Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Satellite images show scale of destruction in Pokrovsk as Russia pushes to take key Ukrainian city

Pokrovsk, seen as the gateway to the Donetsk region, has been devastated by more than a year of intense fighting

Zelensky says Russia forced to ‘push back the deadlines’ on capturing Pokrovsk and Dobropillya

New satellite images show how Pokrovsk, a key strategic city in Ukraine currently witnessing the fiercest fighting in the war with Russia, has been largely reduced to ruins.

On Thursday, Russia’s defence ministry said its forces had advanced in the battered city and were engaged in house-to-house battles as part of Vladimir Putin’s desperate push to capture his first meaningful urban centre in over a year.

Satellite images taken on Monday showed the deadliest sector of fighting between both sides shrouded in smoke and battered by months of fierce fighting.

The imagery, captured by the Vantor data intelligence firm, shows white smoke from houses set ablaze in residential areas in Pokrovsk and downed trees around the arterial roads of the war-hit city.

A satellite image shows armoured vehicles in the ruins of Pokrovsk on 3 November
A satellite image shows armoured vehicles in the ruins of Pokrovsk on 3 November (Vantor via Reuters)
A satellite image shows downed trees along a road in the eastern Ukrainian city
A satellite image shows downed trees along a road in the eastern Ukrainian city (Vantor via Reuters)
Smoke rises in a residential area as Pokrovsk is subject to intense Russian attacks
Smoke rises in a residential area as Pokrovsk is subject to intense Russian attacks (Vantor via Reuters)
A zoomed-out satellite image of the city, a key strategic location in the ongoing war
A zoomed-out satellite image of the city, a key strategic location in the ongoing war (Vantor via Reuters)

Dubbed “the gateway to Donetsk”, capturing Pokrovsk will give Russia a territorial platform to penetrate further north inside Ukraine’s defensive lines, opening up the pathway to the two biggest remaining Ukrainian-controlled cities in the region, Kramatorsk and Sloviansk.

At present, Ukraine is in control of about 10 per cent of Donbas – comprising both Donetsk and Luhansk – or an area of about 5,000 sq km.

Russian forces have been trying to capture Pokrovsk for more than a year. If they succeed, it would be Moscow’s first big win on the battlefield since the capture of Avdiivka early last year.

Russia has opted for a pincer movement to attempt to encircle Pokrovsk and cut off its supply lines, rather than the blunt frontal assaults it employed to capture the city of Bakhmut in 2023.

The Russian defence ministry has prematurely announced the capture of large swathes of territory in Pokrovsk, but their claims have been swiftly rejected by Ukrainian military officials.

Kyiv has acknowledged that the situation has become difficult in recent days but says its troops are still fighting there and denies they are surrounded.

President Volodymyr Zelensky rejected the claims from Moscow and visited the embattled region in person, interacting with troops earlier this week.

He posted photos of meetings with Ukrainian armed forces personnel at a command post in the Dobropillya sector, which lies just 20km north of Pokrovsk.

Russia says it has captured 64 buildings in the city, once home to 60,000 people, over the past 24 hours and repelled Ukrainian attacks from Hryshyne to the west.

“If Pokrovsk falls, so does Myrnohrad [city in Donetsk], and the pocket closes,” Michael Kofman, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment, said on X/Twitter.

“The city holds operational value. Its loss widens the Russian axis of advance in Donetsk west of the Kramatorsk conglomeration of towns, but it does not open those cities to be quickly taken,” he said.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in