Partisan group claims Russia is preparing defenses around Mariupol

Could the city be attacked if Ukraine’s offensive breaks through?
The Atesh partisan movement
Preparing new defenses around Mariupol
Russia is so sure Ukraine's offensive will fail
Atesh claims the new defenses will be broken through, too
Equipment and men have allegedly been moved into the area
Mariupol’s new rail connection to Russia
Mariupol is becoming more interconnected with Russia
Fortifying the city’s defenses makes sense
What are some other explanations for the defenses?
Mariupol might be Russia’s next major supply hub
Comments from the Wall Street Journal
Connecting Mariupol to the Black Sea ports
There is value in a new defensive line
Ukraine has promised to recapture Mariupol
The situation in the east
Could the city be attacked if Ukraine’s offensive breaks through?

Russia has begun preparing defenses around the occupied city of Mariupol according to a new report from a pro-Ukrainian partisan group that has been operating behind enemy lines in response to Moscow’s full-scale invasion. 

The Atesh partisan movement

Members of the partisan guerilla movement Atesh reported on October 12th in a post on Telegram that Russian military forces had started transferring anti-tank obstacles known as dragon’s teeth throughout the city of Mariupol. 

Photo Credit: Telegram @atesh_ua

Preparing new defenses around Mariupol

The report claimed that Russia was preparing a new defensive line outside of Mariupol to the northwest of the city and alluded that it was because Russia’s military leadership feared a future Ukrainian breakthrough in Donetsk. 

Photo Credit: Telegram @atesh_ua

Russia is so sure Ukraine's offensive will fail

The Telegram post commented: "The occupiers are so ‘sure’ that Ukraine's counteroffensive has failed that they are hastily building new defenses," according to a translation of the group’s comments from The New Voice of Ukraine.   

Photo Credit: Telegram @atesh_ua

Atesh claims the new defenses will be broken through, too

However, Atesh wrote that the defensive lines being prepared around the city would not help Russian forces defend against Ukraine’s counter-offensive, adding that they would also be broken through by Kyiv’s counter-offensive. 

Photo Credit: Telegram @atesh_ua

Equipment and men have allegedly been moved into the area

The New Voice of Ukraine reported that Petro Andriushchenko, an advisor to the former Ukrainian mayor of Mariupol, has previously noted that Russia was increasing its manpower in the area and stationing additional equipment in Mariupol as well. 

Photo Credit: YouTube @petpavan

Mariupol’s new rail connection to Russia

Andriushchenko also reported that Russia was constructing a railroad connection to the city and provided photo evidence of the project on his Telegram channel which showed the likely route of the new railway link to Russia. 

Photo Credit: Telegram @andriyshTime

Mariupol is becoming more interconnected with Russia

Unfortunately, all signs do signal that the Kremlin is working to connect Mariupol to the broader Russian world, and even though reports from Atesh regarding the fortification of the city have yet to be verified, they make sense. 

Photo Credit: Telegram @andriyshTime

Fortifying the city’s defenses makes sense

Mariupol was one of the major Russian conquests in Ukraine and has become a symbol for the Kremlin just as much as it was for Ukraine. Fortifying the defenses of Mariupol in the face of a breakthrough would be a vital goal.  

What are some other explanations for the defenses?

However, any possible redeployment of troops or military equipment to Mariupol, as well as the area around the city, could be explained just as easily if Russia was preparing to turn Mariupol into a major supply hub for the war. 

Mariupol might be Russia’s next major supply hub

Ukraine’s counter-offensive has made progress in the south of the country and it has put portions of Russia’s major supply routes within the firing range of Ukraine’s longer-range weapons. This is a plausible explanation for what’s happening in Mariupol. 

Comments from the Wall Street Journal

“In a sign of how seriously Russia takes the risk to its logistics infrastructure,” wrote the Wall Street Journal, “it has begun building new rail lines across territory it occupies in case Ukraine manages to damage the ones Moscow currently uses to deliver supplies.”

Connecting Mariupol to the Black Sea ports

Reporter Daniel Michaels explained that the new rail line being constructed to Mariupol would link the city to Russia’s Black Sea ports and relieve some of the supply pressures the country has been dealing with since Kyiv began targeting Russian logistics. 

There is value in a new defensive line

Whether or not this new railway would require the construction of a new defensive line around the city is still up for debate but any intelligent Russian commander would see the value in securing the city’s defenses in light of Ukraine’s war objectives

Ukraine has promised to recapture Mariupol

The New Voice of Ukraine noted that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky promised that the country’s armed forces would take back Mariupol from occupation, though it still remains to be seen if Kyiv can actually do it.  

The situation in the east

Fierce fighting still persists in Ukraine’s east according to the Associated Press, but Kyiv has yet to capture the all-too-important city of Tokmak and Russia has launched its own offensive in Avdiivka to relieve some of the pressure from Ukraine's offensive. 

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