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In eastern Ukraine, Russian 鈥榞lide bombs鈥 push civilians to flee

The residents of Ukraine鈥檚 Donetsk region have been resilient in the face of war. But Russia鈥檚 introduction of upgraded, highly destructive 鈥済lide bombs鈥 is changing civilians鈥 calculus.

By Scott Peterson, Staff writer
MYRNOHRAD, Ukraine

The tiny poodle strains at its leash and barks, triggering a deafening reaction from a pack of dogs roaming the wreckage in this town in Ukraine鈥檚 embattled far east, some 10 miles from Russia鈥檚 gradually advancing forces.

鈥淎 lot of people are leaving, and let their dogs go,鈥 explains the poodle鈥檚 owner, a retired Ukrainian military pilot in a faded orange tank top, who gives the name Oleksandr.

On their right stands the shell of an apartment block, hollowed out just days before by a single Russian 鈥済lide bomb鈥 鈥撀燼 heavy Soviet-era 鈥渄umb鈥 bomb upgraded with wings and a guidance system, and launched from a plane deep inside Russian airspace.

On their left is all that remains of a kindergarten complex, newly built before Russia鈥檚 invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, but targeted a third time, also just days earlier.

鈥淎 lot of people lived here all their lives, and have apartments and jobs, but now our lives look like this,鈥 says Oleksandr, as he describes how Russia鈥檚 advancing forces and use of glide bombs are triggering new departures from this Donetsk coal mining town.

He points to a nearby building entrance where a neighbor, Olena, 鈥渄idn鈥檛 have a chance鈥 when she stepped out after the first blast, only to be killed by a second 鈥 one of three deaths in the bombardment.

鈥淣ow the front is coming closer, and it鈥檚 more and more dangerous to live here,鈥 says Oleksandr. 鈥淣ow the intensity of the strikes is like never before.鈥

Augmenting Russia鈥檚 supply of rockets and missiles, the glide bombs, which can pack from 500 pounds to more than 3,000 pounds of explosive punch each, remain virtually unstoppable by Ukraine鈥檚 air defense systems.

Russia鈥檚 advance

To stay or to go is the decision being weighed by an increasing number of residents of Myrnohrad with heightened urgency in recent weeks.

Among the towns along Ukraine鈥檚 eastern front, Myrnohrad may be at particular risk, as it sits on an important Ukrainian supply line that Russian forces have already disrupted and 鈥 advancing west toward the Pokrovsk-Kostiantynivka road 鈥 appear determined to control.

鈥淚 tell everyone that you should leave, especially those with children and older people,鈥 says Yurii Tretiak, Myrnohrad鈥檚 acting military administrator, who describes a state of 鈥渟table intensity.鈥澛

鈥淲e don鈥檛 know why they don鈥檛 like our kindergartens so much,鈥 he says, noting that a number of schools have been targeted by 12 glide bombs, especially, that hit residential areas and claimed seven lives over a recent two-week period. Earlier in July, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Russia was launching 3,500 such glide bombs each month.聽

鈥淲e can see that people are actually dying, so [people] decided to leave,鈥 says Mr. Tretiak. 鈥淲e hope more weapons [for Ukrainian forces] will come soon, and the front-line situation will be better.鈥

He steps into an abandoned Soviet-era theater, where the engine of one Russian rocket still hangs from the ceiling where it fell, two weeks earlier. Ironically, on a wall nearby remains a tile mosaic that commemorates Moscow鈥檚 former friendship with the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.

鈥淥f course, weapons can help stabilize the front. But we really hope they can fly 30 kilometers [behind Russian lines]. If used with sophistication, then this category of glide bomb won鈥檛 exist,鈥 he says.

In late April, the United States approved a long-delayed $60.84 billion military and economic aid package, and European nations have also funneled billions of euros into weapons and ammunition for Ukraine.

But so far that has not stopped Russian forces from moving forward, if slowly. One recent 24-hour period reportedly saw 172 front-line clashes along this sector of the front alone.

鈥淗ope dies last鈥

Days after one barrage, the residents of a decades-old building in Myrnohrad are still carefully collecting shards of glass from their rose garden. All the windows blew out when two Russian missiles struck an adjacent school and two more hit a bus stop, killing four coal mine workers.

Of 18 apartments, only six remain occupied 鈥 but the sense of community and family, the residents say, is robust.

鈥淭here is a saying, 鈥楬ope dies last,鈥欌 says a woman with a red blouse and gloves, who gives the name Iryna. 鈥淚t goes day by day. Today we stay; maybe tomorrow we go.鈥

Svitlana, a laboratory worker at the mine who wears bright-red garden gloves to clear glass, says her family was only away for one month during the entire conflict, at the start of the war.

鈥淏ut now, I am slowly packing my bags,鈥 she says.

鈥淭he last two nights have been terrible,鈥 adds Larysa Chirva, who wears a headscarf with flowers and has lived 60 of her 64 years in this building. She says her husband was thrown backward by the blast but not wounded.

鈥淚 will leave when there are no walls here,鈥 she says.聽

Across town, Oleksandr Radin, a pastor at the Rock of Salvation evangelical church with grey stubble and a gold lower tooth, speaks after volunteering to put out a brush fire sparked by extreme temperatures.

鈥淪ince 2014, the Russians have said they would get Donetsk; it looks like they have moved into at-any-price mode,鈥 he says. Mr. Radin was forced to leave the city of Avdiivka when it fell to Russia last February, and is active in evacuating civilians from contested areas.

Evacuation requests

The surge in Russian glide bomb and missile strikes has focused minds, he says. After receiving barely five evacuation requests during a recent three-month period, he received four from groups in the previous week alone.

鈥淧eople are afraid to leave because they have no place to go after nearly three years of war,鈥 says Mr. Radin. But past decisions to 鈥渟tay until the [Russian] artillery can reach us鈥 have been upended by the long reach of glide bombs.

Mr. Radin keeps a box of what he calls 鈥渟ouvenirs鈥 given to him from the conflict, which now include the bent, super-lightweight wings of a Russian glide bomb.

鈥淭o say thank you, people used to bring shrapnel from missiles. Now they bring wings from glide bombs,鈥 says Mr. Radin. 鈥淚 tell people, 鈥業t鈥檚 time to turn your brain on and leave. It鈥檚 dangerous.鈥欌澛

Among those heeding his call is Valentyna Mertsalova, a 70-something pensioner with white hair and a red dress, who the next day sat emotionally during a service at the pastor鈥檚 church. A handful of uniformed military soldiers in the 80-plus congregation were called forward and thanked for their service.

But Ms. Mertsalova was thinking about the deaths of her son and daughter-in-law, who were killed in their beds by a Russian missile in 2022 鈥撀燼nd about the decision she and her husband have now taken to leave Myrnohrad for their safety.

That decision came two nights earlier, when their sleep was shattered by a barrage of 16 Russian glide bombs and missiles. In the morning she went outside, and was surprised that her neighbor planned to 鈥渨ait it out.鈥

鈥淲hat, girl?鈥 she responded. 鈥淎 few more nights like this, and we will be running [to flee] in front of the train!鈥

鈥淚 saw a crater made from a glide bomb, and no basement can save you,鈥 says Ms. Mertsalova, whose eyes tear up at the thought of leaving.

鈥淓veryone is scared. There are almost no young people,鈥 she says. 鈥淓ven if we are under the rubble, there will be no one to dig us out.鈥

Oleksandr Naselenko supported reporting for this story.