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Russian forces bypass key Ukraine stronghold in bid to cut off its supplies

After almost three years of war, Ukrainian units are depleted and are outnumbered by Russian forces.

Ukrainian servicemen collect damaged ammunition on the road at the front line near Chasiv Yar (Oleg Petrasiuk/Ukraine’s 24th Mechanised Brigade via AP)
Ukrainian servicemen collect damaged ammunition on the road at the front line near Chasiv Yar (Oleg Petrasiuk/Ukraine’s 24th Mechanised Brigade via AP) (Oleg Petrasiuk/AP)

Russian forces are bypassing a key stronghold in eastern Ukraine that they have fought for months to capture and are focusing instead on cutting supply lines to it, a Ukrainian official said.

Russian troops are going around the vital logistics hub of Pokrovsk, where a steadfast Ukrainian defence has kept them at bay, and are taking aim at a highway that leads from there to the central Ukraine city of Dnipro, Major Viktor Trehubov, a local Ukrainian army spokesperson, told The Associated Press.

That route is crucial for supplies feeding Ukrainian forces in the entire region.

Cutting the highway traffic would also severely weaken Pokrovsk.

A car drives along a highway from Pokrovsk (Evgeniy Maloletka/AP)
A car drives along a highway from Pokrovsk (Evgeniy Maloletka/AP) (Evgeniy Maloletka/AP)

“So far, they have not achieved their goal and (Ukrainian forces) are working to ensure that they do not achieve it in the future — just as they have not been successful in other attempts to bypass the city,” Major Trehubov said in a WhatsApp message.

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Ukraine’s army is under severe strain along parts of the approximately 600-mile front line, especially in the eastern Donetsk region where Pokrovsk is located.

After almost three years of war, Ukrainian units are depleted and are outnumbered by Russian forces.

Though its battlefield progress has been slow and costly, momentum in the war is in Russia’s favour and its onslaught has gradually swallowed up towns and villages.

In his daily video address to the nation late on Sunday, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelensky said fighting around Pokrovsk was “the most intense” in recent days.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is pressing his advantage ahead of US President-elect Donald Trump’s arrival in the White House next week.

Mr Trump says he wants to bring a swift end to the war, though he has not publicised details of his plans.

In 2022, Moscow illegally annexed the Donetsk and neighbouring Luhansk regions, which make up the economically important Donbas industrial area, together with the southeastern provinces of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia.

But Russian forces do not fully control any of them.