Wagner Group: Russian mercenaries bomb Bakhmut as Moscow searches for victory


Bakhmut, Ukraine
CNN

Amidst the rubble of an apartment building stained with soot and clouds of dust amid incessant bombardment, a small group of Ukrainian soldiers encounter a new type of Ukrainian soldier. Russian enemy: mercenaries may be some of them convicts Send to the front line.

The battle is as intense as it is decisive around the city of Bakhmut. The Russian positions are located within 200 meters of the Ukrainian military unit joined by CNN. The unit is caught up in a horrific artillery duel, sheltering in cellars, and using commercially procured drones as the best line of defense and intelligence.

Through broken windows, and from inside the rubble-strewn rooms, Ukrainian soldiers look across the adjacent field, which is riddled with countless black craters of artillery shells.

“They can see us here,” said a Ukrainian soldier, pointing into the distance.

This is a new type of frontline fighter. Moscow’s manpower dwindled after as many as 80,000 casualties, according to US officials, prompted Moscow to turn to the country’s sprawling private mercenary sector, the Wagner Group.

The Wagner Group is allegedly run by a man known as Putin’s cookYevgeny Prigozhin. A man matching Prigozhin’s appearance recently appeared in a video in the yard of a Russian prison, praising prisoners for the virtues of joining the Wagner group and fighting on the front line.

Here in Bakhmut this system is put into ruthless work. This city has been the focus of Russian forces in the past weeks, even as they have abandoned their positions around Kharkiv and appear to be struggling for control elsewhere. Wagner’s mercenaries were deployed to this battle, according to multiple reports from the Russian media, and made gains around the city’s eastern fringes.

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Mercenary attacks are often devastatingly brutal: the Ukrainians told CNN that Wagner fighters were rushing towards them with small arms attacks, prompting the Ukrainians to shoot them to protect their positions. After that, the shooting reveals the whereabouts of the Ukrainians, which allows the Russian artillery to target with greater accuracy.

The attacks are regular and the bombing is almost continuous.

“We see a hostile mortar unit. “They are preparing to shoot us,” said a drone operator, looking at his screen.

Ukrainian officer known for the call sign

During CNN’s time with this unit on Tuesday, shells fell intermittently nearby, at one point rocking the walls of the basement shelter. Here, a Ukrainian officer, known for the call sign “Price,” tells CNN about the last captured Russian.

“We quarrel a little with these musicians,” he said, referring to the Wagner group, named after the composer.

“There was one Wagner guy that we caught. He was a convict from Russia – I don’t remember exactly where. He was shot or surrendered for. They behave professionally and not like the usual infantry units.”

A captive Russian convict recruited to fight.

“The real problem is the artillery, it’s really accurate,” he added.

As he was speaking, another shell fell near the shelter.

Bakhmut’s city center is now littered with large potholes from Russian bombing, with main streets riven, and stadium seats torn in two.

Analysts believe that the city could provide Moscow with a strategic position in the Donbass from which to advance north toward Sloviansk and Kramatorsk – and deliver a much-needed strategic victory at a time of mounting losses.

The main streets of Bakhmut were destroyed.

Martin, another Ukrainian officer, agreed to a series of trenches on the other front line, buried in the woods.

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“[The Russians] They retreat elsewhere and they need a victory, something important, so they are throwing troops here.

Of course we have victims, not today in our unit. But you cannot avoid dead or wounded, sometimes seriously wounded. ”

These losses were very personal. “I lost my best friend, five days after we got here. His nickname was a Dancer. As with many call signs or nicknames, Martyn has no idea why his friend got this mark.

Throughout the city, local life is punctuated by massive explosions of bombardment. One of the locals, Andrei, has sad, dark eyes that speak of explosions, lack of electricity, water and calm.

However, he said of his street: “The situation is not so bad, just every second house is ruined.”

Natalia helps many out of life, selling potatoes – half a ton of them one morning alone. “Who knows where the bombing is coming from or heading,” she said, while another blast caused her to laugh nervously.

“Don’t be afraid,” she added.

The streets of Bakhmut were empty on Wednesday, and shelling appeared to be intense on the eastern edge of the city, with Ukrainian guns targeting apparently Russian positions.

An apartment building, which I had already hit once, was still smoking after another missile hit all four floors. Soldiers were grinding anxiously in the street outside to check for damage. Military vehicles hum along the streets.

Slower, she walked home with the food in a noisy and noisy wheeled cart, retired Maria, her eyes covered with large sunglasses.

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“With God, do not be afraid. You cannot feel fear on your land either,” said Maria. More noise of the explosion pierced the sharp creak of her rusty wheels.

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