Ukraine war latest: Russia ramps up mobilization, Ukraine receives ‘optimistic’ news following Ramstein meeting

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Key developments on March 15:

As Ukraine reaffirms its willingness to keep fighting for the city of Bakhmut, Russia reportedly plans on drafting 400,000 people to fight the war against Ukraine.

According to a March 14 report by the Russian service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, that cites several regional media outlets, Russia's Defense Ministry will start a new recruitment campaign on April 1, aiming to contract 400,000 soldiers.

The ministry has sent orders with recruitment quotas to Russia's regions, RFE/RL reported.

Residents of Russia's Voronezh Oblast started to receive summonses to military enlistment offices as it was in September last year following the so-called “partial” mobilization announced by Russian dictator Vladimir Putin, the publication says.

Simultaneously, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), a Washington, D.C.-based think tank, confirmed that Russia “continued measures to mobilize the struggling Russian defense industrial base (DIB) for a protracted war effort.”

In its latest update, the ISW referenced Putin’s March 14 announcement about the list of specialties that could get a deferral from military service. Such a move by the Russian leadership “suggests that the Kremlin is prioritizing using skilled workers in the production of Russian weapons over having skilled soldiers fight in Russia’s military,” according to the ISW.


The Russian occupying forces are also intensifying their mobilization efforts throughout the occupied Crimean peninsula, Ukraine's Defense Ministry’s National Resistance Center reported on March 14.

At the same time, fierce fighting continues in Bakhmut in Donetsk Oblast, which has been under Russian siege for months. On March 15, the soldiers of Ukraine’s 93rd Separate Mechanized Brigade shot down a Russian Su-24 supersonic tactical bomber near Bakhmut, the brigade's spokeswoman Iryna Rybakova told Hromadske news outlet on March 15.

The majority of the funds will be spent on military assistance consisting of weapons, other military equipment, and training efforts, the ministry wrote.

Denmark will also provide Ukraine with humanitarian aid, help the country with long-term reconstruction and support the business initiatives, allowing Danish companies to contribute to Ukraine's recovery.

“Ukrainians are fighting not only for their own freedom but also for the security of the whole of Europe. With the Ukraine Fund, we are taking Danish support to a new level,” Denmark's Foreign Minister Lars Løkke Rasmussen said.

Additionally, Denmark set aside funds for the next several years that could help cover the cost of replacing military equipment donated to Ukraine in 2022-2023.

“Their struggle is also our struggle,” said Denmark's Acting Minister of Defense Troels Lund Poulsen.

Russian attacks

According to the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Governor Serhiy Lysak, Russian troops hit the city of Marhanets in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast on March 15, killing two women.

Four women and one man were injured in the attack, according to the governor.

Governor of Kharkiv Oblast Oleh Syniehubov reported that the Russian military had attacked three districts in Kharkiv Oblast, killing two people and injuring two.

The attacks also damaged a fire station and shops in Vovchansk as well as houses and infrastructure sites in the village of Kolodiazne.

Russian shelling killed one civilian in Kramatorsk and injured 16 more in Donetsk Oblast, Governor Pavlo Kyrylenko reported in his morning update.

According to the Kherson Oblast Military Administration, Russian forces struck Kherson Oblast 78 times over the past day, reportedly injuring four and damaging critical infrastructure.

Russian forces shelled the community of Znob-Novhorodske in Sumy Oblast bordering Russia, according to the regional administration.

Additionally, Russia shelled Zaporizhzhia, Chernihiv, Mykolaiv and Luhansk oblasts.