News

Bakhmut battle lays bare high stakes for both sides in Ukraine war

In crude military parlance, the eastern Ukrainian town of Bakhmut is a “meat grinder.”

Nobody knows how many Russian soldiers have died in Moscow’s long, drawn-out assault on Bakhmut, nor how many Ukrainians have died defending it. But the scale of the carnage can be judged by the words of one young Ukrainian soldier as he took a few hours of leave near the Bakhmut front this week.

Why We Wrote This

Whether Russia or Ukraine wins the battle for Bakhmut, heavy casualties mean it will be a Pyrrhic victory. Russians are fighting for a symbol; Ukrainians are fighting for their home.

“Russians got as close to us as 30 meters,” he said. “I’ve never seen so many people walking straight into the bullets, willing to die like that. Nothing prepared me to see such sights.”

Bakhmut has no great strategic importance, but Russian President Vladimir Putin is anxious for a military victory and has chosen to do whatever it takes to capture the town. By the same token, Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelenskyy feels he cannot surrender the place.

“All we can do by fighting with all our might is exact the highest price possible for each meter” that the Russians take, says Yan Antoniuk, a Ukrainian squad commander near Bakhmut.

Asked whether the town is worth such a high cost, he is blunt. “That is like asking whether you want to be a slave or not,” he says.

Leaning against a low wall in the shadow of a building large enough to provide cover from Russian shellfire, Mykhailo sips his tea with calm determination as he and fellow members of his unit await evacuation. For weeks, they have been defending Bakhmut against an intense Russian onslaught in a battle that has come to symbolize the savagery of the war in Ukraine.

Covered in mud and visibly exhausted, none of the men flinch or take cover when a mortar lands uncomfortably close. The fierce battle has subjected nearby towns such as Chasiv Yar, a few miles from the Bakhmut front line, to a constant barrage of tank shells, mortar rounds, and thundering Grad rockets.

“We are holding onto the city, but at what price?” wonders Mykhailo, a member of the Ukrainian army’s 77th brigade who shared only his first name. “The losses are huge. If we keep this city, who will walk in it? Just dogs?”

Why We Wrote This

Whether Russia or Ukraine wins the battle for Bakhmut, heavy casualties mean it will be a Pyrrhic victory. Russians are fighting for a symbol; Ukrainians are fighting for their home.

“The fighting has been hard all along,” says Sergiy, a soldier with honey-colored eyes brimming with tears. The men are in shock. One of their comrades was killed hours earlier in Bakhmut, the latest casualty in a battle that has been as long as it has been brutal, leaving the town almost completely destroyed after 10 months of fighting.

The soldiers know they have been risking their lives to hold positions of questionable strategic value. They find courage by channeling their anger against Russia over fallen comrades and atrocities committed in Ukraine, as well as the primal instinct to defend their homes and families.

Previous ArticleNext Article