Russia ‘captures eastern town of Soledar’
The town’s fall would mark a rare victory for the Kremlin after a series of battlefield setbacks in its invasion of Ukraine.
Russia has claimed its forces have captured a fiercely contested salt mining town, in what would mark a rare victory for the Kremlin after a series of setbacks in its invasion of Ukraine.
Ukrainian authorities said the fight for Soledar continued.
There have repeatedly been conflicting reports over who controls the town, the site of a months-long bloody battle in the grinding fight for Ukraine’s eastern regions.
The Associated Press could not independently confirm either side’s claim.
From the outset, Moscow identified Donetsk and neighbouring Luhansk province as priorities, and it has treated the areas as Russian territory since their alleged annexation.
“The liberation of the town of Soledar was completed in the evening of January 12,” Lieutenant General Igor Konashenkov, the Russian Defence Ministry’s spokesman, said, adding that the development was “important for the continuation of offensive operations in the Donetsk region”.
Taking control of Soledar would allow Russian forces “to cut supply lines for the Ukrainian forces” in Bakhmut and then “block and encircle the Ukrainian units there”, Lt Gen Konashenkov said.
But Serhii Cherevaty, a spokesman for the Ukrainian army in the east, denied the Russian Defence Ministry’s claim in remarks carried by the RBK Ukraine news outlet, saying that “fighting is ongoing in the city”.
The Institute for the Study of War, a think tank in Washington, said that a Russian seizure of Soledar was “not an operationally significant development and is unlikely to presage an imminent Russian encirclement of Bakhmut”.
The institute said that Russian information operations have “overexaggerated the importance of Soledar”, a small settlement, arguing as well that the long and difficult battle has contributed to the exhaustion of Russian forces.
In a Telegram post early on Friday, Ukraine’s deputy defence minister Hanna Maliar said that Moscow “had sent almost all (its) main forces” to secure a victory in the east.
She said that Ukrainian fighters “are bravely trying to hold the defence”.
“This is a difficult stage of the war, but we will win. There is no doubt,” Ms Maliar added.