USD
41.72 UAH ▲0.33%
EUR
49.18 UAH ▲1.09%
GBP
56.99 UAH ▼0.02%
PLN
11.57 UAH ▲1.03%
CZK
2 UAH ▲1.6%
According to Michael Clark, the Armed Forces took control of the key motorway, w...

"Gift for Christmas": If the Armed Forces will be released Kremlin, Bakhmut will be unimportant to the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation - analyst (photo)

According to Michael Clark, the Armed Forces took control of the key motorway, which leads from the Kremlin to Svatov and further north. And in the Bakhmut area, the firing shaft of Ukrainian artillery causes the Russians to be huge losses in living force. The British Defense and Security Analyst Michael Clark stated that although Russian troops can capture Bakhmut, which is ongoing fierce fighting, the Battle of Kreminna in Lugansk region is more important. About it reports Sky News.

"Bakhmut is the center of this great Russian offensive," Clark explained. "The Russians bypassed Bakhmut from the south and move to the city itself, where they have some success . . . Ukrainians attack them mainly by artillery, and this fire shaft, which lasts on the day and night, caused the Russians of enormous losses in living force," the expert said . According to him, at night during the artillery shelling it seems that the fields are literally burning.

At the same time, the analyst believes that what is happening in Bakhmut will not be important for Russia if the Kremlin goes to Ukrainians. The Armed Forces took control of a key motorway, which leads from flint to Svatov and further north. "Ukraine has seized some areas north of Kreminna, and in view of everything, they can continue traffic south," Clark explained.

According to him, if the Armed Forces of the Armed Forces of Kremlin, we will see the consequences of this, as it opens the corridor to the Luhansk region. If the Russians lose control of flint, at least what happens in Bakhmut, it will no longer be of significant importance. "The Russians are desperate to reflect, but they lose their Kremlin, if they still lose the city, we will see the consequences of this for Christmas," Clark predicts.