subscribe Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Subscribe now
Picture: REUTERS/SERHII NUZHNENKO
Picture: REUTERS/SERHII NUZHNENKO

Kyiv — Ukraine said on Tuesday its forces were still holding out at Sievierodonetsk and trying to evacuate civilians after Russia destroyed the last bridge to the devastated eastern city in a potential turning point in one of the war’s bloodiest battles.

“The situation is very difficult but there is communication with the city” despite the destruction of the last bridge over the Siverskyi Donets, said the Ukrainian mayor of Sievierodonetsk, Oleksandr Stryuk. “Russian troops are trying to storm the city, but the military is holding firm.”

Ukraine says more than 500 civilians are trapped inside a chemical factory in an industrial zone of the city where its forces have resisted weeks of Russian bombardment and assault.

Evacuations were still being carried out “every minute when there is a lull and there is a possibility of transportation”, Stryuk said. “But these are discrete evacuations, done one by one, and every possible chance is taken.”

Both sides say they have inflicted huge casualties in the fight for the city, Russia’s main target in its battle for the east after it failed to capture the capital Kyiv in March.

Ukraine still holds Lysychansk, Sievierodonetsk’s twin city on higher ground on the opposite bank. But with all the bridges now cut, its forces acknowledge the risk of being encircled. Russia’s separatist proxies said any Ukrainian troops left behind must surrender or die.

Damien Megrou, a spokesperson for a unit of foreign volunteers helping to defend Sievierodonetsk, said there was a risk of leaving “a large pocket of Ukrainian defenders cut off from the rest of the Ukrainian troops”  — as was the case in Mariupol, which fell in May after months of Russian siege.

Brutal battle

The battle for Sievierodonetsk — a city of little more than 100,000 people before the war — is the most intense in Ukraine as the conflict has shifted into a punishing war of attrition.

Ukraine has said 100-200 of its soldiers is killed each day, with hundreds more wounded. In an overnight address, President Volodymyr Zelensky described the battle for the eastern Donbas region as one of the most brutal in European history.

Russia gives no regular figures on its losses, but Western countries say they have been huge, as Moscow has committed the bulk of its firepower to delivering one of President Vladimir Putin’s stated objectives: forcing Kyiv to cede the full territory of two eastern provinces.

Momentum in Sievierodonetsk has shifted several times over the past few weeks. Russia has concentrated its overwhelming artillery firepower on urban districts to obliterate resistance, then sent troops vulnerable to counter-attacks.

Bigger battles could lie ahead for the wider Ukrainian-held pocket of the Donbas, nearly all on the opposite bank of the river, which Russian forces have found difficult to cross. Ukraine says Russia is massing to assault Sloviansk from the north and along a front near Bakhmut to the south.

It has pleaded for the West to send more and better artillery to neutralise Russia’s main advantage. Ukraine needs 1,000 howitzers, 500 tanks and 1,000 drones among other heavy weapons, Presidential Adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said on Monday.

Western countries have promised Nato-standard weapons — including advanced US rockets. But deploying them is taking time, and Ukraine is running out of ammunition for its existing Soviet-era arsenal, which is dwarfed by Russia’s.

“In effect, [Ukraine] is wanting to field a new army, with Western equipment, with unfamiliar processes, while fighting a war,” tweeted Mark Hertling, a retired US general and a former commander of US ground forces in Europe.

“Make no mistake, Ukraine requires support from the US & Nato,” he wrote. Ukraine “will win, but it will be a tough fight. And ... supporters ought to understand the dynamics of what they’re facing.”

Beyond the Donbas, Ukrainian officials hope that Russia’s focus on capturing the east will drain its forces from other areas, paving the way for counter-attacks to recapture other territory.

Ukraine recaptured the area around its second largest city Kharkiv in May and has reported small but steady gains recently in the south, the biggest swathe that Russia still retains of the territory it seized after its invasion in February.

Serhiy Khlan, adviser to the head of the southern, mainly Russian-occupied Kherson province, said Ukraine was having tactical success recapturing territory there for a second straight week. Troops had already advanced 5km from Tavriysk, a town on the south bank of the Dnipro river east of Kherson city, and were gradually advancing, he said.

“We have tactical victories. They are turning into a counteroffensive. For the counteroffensive, we are waiting for the reinforcement of equipment from our partners,” Khlan said. Reuters was unable to verify any reports from the area.

Reuters

subscribe Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Subscribe now

Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.