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Tag: Artillery

  • Ukraine’s war strategy: Survive 2024 to win in 2025

    Ukraine’s war strategy: Survive 2024 to win in 2025

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    This year will be one of “recovery and preparation on both sides, like 1916 and 1941-42 in the last world wars,” said Marc Thys, who retired as Belgium’s deputy defense chief last year with the rank of lieutenant general. 

    Looking ahead

    To assess prospects for the year ahead, POLITICO asked analysts, serving officers and military experts to give their view on the course of the war.

    Nobody could provide a precise roadmap for 2024, but all agreed that three fundamentals will determine the trajectory of the coming months. First, this spring is about managing expectations as Ukraine won’t have the gear or the personnel to launch a significant counteroffensive; second, Russia, with the help of its allies, has secured artillery superiority and, together with relentless ground attacks, is pounding Ukrainian positions; and third, without Western air defense and long-range missiles as well as artillery shells, Kyiv will struggle to mount a credible, sustained defense.

    “The year will be difficult, no one can predict from which direction Russia will go or whether we will advance this year,” said Taras Chmut, a Ukrainian military analyst and sergeant with the Naval Forces Marine Corps Reserve.

    It’s clear, however, that Ukraine is on the back foot.

    After many weeks of bloody fighting, Russia finally took the fortress city of Avdiivka this month. Without pausing for a breather, its military proceeded to launch attacks on other key Ukrainian strongpoints and logistical hubs: Robotyne in the region of Zaporizhzia, Kupiansk in Kharkiv, and Chasiv Yar in Donetsk region. 

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    Joshua Posaner, Veronika Melkozerova, Stuart Lau, Paul McLeary and Henry Donovan

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  • Russia takes full control of Avdiivka, as Kyiv decries ‘artificial deficit’ in ammo

    Russia takes full control of Avdiivka, as Kyiv decries ‘artificial deficit’ in ammo

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    U.S. President Joe Biden said “Ukrainian soldiers had to ration ammunition due to dwindling supplies as a result of congressional inaction, resulting in Russia’s first notable gains in months.” Biden called on lawmakers to approve $60 billion in aid to Ukraine that has been held up in the U.S. Congress.

    The fall of Avdiivka is Russia’s biggest gain since capturing the city of Bakhmut in May 2023, and comes almost two years to the day since Russian President Vladimir Putin launched his full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

    Ukraine’s newly appointed military chief, Gen. Oleksandr Syrsky, said in a statement that he decided to withdraw forces from the embattled city to “avoid encirclement [by Russian troops] and preserve the lives and health of servicemen.”

    Moscow said that some Ukrainian troops were still holed up in an industrial plant in the Avdiivka area, according to media reports. Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu told the Kremlin that Russian forces were working to clear final pockets of resistance at the Avdiivka Coke and Chemical Plant, officials said in a statement.

    Outnumbered Ukrainian defenders had battled a Russian assault around Avdiivka for four months in one of the most intense battles of the war. Zelenskyy said Russian forces had been suffering seven casualties for every Ukrainian death in Avdiivka, but even that death rate wasn’t stopping the attacks.

    “Russia has only one specific advantage, complete devaluation of human life,” Zelenskyy said.

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    Jones Hayden

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  • Zelenskyy offers Trump a tour of Ukraine’s front line

    Zelenskyy offers Trump a tour of Ukraine’s front line

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    “This is Russia’s war against any rules at all,” Zelenskyy said, to applause from the auditorium, adding:” If you do not manage to act now, Putin will make the next years catastrophic for other countries as well.”

    Zelenskyy’s appearance in Munich is part on an ongoing campaign to strengthen Kyiv’s ties with its Western allies. Before coming to Munich, he was in Berlin and Paris to sign security agreements, adding to a similar pact with the United Kingdom.

    Although Russia has more ammunition, the war is also causing problems, forcing it to plead for help from ramshackle dictatorships. “For the first time in Russian history, Russia bowed to Iran and North Korea for help,” said Zelenskyy.

    Despite problems like ammunition shortages and retreats from cities like Avdiivka, Zelenskyy insisted that Ukraine can prevail in the war against Russia, especially if its allies give it more arms and ammunition.

    “We can get our land back, and Putin can lose,” he said, adding: “We should not be afraid of Putin‘s defeat and the destruction of his regime. It is his fate to lose — not the fate of the rules-based order to vanish.”

    Antoaneta Roussi contributed reporting.

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    Joshua Posaner

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  • Russia loses 1,190 troops, 18 artillery systems in a day: Kyiv

    Russia loses 1,190 troops, 18 artillery systems in a day: Kyiv

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    Russian forces in Ukraine have lost 1,190 troops and 18 artillery systems in the past day, Kyiv’s military said on Sunday, as losses pile up at the start of the grueling winter effort.

    Moscow’s forces have lost a total of 318,570 soldiers and 7,744 artillery systems since the start of all-out war in the country in February 2022, the General Staff of Ukraine’s military said on Sunday.

    It is impossible to independently verify battlefield losses, and Newsweek has reached out to Russia’s Defense Ministry for comment via email.

    In an update also published on Sunday, Moscow said 605 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed over the past 24 hours, but did not provide a Russian estimate for total Ukrainian losses in the almost 21-month-long war. The Ukrainian military has been contacted for comment.

    A Russian soldier collects weapons on April 12, 2022, in Mariupol, Ukraine. Moscow’s forces in Ukraine have lost 1,190 troops and 18 artillery systems in the past day, Kyiv’s military said on Sunday.
    ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP via Getty Images

    On Sunday, Ukraine’s General Staff said its air-defense systems had destroyed 15 out of 20 Iranian-designed Shahed drones used by Moscow. A total of 38 strike drones were launched overnight on Ukrainian territory, Kyiv’s military said.

    Over the previous 24 hours, Russia also launched five missiles and 76 airstrikes against Ukraine, according to Kyiv. Moscow has maintained a campaign of missile, drone and artillery strikes on the country since the Kremlin began its invasion effort.

    But as the tougher, muddier and freezing winter conditions influence battlefield tactics, Russia is expected to launch a renewed campaign of missile strikes against Ukrainian targets, including on the country’s energy infrastructure.

    “As winter approaches, there will be more Russian attempts to make the strikes more powerful,” Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelensky, said in his daily evening address on Saturday. “It is crucial for all of us in Ukraine to be 100 percent effective,” he added.

    More than 150 Ukrainian settlements in the north, east and south of the country came under artillery fire over the past day, Kyiv said on Sunday.

    Fighting is continuing around the embattled Donetsk town of Avdiivka, the Ukrainian military also said. “Our warriors are steadily holding the defense, causing the enemy significant losses,” the General Staff continued.

    In its daily update, Russia did not mention the fortified, but hard-hit town that has spent months on the front lines, but said its southern grouping of forces had stopped six Ukrainian attacks around the Donetsk town Marinka and the villages of Klishchiivka and Shumy.

    Kyiv’s fighters recorded 22 attacks around Marinka, Ukraine said.

    More than 100 Ukrainian soldiers were killed and three armored vehicles were destroyed in the southern Zaporizhzhia region, Moscow’s Defense Ministry said. The Kremlin has annexed the region, but this is not internationally recognized and it does not control the entirety of territory. The southern swathe of Ukraine has also seen some of the heaviest fighting of Kyiv’s counteroffensive, which began in early June.