Ukrainian assault and airborne infantry units were consolidating around newly-captured terrain at locations across the frontline Bakhmut sector and repelled Russian attempts to recapture lost ground at two locations, according to news reports and official Ukrainian statements, on Thursday July 6.

Pro-Russian information platforms reported that Ukrainian troops were digging in near the Berkhivka and Yahidne villages to the north-east of Bakhmut, after recapturing positions lost to Russian assaults as long ago as May. The early July successes marked continued progress on a wider front in a double axis offensive that was initially launched by Ukraine in the Bakhmut sector in early June.

A Russian combined arms assault to push Ukrainian Armed Forces (AFU) units back on Wednesday failed to eject Ukrainian troops from the newly-gained positions, as pro-Russia combat correspondent Simon Pegov reported on Thursday on his Telegram channel.  An official July 6 situation estimate published by Ukraine’s Army General Staff (AGS) confirmed Ukrainian units had repelled the Russian counterattacks against Berkhivka and Yahidne.

Social media and news reports, in some cases backed up by video and geolocated photographs posted by soldiers themselves, showed Ukrainian daily progress measured in hundreds of meters. The AFU advances were based on deliberate, short-range assaults calculated to captured a single wood-line or a farm field, reports agreed.

 

The Kremlin criticised President Volodymyr Zelensky’s visit to NATO-member Bulgaria, saying the Ukrainian leader was trying to “drag” other countries into the conflict between Moscow and Kyiv.

Comments made by Ukraine’s ground forces commander, Oleksandr Syrsky to Ukrainian national media on Wednesday July 5 praised the 10th Mountain Brigade, a formation long-deployed to the north-west of Bakhmut, for recently gaining ground, capturing prisoners of war, and success in defeating the Russian counterattacks. Syrsky said: the brigade had conducted “assaults that succeeded in seizing a range of territory and in destroying a significant number of occupiers [Russian troops].” He did not say where.

Battle videos posted by the brigade itself on Tuesday July 4 and Wednesday July 5 indicated the unit is fighting in the northern Bakhmut sector. Footage showed heavily-armed Ukrainian infantrymen backed by armored personnel carriers and observation drones, deliberately clearing trench lines using grenades and small arms fire. Other images showed medics from the 10th treating soldiers for splinter and gunshot wounds

The 80th Air Assault Brigade, a seasoned AFU fighting unit deployed to the south-west of Bakhmut, published YouTube video on Wednesday July 5 showing Russian soldiers peacefully agreeing to surrender to Ukrainian troopers advancing through a wood-line, and other Russian soldiers fighting to the death from fortifications only meters away. One surviving Russian said he was a reservist from Omsk. The 80th attack poshed Ukrainian lines 300 meters forward, the high-profile Ukrainian military journalist Yury Butusov said.

Aside from the 10th Mountain and 80th Air Assault, are both longstanding regular AFU formations that existed prior to Russia’s Feb. 2022 invasion. The recently-raised 3rd and 5th Assault Brigades have long been deployed to the Bakhmut sector and are widely credited as being key players in Ukraine’s most successful advances in its summer offensive to date.

Both the 3rd and 5th were raised at the outset of the war as all volunteer formations with strong contingents from pre-existing civil society patriotic groups, and veterans of fighting against Russia’s initial invasion of Ukraine from 2014-2022.

Source:kyivpost.com/post