Ukraine's Zelensky warns of 'difficult defense' in east as cold sets in | Inquirer News

Ukraine’s Zelensky warns of ‘difficult defense’ in east as cold sets in

/ 07:08 AM November 23, 2023

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky warns of 'difficult defense' in east as cold sets in

FILE PHOTO: A view shows a hospital heavily damaged by a Russian missile strike, amid Russia’s attack on Ukraine, in the town of Selydove, Donetsk region, Ukraine on November 21, 2023. REUTERS/Alina Smutko/File Photo

Ukrainian troops face “difficult” defensive operations on parts of the eastern front with bitter winter cold setting in, but forces in the south are still conducting offensive actions, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Wednesday.

Russian troops launched offensives on different sections of the front line in Ukraine’s east this autumn, trying to advance on the devastated town of Avdiivka and in the northeast between the towns of Lyman and Kupiansk.

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“Difficult weather, difficult defense on the Lyman, Bakhmut, Donetsk, and Avdiivka fronts. Offensive actions in the south,” Zelensky said on Telegram messenger.

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The Ukrainian general prosecutor’s office said one man died when Russian forces shelled Avdiivka, another in an attack on Chasiv Yar to the north, and a third in the southern city of Kherson. In the town of Sedylove in the east, a third body was pulled from rubble after a hospital was struck on Tuesday, Nov. 21.

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Cold weather could complicate operations, with daytime temperatures of minus 5 degrees Celsius (23 degrees Fahrenheit) expected to dip as fighting moves to an attritional phase.

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Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022 and now controls nearly a fifth of its territory. A Ukrainian counteroffensive, underway since June, has made no major breakthrough.

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The front line has changed little in Avdiivka since fighting erupted in 2014 between Kyiv and Russian-backed militants, but the town has faced waves of attacks since mid-October, followed by temporary lulls, according to the Ukrainian military.

READ: Zelensky: Russia uses food, energy, children as weapons against Ukraine

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After one such lull the day before, the head of the “Tavria” military command said on Wednesday that Russian troops had “dramatically increased” the number of assaults and airstrikes.

“Our defenders are steadfastly holding the defense in the Avdiivka direction,” Commander Oleksandr Tarnavskyi said on Telegram. Ukrainian forces continued the offensive on the southeastern Melitopol front, he added.

In its evening report, Ukraine’s General Staff said 22 Russian attacks had been beaten back in and around Avdiivka.

Military analyst Oleksandr Musiyenko told NV Radio that Ukrainian forces had launched counterattacks near Avdiivka in the past week and “managed to push the enemy back from previous positions.”

READ: Ukraine’s Zelensky questions why Russia still has a place in UN

In an earlier battlefield report, the General Staff said troops were holding bridgeheads secured on the eastern side of the River Dnipro occupied by Russian forces in the early days of their invasion.

In his nightly video address, Zelensky said the latest gathering of military officials from Western countries helping Ukraine had set up a “coalition to develop air defense” led by France and Germany. Kyiv sees improving air defenses as critical to its drive to evict Russian troops.

In its account of the fighting, Russia’s Defense Ministry said its troops had struck Ukrainian troops and equipment near Bakhmut, another devastated town north of Avdiivka.

Reuters could not independently verify frontline reports.

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READ: February 24, 2022: the day Russia invaded Ukraine

TAGS: Russia-Ukraine war, Volodomyr Zelensky

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