06 Apr 2023 | 03:40 PM UTC
Ukraine: Military operations continue in southern and eastern regions as of April 6 /update 215
Military operations continue in southern and eastern regions of Ukraine as of April 6.
Event
Military operations are ongoing in Ukraine's southern and eastern regions as of April 6. Ground combat, artillery bombardments, and air and missile strikes remain focused near the frontlines in the Donetsk, Luhansk, and Kharkiv regions. There have been limited changes in the territory over the past week. Ukrainian officials report around 40-70 attacks per day, a slight decrease over the previous week.
Bakhmut, in Donetsk Region, continues to be the area of most intense combat. The availability of verifiable information on operations in the city is limited. Russian forces appear to be making gradual gains toward the city center with Ukrainian defenders concentrated in western districts; Wagner Group mercenaries claim to have captured the city administration in the city center. Ukrainian officials confirmed their intention to continue defending the city but stated they will withdraw forces to avoid encirclement if deemed necessary. Further south in Donetsk Region, Ukrainian forces continue to repel Russian assaults around Avdiivka and Marinka.
Combat operations are ongoing in Luhansk Region along a front line stretching between Kupyansk, Svatove, Kreminna, and Spirne; Ukrainian troops continue to repel most Russian assaults in this sector. Russian forces increased activity around Makiivka in recent days, claiming limited gains in this area; however, these claims are not confirmed, and the front line is not significantly altered.
The outskirts of Kharkiv continue to be targeted in artillery fire on a near-daily basis. Similarly, towns on the international border between Ukraine's Kharkiv and Sumy regions and Russia continue to suffer artillery bombardments. Ukrainian forces typically respond with artillery fire into Russia's Belgorod and Kursk oblasts. Artillery exchanges have continued between the opposing sides across the front lines in the Zaporizhzhia and Kherson regions, but major ground assaults are unlikely in the immediate term. Russia launched a drone attack on Odesa early April 4 in the only significant air attack away from the front line or border regions over the past week. Ukrainian officials claim to have intercepted 14 of 17 drones and state the attack did not result in casualties or significant damage to infrastructure.
Context
As wintry conditions become less severe, Russian offensive activity will likely continue to slowly increase in the Luhansk and Donetsk regions, and the likelihood of a major Ukrainian counteroffensive grows. However, frontal assaults in recent weeks have yielded limited progress while resulting in numerous Russian casualties. While Ukrainian forces are likely also taking casualties and losing equipment, they are likely less severe than those of Russia. Additionally, Ukrainian equipment losses are increasingly replaced by advanced Western weaponry and equipment, though likely not yet in sufficient quantities to launch major counteroffensive operations. Ukrainian forces will likely seek to attrite Moscow's forces as much as possible before eventually withdrawing from locations subject to significant Russian pressure, should that become necessary.
Russia's spring conscription period began on March 30. Russia typically conducts two rounds of conscription per year, drafting roughly 134,000 men. Russian President Vladimir Putin's latest decree authorizes the drafting of up to 147,000 men. However, they are unlikely to appear in the combat zones of Ukraine. Russian conscripts must undergo months of training before being considered combat-ready, and Russian officials and civil society previously engaged in rare public opposition to Putin's regime following conscript deaths in 2022.
Ukraine’s military intelligence believes that Russia's plan to plunge Ukraine into an extensive blackout failed; therefore, Moscow is returning to the tactics used in the first days of the full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Their targets during future mass missile and drone attacks might increasingly include strategic sites, such as military facilities and routes for the supply of Western weapons, including train stations and rail hubs.
Ukrainian estimates of Russian missile stockpiles continue to suggest that their number is decreasing. However, Russian domestic missile production continues, and Russia has increasingly repurposed S-300 and anti-ship missiles for ground attacks. Additionally, in recent barrages, Russia has launched older, Soviet-era cruise missiles, such as the Kh-55, without payloads in a likely effort to trigger Ukrainian air defenses. Additionally, Moscow continues to launch Iranian Shahed-136 drones, forcing Ukraine to expend costly and finite resources to repel these attacks and possibly reveal air defense battery positions.
Russian cross-border artillery strikes in the border areas of Chernihiv, Sumy, and Kharkiv regions continue to escalate. Although a major offensive does not appear imminent, limited incursions to harass Ukrainian forces and pin significant numbers of defenders in place remain possible. Artillery strikes also regularly cause utility disruptions and civilian casualties.
Advice
Avoid travel to active conflict zones in the Kharkiv, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson regions of Ukraine; consider leaving these areas by available ground transport if safe to do so. Exercise extreme caution if operating anywhere in Ukraine. Download the AirAlert mobile application to receive an air alert notification in your chosen city or region of Ukraine from the Civil Defense System. You should shelter in place if there is fighting or airstrikes in the area. Stay away from windows and exterior walls if officials report incoming rocket or artillery fire. Follow the instructions of local security personnel, especially when instructed to seek refuge in air-raid shelters. Maintain contact with diplomatic representations. Due to the threat of unexploded ordnance, avoid off-road travel. Travel on well-used routes only. Do not approach suspected unexploded ordnance. In areas previously occupied by Russian forces, be aware of booby traps.