(C) Daily Kos This story was originally published by Daily Kos and is unaltered. . . . . . . . . . . Ukraine Update: Battle of Kyiv was 'the most decisive battle,' but Bakhmut may be just as important [1] ['Daily Kos Staff', 'Backgroundurl Avatar_Large', 'Nickname', 'Joined', 'Created_At', 'Story Count', 'N_Stories', 'Comment Count', 'N_Comments', 'Popular Tags'] Date: 2023-04-01 This map provides an idea of where Russia has made gains inside the city in the last week, and where Ukraine has pushed the lines back in areas west of Bakhmut. Once again, you’ll have to look carefully. Definitely take advantage of that “open in another tab” option if you’re not on a mobile device that can zoom to full scale. Bakhmut. Open image in another tab for a larger view. The Russian gains are that little orange smudge southeast of the city center. The Ukrainian counters are those two blue wedges in the west. Everything here is the opposite of a “huge breakthrough” in terms of area, but that doesn’t mean this map does not represent something huge. Imagine if someone had told you at the start of March, or the start of February, or the start of January, December, November … that come the first of April, Russia would still not occupy Bakhmut. Once Wagner forces stopped hurling all their men at the same little stretch of road (remember the cement factory? The wine factory? The land fill?) back in early winter, it seemed that they had finally found the trick for taking Bakhmut. By moving around the city, they were able to make some substantial advances for the first time in months. When Russia successfully occupied Soledar near the end of December, the clock went from ticking to racing, and it seemed as if everyday was carrying Russian forces through another suburb to the north. At the same time, Russia was moving quickly in the south, apparently taking advantage of Ukrainian forces that had been shifted to try and halt the advance through Soledar. Russia occupied Klishchiivka, took the fortified hill to the west, and just two days later Wagner announced that they had taken Mykolaivka and Chasiv Yar. Except they hadn’t. Not at all. The closest they seemed to get was the highway southwest of Ivaniske. From that point, Ukrainian forces fought the Russian advance to a standstill, then actually forced Russia to fall back on Klishchiivka. Ukraine has even placed a temporary bridge over one that had earlier been destroyed some kilometers to the south so that supplies can come to Bakhmut through the city of Kostyantynivka. I’ve said it before: the most amazing thing about Bakhmut is that we’re still talking about Bakhmut, and not Kostyantynivka or Slovyansk. There were a lot of days when it seemed like Bakhmut teetered on the brink, but it’s been weeks since we saw one of those days. The price for making that happen is incalculable. The worth of making it happen is still to be reckoned. Why is Russia advancing within Bakhmut? As great as it would be to think that things are completely stable at Bakhmut, that orange smudge on the map still represents how Russia is slowly, block by block, capturing areas in the city, even areas where Ukraine is putting up a tremendous fight. Translated post from Telegram The image here is from a Telegram page translated from Ukrainian sources. They note that Russian forces, which for some time had seemed to slow their actions in the city, have picked up both pace and intensity. And they have a target: But in terms of intensity, for some reason it seems to us that their main goal is the city center... They are moving towards it, the tactics of encircling the city have shifted to a different plan, from the south and north, they are climbing right into the center, well, we are ready😉 The “city center” mentioned here, isn’t the area where Ukraine has its forces garrisoned, or the center of the area of Ukrainian control. It’s the area just north and west of that orange smudge on the map, where some of the Bakhmut city buildings were located. Everyone seems to concur that this is the area Wagner is driving to obtain, and recently they ran a video showing a Wagner Group flag on top of one of the buildings just south of this area. Best guess: Wagner wants to hang their flag on what amounts to Bakhmut’s “city hall,” so they can declare they have captured Bakhmut. Even though about half the city is still controlled by Ukraine. There are also indications that Wagner may have swapped out their forces in the city over the last week, replacing them with a larger group of fresher troops to make this push. It’s unclear if Ukraine can stop this slow advance without adopting Russia’s tactics of simply leveling blocks. Where are the maps? There was this thing, just two weeks ago, where I declared that Saturday would be map day. On Saturday, I would create a whole series of maps covering almost all areas of the front then walk through the changes that had occured over the week. These maps could then be referenced throughout the following week when reporting on advances and battles that happened all around Ukraine. It seemed like a plan. Except, like all plans, it didn’t survive contact with the enemy. The enemy in this case being … nothing. As in, there’s nothing new to map. Nothing has changed around Kupyansk, nothing has changed at Svatove. There’s probably been some change north of Kreminna, only the signals there are too crossed up to map it. Bakhmut we’ve been dealing with in such detail that today is the first day in a week the unit of scale was actually in kilometers rather than just meters. So I’m faced with a dilemma. I can put up maps for this Saturday, that are the same as last Saturday, and not much changed from the Saturday before that, or I can just walk through the most recent report from the Ukrainian General Staff … and the second one seems more productive. Daily Russian assaults on Ukrainian positions. March 1 through April 1. On Thursday, the number of attacks against Ukrainian positions popped up to 80. Which was the highest level in five days, but still lower than on any date in the first half of the month. On Friday, it dropped back to 30. For Saturday, the number is 70. That unusually low number for Friday probably shouldn’t have anyone screaming “culminating!” It’s very likely tied to the fact that eastern Ukraine saw what, in military terms, is known as a metric s**t-tonne of snow on that date. On Saturday, forces on both sides scraped away enough slush to get back to shooting, through I really don’t envy anyone who was trying to make an advance through that mess. Oh, and for those who asked, the statistics are now on the graph, but you’ll really need to use that “open in another tab” bit if you want to read them. One other number worth noting — this was another night in which Russia did not conduct a major strike with missiles and drones. It looks like Russia sent 5 missiles into civilian positions (probably S-300) and launched a small number of Iranian drones, all of which were reportedly shot down short of their targets. As usual, we don’t know if Russia is hoarding missiles for something “special,” but this is now the longest period without a major attack this year. There’s not a lot of new information to be gathered from the location of shelling and assaults on Friday, however, west of Kreminna, Ukraine reports repelling attacks at Kreminna, Chervonopovka, Díbrova, and in the Serebryanskogo forest. This seems to indicate that Ukraine has been able to maintain those locations throughout this offensive, in spite of earlier Russian reports of advances. Battle of Kyiv: Most decisive battle of the modern era John Spencer is an instructor at West Point’s Modern War Institute research center. This lecture—and warning, it’s a genuine lecture, but also fascinating—covers research he has put together around the Battle of Kyiv, which he calls “the most decisive battle of the modern era.” Spencer has visited the locations around Kyiv, interviewed those involved, and put together a case study that explains why this battle turned out as it did and why it determined the course of the war. Ukrainian Pravda reports that Poland is selling Ukraine 100 Rosomak armoured personnel carriers. These will be paid for using funds donated to Ukraine by the U.S. and E,U. Polish armored transporter KTO Rosomak Reuters reports that the U.S. will announced another $2.6B support package for Ukraine next week, which will include “air surveillance radars, anti-tank rockets and fuel trucks” as well as more ammunition of several types. 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