Fierce Battle Rages for ‘Every Stairwell’ in Bakhmut, Wagner Leader Says

Fierce Battle Rages for ‘Every Stairwell’ in Bakhmut, Wagner Leader Says

A fierce fight was raging on Sunday in the eastern Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, where a Russian paramilitary leader said Ukrainian forces were defending “every street, every house, every stairwell,” as they waged an increasingly desperate effort to deny Moscow its first significant battlefield success in months.

Yevgeny Prigozhin, the founder of the Wagner private military company, whose forces have helped lead Russia’s brutal campaign in Bakhmut, denied reports on social media that Ukrainian forces were retreating from the city.

“The Armed Forces of Ukraine are not retreating anywhere,” Mr. Prigozhin said in a statement posted by one of his companies on Telegram, the social messaging app. “The Armed Forces of Ukraine are fighting to the last.”

Amid warnings from Ukraine that Russia had begun the opening moves of a renewed push to seize territory in the east, Moscow’s Defense Ministry claimed on Telegram that “offensive operations” had helped its forces gain “more advantageous lines and positions” around the Donetsk region, which includes Bakhmut. The claim could not be independently verified.

The Kremlin’s forces since last summer have bombarded Bakhmut, a city once home to 70,000 people in Donetsk, one of four Ukrainian regions that President Vladimir V. Putin has illegally claimed as part of Russia. Donetsk and the neighboring Luhansk region together comprise Donbas, which Mr. Putin has ordered his army to capture completely.

In recent weeks, pouring more troops into eastern Ukraine and intensifying artillery strikes, Russia has steadily surrounded Bakhmut from three sides and cut off many of the roads leading into and out of the city. That has left Ukrainian forces with one westbound road as their last major supply line — or potential escape route.

“Bakhmut is increasingly isolated,” Britain’s defense intelligence agency reported on Sunday.

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine on Saturday night called the situation in Bakhmut and other parts of the east “very difficult,” saying that Russia was throwing in “more and more of its forces to break our defenses.”

Ukraine also has deployed a large military presence in the region around Bakhmut, with large troop transports and armored vehicles crowding the roads. But some Ukrainian soldiers deployed there have become increasingly pessimistic about the fate of the city amid continuing Russian assaults. They are killing Russians, one soldier recently told The New York Times, but not fast enough.

Three people were killed in Russian attacks on Saturday in Bakhmut, the head of the regional military administration, Pavlo Kyrylenko, said on Telegram. A fourth was killed in the settlement of Yampol, to the north, he said.

On Sunday morning, Russian forces struck a school that Ukrainian soldiers appeared to be using as a base in the town of Druzhkivka, west of Bakhmut. A blast ripped out window frames and damaged the building’s facade. Another missile hit an apartment complex directly across from the school, blasting a large hole through the first floor and cutting through a number of apartments.

Five residents were injured in the strikes, according to the local authorities.

Still, Ukraine’s defense in Bakhmut has drawn in a significant Russian force, pinning them down and preventing them from deploying to other fronts. Mr. Zelensky declared on Friday that the city was “our fortress” and vowed, “No one will give away Bakhmut.”

In northeastern Ukraine, four people were injured in a Russian missile attack on the center of Kharkiv, the country’s second largest city, regional officials said on Sunday.

Michael Schwirtz and Thomas Gibbons-Neff contributed reporting.

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