The spoils of war were visible on the road. A large military transport truck emblazoned with the white Z that Russian forces use to identify themselves was being towed into town. A half-destroyed armored Tigr fighting vehicle, Russia’s answer to the Humvee, was sitting on a flatbed truck.
Russia-Ukraine War: Key Things to Know
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A Ukrainian base is hit. A missile attack on a barracks in the southern city of Mykolaiv killed as many as 40, a Ukrainian official said. That number would make it one of the single deadliest attacks on Ukrainian forces since the start of the war, and the death toll could be much higher.
The Biden-Xi talk. In a two-hour call with China’s president, Xi Jinping, President Biden discussed the Russian invasion of Ukraine, detailing the implications and consequences if Beijing were to provide material support to Russia in its attacks.
Displaced Ukrainians. The United Nations said that more than a fifth of the 44 million people who were living in Ukraine before Russia invaded have been internally displaced or have fled to other countries, according to the body’s estimates.
Because of the lull in shooting, workers from local construction companies were out on Saturday helping to build new trenches and an underground shelter compete with a wood-burning stove.
One sergeant, who would give only his first name, Andrei, said he left work as a security guard and went to the local draft office the day Russia’s president, Vladimir V. Putin, ordered his forces to invade Ukraine. He has been living in a trench ever since.
He said the attack on the marine base showed the need for western countries to provide Ukraine with additional missile defense systems. Despite the large loss of life in that attack, he said he thought Russian forces were now on their back foot.
“We’re holding the defense and waiting for them to weaken,” he said. “In my opinion we should get an order to cleanse them to zero. But that’s just my opinion. I’m a soldier.”
Part of the Ukrainian military’s success, the sergeant said, was the assistance it has received from local residents. In addition to the borscht, he said, locals brought him a new cellphone so that they could more easily provide him with information about Russian troop movements in their villages.
“They thought that the locals would meet them with flowers,” he said, throwing in several unprintable words. “And the locals told them, we don’t need your Russian world, so go back to where you come from.”