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Ukraine's attempt to hold on to iconic village in Zaporizhzhia

VnExpressVnExpress01/04/2024


Ukraine recaptured Rabotino in a counter-offensive last summer, and is now trying to hold the village against heavy Russian fire because of its symbolic significance.

The Ukrainian soldiers spent hours hiding in trenches as artillery exploded around them, then rushed to an armored personnel carrier for cover. A small drone chased after it, crashed into the back of the vehicle and exploded.

“All I saw was flashes of light,” Ukrainian Sergeant Oleksandr said of what happened when his armored vehicle was attacked by a Russian drone. The attack left Oleksandr and his comrades injured, but no one was killed.

Fighting on flat land along the front line in Zaporizhzhia province, where Oleksandr's armored vehicle was ambushed, has been fierce for the past 10 months in two stages.

Initially, Ukraine was on the offensive and recaptured Rabotino in a counter-offensive last summer. Now Ukrainian units must defend against relentless Russian attacks on the “spoils of war”.

Experts say Ukraine is adopting a “hold, consolidate, attack” strategy. They are trying to maintain their defense lines in the southeast, replenishing their units and conducting long-range drone attacks on oil and gas facilities and military logistics inside Russia.

Location of the village of Rabotino in Zaporizhzhia province. Graphics: RYV

Location of the village of Rabotino in Zaporizhzhia province. Graphics: RYV

In Zaporizhzhia, this meant defending a 15-kilometer-deep arc into Russian-controlled territory that Ukrainian forces carved out in last summer’s counteroffensive. At the southern tip of the arc is the village of Rabotino, which Ukraine recaptured at the height of the offensive and then stalled.

Failing to achieve further breakthroughs, Ukraine has left Russian forces in a position strong enough to counterattack. Ukrainian units entrenched in the Zaporizhzhia arc are under attack from three sides and face a dilemma.

The pressure they are under would be lessened if they withdrew, but it would signal a symbolic setback in the conflict, as Ukrainian forces abandoned an area they had fought at high costs in terms of personnel and equipment.

Some Ukrainian soldiers who have just returned from the area said Russia has been shelling the area heavily. The commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian army, Colonel General Oleksandr Syrsky, said on March 29 that Russia fired six times as many shells as Ukraine along the 1,000-kilometer frontline.

US weapons provided for last year's counteroffensive, including Stryker armored vehicles, now help protect Ukrainian soldiers from Russian artillery fire as they hold out instead of advancing.

However, the US $60 billion aid package for Ukraine is still stuck in the US Congress . The $300 million aid package announced in mid-March only meets Ukraine's short-term needs.

Ukrainian soldiers in trenches around the village of Rabotino on February 21. Photo: Reuters

Ukrainian soldiers in trenches around the village of Rabotino on February 21. Photo: Reuters

The village of Rabotino, which used to have a population of 500 people before the war, is now just ruins like the two cities of Bakhmut and Avdeevka.

US officials have repeatedly expressed concern that Ukraine is trying to hang on too long in such locations, wasting soldiers and ammunition to hold ruined neighborhoods with little strategic value.

But for Ukraine, the area around the village of Rabotino is still worth defending, at least for now.

“Symbolism becomes strategic,” said Yuri Sak, a former adviser to Ukraine’s defense minister. “Protecting the gains of the counteroffensive is important for morale and popular support.”

According to Mr. Sak, the fighting has inflicted heavier losses on the attacking Russian units than on the defending Ukrainian forces. "As long as the situation continues like this, the position of continuing to hold out will be supported," Mr. Sak said. "This is a war, so casualties are inevitable on both sides."

Russian forces are attacking along the entire 1,000 km front. The Russian army has enjoyed advantages in ammunition, personnel and air power for months.

Rubble in the village of Rabotino in August 2023. Photo: Reuters

Rubble in the village of Rabotino in August 2023. Photo: Reuters

Since then, Russia has used coordinated offensive tactics between infantry attacks and air strikes in seven positions along the front, the Ukrainian General Staff said.

In the northeast, Russian forces pushed through pine forests toward the city of Kupyansk on the Oskol River, seeking to reverse the gains Ukraine made in a lightning counteroffensive in the fall of 2022.

In the Donbass region, a rugged terrain dotted with coal mines and factories, Russia has deployed four attack prongs and is trying to exploit the gap Ukraine has created after abandoning Avdeevka. Ukraine is holding its line west of Avdeevka, but Russia has steadily taken control of more villages near the city this month.

Meanwhile, in Kherson province, Russia has repeatedly pushed Ukrainian troops out of their outposts on the east bank of the Dnieper River, near the provincial capital Kherson. Ukraine can only supply its troops there by boat, and their foothold there is precarious.

The situation on the Ukrainian battlefield. Graphics: Washington Post

The situation on the Ukrainian battlefield. Graphics: Washington Post

Ukrainian officials say the fighting there has been “worth it, as it has left tens of thousands of Russian servicemen dead or wounded.” However, Washington has expressed skepticism.

“I find the Biden administration disappointing,” said Evelyn Farkas, director of the US-based McCain Institute. “It is unclear whether the decisions by the Ukrainian military were purely military or influenced by political pressure.”

Ukrainian soldiers at Rabotino suffered somewhat fewer casualties when they went on the defensive. Russian soldiers had to leave their trenches to attack, while Ukrainian soldiers fought in their bunkers.

Private Oleksandr believes that if Kiev withdraws its troops from here, Ukrainian soldiers will eventually have to fight in other positions under similar conditions. "We need to defend every inch of land," he said.

Nguyen Tien (According to AFP, Reuters, All Sides )



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