WRAPUP 8-Russia tries to close ring on Bakhmut as Ukrainians resist
Yevhen Titov
Updated 5 min read
(Adds Ukraine's Zelenskiy says front 'under control')
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Ukraine's Zelenskiy: each front line sector 'under control'
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Russia allies China, Belarus urge 'soonest possible' peace
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West urges condemnation of war as G20 foreign ministers meet
By Yevhen Titov
NEAR CHASIV YAR, Ukraine, March 1 (Reuters) - Russian forces carried out relentless attacks on Bakhmut on Wednesday, trying to encircle and storm the eastern Ukrainian city and claim their first major prize for more than half a year after some of the bloodiest fighting of the war.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy accused Moscow of throwing waves of men into battle in Bakhmut with no regard for their lives, and said the fighting was "most difficult" but the city's defence essential.
"The enemy continues to advance. The assault on the city of Bakhmut continues," the general staff of Ukraine's armed forces said in a Facebook post on Wednesday evening.
Hours later, Zelenskiy said in a video address that "we are keeping each sector of the front under control". He accused Russian forces of shelling cities on the frontline in a campaign of "deliberate terror".
The leader of Russia's Wagner mercenary group said the Ukrainians were putting up "furious resistance" trying to hold the city at all costs.
Russia also said it had repelled a massive drone attack on Crimea, the peninsula its forces seized from Ukraine and claimed to annex in 2014. On Tuesday Moscow accused Kyiv of launching a series of drone strikes on targets in Russia itself.
Reuters was able to reach Bakhmut from the west on Monday - proof the city was not yet surrounded despite Russian forces pressing from north and south to close the last access routes.
Flames and smoke rose into the sky from blazing buildings. Constant gunfire and explosions rang out into the sky. Ukrainian armoured vehicles roared through the streets, while stray dogs wandered amid the mud and debris.
NO UKRAINIAN WITHDRAWAL
A Ukrainian soldier said in a video he posted on Wednesday on messaging app Telegram that it was "a bit calmer" in Bakhmut.
"We (have) silenced the enemy a bit ... There's a gunfight on the outskirts. A few explosions, shells flying," serviceman and vlogger Andrii Babychev said, blasts reverberating behind him.
"Nobody plans to withdraw anywhere at the moment. We're standing. Bakhmut is Ukraine. Glory to Ukraine!" he said.
Reuters was able to confirm the location as Bakhmut from the look of the buildings in the video, which matched file pictures, though not that the video was filmed on Wednesday.
Only a few thousand residents remain inside the ruined city from a pre-war population of around 70,000.
"It is frightening indeed," said a middle-aged man bundled in a coat and woolly hat on the steps of his apartment block.
"I can hardly move my legs - they barely move - from the stress of the situation. As long as my home is intact and I am not hurt, I will stay here."
In the town of Chasiv Yar just to the west, a grocery store was ablaze.
WINTER OFFENSIVE
The area around Bakhmut has been the one segment of the front where Russia has made notable gains during a winter offensive that has seen what both sides describe as the deadliest fighting of the year-long war.
In an audio message on social media, Wagner leader Yevgeny Prigozhin said the Ukrainian military was throwing extra reserves into the battle for Bakhmut.
"Tens of thousands of Ukrainian army fighters are putting up furious resistance. The bloodiness of the battles is growing by the day," Prigozhin said.
Since being ousted from some territory in the second half of 2022, Russian forces have been replenished by hundreds of thousands of reservists. Ukraine, for its part, has stuck mainly to defence over the past three months, hoping Russia's assault will exhaust its forces before Kyiv launches a counter-attack with new heavy weapons promised by the West.
Russia says seizing Bakhmut would open the way to fully capturing the rest of the surrounding Donbas industrial region, one of its main war objectives. Ukraine says Bakhmut has limited strategic value but the losses have been so huge they could influence the future course of the war.
MUD
Ukrainians and Russians traditionally view March 1 as the start of spring. Already, frozen ground has melted at the front, ushering in the season of sucking black mud - "bezdorizhzhia" in Ukrainian, "rasputitsa" in Russian - that has been notorious in military history for destroying attacking armies in the region.
Ukrainians declared that the arrival of milder weather proved Russia had failed to "freeze" them into submission with missile and drone attacks on energy infrastructure.
Putin's close allies, presidents Xi Jinping of China and Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus, called for the "soonest possible" peace deal for Ukraine at talks in Beijing on Wednesday, Belarusian state news agency Belta reported.
China has become increasingly vocal in calling for peace and denied it would provide arms to Moscow after U.S. officials said Beijing was considering doing so.
The war took centre stage on the eve of a G20 foreign ministers' meeting in New Delhi on Wednesday with the EU foreign policy chief saying its success would be measured by what it could do to help end the conflict.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux Writing by Peter Graff, Mark Heinrich and Grant McCool Editing by Gareth Jones, William Maclean and Diane Craft)