Russia-Ukraine war live: Ukraine ‘operation’ is ‘difficult’ says Kremlin; US thinktank reports Russian forces ‘constrained’ in Bakhmut

Ukraine ‘operation’ is ‘difficult’ says Kremlin spokesperson

Russia’s military operation against Ukraine is “very difficult” but will continue, Tass news agency cited Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov as telling a Bosnian television station on Wednesday.

Russia has succeeded in severely damaging the Ukrainian military machine and this work will continue, he added, in a long interview during which he repeated many of Moscow’s talking points about the conflict.

“The special military operation continues. This is a very difficult operation, and, of course, certain goals have been achieved in a year,” Tass quoted Peskov as saying.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends ceremonial soldiers parade during 78th anniversary of the Victory Day in Red Square in Moscow, Russia on 9 May 2023.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends ceremonial soldiers parade during 78th anniversary of the Victory Day in Red Square in Moscow, Russia on 9 May 2023. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Ukraine continues to shell eastern parts of the country occupied by Russia and Peskov said this demonstrated the need to continue the conflict and push pro-Kyiv forces back, Reuters reports.

“We managed to beat up the Ukrainian military machine quite a bit,” said Peskov, noting Russia had launched countless missile strikes against what he said were military targets across Ukraine.

“This work will continue,” he said. Ukraine accuses Russia of targeting mainly civilian targets, a charge Moscow denies.

Key events

Number of internally displaced people reaches record worldwide

The number of internally displaced people reached a record 71.1 million worldwide last year due to conflicts such as the war in Ukraine and climate calamities like the monsoon floods in Pakistan, according to data published on Thursday and reported by Reuters.

The Geneva-based Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre said that figure represented a 20% increase since 2021. The IDMC said that nearly three-quarters of the world’s displaced people live in 10 countries, including Syria, Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ukraine and Sudan, due to conflicts that prompted significant displacement in 2022.

The war in Ukraine triggered nearly 17 million displacements last year, it said.

Internally displaced Ukrainians stand next to easter food baskets on 16 April 2023 in Lviv, Ukraine.
Internally displaced Ukrainians stand next to easter food baskets on 16 April 2023 in Lviv, Ukraine. Photograph: Omar Marques/Getty Images

“Conflict and violence triggered 28.3 million internal displacements worldwide, a figure three times higher than the annual average over the past decade,” it said.

But the bulk of displaced people last year – 32.6 million – was due to disasters including floods, droughts and landslides.

“The war in Ukraine also fuelled a global food security crisis that hit the internally displaced hardest. This perfect storm has undermined years of progress made in reducing global hunger and malnutrition,” said Jan Egeland, secretary general of the Norwegian Refugee Council.

Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant facing ‘catastrophic’ staff shortage

Russia plans to relocate about 2,700 Ukrainian staff from Europe’s largest nuclear plant, Ukraine’s atomic energy company has claimed, warning of a potential “catastrophic lack of qualified personnel” at the Zaporizhzhia facility in Russian-occupied southern Ukraine.

Workers who signed employment contracts with Russia’s nuclear agency Rosatom following Moscow’s capture of the Zaporizhzhia plant early in the war are set to be taken to Russia along with their families, Energoatom said in a Telegram post on Wednesday.

The company did not specify whether the employees would be forcibly moved out of the plant, nor was it immediately possible to verify Energoatom’s claims about Moscow’s plan.

Removing staff would “exacerbate the already extremely urgent issue” of staff shortages, Energoatom said.

Russian forces ‘constrained’ in Bakhmut, says Institute for the Study of War

Moscow’s forces in Bakhmut are constrained by “pervasive issues with Russian combat capability”, the Institute for the Study of War, a US thinktank, has warned. “Continued attritional assaults” by Ukraine are futher limiting Russia’s progress in the city, the ISW said.

On Wednesday a Ukrainian military unit said it had routed a Russian infantry brigade from frontline territory near Bakhmut, claiming to corroborate an account by the head of Russia’s Wagner group that the Russian forces had fled.

Later on Wednesday, Col Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, who heads Ukraine’s ground forces, said Russian units in some parts of Bakhmut had retreated by up to 2km (1.2 miles) as the result of counterattacks. He did not give details.

Wagner units have led a months-long Russian assault on the eastern city, but Ukrainian forces say the offensive is stalling.

The ISW said in its daily update late on Wednesday:

Pervasive issues with Russian combat capability, exacerbated by continued attritional assaults in the Bakhmut area, are likely considerably constraining the ability of Russian forces in this area to defend against localized Ukrainian counterattacks. […] Issues with the ad hoc commitment of various depleted force groupings to the Bakhmut axis, alongside apparent command and control failures, are likely preventing Russian forces in the area from conducting sound defensive operations.

Ukraine ‘operation’ is ‘difficult’ says Kremlin spokesperson

Russia’s military operation against Ukraine is “very difficult” but will continue, Tass news agency cited Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov as telling a Bosnian television station on Wednesday.

Russia has succeeded in severely damaging the Ukrainian military machine and this work will continue, he added, in a long interview during which he repeated many of Moscow’s talking points about the conflict.

“The special military operation continues. This is a very difficult operation, and, of course, certain goals have been achieved in a year,” Tass quoted Peskov as saying.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends ceremonial soldiers parade during 78th anniversary of the Victory Day in Red Square in Moscow, Russia on 9 May 2023.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov attends ceremonial soldiers parade during 78th anniversary of the Victory Day in Red Square in Moscow, Russia on 9 May 2023. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Ukraine continues to shell eastern parts of the country occupied by Russia and Peskov said this demonstrated the need to continue the conflict and push pro-Kyiv forces back, Reuters reports.

“We managed to beat up the Ukrainian military machine quite a bit,” said Peskov, noting Russia had launched countless missile strikes against what he said were military targets across Ukraine.

“This work will continue,” he said. Ukraine accuses Russia of targeting mainly civilian targets, a charge Moscow denies.

Opening summary

Hello and welcome back to our continuing live coverage of the war in Ukraine. My name is Helen Sullivan and I’ll be bringing you the latest.

Our top stories this morning: Russia’s military operation against Ukraine is “very difficult” but certain goals have been achieved, Tass news agency cited Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov as saying on Wednesday.

Russia has succeeded in severely damaging Ukraine’s military machine and this work will continue, he added.

Meanwhile, the Institute for the Study of War, a US thinktank, says Russian forces appear to be “constrained” in Bakhmut because of what it called ‘pervasive issues with Russian combat capability”.

We’ll have more detail for you shortly. In the meantime, here are the key recent developments in the war:

  • A Ukrainian military commander has said that Russian forces in Bakhmut had been pushed back by up to 2km in some areas, after counter offensives. Col Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi, who heads Ukraine’s ground forces, made the comments in a post on Telegram. He said: “In some areas of the front, the enemy could not resist the onslaught of the Ukrainian defenders and retreated to a distance of up to two kilometers.”

  • Russia’s oil pipeline operator Transneft said that a filling point on the Europe-bound Druzhba pipeline in a border area between Russia and Ukraine had been targeted in a “terrorist” attack, according to the Tass news agency. Transneft said nobody was injured in the incident, which it called a “terrorist attack”, according to Reuters.

  • It comes as Ukraine’s military said its forces have seriously damaged Russia’s 72nd independent motorised rifle brigade near Bakhmut, made up of thousands of troops. Serhiy Cherevatyi, a spokesperson for Ukrainian troops in the east, said the situation remained “difficult” in Bakhmut but Moscow was increasingly forced to use regular army units because of heavy losses among the Wagner private army group.

  • France’s anti-terrorism prosecution office on Wednesday announced it had opened an investigation for possible war crimes and crimes against humanity after an AFP video journalist was killed on Tuesday by Grad rocket fire near Chasiv Yar, in eastern Ukraine.

  • Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Wednesday he thought the Ukraine Black Sea grain deal could be extended for at least two more months, as officials held the first day of talks on an extension in Istanbul. Russia has said it would not extend the pact beyond 18 May unless a list of demands is met to remove obstacles to its own grain and fertiliser exports. Cavusoglu was speaking to reporters on his return from a trip to Moscow.

  • Russian forces are planning to “evacuate” more than 3,000 workers from the town that serves the occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, resulting in a “catastrophic lack” of personnel, Ukraine’s state-owned Energoatom company claimed on Wednesday.

  • Former German chancellor Gerhard Schröder has been criticised again for his links to Russia after attending a Victory Day party at the Russian embassy in Berlin. Schröder was seen at the reception on Tuesday marking the defeat of Nazi Germany in the second world war, along with senior figures from the far-right Alternative for Germany party and the far-left Linke party.

  • Russia may formally “denounce” the treaty on conventional armed forces in Europe that it pulled out of in 2015, according to a decree signed by President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday.

source: theguardian.com