The New York Times: Truce unravels as fighting picks up in Ukraine

Though overshadowed by the war in Syria, fighting in eastern Ukraine has picked up sharply in recent weeks, residents along the front line, commanders and European monitors say, according to The New York Times.

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The resumption of hostilities in Ukraine, with exchanges of machine gun and mortar fire across the front line up to levels not seen since last summer, suggests willingness by Russia, which supports the rebels in eastern Ukraine, to sustain two conflicts at once. In late September, Russia began airstrikes in Syria on behalf of the government of President Bashar al-Assad, Andrew E. Kramer, Moscow correspondent for The New York Times, writes in his article titled "Truce Unravels as Fighting Picks Up in Ukraine," published on Sunday.

A cease-fire took hold here in eastern Ukraine between Russian-backed separatists and the government on September 1, which was apparently coordinated with Russia's military deployment in Syria.

But that truce is now unraveling, and Maryinka has become one of the new hot spots.

"A week ago, we had shelling every two to three days, and mostly at night," Lt. Col. Mikhailo M. Prokopiv, the commander of Ukrainian Army troops in this town, said in an interview on Sunday while touring the front line. "Now, not a day goes by when we don't fight."

Separatist militias have crept forward to carve new trenches within 150 yards of the army's front line, he said, close enough for the soldiers and militiamen to yell insults back and forth.

His positions now regularly come under fire from mortars and truck-mounted antiaircraft machine guns, lowered to fire horizontally, Colonel Prokopiv said. A sniper killed one of his soldiers on Saturday.

Neither side has yet resorted to firing heavy artillery. For now, the shooting appears intended to "give us a little nightmare," he said, to encourage Ukrainian politicians to carry out the stalled peace accord known as Minsk 2.

Russia was drawn deeper into the Syrian conflict in November after Turkey shot down a Russian bomber that Turkey said had violated its airspace. Moscow sent more planes and a sophisticated air defense system to Syria.

Alexander Hug, the deputy chief of the monitoring mission in eastern Ukraine for the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, told journalists on Friday that observers last week saw 88 tanks on the pro-Russian side of the line. He did not specify their origin, and Russia has denied sending weapons to help the rebels.

"They just sit there, armed and battle-ready, within easy reach of the contact line," Mr. Hug said of the tanks.

In Ukraine's capital, Kyiv, several hundred right-wing paramilitary veterans added to the government's troubles by kicking off a protest over the weekend on the city's Independence Square, known as the Maidan, demanding the ouster and trial of the country's leaders. The men, who call themselves the Revolutionary Right Forces, pitched tents and milled about, but did not appear to have much popular backing.

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