Russia closes in on key Ukrainian city, seeking gateway for future advances
Russian forces are slowly tightening the noose around the eastern Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, a key logistical hub whose main supply lines are under threat nearly three years after Moscow invaded its neighbour.
While
Ukraine is stubbornly defending the city, its encirclement or fall
could put Russia in a strong position to mount attacks in several
directions in the east and increase pressure on Kyiv at a critical
juncture in the war.
Inside
Pokrovsk, life is bleak. According to the regional governor, 7,000
residents remain out of a pre-war population of 60,000. The last post
office recently closed - mail will now be delivered by armoured truck.
On
either side of the city, Russian troops are within artillery and drone
range of a crucial highway that runs east to west along the entirety of
Ukraine, and most cars now take detours along backroads into Pokrovsk
for their safety.
In
the past several days, Moscow's forces have reached the main rail line
into the city from eastern Ukraine's most important logistical hub, the
city of Dnipro.
"The
situation is generally difficult, the enemy is constantly attacking on
foot," said the deputy commander of Ukraine's 59th assault brigade,
which is fighting on the Pokrovsk front.
He asked to be identified by his military call sign, Phoenix, for security reasons.
The
officer said the enemy had much greater numbers of infantry, attacked
in small groups willing to take extremely high casualties and adeptly
exploited the landscape and low-visibility weather conditions to hide
themselves from drones.
"Day and night they are moving forwards," Phoenix told Reuters.
Pokrovsk's
road and rail connections have made it an important supply centre for a
large section of Ukraine's frontline, although in recent months the
threat of Russian artillery and drones has limited that function.

Michael
Kofman, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace in Washington, said Pokrovsk's transit routes meant that if it
fell, Russian forces could use it as a staging ground to push north or
west.
"It
sets up Russian forces for a potential advance into Dnipropetrovsk
region ... further behind the frontlines, they're building and repairing
rail lines."
"They can then move up their own logistics and that enables them to push further west."
Dnipropetrovsk
region is a large province whose eastern tip faces Pokrovsk, and
Russian troops are currently about 5 km (3 miles) from its boundary. It
is not one of the four Ukrainian regions claimed by Russia.
With U.S. President Donald Trump
pressing the sides to reach a peace deal, Moscow's occupation of a part
of this region could strengthen its hand in future negotiations.
CHANGE IN TACTICS
Viktor
Trehubov, a Ukrainian military spokesman, said the Russians were
attempting to bypass and surround Pokrovsk from the west.
He
said this differed from their approach to taking previous big urban
areas, where they opted for costly frontal assaults and street fighting.
"It seems that, perhaps for the first time, they have started to spare their manpower," he said.
Three
analysts Reuters spoke to said that should it capture the city, Russia
had two main options for advancing on the Pokrovsk axis of battle.
The
first was to push westward into the sparsely populated plains of
Dnipropetrovsk region, which are lightly fortified and offer few natural
or urban obstacles for Kyiv to use in defence.
The
second was to push north, into a denser patchwork of industrial towns
that would be tougher to get through but would enable Moscow to put
pressure on Kramatorsk and Sloviansk, the two biggest remaining
Ukrainian-controlled cities in the eastern region of Donetsk.
On
Sunday, President Volodymyr Zelenskiy put one of Ukraine's most senior
generals, land forces chief Mykhailo Drapatyi, in charge of the
strategic command that oversees a vast chunk of frontline including
Pokrovsk.
"He's
a well-respected commander and his appointment might lead to improved
command and control and coordination between units on the frontline,
which has remained a challenge for Ukraine over the past year," said Rob
Lee, a senior fellow at the U.S.-based Foreign Policy Research
Institute.
Russia's
assaults on the Pokrovsk front are largely conducted by small groups of
infantry that use villages and treelines to dig in, said military
spokesman Trehubov.
Phoenix,
the deputy brigade commander, said the Russians had recently started
using a new tactic - sending three- or four-man infantry squads deep
into enemy territory to ambush Ukrainian soldiers and vehicles with the
help of anti-tank mines.
However,
he added that overall the assaults had become slightly less intense
over the past month, and that Russia was firing less artillery than six
months ago.
Pasi
Paroinen, an analyst with the Finland-based Black Bird Group, said
Ukraine struggled to beat back Russia's small infantry assaults because
it lacked sufficient manpower of its own to comprehensively cover the
front lines.
Kyiv has faced long-running recruitment and mobilisation issues, and last year there was a rise in soldiers deserting and absconding from a depleted, tired force.
"Ukrainian units are simply running out of infantry," Paroinen said.
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