Why the battle for the small city of Bakhmut is so important to both Russia and Ukraine - Action News
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Why the battle for the small city of Bakhmut is so important to both Russia and Ukraine

One of the longest-running battles in Russia's war on Ukraine is in the Donbas city of Bakhmut, where Russian forces have suffered immense losses for months trying to break Ukrainian positions.

Conditions are terrible, casualties are enormous and significance of Bakhmut is debatable

A van drives past a crater in the road caused by a missile strike in the eastern Donbas region of Bakhmut, Ukraine, on Nov. 1. (Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters)

The quagmire of carnage now consuming the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut has been mostly overlooked, givenUkraine's battlefield successes against Russia's army elsewhere.

But the gruelling, gruesome six-month fight for the city in the Donbas region may soon reach its culmination, and the outcome is takingon outsized importance for both sides.

"It reminds me of a situation in the First World War," said retired Ukrainian colonel Serhiy Grabskiy,now a military analyst based in the capital, Kyiv.

Fields and villages surrounding Bakhmut are pockmarked with foxholes, filled with shivering soldiers. Troops from both sides shoot at each other over the top of mucky,water-filled trenches that snake for dozens of kilometres throughout the torn-up countryside.

A member of the 68th Independent Jager Brigade of the Ukrainian Army moves positions in order to scan the horizon for Russian military from his position in the trenches near the front line in Ukraine's southern Donbas region on Nov. 29. (Leah Mills/Reuters)

Before Russia's invasion,Bakhmut had a population of 70,000 peopleand was known mostly for its large salt mine and as a transportation hub where several highways intersected.

But since the spring,the city has become part of Ukraine's front-line defence.

Tremendous losses

Facing off against the Ukrainians are some of Russia's better-equipped soldiers, many of them paid mercenaries from the Wagner Group, which is controlled byYevgeny Prigozhin, a confidant of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Fighting alongside the Wagner forces are conscripted prisoners,forcibly drafted into the fighting ranks, along with perhaps tens of thousands of newly mobilized Russian recruits.

WATCH | Ukraine and Russia engaged in brutal battle for Bakhmut:

Bakhmut, Ukraine, becomes centre of brutal, drawn-out battle

2 years ago
Duration 2:05
The Ukrainian city of Bakhmut has been the focus of unrelenting Russian attacks for almost six months, creating apocalyptic scenes of dead soldiers in trenches. As winter sets in, Russian troops are mounting an aggressive counter-offensive to recapture the city.

Together, they have relentlessly pounded Bakhmut as they attempt to take control of the key roads leading north and west.

Grabskiysays most of the Russian troops are being sacrificed in high-risk attacks to discover the locations of the strongest Ukrainian defensive lines.

"The Russians are sending in wave after wave against [fortified] Ukrainian positions," he said.

The area around the city of Bakhmut resembles a scene from the First World War, with muddy trenches snaking through the torn-up countryside. (Reuters)

Once the Ukrainians return fire,their positions are then targeted and hit by Russian mortars and artillery. The result has been a bloodbath.

"We have to accept that losses from both sides of the conflict are huge."

Neither Russia nor Ukraine has said how many have been killed in the six months of fighting in Bakhmut, but Grabskiyestimates Ukraine is now losing "half a company"roughly 30 to 50 soldiers every day.

He says Russian losses may be four or five times that.

Strategic military objectives

One video posted by Ukraine's Defence Ministry shows Russian soldiers hiding in a series of trenches and foxholes on the grounds of what used to be a gas stationjust outside Bakhmut.

Ukrainian drones are seen dropping grenades and other ordnance on top of their positions, as some men scurry for cover. In other instances,some soldiers barely change their positions after a close strike,suggesting they may already be injured or are suffering from hypothermia.

Another video posted earlier this week on the "Bakhmut Life" channel on the Russian social media site Telegram shows Russian artillery shells slamming into the colourful exterior of what used to be a kindergartencalled Smile. The buildingis seen burning.

This photograph taken on Nov. 29 shows a destroyed building in Bakhmut. (Yevhen Titov/AFP/Getty Images)

That initial attack was followedby several moreRussian artillery volleys.

The Russian assault on Bakhmut is reminiscent of earlier and ultimately successful campaigns to capture the port city of Mariupol and the twin cities of Severodonetsk and Lysychansk with some notable differences.

All of those cities were recognized as strategic military objectives and major population centres, whereas Bakhmut is neither.

'It's about money'

Yet even as Russian troops were withdrawing in disarray from the Kharkiv region in September and abandoning the city of Kherson in November,the assault on Bakhmut continued unabated.

Which raises the question:whyis Russia devoting so much of its military might to capturing a peripheral city?

"It is about money," saidGrabskiy.

Visitors pose for a picture outside the PMC Wagner Centre in Saint Petersburg, Russia, on Nov. 4. The building project was implemented by Yevgeny Prigozhin, the businessman and founder of the Wagner private military group, which is involved in the battle for Bakhmut, Ukraine. (Igor Russak/Reuters)

He says theWagner Group was likely assigned the job of capturing Bakhmutby the Kremlin, and doing so will come with a significant financial reward regardless of the number of Russian lives lost doing it.

Prigozhin "will play his role and show that he is an importantcomponent of the Russian military machine," said Grabskiy.

The Donbas region made up of the Luhansk and Donetsk oblasts was"annexed" by Russia at the end of September in a ceremony at the Kremlin that most of the world dismissed as illegal and irrelevant.

Grabskiy says the only part of the long front line where Russia appears to have the capacity to go on the offensive is around Bakhmut, and it's important for the military to provide a battlefield success forPutin.

Ukraine forces holding firm

The reasons for Ukraine's strong stand in Bakhmut are harder to discern.

Russian forces have managed to capture several villages to the south, and the country's military bloggers claim the rest of the city may be about to fall, too.

A Ukrainian tank rolls on a road near Bakhmut, in the Donetsk region, on Nov. 30. (Anatolii Stepanov/AFP/Getty Images)

But analysts at the Washington, D.C.-based Institute for the Study of Warwho closely track social media postings about the fightingaren't convinced.

Nor do they see the likelihood of a Russian breakthrough even if they take Bakhmut,as there are other natural lines of defence thatUkrainian troops can fall back to.

"Russian troops are getting pinned down in tiny,inconsequential settlements," said Karolina Hird,an analyst with the independent think-tank."[They have] degraded their manpower andequipment and thrown the most poorly trainedmobilized guys to fill in the gaps.And those bodies will continue to pile up."

In fact,the Ukrainian strategy may be to repeat what happened in Severodonetsk,where,after drawing the Russians into a months-long battle, Ukraine opened up new,ultimately successful offensives to the north and south, where the Russian lines had become stretched thin.

"I think we are seeing the same effect around Bakhmut," said Hird.

Situation 'is difficult'

But the strategy carries risks for Ukraine.

NATO officials claim Russia still has an immense amount of equipment,troops and weaponry inside Ukraine, and there appears little chance its army will run low on foot soldiers.

A woman walks past a building damaged by missile strikes in Bakhmut on Nov. 1. (Clodagh Kilcoyne/Reuters)

Russian officials say they have just completed mobilizing 300,000 soldiers,and there are persistent reports that another round of call-ups could come after Christmas.

Even as some of NATO's best weaponry continues to pour into the country,Western officials worry Ukraine is suffering heavy military and civilian casualties as many as 100,000 of its soldiers may have been killed or wounded.

Ukraine President Volodomyr Zelenskyy has said the numberof Ukrainian casualties is a security issue and something he doesn't discuss. But in an address earlier this week, he indicated the situation in Bakhmut is grim.

"The situation on the front line is difficult. Despite extremely large losses, the occupiers are still trying to advance on the Donetsk region," he said.

Russia controls roughly half of Donetsk oblast,but in a briefing with journalists earlier this week, Pavlo Kyrylenko, the administrator of the Ukrainian-held portion, tried to offer reassurance that Russian troops would not advance much further.

"The situation is still under control," he said.