Ukraine withdraws some outnumbered troops from ‘difficult battlefield situation’ in Avdiivka

Ukraine withdraws some outnumbered troops from difficult battlefield situation in Avdiivka
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Ukraine’s military said it had withdrawn outnumbered troops from the southeastern part of the city of Avdiivka amid escalating battle.

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The decision provided no strategic advantage for Russia, it added.

Oleksandr Tarnavskyi, the commander of Ukraine’s southeastern sector, said on Telegram that Ukrainian units pulled back with minor losses.

“In a difficult battlefield situation, when only ruins and a pile of broken bricks remain from the fortification, our priority is to save the soldiers’ lives,” he said.

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Tarnavskyi once again described the Avdiivka sector as “the hottest” on the entire front line of about 1,000 kilometres.

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“The enemy launches massive bomb attacks day and night, and does not stop attacking simultaneously from several directions,” he said.

A person collects wood from debris in front of a destroyed apartment following Russian bombardment in Avdiivka in March 2023. (Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images)

Later on Friday, Tarnavskyi said that heavy fighting continues and Russia keeps “practically wiping the city from the face of the earth.” He also claimed that on Friday alone Ukrainian forces have repelled more than 30 Russian attacks and the defensive operation continues.

“Ukrainian soldiers are manoeuvring out of destroyed positions and entrenching themselves on new lines of defence,” Tarnavskyi said.

A video from Avdiivka, shared by Ukraine’s Third Separate Assault Brigade on Friday, shows soldiers taking cover from heavy Russian shelling in the dim dungeons of a large local coking plant, warming themselves and helping the wounded.

Another video shows state border guard soldiers showing their positions in a badly damaged building, calling the current situation an all-round defence.

A soldier sits in the rubble of a nearly destroyed building.
A Ukrainian soldier sits amid the rubble of a nearly destroyed building in Avdiivka in this screen grab taken from a video released on Friday. (State Border Service of Ukraine/Reuters)

It was not immediately possible for Reuters to confirm battleground reports.

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Capturing the eastern city is seen as key to Moscow’s aim of securing full control of the two provinces that make up the industrial Donbas region, and could hand Russian President Vladimir Putin, who recently underlined its significance, a battlefield victory to hold up to voters as he seeks re-election next month.

As troops were leaving the so-called Zenit fortified area in the city’s southeast, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Kyiv’s priority was to minimize losses, though the military was trying to defend strategic routes.

A person takes a selfie in front of roadside signage.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy takes a selfie as he visits Avdiivka in December 2023. (Ukrainian Presidential Press Office/The Associated Press)

“Tactically, securing of these positions does not give the enemy a strategic advantage and does not change the situation in the Avdiivka defence operation,” Tarnavskyi said.

He added measures were taken to expand logistics routes, and munitions were delivered in increased volumes.

The Third Assault Brigade was recently sent to reinforce Ukraine’s positions and Tarnavskyi said on Friday that “a planned strengthening of units” was taking place.

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None of the Ukrainian troops was blocked by the enemy as of midday, he said, and defenders in other parts of the city were moving to prepared positions “if necessary.”

Tarnavskyi noted that Russian troops suffered “enormous losses.” The Third Assault Brigade echoed this comment.

One of the dangers, apart from being outnumbered and outgunned, was Russia’s tactic of dropping guided bombs over the city. Maksym Zhorin, the brigade’s deputy commander, said Russia was using between 60 and 80 of them per day.

“All buildings [and] structures are simply turned into a ditch after a strike by just one guided bomb,” he wrote on Telegram.

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