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Putin addresses a rally in Moscow on 18 March 2022 Alamy Stock Photo

Tom Clonan Putin's Ukraine advance is a dogged, savage and illegal war of attrition

Our columnist says the Russian leader is showing no regard for Ukrainian or Russian lives in the latest assault in the east.

ON DAY 96, of Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, Russian forces are pounding more than 40 towns and villages with artillery and multiple launch rocket systems (MLRS) over a wide front in the Donbas region.

This is a grinding and brutal offensive designed to painstakingly extend the Kremlin’s occupation of ground in Luhansk and Donetsk. The Russian military’s strategy is an unimaginative but punishing full-frontal assault on what remains of Ukrainian fixed defences in eastern Ukraine.

In an explicit nod to Russia’s revised political strategy, foreign minister Sergei Lavrov has stated that “the liberation of the Donetsk and Luhansk regions, recognised by the Russian Federation is an unconditional priority”.

This appears to be Putin’s last-ditch plan for a ‘victory’ in Ukraine after three months of costly and at times disastrous combat operations. For now, it also appears to be the limit of their current military ambitions in Ukraine with Lavrov further stating, for the rest of the territories in Ukraine, ‘the people should decide their own futures in these areas’.

At the beginning of the war on the 24 February, Russia controlled approximately 60% of the Luhansk Oblast. In the last 24 hours or so, Russian troops have entered the strategically important town of Severodonetsk. The towns of Svitlodarsk and Lyman have also been occupied by Russian forces in recent days.

This means that Severodonetsk and its close neighbour Lysychansk are the last two major population centres in Luhansk controlled by Ukrainian forces. If Severodonetsk is taken, Lysychansk will fall and Russian troops would then have the capacity to encircle Ukrainian forces in the area with flanking manoeuvres towards Slovyansk and Kramatorsk.

This would be a nightmare scenario for Ukrainian forces – trapped in dug-in positions and cut off from reinforcements and the supply of weapons from western Ukraine. The battle for Severodonetsk will be a crucial one in the current war for Ukraine.

Putin saving face

Putin’s advances have come at a very high price for Russian forces. Robbed of any battlefield initiative or momentum in the field by Ukraine’s nimble and agile defences, Russia’s military has resorted to an old-school – World War II style – textbook conventional frontal assault.

There is no ‘maskirovka’ or deception plan, the Kremlin is simply throwing as much artillery and troops as they can at Ukraine’s fixed positions. It resembles the ‘scorched earth’ strategy of WW2 battles in Ukraine, with entire population centres razed to the ground.

In a manner similar to the destruction of Mariupol, Severodonetsk has been almost completely destroyed as Russian troops tentatively enter its eastern outskirts. Of a population of 100,000 citizens, fewer than 10,000 remain – trapped in the ruins of the city with its defenders. 90% of the buildings in the town have been damaged, with all of its critical infrastructure obliterated.

In a recurring feature of this war, Putin’s forces have deliberately targeted civilian objects such as housing, schools and hospitals, with over two-thirds of Severodonetsk’s homes completely destroyed. This approach is contrary to the Geneva Conventions and the Laws of Armed Conflict.

Determined dictator

Putin has also paid scant regard to losses among his own troops. In the advance on Severodonetsk last week, the Russian military made nine successive attempts to cross the Siverskyi-Donets river, using pontoon bridges. Each time they were shelled by Ukrainian artillery and each time, Russian officers ordered their engineers and armoured units to repeat the attempt at precisely the same grid location.

It is reported that Russia lost over 80 tanks and armoured fighting vehicles and over 400 troops in this botched operation. As Russian and Ukrainian military losses mount on both sides, Putin’s strategy in Donbas appears to be a dogged, savage and illegal war of attrition that seeks to target and completely destroy civilian population centres in order to ‘liberate’ them.

This strategy has entailed the use of massed artillery and MLRS barrages in advance of armour and supporting infantry moving slowly forward in small bounds. Russia has – literally – thousands of artillery and rocket launching weapon systems, ranging from ‘Tornado’ and ‘Smerch’ MLRS systems to heavy mortars and massive 203mm ‘Pion’ artillery pieces capable of delivering tonnes of high explosive and incendiary munitions into civilian areas and Ukraine’s defensive lines.

These indirect fire systems have ranges of up to 90km for MLRS and up to 50km for some artillery units. The Russians simply adjust fire from a distance, using forward artillery observers on the ground and air assets to pinpoint and concentrate their fire on Ukrainian targets. For now, this has robbed the Ukrainian military of the advantage of their previously highly mobile and imaginative defensive tactics. For now, the Ukrainians must stand and fight and bring the Russians to a halt along a fixed line east of the Dnieper river.

This is the reason why President Zelenskyy has been applying ever greater pressure in demands for the more urgent supply of heavy weapons such as US manufactured M777 155mm howitzers – in order to counter Putin’s grinding pincer movement in Luhansk. If Luhansk falls to Russia in the coming weeks, then Putin will swing his forces south to concentrate on what is left of Donetsk. Renewed combat operations around Kherson – now that Mariupol has been ‘neutralised’ – indicate that Putin’s forces would attempt to link up their forces in Donetsk with those in Luhansk, should it fall in the coming days.

Cognisant of Putin’s slow and bloody advances in Donbas, some international commentators – including Henry Kissinger – have called upon President Zelenskyy to cede territory to Putin and to negotiate for peace. As the war grinds on, the Kremlin has blockaded Ukraine’s remaining sea ports – trapping millions of tons of grain inside the country and threatening a worldwide famine in vulnerable parts of the developing world. Putin’s strategy in Ukraine – initially floundering in an unsuccessful assault on Kyiv – has settled down into a well-worn pattern of brutality and terror.

What next?

If Putin succeeds in Ukraine, if he can wrest a ‘victory’ of sorts from the destruction and seizure of Donbas, he will survive in office in the Kremlin. In such a scenario, in my opinion, having been ‘humiliated’ to a certain extent in Ukraine, he will accelerate the re-arming and re-equipping of his forces in order to prepare for future, further operations along Russia’s border with Europe. The current battle for the remaining towns in Luhansk, and then what remains of Donetsk will determine the outcome of the war in Ukraine.

The EU needs to support Ukraine by every means at its disposal – through a complete oil embargo on Russia and the supply of all the means necessary for Ukraine to defend itself. This is a war – not just for the EU’s interests – but for the very values and principles that underpin the international rule of law and democracy.

The outcome of this war may well determine the actions and behaviours of the world’s newly emerging superpowers – many of whom eschew democratic values and the rule of law in favour of coercion, propaganda and misinformation and the wanton use of force against their own populations and others.

Our grandparents in Europe have been at this point before. This is a pivotal moment for our generation.

Dr Tom Clonan is an independent Senator and former Captain in the Irish armed forces. He is a security analyst and academic, lecturing in the School of Media in DIT. You can follow him on Twitter.

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    Mute Lloyd Christmas
    Favourite Lloyd Christmas
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    Apr 16th 2014, 11:18 AM

    1 in 2 people are either male or female

    82
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    Mute Jimmy Connaughton
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    Apr 16th 2014, 12:51 PM

    Surely that should be everyone is either male or female.

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    Mute aisling doyle
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    Apr 16th 2014, 1:13 PM

    I’m 21 days smoke free :-)

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    Mute Allie Moore
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    Apr 16th 2014, 3:48 PM

    Great keep it up its hard for you but well worth the effort !

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    Mute Jane Travers
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    Apr 16th 2014, 10:03 PM

    Well done Aisling :)

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    Mute Anto O Rourke
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    Apr 16th 2014, 11:30 AM

    Either make it illegal, or shut up about it. Useless story.

    63
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    Mute gerbreen
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    Apr 16th 2014, 10:01 PM

    bollocks to that – how many hours are lost each year “outside puffing”. How many sick days a year in HSE?

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    Mute TOP CAT
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    Apr 16th 2014, 11:22 AM

    They can’t afford to smoke anymore simple as…..

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    Mute simon shewster
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    Apr 16th 2014, 11:31 AM

    I’d be afraid to know the statistic of smokers in germany, nearly everybody smokes, young and old.

    22
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    Mute Martin Bishop
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    Apr 16th 2014, 11:44 AM

    Yeah but there’s massive differences in Germany,

    - Smoking adverts exist on billboards and bus stops
    - Shops have adverts up in windows and behind the counter
    - Cigs are openly for sale, one example is in Aldi where instead of sweets at the checklike like you have in Ireland they have cigs…hundreds of the things!
    - Many streets have cig vending machines that can be used anytime.

    Goes to show that Ireland has done something right,

    49
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    Mute Harry byrne
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    Apr 16th 2014, 4:26 PM

    As much as i dont like smoking its not illegal for god sake so i dont understand the point of the article…Who gives a sh*t!!

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    Mute Eoin Sheehy
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    Apr 16th 2014, 11:36 AM

    I’m all for the non-smoking campuses but the enforcement just isn’t there, if anyone has been to CUH you can hear that voice announcing that “Cork University Hospital is a smoke-free campus, the smoke from your cigarette is directly effecting patients in the breast cancer and cardiac unit overhead etc etc” but patients, staff and visitors still smoke there regardless, plenty porters bring the patients out for a smoke no bother!

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    Mute Martin Bishop
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    Apr 16th 2014, 11:46 AM

    Many (not ALL) smokers have no regard for anyone else, especially in places where people have health issues.

    Anyone with asthma will tell you the problems that people smoking around them can cause, the last thing such a person needs is to walk through a cloud of smoke as they leave a hospital!\

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    Mute Jane Travers
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    Apr 16th 2014, 12:09 PM

    Very true, Martin. I have to run the gauntlet of smoke every 4 weeks when attending the respiratory clinic. It’s ridiculous, but I do think it’s slowly improving.

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    Mute Alan O'connor
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    Apr 16th 2014, 2:46 PM

    The gauntlet of smoke?

    Oh the humanity!!!

    First world problems strike again.

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    Mute Jane Travers
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    Apr 16th 2014, 3:53 PM

    I quite enjoyed mixing that particular metaphor, Alan ;)

    You might say it’s a first-world problem, and possibly it is; if I had been born in the developing world I’d be dead long before now. Remember, though, this is a hospital. People shouldn’t have to risk their own health to any degree just to pass through the doors.

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    Mute Alan.V
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    Apr 16th 2014, 8:02 PM

    What a pile of drivel?

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    Mute Tinker Taylor
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    Apr 16th 2014, 12:38 PM

    This is about spending more money to help HSE smokers quit. I know of one person who availed of this scheme… a complete waste of money as she still puffs 20-30 per day. If HSE staff want to quit let them do so with their own cash and not the tax payer.

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    Mute mmz
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    Apr 16th 2014, 7:21 PM

    I say they should fire all HSE staff that cannot keep their grubby yellow fingered mitts off of the cancer sticks for the 8 hours a day they are required to be at work.

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    Mute Sarah Boylan
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    Apr 16th 2014, 8:09 PM

    Get a grip of yourself….smoking is a personal choice. Sack the nurses, then who would be there to look after the whingers like you? Now im going to make a lovely cup of tea & have a lovely cigarette to go with it.

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    Mute mmz
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    Apr 16th 2014, 9:10 PM

    No doubt you won’t be worrying about the medical services, hospital beds and hospital budgets that won’t be available for your children and relatives now or in the future when they need them, because the selfish, coffin nail addicted, people like yourself are using them all up – coughing up your lungs and polluting the place while you die slowly at huge expense to the taxpayer. That won’t worry you one little bit will it ?

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    Mute Sarah Boylan
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    Apr 16th 2014, 9:30 PM

    Nope!! It sure won’t u pathetic do gooding whinge

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    Mute Barry Walsh
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    Apr 16th 2014, 10:08 PM

    Well when youre out dogooding and moralling bullshitting out of you,make sure and berate the fatties in supermacs with their clogged arteries,and the alcoholics taking up valuable breathing space,and the junkies,they all need hospital beds too,at least smokers will agree with you that its a disgusting addiction,but the fatties all go around miffed about why theyre fat,as if it was a fcuking mystery!

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    Mute Sarah Boylan
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    Apr 16th 2014, 10:24 PM

    Well said Barry!!

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    Mute Sarah Boylan
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    Apr 16th 2014, 9:39 PM

    U sound like you could do with a smoke, would u ever light up!!! Sorry I meant lighten up……

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    Mute mmz
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    Apr 16th 2014, 10:35 PM

    You sound like you could be paid for by the tobacco – profits before people – industry….

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    Mute Sarah Boylan
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    Apr 16th 2014, 10:49 PM

    The tobacco industry could pay me all day long if they wanted, I’d be delighted!!!

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    Mute Sarah Boylan
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    Apr 16th 2014, 9:39 PM

    U sound like you could do with a smoke, would u ever light up!!! Sorry I meant lighten up……

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    Mute Sheik Yahbouti
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    Apr 16th 2014, 7:38 PM

    So?

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