The frontlines of the ongoing Russia-Ukraine war are shifting, and Ukraine finds itself on precarious footing.
The battle-hardened spirit of its defenders notwithstanding, the need for substantial support is undeniable.
Yet, as Ukrainian forces fight tooth and nail to hold their ground, it is essential that US assistance arrive in time.
While promises of immediate aid trickle in, the reality on the ground is unforgiving. Russian forces, equipped and emboldened, show no signs of relenting.
With each village seized, with each inch gained, the strategic landscape shifts in favor of Moscow. Ukrainian defenders, valiant yet outmatched, struggle to hold the line against a well-equipped adversary.
According to the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), the Kremlin is seeking to exploit a window of opportunity before US assistance is delivered.
Moscow has been bringing in reinforcements and has a threefold advantage in some sectors.
It observed: “The arrival of US aid at the front in the coming weeks will allow the Ukrainian forces to address their current materiel constraints and blunt ongoing Russian offensive operations. Russian forces appear to be intensifying efforts to destabilise Ukrainian defences and gain ground.”
In a seeming confirmation to ISW’s claim, Russia has consolidated recent battlefield gains in the east of Ukraine, and is attempting to break through Ukrainian defensive lines before a long-awaited package of US military assistance arrives at the frontline.
On Sunday, April 28, 2024, Russian troops advanced near the city of Avdiivka. They seized two villages and expanded a narrow corridor around the rural settlement of Ocheretyne, which the Russians entered a week ago.
The fighting in Ocheretyne followed a surprise Russian attack. The manoeuvre enabled Russian combat units to bypass a network of Ukrainian trenches and to establish a salient.
They have since overrun neighbouring hamlets – Solovyove and Novokalynove – and are attempting to push farther west.
Ukraine’s eastern command said its forces controlled two-thirds of Ocheretyne, where there was fierce fighting.
Russia seized Avdiivka in February after Ukrainian troops withdrew. Moscow’s forces have been advancing ever since. North-west of Avdiivka, Russian brigades have come within about 18 miles (30km) of the city of Pokrovsk, a Ukrainian military hub. Farther north, they are assaulting the town of Chasiv Yar, near Bakhmut, using airdropped glide bombs to pound Ukrainian positions.
A statement by Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskyi reflected Ukraine’s deteriorating position in the east
“The situation at the front has worsened,” he wrote on the Telegram app, describing the “most difficult” areas as west of occupied Maryinka and northwest of Avdiivka,
“Right now things are not critical or catastrophic. But it’s very difficult,” one senior security official in Kyiv said on Sunday.
The person said it would take “one to two months” before $61bn of US military aid reached frontline troops and allowed them to counter Russian attacks. Some weapons such as 155mm artillery ammunition would arrive sooner, officials suggested.
With a timeline of “one to two months” before the full arsenal of $61 billion in military assistance reaches the frontlines, the window of opportunity narrows with each passing day.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Ukraine’s President, urged on Sunday, “We are still waiting for the supplies Ukraine was promised. We are expecting those volumes and scope that can change the situation on the battlefield in Ukraine’s interests.”
Russia To Provide “Stinging” Response To Assets Seizure
Russia has warned that any seizure of its assets would result in a blow to the Western economic system and it will be subject to “retaliatory actions and legal proceedings.”
“If this happens, if such a dangerous precedent is created, it will be such a solid nail in the future coffin of the entire Western economic system of coordinates,” Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in an interview with Pavel Zarubin, a Russian journalist.
On April 23, 2024, the US Senate adopted a set of bills that had already been passed by the House of Representatives, including one that makes it possible to confiscate the Russian financial assets that the US had frozen as part of the Western sanctions and transfer them to Ukraine for reconstruction.
He was further cited as saying by the Russian news agency that foreign investors and countries around the world “from now on will think ten times before investing their money” in the West if it goes ahead with the asset seizure sanctioned by the US Congress this week.
Peskov stated that it was premature to talk about Russia’s response in the event of the West seizing Russian assets, but noted that there was also Western property in Russia.
Meanwhile, Russian Security Council Deputy Chairman Dmitry Medvedev said that Moscow’s response to the US legislation providing for the confiscation of Russian assets “will sting.”
Only an asymmetric response is possible. However, this doesn’t mean that it will sting any less,” he wrote on Telegram.
Medvedev also suggested enacting legislation to allow Russia to confiscate assets belonging to the citizens of unfriendly countries.
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