BY ELLIE
COOK ON
5/23/23 AT 8:12 AM EDT
Ukrainian artillerymen fire a M777 howitzer towards Russian positions on the front line in eastern Ukraine in November, 2022. Russian forces have lost 40 artillery systems in the past 24 hours, Ukraine's military said on Tuesday morning.
ANATOLII STEPANOV/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
Russian forces have lost 40 artillery systems in the past 24
hours, Ukraine's military said on Tuesday morning.
Since May 17, Moscow has lost nearly 170 artillery systems,
according to an updated count published by the General Staff of the Armed
Forces of Ukraine on Tuesday.
On Monday, the General Staff said 20
Russian artillery systems had been destroyed, with 29 losses registered under
Kyiv's tally, posted on Sunday. This brings the overall Russian
artillery losses since the start of the full-scale invasion to 3,318, per the
General Staff's total.
Newsweek could
not independently verify these figures. The Russian Defense Ministry has been
contacted for comment via email.
Artillery and its supplies have played a
crucial role in the war efforts waged by both Moscow and Kyiv since the
outbreak of the conflict in February 2022.
"The war in Ukraine has become an
artillery war," the U.S. Center for Strategic and International Studies
said in January this year. Ukraine has frequently asked for artillery supplies
from its Western backers.
The U.S. has
prioritized artillery supplies in its tranches of military aid, including in
the most recently promised package announced by U.S. Defense Secretary, Lloyd
Austin, on Sunday. The U.S. will provide additional ammunition for
the HIMARS—or High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems—it has sent to Ukraine,
the Defense Department said in a press release, as well as more 155mm and 105mm
artillery rounds.
As of May 21, the U.S. has provided more than
160 155mm howitzers as well as 72 105mm howitzers and 38 HIMARS, in addition to
hundreds of mortar systems, the Defense Department said.
On April 8, the Institute for the Study of War
(ISW), a U.S. think tank, said Russian forces were using artillery to
"offset their degraded offensive capabilities."
Moscow's fighters are
"still heavily relying on
artillery to offset key shortcomings" of their forces in other
areas, the ISW said at the time.
The Kremlin's troops use barrages of artillery to "flatten
settlements before seizing them," the ISW said, compensating for failings
such as a lack of airpower and poor targeting skills.
Also on Tuesday, Ukraine's Deputy
Defense Minister, Hanna Maliar, said "the number of shellings is
consistently high" in the fiercely contested Ukrainian city of Bakhmut.
The city has been claimed by both Wagner mercenary forces in the
levelled settlement and by the Russian Defense Ministry, but
Kyiv insists fighting is ongoing.
"We have a slight advance on the
flanks to the north and south of Bakhmut," Maliar said in a post to social
media on Tuesday, adding that fighting was continuing
in the city's suburban areas.
On Tuesday, Russia's Defense Ministry doubled down on its
statements asserting the capture of Bakhmut, saying Kyiv has "suffered a
defeat in the city of Artemovsk," referring to the settlement by its
Soviet-era name.
https://www.newsweek.com/russia-artillery-systems-lost-ukraine-howitzers-himars-ammunition-1802075
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