delay in the supply of weapons for Ukraine, air defense systems for the protection of our people leads, unfortunately, to such losses,” Zelenskyy said following the attack.
Ukrainian air force spokesman Yuri Ignat said on March 5 it was not possible to protect Odessa from all missiles and drones. "Odesa is… a densely populated city bordering the coast, large buildings, infrastructure. The location of air defense in the Odesa region is built in such a way that it is not always possible to intercept both drones and missiles on the approaches to the city itself," Ignat said.
Another drone struck Odesa on Wednesday [March 6] as Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis met with Zelenskyy in the city.
Ukraine’s air defences downed 36 out of 43 drones Russia launched between February 29 and March 5, but officials have warned that it could run out of missiles for its air defence batteries without further support.
Maksym Timchenko, who runs Ukraine’s largest electricity utility, told the Financial Times that Ukraine was better prepared for Russia’s first drone onslaught on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure last winter, and that increasingly in recent weeks drones were reaching their targets. Russia had targeted energy infrastructure no fewer than 160 times just this year, he said.
The war at sea
The brightest spot for Ukraine during the week was its sinking of the Russian patrol ship Sergei Kotov near the Kerch Bridge, off east Crimea, in the small hours of Tuesday.
Ukrainian military intelligence’s “Group 13” launched Magura V naval drones, which Ukraine claims to be the fastest in the Black Sea. Military intelligence spokesman Andriy Yusov said the ship suffered five direct hits. The final pair of drones seemed to detonate inside the hull, which had been ripped open by previous explosions.
Group 13 has undertaken previous special operations with naval drones, sometimes in co-operation with the Security Forces (SBU), sinking or disabling between one third and one half of the Black Sea Fleet.
A Ukrainian government video shows the capabilities of the Sea Baby naval drone