https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2022/06/10/ukraine-ammunition-donbas-russia/
Ukraine is running out of ammunition as prospects dim on the battlefield
Hopes that Ukraine will be able to reverse Russian gains are fading in the face of superior firepower
SLOVYANSK,
Ukraine — The euphoria that accompanied Ukraine’s unforeseen early
victories against bumbling Russian troops is fading as Moscow adapts its
tactics, recovers its stride and asserts its overwhelming firepower
against heavily outgunned Ukrainian forces.
Newly
promised Western weapons systems are arriving, but too slowly and in
insufficient quantities to prevent incremental but inexorable Russian gains in the eastern Donbas region of Ukraine, which is now the focus of the fight.
The
Ukrainians are still fighting back, but they are running out of
ammunition and suffering casualties at a far higher rate than in the
initial stages of the war. Around 200 Ukrainian soldiers are now being
killed every day, up from 100 late last month, an aide to President
Volodymyr Zelensky told the BBC on Friday — meaning that as many as
1,000 Ukrainians are being taken out of the fight every day, including
those who are injured.
The
Russians are still making mistakes and are also losing men and
equipment, albeit at a lesser rate than in the first months of the
conflict. In one sign that they are suffering equipment shortages, they
have been seen on videos posted on social media hauling hundreds of
mothballed, Soviet-era T-62 tanks out of storage to be sent to Ukraine.
But
the overall trajectory of the war has unmistakably shifted away from
one of unexpectedly dismal Russian failures and tilted in favor of
Russia as the demonstrably stronger force.
Ukrainian and U.S. hopes
that the new supplies of Western weaponry would enable Ukraine to
regain the initiative and eventually retake the estimated 20 percent of
Ukrainian territory captured by Russia since its Feb. 24 invasion are
starting to look premature, said Oleksandr V. Danylyuk, an adviser to
the Ukrainian government on defense and intelligence issues.
“The
strategies and tactics of the Russians are completely different right
now. They are being much more successful,” he said. “They have more
resources than us and they are not in a rush.”
“There’s much less space for optimism right now,” he added.
Ukrainian forces remain resolute. In a cafe in the front line town of Slovyansk,
two Ukrainian soldiers on a break from the trenches nearby recounted
how they were forced to retreat from the town of Dovhenke, northwest of
Slovyansk, under withering Russian artillery fire. Thirty-five of their
100-strong unit were killed in the assault, typical of the tactics
Russia is using. “They destroy everything and walk in,” said one of the
soldiers, Vitaliy Martsyv, 41.
“There is nothing there,” Andriy Tihonenko, 52, said of Dovhenke. “It’s all burned down.”
As
troop fatalities mounted, the surviving soldiers felt “more motivated
to hold our position,” Tihonenko said. To retreat after their comrades
were killed defending the town, he said, would have felt like treating
their deaths as insignificant.
But
eventually, the defensive line was no longer effective, the two men
said. With more than one-third of their force killed, the remaining
soldiers had no choice but to pull back.
“Sometimes you feel down,” Tihonenko said. “But then you realize war is war — and you have to finish it.”
But the odds against the Ukrainians are starting to look overwhelming, said Danylyuk, the government adviser.
“The
Russians are using long-range artillery against us, often without any
response, because we don’t have the means,” he said. “They can attack
from dozens of kilometers away and we can’t fire back. We know all the
coordinates for all their important targets, but we don’t have the means
to attack.”
Ukraine
has now almost completely run out of ammunition for the Soviet-era
weapons systems that were the mainstay of its arsenal, and the Eastern
European countries that maintained the same systems have run out of
surplus supplies to donate, Danylyuk said. Ukraine urgently needs to
shift to longer-range and more sophisticated Western systems, but those
have only recently been committed, and in insufficient quantities to
match Russia’s immense firepower, he said.
Russia
is firing as many as 50,000 artillery rounds a day into Ukrainian
positions, and the Ukrainians can only hit back with around 5,000 to
6,000 rounds a day, he said. The United States has committed to deliver
220,000 rounds of ammunition — enough to match Russian firepower for
around four days.
The
majority of the American M777 howitzer artillery guns that U.S.
officials said would enable Ukraine to match Russian firepower are now
in use on the battlefield, according to the Pentagon. Yet the Russians
continue to advance.
Four
of the more sophisticated and longer range HIMARS multiple-rocket
launcher systems that the Ukrainians had long requested from the United
States are on the way, along with three similar systems pledged by
Britain. But the Ukrainians will first have to be trained how to use
them, and they are still weeks away from reaching the battlefield, U.S.
officials say. The Pentagon has hinted that more systems will be made
available once the Ukrainians have demonstrated they can be used.
But
the Russians started the war with about 900 of their own similar
systems, and although the Ukrainians claim they have destroyed hundreds,
the Russians still have hundreds left, Danylyuk said.
The
Russians have meanwhile adapted their tactics in ways that have let
them take full advantage of their firepower by remaining at a distance
from Ukrainian positions, pounding them relentlessly, then taking
territory once the Ukrainians have been forced to retreat.
The
Russians are also doing a better job of combining their arms, of using
close air support and deploying dismounted infantry, said Rob Lee, a
former U.S. Marine now with the Foreign Policy Research Institute.
Russian
officials have claimed they are advancing more slowly than during the
initial invasion to avoid civilian casualties. Instead, however, the
tactic helps reduce Russian casualties while inflicting heavy losses on
the civilians who live in the towns and villages being targeted,
analysts say.
“I’m
afraid of every single boom or sound,” said Irina Makagon, as she sat
in her kitchen in Kostiantynivka, a town near the front line that has
suffered intense bombardments. She was sitting in her kitchen earlier
this week when a boom and a whistle heralded an incoming shell that
crashed into the house next door, killing a young man.
The
Ukrainians are still fighting well and can inflict tactical pain on the
Russians when the opportunity presents itself, said Dmitri Alperovitch
of the Silverado Consultancy, citing Russia’s disastrous attempt
late last month to cross the Siverskiy Donets river; hundreds of
Russians were killed and scores of military vehicles destroyed. The
Ukrainians are also conducting successful drone strikes against Russian
positions and supply columns, he said.
Russia
has not released casualty figures since March. “But when you look at
what’s happening, I’d be shocked if the Russians are sustaining
casualties anywhere close to what the Ukrainians are right now,”
Alperovitch said.
Manpower
is less of a problem for the Ukrainians than the shortages of
ammunition and equipment, said Danylyuk, who put the number of men who
have signed up to potentially fight at 6 million. But Ukraine doesn’t
have the equipment, including protective gear and guns as well as
artillery systems, to field all those willing to volunteer. “We would be
sending them to their deaths without equipment,” he said.
The
Russians face manpower shortages too, after the heavy losses they
suffered in the earliest days of the war. Western officials put the
number of Russian deaths at 15,000 to 20,000 so far, with as many as a
third of the original invasion force rendered unfit for combat due to
injuries, capture and equipment losses after the disasters of the first
two months.
But
Russia has regenerated its forces to a greater extent than anticipated
by many military analysts, bolstering its depleted army by as many as
40,000 to 50,000 men over the past two months, by increasing the age of
the reserve force, deploying new forces and refurbishing units that had
been decimated, Danylyuk said.
For
now, the Donetsk River stands in the way of significant new Russian
advances. Western officials say they expect that Russian troops will
soon secure full control of the town of Severedonetsk and then are
likely to turn their attention to the town of Lysyshansk, on the
opposite bank of the river, which would put them in full control of the
region of Luhansk. After that, they can be expected to target the larger
region of Donetsk that Russia has partially controlled since 2014.
Lysyshansk
will be a tougher challenge because the Ukrainians control the high
ground, and the Russians’ artillery strength is less of an advantage in
close urban combat, said Konrad Muzyka, director of the Warsaw-based
Rochan Consulting defense consultancy. Russia may find it difficult to
sustain its recent gains for much beyond that, given the losses it has
suffered so far, he said.
But if the Russians manage to breach the river, they could start to make rapid advances, he said.
“The
Ukrainians are resting their defense on the Donetsk river. If Russia
successfully crosses the river, my concern is that the Russians will
enter Donetsk with their full might, and then the Ukrainians might be
overwhelmed,” he said.
Sly reported from London. Heidi Levine in Slovyansk contributed to this report.