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Ukraine Chips Away at Russian-Held Region, but Task Is Daunting

Ukrainian forces badly want to retake the southern region of Kherson from Russian invaders, but Moscow retains a potentially overwhelming advantage.

Ukrainian soldiers at a frontline position in the Mykolaiv region last week.Credit...Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times

MYKOLAIV REGION, Ukraine — In their summer campaign to drive Russian troops from the southern region of Kherson, Ukraine’s forces have decimated Russian command centers and ammunition depots, severed supply lines with precision strikes on key bridges, and sown terror among collaborationist officials with a spate of car bombings, shootings and, Ukrainian officials say, at least one poisoning.

But in the sunbaked fields along the Kherson Region’s western border, the Ukrainian fighters who would be called on to deliver the knockout blow in any successful effort to retake territory remain pinned down in their trenches. The cuts to supply lines have not yet eroded Moscow’s overwhelming advantage in artillery, ammunition and heavy weaponry, making it difficult, if not impossible, for Ukrainian forces to press forward without suffering enormous casualties.

“Without question we need a counteroffensive; I sincerely believe it will come,” said a 33-year-old lieutenant with the call sign Ada, who commands an outpost of trenchworks in the Mykolaiv region, a few miles from the Russian lines in Kherson.

But he said: “We need the advantage in numbers, we need the advantage in heavy weapons. Unfortunately, this is a bit of a problem for us.”

Ukrainians have acutely felt the loss of the Kherson region, with its vast black-earth farmlands famous for producing the country’s tastiest tomatoes and watermelons. Just about the entire region was seized in the first weeks of the war after Russian troops struck from their bases in the Russian-occupied Crimean Peninsula. Since then, Ukraine’s leaders have plotted to take it back.

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Ukrainian soldiers in a school bombed by Russian forces near the Mykolaiv-Kherson frontline.Credit...Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times

But doing so presents major challenges.

Russia maintains overwhelming superiority in troop numbers and ammunition, and in recent weeks the Kremlin has moved to reinforce its military in the region, shifting resources there from the fighting in the eastern Donbas. Even if Ukraine’s military is able to squeeze Russian forces out of the rural farmlands, they will most likely have to fight a vicious urban battle for the city of Kherson, which could lead to huge losses in lives and property.

Ukraine is also operating under a condensed timeline. The Kremlin plans to hold a referendum on Kherson’s absorption by Russia in mid-September, and disrupting it would require Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, and his generals, to take some kind of significant offensive action soon, experts said.

“The real limitations the Ukrainians face is that moving forward in the combat environment today is really difficult,” said Phillips P. O’Brien, a professor of strategic studies at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. “Unless you have total command of the skies and the ability to clear out the area in front of your troops, those moving forward are in real danger of getting eaten away.”

But Russia’s position in Kherson is also precarious, Professor O’Brien and others said.

Though Ukrainian troops have not advanced for weeks in Kherson, their artillery campaign appears to have borne fruit, slowing the flow of Russian arms, equipment and troops into the region, Ukrainian officials say. Using high-precision weapons such as the American-supplied High Mobility Artillery Rocket System, or HIMARS, Ukrainian forces have pounded the three bridges over the vast Dnipro River that connect thousands of Russian troops to their supply lines in occupied Ukrainian territory east of the river.

The strikes have rendered these bridges “inoperable,” said Nataliya Gumenyuk, the spokeswoman for the Ukrainian military’s southern command. Over the weekend, Ukrainian forces launched yet another strike on the Antonivsky Bridge, the main supply artery into the city of Kherson.

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Ukrainian soldiers have been unable to overcome Moscow’s overwhelming advantage in artillery, ammunition and heavy weaponry.Credit...Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times

The question now is whether the pressure on supply lines will be sufficient to cripple the fighting capacity of Russian troops and perhaps force the Kremlin to order at least part of the force to withdraw from Kherson and fall back across the river. Several Ukrainian officials in the region said this week that some Russian field commanders had already begun to move their headquarters east of the river, although two senior Ukrainian military officials said there was no evidence of this.

Along with additional forces, Russia may have already moved large amounts of equipment and ammunition into the region, allowing it to fight on for some time, even with supply lines severely disabled, said Ben Barry, a senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a research group based in London.

And even with the bridges destroyed, Russia would still have options to resupply.

“The prospect of being isolated from the rest of their forces won’t do anything for the morale of Russian troops defending in the Kherson Oblast,” Mr. Barry said. “But on the other hand, Russia has a lot of military bridging, it’s got quite a lot of ferries, it’s got riverboats.”

Over the long run, pressure from Ukraine could turn Russia’s precarious position into an untenable one, said Michael Kofman, director of Russian studies at C.N.A., a research institute in Arlington, Va. But this could take months, not weeks, he said, and could sap the Ukrainian military of the resources it would need to pursue other campaigns.

“The position that the Russian military has taken in Kherson is the least defensible of the territories they have occupied,” Mr. Kofman said. “Once those bridges are gone and once the railway bridge connector into Kherson is gone, then they’re going to have a very hard time getting ammunition there. They’ll have to retreat to positions that, at best, are outside the city.”

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Ukrainian soldiers in the Mykolaiv region.Credit...Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times

Looking east toward the Russian lines last week from behind a sandbag-reinforced trench position just over the border with the Kherson region, the task of pushing Russian forces back appeared daunting.

Each day a withering barrage of Russian strikes inevitably kills a handful of troops there and wounds many more, Ada, the local commander, said. A near miss by a grad rocket a day earlier charred the grass around one dugout position and, in the field nearby, the tail section of another rocket was visible sticking out of the ground. Periodically, a low-decibel thud reverberated across the plains.

It is the same all across the roughly 50-mile Kherson front, which cuts northeast to southwest through farmland and once-tidy villages now mostly blown apart and abandoned.

Ukraine’s commanders and military analysts say that any push forward would require vastly more troops and equipment than Ukraine has in the Kherson theater at the moment, as both armies fight on several fronts.

In the Luhansk region in the east, Ukrainian officials claimed to have hit a base that housed mercenaries from the Wagner Group, a private military organization with close ties to President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia. There was no immediate comment from the authorities in Russia. In the southeast, shelling near the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant hit a fire station that responds to blazes inside the sprawling facility, officials said on Monday, adding to concerns over nuclear safety in the area.

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Refugees from Kherson cutting up clothing to be used as camouflage for Ukrainian troops, near Mykolaiv last month.Credit...Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times

At a hotel a safe distance from the front lines in the Mykolaiv region, but very far from home, refugees from the Kherson region have grown increasingly anxious.

Natalya Larionovskaya, who fled with her children and parents in April, said her husband, who remained behind, had told her that Russian artillery and tank units had taken up positions in her village and that all but 10 square meters of the surrounding fields had burned.

Her husband has become pessimistic about Ukraine’s chances to retake the region and liberate their home, but Ms. Larionovskaya has tried to boost his spirits.

“I tell him, ‘Don’t worry, no one is going to abandon anyone,’” she said.

Maj. Gen. Dmytro Marchenko, the commander of Ukraine’s forces in the region, recently acknowledged bubbling frustrations with the slow pace of Ukraine’s efforts to retake Kherson, but he said he could give no timetable for the start of major offensive actions.

“I want to tell the people of Kherson to be a little patient — that it will not be as long as everyone expects,” General Marchenko said in an interview last week with RBK-Ukraine. “We have not forgotten about them. No one will abandon our people, and we will come to help them. But they need to wait a little longer.”

Reporting was contributed by Marc Santora from Kyiv; Ivan Nechepurenko from Tbilisi, Georgia; and Michael Levenson from New York.

Michael Schwirtz is an investigative reporter with the International desk. With The Times since 2006, he previously covered the countries of the former Soviet Union from Moscow and was a lead reporter on a team that won the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for articles about Russian intelligence operations. More about Michael Schwirtz

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section A, Page 5 of the New York edition with the headline: Ukraine Chips Away at Russian Troops in South, but Task Is Daunting. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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