Russian forces roll Mad Max-style into battered Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk

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Russian war bloggers published a video on Nov 11 showing what they said were Russian forces entering Pokrovsk along a road enveloped in fog.

Russian war bloggers published a video on Nov 11 showing what they said were Russian forces entering Pokrovsk along a road enveloped in fog.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Russia said its forces had pushed deeper into the eastern Ukrainian cities of Pokrovsk and Kupiansk on Nov 11, with one video showing Russian soldiers rolling into Pokrovsk on motorcycles and even sitting on the roofs of battered cars and vans.

Moscow says taking Pokrovsk, dubbed “the gateway to Donetsk” by Russian media, would give it a platform to drive north towards the two biggest remaining Ukrainian-controlled cities in the Donetsk region – Kramatorsk and Sloviansk.

Russia has been threatening Pokrovsk for more than a year, using a pincer movement in an attempt to encircle it and threaten supply lines rather than the deadly frontal assaults it employed to capture the city of Bakhmut in 2023.

Ukraine’s military said about 300 Russian soldiers were now inside Pokrovsk and that Moscow had intensified efforts to get more troops in over the past few days, using dense fog for cover.

Russian war bloggers published a video on Nov 11 showing what they said were Russian forces entering Pokrovsk along a road enveloped in fog, in what some Telegram users said looked like scenes from the 1979 action film Mad Max, which unfolds in a post-apocalyptic landscape.

The video showed Russian forces on motorcycles and in an odd assortment of cars and other vehicles.

Many vehicles, missing doors and windows, were shown driving along a road strewn with debris as soldiers looked on. Some Russian soldiers sat on the roof of a battered vehicle. A drone was seen beside the road.

Reuters confirmed the location of the video as Pokrovsk from the road layout, signs, a utility tower and trees seen in the footage, which matched file and satellite imagery of the area.

Moscow and Kyiv have given different accounts of the battle for Pokrovsk: Moscow has for days said the city is encircled, while Kyiv

has denied that Moscow controls the city

and said on Nov 10 that it was still able to supply neighbouring Myrnohrad.

Open-source battlefield maps from both sides show that Russia has executed a pincer movement around the city and is close to closing it, though Kyiv has counter-attacked around the town of Dobropillia.

Ukraine’s top military commander, General Oleksandr Syrskyi, in an interview with the New York Post, said Russia was concentrating about 150,000 troops in its drive to capture Pokrovsk, with mechanised groups and marine brigades as part of the push.

Russia said its forces had taken full control of the eastern part of Kupiansk in Ukraine’s Kharkiv region and were actively advancing to the north-west and east of Pokrovsk.

It also said its troops had taken control of the settlement of Novouspenivske in the south-eastern Zaporizhzhia region.

A Russian commander, who gave his call sign as “Hunter” and identified himself as in charge of Russia’s 1486th Motorised Rifle Regiment’s assault detachment, said his forces had taken control of an oil depot on the eastern edge of Kupiansk.

In a video statement issued by Russia’s Defence Ministry, he said his forces had taken control of a series of train stops along the railway to Kupiansk Vuzlovyi, a settlement about 6km south of the centre of Kupiansk itself.

Russia’s military says it now controls more than 19 per cent of Ukraine, or about 116,000 sq km. Ukrainian maps tracking front-line changes show Russian control at 19.1 per cent of Ukraine, up from 18 per cent nearly three years ago. REUTERS

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