Moscow named a new commander for its invasion of Ukraine while Russian private military firm Wagner Group said its capture of the salt mining town Soledar in eastern Ukraine was complete, although the Ukrainian military said the battle was not over.
Russian Minister of Defense Sergei Shoigu on Wednesday appointed Russian Chief of the General Staff Valery Gerasimov as overall commander for what Moscow calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine, now in its 11th month.
The change effectively demoted General Sergei Surovikin, who was appointed only in October last year to lead the invasion and oversaw heavy attacks on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure.
Photo: AFP
Meanwhile, Yevgeny Prigozhin, head of Wagner and a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin, said his forces had captured all of Soledar and killed about 500 Ukrainian soldiers after heavy fighting.
“I want to confirm the complete liberation and cleansing of the territory of Soledar,” Prigozhin said in a statement.
“The whole city is littered with the corpses of Ukrainian soldiers,” he said.
US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin told reporters that he could not corroborate reports that Soledar was in Russian hands.
Donetsk Governor Pavlo Kyrylenko told Ukrainian state TV that 559 civilians remain in Soledar, including 15 children, and it was impossible to evacuate them due to ongoing fighting.
The town had a pre-war population of about 10,500.
Reuters was unable to independently verify the situation in Soledar.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy mocked previous Wagner claims to have seized part of Soledar, but made no immediate comment on the latest assertions.
“The terrorist state and its propagandists are trying to pretend that part of our town of Soledar ... is some sort of a Russian possession,” Zelenskiy said in a video address. “But fighting continues.”
In a statement on Facebook, the Ukrainian military general staff said Russian forces were suffering heavy losses as they tried to take Soledar and sever Ukrainian supply lines.
In its morning roundup of reports from the front lines yesterday, the Ukrainian military command mentioned tanks and artillery in the Soledar area, but offered no other details.
Russia has struggled to cement control over the town, which would be Russia’s most substantial gain since August last year after a series of retreats before Ukrainian counteroffensives in the east and south.
Ukrainian military analyst Oleh Zhdanov said the situation in Soledar was “approaching that of critical.”
“The Ukrainian armed forces are holding their positions. About one half of the town is under our control. Fierce fighting is going on near the town center,” he said on YouTube.
However, Zhdanov told Ukrainian television that if Russian forces seized Soledar or nearby Bakhmut, it would be more a political victory than military.
“There is more politics than war here,” Zhdanov said.
“The Russians, if they take one of these towns, will try to put the event on par with capturing Berlin and they will use it for propaganda purposes as much for the outside market as for domestic consumption,” he said. “Inside Russia, it will give them the opportunity to lift the spirits of conscripts and society as a whole. To unite them all.”
Ukraine’s military command yesterday said that Russia was recruiting former soldiers and law enforcement officers to join paramilitary units in Crimea, which Moscow annexed in 2014.
A Russian defense ministry statement said that its latest command reshuffle was meant to improve contacts between military branches and the effectiveness of the command structure.
One prominent military blogger who posts on the Telegram messaging app under the name of Rybar said that Surovikin was being made the fall guy for recent Russian military debacles.
Those included a Ukrainian attack on a Russian barracks that killed at least 89 Russian soldiers on New Year’s Day.
Surovikin was ordered to head the campaign after Ukrainian offensives turned the tide of the war and drew attention to poor training, equipment and morale among Russian forces.
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