![]() ![]() In their counteroffensive, Ukrainian forces will look to break through the land corridor between Russia and the annexed Crimean peninsula, moving from Zaporizhzhia toward Melitopol and the Azov Sea, according to Ukrainian military analyst Oleh Zhdanov. ![]() “Sheer numbers of tanks can drive a deeper wedge into Russian holding positions,” Nixey said. The new supplies, including howitzers, anti-tank weapons and 1 million rounds of artillery ammunition, will add more muscle to the Ukraine military and give it a bigger punch. Zelenskyy recognizes that without US help, his country has no chance to prevail. The Western help has been vital in strengthening Ukraine’s dogged resistance and shaping the course of the war. He also expects six or seven battalions of Leopard 1 tanks, with ammunition, from a coalition of countries.Īlso pledged are US Abrams tanks and French light tanks, along with Ukraine soldiers recently trained in their use. Ukraine’s defense minister, Oleksii Reznikov, has said he’s hopeful Western partners will supply at least two battalions of the German-made Leopard 2s by April. ![]() British Challenger tanks have arrived too. Poland, Canada and Norway have also handed over their pledged Leopard tanks. Germany said this week that it had delivered the 18 Leopard 2 tanks it promised to Ukraine. The Ukrainian military starts the season with an influx of powerful weapons. Russia’s strategy is designed around “getting the West to crumble,” he said. Realizing he cannot win the war any time soon, Putin aims to hunker down and drag out the fighting in the hope that Western support for Kyiv eventually frays, Nixey said. “The Russians have no end of problems,” said James Nixey, director of the Russia and Eurasia program at Chatham House, a think tank in London. Russian President Vladimir Putin, apparently concerned that the war could erode public support for his government, has avoided an all-out push for victory through a mandatory mass mobilization. The invasion also depleted Russian military resources, triggering difficulties with ammunition supplies, morale and troop numbers. Moscow’s intelligence services badly misjudged Ukraine’s resolve and the West’s response. Attempts to break the Ukrainian will to fight, such as relentlessly striking the country’s power grid, have failed too. The battlefield setbacks include Russia’s failure to reach Kyiv in the early days of the invasion, its inability to hold some areas and its failure to take the devastated eastern city of Bakhmut despite seven months of fighting. The war has exposed embarrassing shortcomings in the Kremlin’s military prowess. Now, Kyiv can take advantage of improved weather to seize the battlefield initiative with new batches of Western weapons, including scores of tanks, and fresh troops trained in the West.īut Russian forces are dug in deep, lying in wait behind minefields and along kilometers (miles) of trenches. Then the fighting got bogged down in attritional warfare during the bitter winter and into the muddy, early spring thaw. Ukrainian counteroffensives took back large areas from August through November. 24 2022, but its attacks fell short of some main targets and lost momentum by July. Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine on Feb. Here’s a look at how the fighting has evolved and how the spring campaign might unfold: Kyiv faces a key tactical question: How can the Ukrainian military dislodge Kremlin forces from land they are occupying? Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is working hard to keep his troops, and the general public, motivated for a long fight. ![]() With no suggestion of a negotiated end to the 13 months of fighting between Russia and Ukraine, the Ukrainian defense minister said last week that a spring counteroffensive could begin as soon as April. Europe’s biggest armed conflict since World War II is poised to enter a new phase in the coming weeks. ![]()
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