HTTP/1.1 302 Found Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2014 17:46:30 GMT Server: Apache Set-Cookie: NYT-S=deleted; expires=Thu, 01-Jan-1970 00:00:01 GMT; path=/; domain=www.stg.nytimes.com Set-Cookie: NYT-S=0MMApqdgkNm.rDXrmvxADeHDVekgOOann0deFz9JchiAIUFL2BEX5FWcV.Ynx4rkFI; expires=Fri, 26-Sep-2014 17:46:30 GMT; path=/; domain=.nytimes.com Location: http://ift.tt/1tcujUu Content-Length: 0 Cneonction: close Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8 HTTP/1.1 200 OK Server: Apache Cache-Control: no-cache Channels: NytNow Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8 Transfer-Encoding: chunked Date: Wed, 27 Aug 2014 17:46:30 GMT X-Varnish: 1409445567 1409439219 Age: 75 Via: 1.1 varnish X-Cache: HIT X-API-Version: 5-5 X-PageType: article Connection: close 002563
http://nyti.ms/1wDeFE5
- Charles M. Blow
- David Brooks
- Frank Bruni
- Roger Cohen
- Gail Collins
- Ross Douthat
- Maureen Dowd
- Thomas L. Friedman
- Nicholas Kristof
- Paul Krugman
- Joe Nocera
- Charles M. Blow
- David Brooks
- Frank Bruni
- Roger Cohen
- Gail Collins
- Ross Douthat
- Maureen Dowd
- Thomas L. Friedman
- Nicholas Kristof
- Paul Krugman
- Joe Nocera
Credit Mauricio Lima for The New York Times
NOVOAZOVSK, Ukraine â Tanks, artillery and infantry have crossed from Russia into an unbreached part of eastern Ukraine in recent days, attacking Ukrainian forces and causing panic and wholesale retreat not only in this small border town but a wide swath of territory, in what Ukrainian and Western military officials described on Wednesday as a stealth invasion.
The attacks outside this city and in an area to the north essentially have opened a new, third front in the war in eastern Ukraine between government forces and pro-Russian separatists, along with the fighting outside the cities of Donetsk and Luhansk.
Exhausted, filthy and dismayed, Ukrainian soldiers staggering out of Novoazovsk for safer territory said Tuesday they were cannon fodder for the forces coming from Russia. As they spoke, tank shells whistled in from the east and exploded nearby.
Continue reading the main story
Related Coverage
-
As Peace Talks Approach, Rebels Humiliate Prisoners in UkraineAUG. 25, 2014
-
Ukraine Leader, Set to Meet Putin for Talks, Warns of Long StruggleAUG. 24, 2014
-
In Eastern Ukraine, Rebel Mockery Amid Independence CelebrationAUG. 24, 2014
Some of the retreating Ukrainian soldiers appeared unwilling to fight. The commander of their unit, part of the 9th Brigade from Vinnytsia, in western Ukraine, barked at the men to turn around, to no effect. âAll right,â the commander said. âAnybody who refuses to fight, sit apart from the others.â Eleven men did, while the others returned to the city.
Photo
Credit Sergei Grits/Associated Press
Some troops were in a full, chaotic retreat: a city-busload of them careened past on the highway headed west, purple curtains flapping through windows shot out by gunfire. A Ukrainian military spokesman said Wednesday the army still controlled Novoazvosk but that 13 soldiers had died in the fighting.
The behavior of the Ukrainian forces corroborated assertions by Western and Ukrainian officials that Russia, despite its strenuous denials, is orchestrating a new counteroffensive to help the besieged separatists of the Donetsk Peopleâs Republic, who have been reeling from aggressive Ukrainian military advances in recent weeks.
âRussia is clearly trying to put its finger on the scale to tip things back in favor of its proxies,â said a senior American official. âArtillery barrages and other Russian military actions have taken their toll on the Ukrainian military.â
The Obama administration, which has placed increasingly punitive economic sanctions on Russia over the Ukraine crisis, asserted on Tuesday that the Russians had sent new columns of tanks and armor across the border. The American ambassador to Kiev, Geoffrey Pyatt, said a âRussian-directed counteroffensive may be underway.â
Russian forces have been trying to help the separatists break the siege of Luhansk and have been fighting to open a corridor to Donetsk from the Ukrainian-Russian border, Western officials say.
To the south, Russia has been backing a separatist push toward the southern town of Mariupol, a major port on the Azov Sea, according to Western and Ukrainian officials. The Russian aim, one Western official said, is to open a new front that would divert Ukrainian forces from Donetsk and Luhansk and to possibly seize an outlet to the sea in the event that Russia tries to establish a separatist enclave in eastern Ukraine.
Some Western officials fear the move might even be a step in what they suspect is a broader Russian strategy to carve out a land link to Crimea, the strategic Ukrainian peninsula that Russia annexed in March, setting off Moscowâs worst crisis with the West since the Cold War.
Photo
Credit Francisco Leong/Agence France-Presse â Getty Images
The Russian militaryâs use of artillery from locations within Ukraine is of special concern to Western military officials, who say Russian artillery has already been used to shell Ukrainian forces near Luhansk. And along with the antiaircraft systems operated by separatists or Russian forces inside Ukraine, the artillery has the potential to alter the balance of power in the struggle for control of eastern Ukraine.
Russia has denied that it has intervened militarily in Ukraine and the separatists have asserted that they are using captured Ukrainian equipment. But American officials say they are confident that the artillery in Ukraineâs Krasnodon area is Russiaâs since Ukrainian forces have not penetrated that deeply into that separatist-controlled region. American officials also say the separatists have no experience in using such weaponry.
âWe judge that self-propelled artillery is operated by Russians rather than separatists since no separatist training on this artillery has occurred to date,â an Obama administration official said.
The United States has photographs that show the Russian artillery moved into Ukraine, American officials say. One photo dated Aug. 21, shown to a reporter from The New York Times, shows Russian military units moving self-propelled artillery into Ukraine. Another photo, dated Aug. 23, shows the artillery in firing positions in Ukraine.
Advanced air defenses, including systems not known to be in the Ukrainian arsenal, have also been used to blunt the Ukrainian militaryâs air power, American officials say. In addition, they said, the Russian military routinely flies drones over Ukraine and shares the intelligence with the separatists.
The Ukrainian retreat from the border area near Novoazovsk, which began on Tuesday, came as President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, at a summit with his Ukrainian counterpart in Minsk, Belarus, continued to assert that Russia was a bystander. Mr. Putin called the Ukrainian insurgency an internal matter and that the Ukrainian government needed to negotiate a cease-fire.
By coupling the Russian military actions with his political talks in Minsk, Mr. Putin appeared to be calculating that Moscow could intervene in eastern Ukraine with conventional Russian forces without risking further Western economic sanctions.
Continue reading the main story
Fighting continued as a Russian humanitarian convoy advanced toward Ukraine, the latest update to the current visual survey of the continuing dispute, with maps and satellite imagery showing rebel and military movement.
On the highway here, Sgt. Ihor Sharapov, a soldier with the Ukrainian border patrol unit, said he had seen tanks drive across the border but marked with flags of the separatist movement here, the Donetsk Peopleâs Republic.
The group that attacked the city crossed from Russia, and though some soldiers were convinced they had spent two days fighting the Russians, others said they had no way of knowing who was inside the tanks, or the identities of the infantry who crossed the border and advanced toward this town.
âI tell you they are Russians, but this is what proof I have,â said Sgt. Aleksei Panko, holding up his thumb and index finger to form a zero. Sergeant Panko estimated that about 60 armored vehicles crossed near Novoazovsk. âThis is what happened: they crossed the border, took up positions and started shooting.â
The Ukrainian Vinnytsia brigade met the cross-border advance over the six miles of countryside separating Novoazovsk from the Russian border, but later retreated to the western edge of town along the Rostov-Mariupol highway, where soldiers were collapsed in exhaustion on the roadside. âThis is now a war with Russia,â Sergeant Panko said.
The counteroffensive that Ukrainian officers said was at least in part staged across the border from Russia pushed the Ukrainian army off a 75 mile-long highway from Donetsk south to the Azov Sea.
On Wednesday, it amounted to a no-manâs land of empty villages, roads crisscrossed by armored vehicle treads, felled trees and grass fires burning out of control, and panoramas of sunflower and corn rotting unharvested in the fields.
To the west of the Novoazovsk highway, the contrails of Ukrainian Grad rockets rose toward the sky, and to the east, black smoke from their impacts where Ukrainian soldiers said the newly arrived armored columns were moving near the Russian border.
The countryside was changing hands and the Ukrainians falling back westward, leaving under fire along side roads. One such route was littered with two incinerated Ukrainian army trucks, smoldering in the early evening, and an abandoned armored vehicle.
âThe Ukrainians slipped away and the Donetsk Peopleâs Republic hasnât yet arrived,â said Roman Bespaltsev, a resident of the village of Starobeshovo south of Donetsk.
More on nytimes.com
Site Index
Source: Top Stories - Google News - http://ift.tt/1pi98i8
0 comments:
Post a Comment