Good morning. A violent weekend in Ukraine shows how Russia's goals are shifting. |
| Destruction after Russian bombings in Kramatorsk.Tyler Hicks/The New York Times |
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Russia's attacks on Ukrainian civilians and soldiers in recent days have made clear that its withdrawal from northern Ukraine is more an attempt to reset Vladimir Putin's invasion than a full retreat. The focus now is on the battle for eastern Ukraine, where Russian forces have deployed brutal tactics. |
Russia struck a train station crowded with civilians in Kramatorsk in the eastern part of the country on Friday, killing at least 50 people and wounding many more. In a video of the scene, one woman shouted, "There are so many corpses, there are children, there are just children!" |
Russia has also reorganized its command in Ukraine. The general now in charge of the invasion reportedly ordered strikes on civilian neighborhoods during a brutal Russian campaign in Syria. |
Analysts expect Russia to carry out a major offensive toward Dnipro, a city that is a strategic target in east-central Ukraine. Yesterday, Russian strikes rained down on the airport there, wounding rescue workers. |
And U.S. analysts saw Russian troops in and around the city of Izium, north of Kramatorsk, preparing to push on to Dnipro and other strategically important cities. |
"We are being encircled. We understand that," Tetiana, 50, a shopkeeper who works next to the bombed train station in Kramatorsk, told my colleagues Thomas Gibbons-Neff and Natalia Yermak yesterday. |
Putin's apparent goal is to cement control over the Donbas region in Ukraine's east, where Russia-backed separatists have fought for years, and potentially secure a land bridge to Crimea in the south, which Russia has controlled since 2014. |
Russia will likely continue to bomb cities across the country to keep Ukraine from sending troops and resources to the east, experts said. But the bulk of Russian soldiers on the ground — including newly hired mercenaries and Syrian troops — will set up camp and fight in eastern Ukraine. |
Russian officials "have learned some of their lessons," my colleague Julian Barnes, who covers national security, told me. "They spread out their forces too much; they've realized that. They used poorly trained forces to try to take Kyiv." He added, "They underestimated Ukrainians." (The Washington Post also found other ways Russia botched the start of its invasion.) |
What happens after the battle for the Donbas region, and whether Russian forces will shift their focus back to the rest of Ukraine, is less clear. "I don't think anybody can know right now," Julian said. "I don't think Putin can know." |
| An abandoned Russian military vehicle near Kharkiv.Tyler Hicks/The New York Times |
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The success or failure of Russia's campaign in the east will shape the legacy of Putin's war — and Ukraine's fate. |
If the fighting in the east is tough, or if Russia falls short of a clean victory, Putin might start to look for a way out of the war. If Russia wins more decisively, Putin could try to push into the rest of Ukraine once again, perhaps aiming to take out Ukrainian leadership and install a puppet regime. |
"I don't think the Kremlin has abandoned its very maximalist aims," said Mason Clark, the lead Russia analyst at the Institute for the Study of War. "It's just been forced to revise them downward." |
The conflict is looking more like a war of attrition, Michael Kofman, the director of Russian studies at the national security think tank CNA, told me. And the violence could get even worse in the next phase, as Russian forces directly assault Ukrainian troops and bomb cities in an attempt to cut off Donbas from the rest of the country. |
Western officials have said that Putin would like to claim some sort of win by May 9, when Russia celebrates its victory in World War II. The date could act as a deadline for Putin's decision on the next phase of the war. "I'm not sure the Russian military could sustain current operations much beyond that anyway," Clark said. |
But some experts were skeptical. "I'm sure Putin would love to get a total victory in the Donbas by May 9," Kofman said. "But you know what happens when he doesn't get it? He'll try to get it the day after." |
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In school board meetings and libraries across the U.S., parents regularly call for the removal of books they deem inappropriate. Last year, book-banning efforts surged to their highest level in two decades, according to the American Library Association. |
Many of the targeted books were by, or about, Black and L.G.B.T.Q. people. Among the most challenged, according to the A.L.A., were "Gender Queer," an illustrated memoir by Maia Kobabe that discusses coming out as gender nonconforming, and "The Hate U Give," a young adult novel by Angie Thomas about a Black teenager whose friend is shot by a police officer. |
Part of the reason for the surge is that parents use social media to circulate lists and coordinate banning efforts. And librarians say they've noticed more heavy-handed tactics from government officials and others, such as political pressure over certain books (like Toni Morrison's "Beloved") and legal threats against the people who choose reading material. |
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The pangram from yesterday's Spelling Bee was blowpipe. Here is today's puzzle — or you can play online. |
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"The Daily" is about the first union victory at Amazon. "Sway" features Paul Krugman. |
Claire Moses, Ian Prasad Philbrick, Tom Wright-Piersanti, Ashley Wu and Sanam Yar contributed to The Morning. You can reach the team at themorning@nytimes.com. |
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