Current:Home > MyReturning to Ukraine's front line, CBS News finds towns falling to Russia, and troops begging for help -Streamline Finance
Returning to Ukraine's front line, CBS News finds towns falling to Russia, and troops begging for help
View
Date:2025-04-17 21:30:03
Chasiv Yar, eastern Ukraine — Ukraine's ammunition starved troops pulled back from two more villages in the country's war-torn east this week, ceding them to Russian forces who've capitalized on their enemies' shortages to seize more territory after taking the hard-fought city of Avdiivka about two weeks ago.
After punishing battles that decimated Bakhmut and then Avdiivka — cities that stood as symbols of Ukrainian resistance for months, even years, but ultimately fell to Russian firepower — Russia's forces have turned their sites and their guns on the nearby city of Chasiv Yar.
CBS News was there months ago, and it was tense even then, but when we returned to Chasiv Yar this week, explosions rang out non-stop and we found a city ravaged by artillery fire, and exhausted troops asking for help.
- The state of the Ukraine war 2 years into "Putin's vicious onslaught"
We were told to drive at breakneck speed over the crumbling, potholed road leading to Chasiv Yar. At a high point on the road, the trees and houses disappeared and just over the brow of the next hill was Bakhmut, which has been held by Russian forces for months.
We were exposed, and it was a clear day — perfect conditions for drones looking to target vehicles moving in and out of the town.
Russia has been smashing Chasiv Yar with artillery, missiles and airstrikes for months, but Ukrainian soldiers told us the intensity of those attacks spiked over the past few days.
That's one indication the city could be the next target for Russia's grinding offensive in Ukraine's eastern Donbas region. Another is its proximity to Russian-held Bakhmut.
We were supposed to speak with the local commander, but at the last minute we were told he couldn't meet with us; he was directing his forces, who were coming under attack.
With explosions reverberating all around, we passed a bombed-out building onto which someone had spray painted a message: "We are not asking too much, we just need artillery shells and aviation — the rest we'll do ourselves."
It was written in English. Ukraine's forces know exactly who to aim both their dwindling bullets, and their words at.
"We are counting on our American partners to help us with weapons, so that our guys do not have to sacrifice their lives," Reuben Sarukhanian, a soldier with Ukraine's 5th Assault Brigade, told CBS News.
- U.S. Army in Europe says it will go broke by summer without Ukraine funding
Russia's lethal reach extends far beyond the battlefield, as residents in the nearby village of Kostyantynivka learned.
As Russian troops advance, countless small towns like Kostyantynivka are in the firing line, and no targets appear to be off limits. The town's historic train station was still smoldering from a Russian missile strike a few nights earlier that turned it into an inferno, and destroyed nearby homes.
It was a direct hit, clearly aimed at crippling Ukraine's civilian infrastructure.
This section of the long front line that stretches right through Ukraine's vast Donbas region has seen some of the worst attacks of the war. It's borne the brunt of two years of blistering offensives and counteroffensives.
But the Russians have the upper hand here now, with more weapons and more manpower — and seemingly no qualms about expending either.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy was in Albania on Wednesday to co-host a summit aimed at drumming up additional support from Ukraine's European neighbors. But he, and Ukraine's battlefield commanders, know that nothing can replace the $60 billion aid package still stalled in the U.S. Congress.
Without American support, Zelenskyy says, Ukraine will lose.
- In:
- United States Congress
- War
- Joe Biden
- Ukraine
- Russia
- Vladimir Putin
- Volodymyr Zelenskyy
Charlie D'Agata his a CBS News foreign correspondent based in the London bureau.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Meet 11-year-old skateboarder Zheng Haohao, the youngest Olympian competing in Paris
- The unstoppable appeal of Peso Pluma and the Regional Mexican music scene
- Haylie Duff Shares Must-Haves She Can’t Live Without, Including an Essential With 76,400+ 5-Star Reviews
- Marriage and politics are tough negotiations in 'The Diplomat'
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Why Tatyana Ali Says It Was Crazy Returning to Her Fresh Prince Roots for Bel-Air
- Paris Hilton Shares First Photos of Her Baby Boy Phoenix's Face
- Your First Look at The Real Housewives Ultimate Girls Trip's Shocking Season 3 Trailer
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- The fantastical art of Wangechi Mutu: from plant people to a 31-foot snake
Ranking
- 'Meet me at the gate': Watch as widow scatters husband's ashes, BASE jumps into canyon
- Transcript: Trump attorneys Drew Findling and Jennifer Little on Face the Nation, Feb. 26. 2023
- 'Wild Dances' puts consequences of a long-ago, faraway conflict at center
- She wants fiction writers to step outside their experiences. Even if it's messy
- Report: Lauri Markkanen signs 5-year, $238 million extension with Utah Jazz
- Peter Pan still hasn't grown up, but Tiger Lily has changed
- The unstoppable appeal of Peso Pluma and the Regional Mexican music scene
- Author Fatimah Asghar is the first winner of the Carol Shields Prize for Fiction
Recommendation
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Harry Belafonte, singer, actor and activist, has died at age 96
Supreme Court sides against Andy Warhol Foundation in copyright infringement case
How the Telugu immigrant community is instilling their culture in the next generation
How breaking emerged from battles in the burning Bronx to the Paris Olympics stage
A man is charged in the 2005 theft of Judy Garland's red 'Wizard of Oz' slippers
You'll Be a Sucker for Joe Jonas' BeReal Birthday Tribute to Sophie Turner
U.S.-Italian national Elly Schlein, who campaigned for Obama, becomes 1st woman to lead Italy's Democratic Party