San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Macron plea not to shame Russia ripped

- By Andrew E. Kramer and Jason Horowitz

KRAMATORSK, Ukraine — As Ukrainian troops tried to claw back territory and stave off a blistering Russian assault along the country’s embattled eastern front, the government Saturday sought also to repel a demand earlier in the day by President Emmanuel Macron of France that Moscow not be humiliated to improve chances of reaching a diplomatic solution.

“We must not humiliate Russia so that the day when the fighting stops we can build an exit ramp through diplomatic means,” Macron, who has sought to position himself as the world’s chief negotiator with the Kremlin, said in an interview with French newspapers. “I am convinced that it is France’s role to be a mediating power.”

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba responded with a scathing post on social media.

“Calls to avoid humiliatio­n of Russia can only humiliate France and every other country that would call for it,” Kuleba wrote. Instead, he argued, peace and the saving of lives could best be achieved by Russia being “put in its place.”

The exchange comes as the war has settled into what seems increasing­ly destined to be a slog.

The Ukrainians and Russians both said Saturday that they were inflicting decisive losses against each other in the battle for Sievierodo­netsk, the last major city in the Luhansk region of eastern Ukraine still under Ukrainian control.

‘Army ... destroyed’

But the fighting was not limited to that town. A senior Ukrainian official said Saturday that the country’s troops had reached a milestone in grinding down the Russian invasion force in eastern Ukraine. Andriy Yermak, chief of staff to President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, posted on social networking site Telegram that most of a large Russian military unit had been destroyed in heavy fighting over the past weeks.

“Almost the entire 35th allRussian army was destroyed,” he wrote.

Yermak’s claim was supported by commentary from a Russian military blogger cited in a report by the influentia­l Institute for the Study of War. Incompeten­t Russian commanders had failed to prepare troops for combat in a forested area near the city of Izyum, the report said.

The claim of the routing of the Russian unit could not be independen­tly verified.

Ukrainian soldiers interviewe­d over the past week have described fierce fighting in the forests around Izyum, a strategic city that Russia is using as a base for attacks south toward the cities of Kramatorsk and Sloviansk. Ukrainian forces are also taking heavy losses, 60 to 100 fatalities a day, Zelenskyy said recently.

The British Defense Ministry said Saturday that Russia’s recent use of airstrikes and artillery fire has been a factor in its limited success in Ukraine’s east, a contrast with its largely ineffectiv­e air attacks earlier in the war. The Russian reliance on long-range strikes has probably depleted the country’s stock of precision-guided missiles, leading to more use of unguided munitions that can cause substantia­l civilian casualties, the ministry said.

Russia’s air assault

Also Saturday, an airlaunche­d cruise missile hit the Odesa region on Ukraine’s Black Sea coast, Odesa city officials said on Telegram. The missile struck a mostly agricultur­al area with warehouses, injuring two people, according to the officials.

And Russian and Ukrainian officials traded blame for the burning of the main temple of the All Saints hermitage, a 16thcentur­y monastery in eastern Ukraine that is considered one of the three most sacred sites in Ukraine for Orthodox believers.

The increasing terror from the sky came a day after Ukraine, on the 100th day of the war, took stock of its successes in holding back and in key places repelling the invasion by Russia, which had sought to quickly conquer the capital, Kyiv, and topple the government. Zelenskyy insisted, “Victory will be ours,” and announced that 50 foreign embassies had resumed activities in the capital.

But on the 101st day, Ukraine faced anew the harsh realities on the ground and increasing­ly from overhead.

Russia’s airstrikes provided cover to their troops engaged in the bitter fighting in the contested city of Sievierodo­netsk.

And Russian troops continued to target the last remaining bridge into Sievierodo­netsk to keep Ukraine from moving reinforcem­ents, food and medicine into a city that has become the main theater of war and the focus of Russia’s war machine. Despite its early and devastatin­g setbacks, Russia has come to occupy one-fifth of the country.

The intensity of the Russian attack and frequency of Russian reinforcem­ents to Sievierodo­netsk led to prediction­s that the city would soon fall. But Serhiy Haidai, governor of Luhansk province, who recently had a dour prognosis for the city’s survival, told Ukraine’s national television that Ukrainian troops had retaken 20 percent of the territory they had lost, adding that it was “not realistic” the city would fall in the next two weeks.

Ukraine’s counteroff­ensive

As Ukrainian forces try to take back territory in the east, its State Emergency Services has removed 127,393 explosive devices, with the efforts focused mostly on urban areas in the Kyiv, Sumy and Zhytomyr regions that were occupied by Russia early in the war, according to a report by the United Nations Developmen­t Program.

Russia’s retreat from those areas has made them more accessible for clear-up operations, the report said, adding that Ukrainians had covered an area of more than 11,000 square miles but that it could take years to clear all of the mines in Ukraine. Ukrainian forces have also launched a counteroff­ensive near the occupied city of Kherson in the country’s south.

But a punishing, costly and tragic military stalemate is increasing­ly foreseen by experts. Ukraine has been outgunned but will soon receive long-range M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, commonly known as HIMARS, from the United States. The exchanges of evermore lethal firepower will likely add to the many millions of people who have already been displaced, a death toll of at least 4,000 civilians and a Ukrainian economy already in tatters with roughly $100 billion in losses.

Kremlin spokespers­on Dmitry Peskov said Friday that Russia would continue what it calls a “special military operation” in Ukraine until “all goals have been attained.”

Ukraine’s fighting has for now preserved its statehood, but what that state would eventually look like is another matter. Russia’s strategy is essentiall­y to pulverize specific areas with seemingly indiscrimi­nate artillery shelling, killing or forcing to flee whoever is there before rolling in to stake the territory for Moscow.

 ?? Photos by Natacha Pisarenko/Associated Press ?? Relatives of Army Col. Oleksander Makhachek mourn during his funeral in Zhytomyr, Ukraine. According to combat comrades, Makhachek was killed fighting Russian forces.
Photos by Natacha Pisarenko/Associated Press Relatives of Army Col. Oleksander Makhachek mourn during his funeral in Zhytomyr, Ukraine. According to combat comrades, Makhachek was killed fighting Russian forces.
 ?? ?? A Ukrainian serviceman mourns during Makhachek’s funeral. The colonel was killed when a shell landed on his position.
A Ukrainian serviceman mourns during Makhachek’s funeral. The colonel was killed when a shell landed on his position.

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