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Russian tanks rolled toward Pokrovsk. Then HIMARS and drones turned the whole convoy into wreckage (video)

russian tanks rolled toward pokrovsk himars drones turned whole convoy wreckage strike near 28 2025 ivan franko group / 79th air assault brigade himars-strike-pokrovsk ukrainian paratroopers destroyed armored advancing using

Ukrainian paratroopers destroyed a Russian armored convoy that was advancing toward Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast, using HIMARS missiles and FPV drones in a coordinated nighttime assault. The strike reportedly took place on 28 August and targeted a mechanized group that had been spotted 10 kilometers behind Russian lines.

For months before, Russia had mostly relied on small infantry groups in the area, as vehicles were easy targets for drones. This time, however, it attempted another armored breakthrough toward Pokrovsk—and failed.

HIMARS strike shatters Russian push from Prohres toward Pokrovsk

Militarnyi reports that drone operators from the Ivan Franko Group, part of the 79th Air Assault Brigade, detected the convoy moving from the settlement of Prohres toward Malynivka, a village east of Pokrovsk. The Russian column consisted of seven vehicles, including tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, and was carrying up to 100 soldiers—some of whom were advancing on motorcycles.

Once the target was confirmed, Ukrainian forces launched a HIMARS missile, striking the column during its movement. The initial hit disrupted the formation, after which drone operators joined the attack, targeting abandoned or disabled vehicles. A second missile strike completed the operation, according to the 79th Brigade.

Situation in the area of Pokrovsk, Donetsk Oblast, as of 1 September 2025. Map: Deep State.

Ukrainian paratroopers reported that the entire armored group was destroyed, and at least 50 Russian soldiers were killed. They believe the unit may have been part of a force recently redeployed from Russia’s Kursk Oblast, possibly including elements of the 155th Naval Infantry Brigade.

The appearance of units near Pokrovsk from a different direction could explain the use of a large number of armored vehicles in an area where, for a long time, Russian forces had relied exclusively on small infantry groups to minimize losses from drones,” Militarnyi noted.

Faced with heavy losses and only limited territorial gains, Russian forces have previously shifted tactics—now infiltrating through the so-called “gray zone” under drone surveillance and concentrating troops for assault operations.

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Frontline report: Ukrainian marines raise flags in recaptured settlements as Russian units withdraw in Donetsk Oblast

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

Day 1284

On 30 August, the biggest news comes from the Novopavlivka sector.

Here, Ukrainian forces have launched a coordinated counteroffensive to destabilize Russian forward momentum in this contested sector in western Donetsk. In just a few days, several settlements have been recaptured, frontline positions have shifted, and drone strikes have decimated Russian strongpoints, with this being only the beginning.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

The main objective of this operation is to push Russian forces back from recently captured frontline positions, liberating exposed villages near the Mokri Yali River. This would not only reverse two months of Russian gains, but also set up a new defense with the terrain to Ukraine’s advantage.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

The specific sector was chosen for two main reasons: first, the terrain between Tolstoy, Zelenyi Hai, and Piddubne heavily favored Ukrainians. Looking at the topographic map, we can see that Ukrainian drone operators benefit from nearby high ground to the west, where they can achieve stronger signal connectivity and greater visibility, allowing more consistent targeting and loitering in enemy zones. Unlike other sectors with gulleys or dried riverbeds that disrupt drone signals, this corridor is more open and connected, providing favorable conditions for networked strikes. Lastly, the area is tied to the Mokri Yali River, which Ukrainian forces likely view as a natural barrier that could help solidify their lines once the operation concludes.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

Secondly, Russian units in the area were already showing signs of overextension following continuous attacks for months, trying to gain new positions. Russian troops deployed in this sector were additionally largely composed of undertrained troops with limited electronic warfare systems to counter Ukrainian drones, and poor conditions across battalion lines. Crucially, Russia lacked inherited hardened positions or top-down fortifications, leaving many Russian trenches here highly exposed to attacks from above by Vampire drones. Ukrainian FPV teams exploited this with methodical strikes, forcing Russian soldiers into basements and static cover.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

This eliminated any mobility or tactical depth the Russians hoped to retain, locking them into a reactive posture where recovery became increasingly difficult. The consequence was not just tactical disruption, but a breakdown in Russian ability to reinforce or coordinate under fire.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

From a planning perspective, the operation was organized as a series of limited, sequential pushes, each targeting vulnerable points along the Russian forward edge, deliberately avoiding a massed broad-front assault. Instead, Ukrainians concentrated firepower and movement on lightly defended junctions between Russian units, relying on well-coordinated assault groups supported by rapid drone reconnaissance and short-range FPV strikes. The use of drone-based precision targeting before and during maneuvers was central, allowing Ukrainian infantry to move in after initial softening without committing excessive forces.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

The operation began with Ukrainian special operations forces clearing out Russian infiltrators in the settlement of Andriivka-Klevtsove, raising the flag of their unit and laying the groundwork for the following operation.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

Ukrainian forces next targeted Russian positions along the approach to Tolstoy, with FPV drones and artillery softening up Russian defenses and restricting Russian maneuverability.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

Then, assault units advanced from the south, clearing the village in close combat, reportedly under the command of the Fifth Separate Heavy Mechanized Brigade.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

Immediately afterward, Ukrainian troops advanced northward and eastward, recapturing the nearby settlement of Zelenyi Hai. Footage shows Ukrainian marines raising the national flag there, indicating full control and suggesting that Russian forces either withdrew under pressure or were neutralized during the clearing phase.

From there, the attack continued toward Piddubne and Novokhatske, and while fighting is still ongoing, Ukrainian drone teams have been eliminating Russian infantry and targeting ammunition caches near Zirka and Tovste, two villages just behind the initial line. These strikes suggest an intent not only to disrupt current Russian positions but also to reduce their ability to counterattack. Ukrainian coordination across units indicates the presence of a broader operational plan to regain control over the sector and impose cumulative attrition on Russian battalions through sustained small-unit maneuvers.

Overall, Ukraine’s counterattack in western Donetsk demonstrates how limited offensive action, when based on precise reconnaissance and strong tactical planning, can yield meaningful battlefield shifts without requiring a large-scale breakthrough. By exploiting weaknesses in Russian training, unit cohesion, and drone denial capabilities, Ukrainian forces have retaken key positions and are now positioned to continue pressuring the front southward, potentially aiming for the Mokri Yali River as a more defensible forward line to undo more months of Russian progress.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

In our regular frontline report, we pair up with the military blogger Reporting from Ukraine to keep you informed about what is happening on the battlefield in the Russo-Ukrainian war

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“No laws or morals in Russian army”: Ukrainian drones document alleged execution of unarmed civilian by Russian soldier near frontline Pokrovsk

Ukrainian drone footage shows Russian soldier executing unarmed civilian in Donetsk Oblast yard near the front line on 28 August.

Fighters from Ukraine’s 1st National Guard Corps “Azov” have released drone footage showing what they describe as the execution of an unarmed elderly civilian by Russian forces in Pokrovsk district, Donetsk Oblast, on 28 August.

According to the Azov unit, aerial reconnaissance captured the incident in which a Russian soldier shot and killed an elderly man in his yard. The military unit published the video evidence on their official Telegram channel.

“It is clearly visible that the person was in civilian clothes and without weapons,” the Azov fighters stated in their announcement. 

Russian soldier shot and killed an unarmed elderly man in his own yard near frontline Pokrovsk on 28 August — 1st National Guard Corps "Azov."

Ukrainian drone footage captured the incident during aerial reconnaissance, identifying the alleged perpetrator as a serviceman from… pic.twitter.com/XQAUDhJAJs

— Euromaidan Press (@EuromaidanPress) August 30, 2025

The unit emphasized that the alleged act constitutes a direct violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention on the Protection of Civilian Persons during times of war and armed conflict. 

The Ukrainian forces identified the alleged perpetrator as a serviceman from the 95th separate rifle regiment of the 5th separate motorized rifle brigade of the 51st army of the Russian Armed Forces, according to their intelligence.

The Azov unit characterized the incident as “another proof that for the Russian army there exist neither laws nor morals,” though this represents their assessment rather than an independent verification.

This incident fits within a documented pattern of executions carried out by Russian forces against both civilians and Ukrainian soldiers in frontline zones and occupied territories.

Russian soldiers have been recorded executing civilians often under suspicion of collaboration with Ukrainian forces or information sharing. These killings sometimes occur as collective punishment following attacks on Russian positions, with troops assuming local residents aided Ukrainian forces.

International observers have also documented hundreds of executions of Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs), including footage showing captured soldiers killed shortly after surrender.

These documented executions serve multiple purposes according to military analysts, including intimidation tactics, retaliation against resistance, and attempts to undermine Ukrainian military and civilian morale. 

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Frontline report: Ukrainian tanks destroy Russian infiltrators point-blank after river crossing near Lyman

fronline report

Day 1283

On 29 August, the biggest news comes from Ukraine.

Russians are sending their infiltration groups across the river, threatening a breakthrough that Russian commanders had long sought after. However, before they could receive orders to hit Ukrainians from behind, Ukrainian tanks rolled up and started annihilating Russian assault units point-blank.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

The main Russian goal here is to take control of the town of Lyman, as the strategic location will serve as a stepping stone for future operations. If captured, Lyman would serve as a forward operating base for three major offensives: a pincer to trap Ukrainian forces along the Oskil river, a southern strike to outflank Siversk, and a push deeper into Donetsk toward the last Ukrainian stronghold of fortified settlements before the terrain opens into vulnerable plains.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.
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To do any of this though, Russia first needs to breach Ukrainian positions east of Lyman and secure a reliable crossing point over the Zherebets River, as the battles for Torske and Zarichne unfold. Russian forces have advanced on two settlements from three sides: using small unit infiltration tactics rather than large-scale assaults. Larger attacks have ended in disaster like a recent 25-strong motorcycle charge near Torske, which was destroyed by artillery and drones. The result is a series of grinding Russian probing assaults, with Russian troops attempting to sneak across terrain and establish a foothold before being detected. Ukrainian forces have responded with an active defense, flexible positions, mobile counterattacks, and deliberate withdrawals to avoid major casualties. As a result, Torske is currently a grey zone where no side holds full control, Ukrainian commanders are prioritizing maintaining long-term combat strength over a static defense.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

Both sides have key advantages here, as Russian units have managed to establish a stable infiltration corridor through the Serebryanskyi forest, which allows small detachments to cross into the area around Zarichne with some level of cover.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

Meanwhile, Ukraine maintains an advantage through its rapid reaction capabilities, allowing it to strike back before Russian units can consolidate. Thermal drones monitor positions, and armored units are held ready for quick strikes once a Russian presence is detected, with Russian drone operators unable to quickly respond and intercept.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

Geolocated footage shows how Russian troops infiltrated through the forest and entered houses on the edge of the village. Ukraine responded by dispatching a tank to eliminate the group, firing four high-explosive shells in direct fire to blow up each of the buildings and any Russians inside. Ukrainian thermal drones monitored the entire exchange, and no follow-up footage was released, suggesting the tank successfully eliminated the entire group.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

Based on the size and number of the infiltrated buildings, and the standard size of Russian groupings that gather before committing to assaults, between 20 and 30 Russians were likely killed. The tactic of rapid armored response under thermal cover is extremely effective, exactly because Russian drone and artillery units do not have enough time to rapidly respond and destroy the tank.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

Ukrainian forces have also laid down layered passive defenses, including razorwire barriers, and these are meant to delay infiltrators just long enough for drone operators to locate and eliminate them with strikes of their own. In one recent incident, a Russian soldier became entangled in Egoza-type razorwire and was eliminated by a drone while immobilized, illustrating how Ukraine pairs static defenses with real-time drone surveillance and immediate strike responses, keeping most Russian infiltrators from ever establishing a foothold.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

Overall, the battle for Lyman continues to evolve, and Russia’s goals are clear: take the city and turn it into a launchpad for a tri-pronged offensive across northern Donetsk. For now though, Russia is struggling to even cross the Zherebets River in enough force to make a dent. Ukrainian forces are using active defense tactics, armored counters, and thermal drone coverage to keep the front fluid and prevent Russian forces from consolidating gains. As road conditions worsen heading into autumn, Russia’s window for launching a full-scale assalt is narrowing.

A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

In our regular frontline report, we pair up with the military blogger Reporting from Ukraine to keep you informed about what is happening on the battlefield in the Russo-Ukrainian war

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Trump envoy: Russia submits Donetsk peace plan Ukraine “may not take”

ftwitkoff cancels moscow trip kremlin snubs 22-point us-ukraine-european-backed ceasefire plan middle east special envoy steve witkoff (left) welcomed russian president vladimir putin (right) st petersburg 11 2025 met officials told

Russia has submitted a peace proposal regarding Donetsk Oblast as part of efforts to end its war against Ukraine, according to Steve Witkoff, US President Donald Trump’s Special Envoy for the Middle East.

Speaking in a Fox News interview, Witkoff revealed the existence of the Russian proposal while defending Trump’s diplomatic efforts.

“The Russians have put a peace proposal on the table. It involves Donetsk. It may not be something that the Ukrainians can take,” Witkoff said.

The envoy did not specify the proposal’s details or submission date, but emphasized Trump’s role in advancing negotiations. “No one has done more than this president in narrowing the issues between these two countries and bringing the sides close to a deal,” Witkoff said.

When asked about responsibility for prolonging the war, Witkoff described both parties as challenging. “We’ve got two tough sides here. You heard the President say that he is disappointed in Russia in some respects, and he is also disappointed in the Ukrainians in some respects,” he said.

The disclosure comes after Trump announced reaching an agreement with Russian leader Vladimir Putin on territory exchange following their Alaska talks. Trump said that “President Zelenskyy has to agree” to the arrangement.

According to Bloomberg reports, Putin continues demanding Ukrainian troop withdrawal from Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts entirely, while offering to freeze the front lines in Zaporizhzhia and Kherson oblasts. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has rejected these demands.

Reuters previously outlined Russia’s war-ending conditions that Putin presented to Trump during their Alaska meeting on 17 August. Trump has warned of launching an “economic war” against Russia if it avoids negotiations.

Witkoff announced plans to meet with a Ukrainian delegation in New York this week as diplomatic efforts continue.

Trump reports indicate Putin wants immediate discussions on ending the war rather than merely pausing hostilities, with Trump believing this approach would be optimal.

The US continues supplying weapons to NATO allies currently providing military assistance to Ukraine, according to Trump’s statements.

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HUR surprise assault liberates Novomykhailivka in Donetsk Oblast as Russians lose company-sized unit

Key takeaways:

  • Ukrainian forces have regained control over Novomykhailivka in Donetsk Oblast, driving out the occupiers and consolidating their positions.
  • The operation was carried out by units of the Active Measures Department of the Main Intelligence Directorate (HUR) of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, the special unit “Artan,” and the 2nd Assault Battalion of the Third Assault Brigade
  • Ukrainian flags are returning to the territory under Ukrainian control.

Novomykhailivka is under the Ukrainian flag again! Ukrainian forces restored control over the settlement in Donetsk Oblast, expelling the Russians and securing strategic positions.

Although according to British intelligence assessments, the village has limited military significance, it is a key point on the way to more important targets such as Kurakhove and Kostiantynivka. The prolonged battles for Novomykhailivka lasted several months, during which Russian forces suffered heavy losses in personnel and equipment.

According to the Main Intelligence Directorate of Ukraine (HUR), the successful offensive operation was carried out by units of the Active Measures Department of HUR, including the special group “Artan,” as well as the 2nd Assault Battalion of the Third Assault Brigade.

“Novomykhailivka is under Ukrainian control!” the intelligence agency reports. 

The announcement came on Ukraine’s Independence Day, on 24 August. 

Tactics and outcome of the operation

According to intelligence, the enemy was caught off guard. Ukrainian units coordinated the use of assault groups, heavy equipment, and drones. As a result, the occupiers lost about a company of personnel and were forced to redeploy reserves from other parts of the front.

“Thanks to the coordinated actions of assault units and heavy equipment, as well as the use of drones, Ukrainian forces improved their tactical position and strengthened defense in the area,” the intelligence agency notes.

Earlier, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Oleksandr Syrskyi reported that Ukrainian defenders successfully conducted counterattacks in Donetsk Oblast, liberating three settlements from the occupiers – Mykhailivka, Zelenyi Hai, and Volodymyrivka.

“I once again express my deep gratitude to our brothers- and sisters-in-arms for their actions during these critical, decisive days,” he said.

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Marines raise Ukrainian flag on National Flag Day in liberated Donetsk settlement

Ukrainian forces reclaim Zelenyi Hai, Donetsk Oblast, on National Flag Day (23 August) in symbolic victory.

Ukrainian military units have established control over the settlement of Zelenyi Hai [eng: Green grove] in Donetsk Oblast, with the victory announced on Ukraine’s National Flag Day, marking both a tactical achievement and symbolic moment amid broader Russian pressure across the eastern front.

The settlement’s strategic importance stems from its location on the border between Donetsk and Dnipropetrovsk oblasts. 
The timing of the announcement on 23 August—National Flag Day—carries particular symbolic weight as Ukrainian forces work to restore territorial control and national symbols across occupied areas.

The operational-strategic group of forces “Dnipro” confirmed that fighters from the 37th separate marine infantry brigade, working alongside the 214th separate assault battalion OPFOR, successfully halted the advance of Russian forces in the area.

However, the operational-strategic group “Dnipro” warned that Russian forces are mounting efforts to retake Zelenyi Hai while simultaneously attempting to occupy additional settlements throughout this sector of Donetsk Oblast.

At the beginning of August, Russian forces entered Zelenyi Hai, photographing themselves alongside Russian flags within the settlement, according to the analytical project DeepState.

However, the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ministry of Defense subsequently reported that Ukrainian special forces eliminated the Russian group that had penetrated the settlement. Despite this operation, DeepState mapping data from 22 August indicated Russian forces maintained control over approximately half of Zelenyi Hai.

Russian soldiers are taking photos with the Russian flag in the occupied Ukrainian village of Zelenyi Hai in Donetsk Oblast at the beginning of August 2025. Now the village is liberated.

Defense forces also recently secured control over most of the nearby village of Tovste, where Ukrainian soldiers raised the national flag.

Russian advances in Donetsk Oblast

The Zelenyi Hai operation occurs against a backdrop of intensifying Russian attacks across Donetsk region.

Recent Russian advances north of Pokrovsk saw enemy forces break through up to 17 kilometers, seizing positions that threaten Ukrainian supply lines.

A separate Russian push near Dobropillia reached the Dobropillia–Kramatorsk highway, a critical route for military logistics.

These tactical gains have prompted regional authorities to expand mandatory evacuation zones. Vadym Filashkin, head of the Donetsk Regional Military Administration, announced on 14 August that five settlements must evacuate approximately 1,879 children due to relentless Russian bombardment of around 3,000 strikes daily.

The Institute for the Study of War identified a “fortress belt,” the primary fortified defensive line established following 2014 military operations, as one of the strategically important Ukrainian positions in Donetsk Oblast that Russian forces continue to approach and attempt to envelop it.

It stretches 50 kilometers from Sloviansk and Kramatorsk in the north to Druzhkivka and Kostyantynivka in the south.

According to the ISW, Ukraine has invested 11 years in strengthening these positions, building “significant defense industrial and defensive infrastructure in and around these cities.”

The institute warned that territorial concessions, pushed by Russia in recent peace negotiations with the US, would “position Russian forces extremely well to renew their attacks on much more favorable terms,” allowing them to bypass costly urban warfare while gaining operational advantages.

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69-year-old British volunteer killed by Russian drone in Ukraine; body trapped in combat zone

British volunteer died in Ukraine

A 69-year-old British aid worker was killed by a Russian drone strike in Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast in June, but her family remains unable to retrieve her body or obtain a death certificate due to ongoing combat operations, according to BBC.

Annie Lewis Marffy from Silverton, near Exeter, died between 11-12 June while delivering humanitarian aid to Kramatorsk, according to the local police report. The document states she sustained “injuries incompatible with life” after the drone attack but notes that her body “remains in an area of active hostilities, making it impossible to conduct evacuation measures to transfer the body to the forensic medical examination department.”

Lewis Marffy had traveled to Ukraine as part of a self-funded mission organized by Aid Ukraine, a UK-based humanitarian organization. She departed for Poland in late May driving a green Toyota RAV4 alongside a former Welsh soldier who later became ill and returned home before crossing the Ukrainian border.

“She was brave, capable and determined, but we never wanted her to go. We were worried,” her son Charlie Lewis Marffy told reporters. Despite family concerns, he emphasized they supported her decision: “She was in touch with us every day. She spoke to my youngest brother constantly. She was excited, happy to be doing something meaningful.”

According to Aid Ukraine founder Katarzyna Bylok, Lewis Marffy crossed into Ukraine on 4 June and maintained regular contact with her family until 8 June. The organization’s last communication with her occurred on 10 June.

Police reports indicate that on 11 June, Lewis Marffy drove alone onto the Bakhmut highway – an area dubbed a “kill zone” due to its proximity to active front lines. She had parked her vehicle on the roadside when both she and the car were destroyed in the drone strike.

“They’re saying she died. Still, there’s no body. No possessions. No ID. Nothing,” Charlie Lewis Marffy said, describing his family’s frustration with bureaucratic obstacles.

The family has contacted Ukrainian authorities, local officials, and the UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office requesting a death certificate based on the police report. Without official documentation, they cannot proceed with probate processes or formal grieving procedures.

“I’m dismayed. The Foreign Office has been vague, unhelpful,” Lewis Marffy said. The family explored private body retrieval options but found them either too dangerous or financially prohibitive.

Lewis Marffy had initially planned to hand over humanitarian supplies in Lviv, but the British volunteer insisted on continuing alone to Kramatorsk despite organizational recommendations, according to Bylok.

Charlie Lewis Marffy described his mother as widely traveled and “amazing, witty, kind, intelligent, adventurous.” He noted her previous work creating documentaries, assisting at soup kitchens and refugee facilities in Exeter, and caring for numerous animals at her home.

“I never saw her scared, she was totally fearless and maybe that’s contributed to her death in some way,” he reflected. “She was a force and it was her decision. We’re not looking to blame anyone. We just want a bit more information, some kind of resolution.”

A Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office spokesperson confirmed: “We are supporting the family of a British woman who is missing in Ukraine and are in contact with the local authorities.”

The case highlights ongoing challenges faced by international volunteers operating in Ukraine’s contested regions and the bureaucratic complexities surrounding casualties in active combat zones.

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Kostyantynivka’s new morning routine: turn on the gas. Nothing. Russians are 3 miles away

For hours today, Kostyantynivka endured merciless Russian bombardment—a once-bustling city in Donetsk Oblast now scarred and shaken. More than 20 residential buildings were damaged, gas infrastructure crippled, and the last postal lifeline cut. Roughly 6,800 residents remain, holding on as the city edges closer to catastrophe.

Kostyantynivka is not just another dot on the map. It anchors the southern approach to the Donbas fortress belt—Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, Druzhkivka, Pokrovsk. These cities together form Ukraine’s eastern bastion. If Kostyantynivka falls, the defensive ring could be flanked, leaving the heart of the Donbas vulnerable.

The warning signs are familiar. Mariupol, Bakhmut, Marinka, Avdiivka, Popasna—all were battered into ruins before Russian troops claimed them. Kostyantynivka is not yet rubble. But the smoke and broken glass already foreshadow that grim possibility.

Kostyantynivka endured merciless Russian bombardment on 22 August 2025. Photo: Serhii Horbunov

Shelling erodes daily life

The bombardment lasted for hours. FPV drones and FAB-250 bombs smashed into residential neighborhoods, ripping through apartments, private homes, and civic buildings. Local officials counted more than 20 apartment blocks among the wreckage.

One of the most devastating strikes hit the gas distribution station, collapsing pressure in the system and plunging the city into a total gas blackout. Donetskoblgaz, the regional gas distribution company, confirmed repairs were impossible under current conditions, citing security risks for its crews.

“Restoration of gas supply is not possible at this time,” the company stated.

Life without gas—no heating, no cooking—leaves residents more exposed, forced to adapt to survival conditions while bombardment continues overhead.

Russian attack on Kostyantynivka on 22 August 2025. Video: Slavyansk/Kramatorsk via Telegram

Postal lifeline severed

As Russian forces edged closer, even the last traces of civil infrastructure disappeared. Kostyantynivka’s last Ukrposhta branch closed its doors, ending pensions and parcel services in the city.

“For a long time, we were the only ones here—no banks, no competitors, just Ukrposhta, supporting thousands. But it became too dangerous to stay,” CEO Ihor Smilianskyi explained.

The nearest branches are now in Druzhkivka and Olexievo-Druzhkivka, 5–7 km away—a distance that, under fire, can feel insurmountable.

Kostyantynivka endured merciless Russian bombardment on 22 August 2025. Photo: Serhii Horbunov

Population hollowing out

Kostyantynivka once held nearly 15,000 residents. Today, fewer than 7,000 remain. Many are elderly or families unable to evacuate. Streets are quiet, windows are boarded, and shops shuttered.

The city is not yet destroyed like Mariupol or Avdiivka. But depopulation is already hollowing it out—a silent erosion that makes the devastation feel inevitable.

Evacuation road from Kostyantynivka, draped with anti-drone nets — a drone just punched a hole. Video: Denys Khrystov

Russian push near Dobropillya—repelled, for now

The crisis around Kostyantynivka is compounded by Russian pressure further west. Near Dobropillya, Moscow launched a thrust, carving a salient toward Pokrovsk. For a moment, Ukrainian defenses bent under pressure.

But Ukraine hit back. The 1st Azov Corps led a counterattack that wiped out Russia’s 132nd Motor Rifle Brigade in a 16-day fight. Reinforcements from Ukrainian air assault, marine, and mechanized brigades stabilized the sector.

Still, the battle is far from over. As analyst David Axe observed, Russia is funneling fresh units, and momentum shifts quickly:

“Neither side can seize the initiative for long.”

Ukrainian soldier in a truck near Kostyantynivka, Donetsk Oblast. Photo: 93rd Brigade via Facebook

Pokrovsk on the brink

Further west, Pokrovsk—the southernmost anchor of the Donbas fortress belt—is under threat of encirclement. Russian advances north and south aim to sever supply routes and trap the city. Its fall would not only endanger tens of thousands still inside—it would unravel Ukraine’s broader defensive belt from the south upward.

Pokrovsk, like Kostyantynivka, is not yet lost. But the pressure is mounting daily.

Pokrovsk, once home to 60,000 people, now shelters just 1,300 residents. Photo: Hromadske

Syrskyi: “The breakthrough near Dobropillya is crushed”

Ukraine’s Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi admitted that Russian troops briefly advanced near Dobropillia, but insists the situation has now been reversed:

“The enemy took advantage of gaps and advanced. But after decisive measures—redeploying forces and clearing villages—their victorious mood turned to despair.”

As for nearby Pokrovsk, Syrskyi emphasized that Ukrainian logistics remain intact, and that reinforcements, counter-attacks, and the advantage of terrain are helping blunt the Russian push—even amid relentless daily assaults.

Ruins in Kostyntynivka, Donetsk Oblast, May 2025. Photo: 93rd Brigade

Moscow’s terms: Donbas for “peace”?

As the battlefield burns, diplomacy shifted to Alaska, where US President Donald Trump met with Vladimir Putin. While exact details remain uncertain, reports suggest Putin floated demands for Ukraine to withdraw from Donbas, renounce NATO, and bar Western troops in exchange for a ceasefire.

European officials and Kyiv dismiss the proposals as a trap—an attempt to freeze Russia’s gains while leaving Ukraine exposed to future assaults.

Ruins in Kostyntynivka, Donetsk Oblast, May 2025. Photo: 93rd Brigade

Between rubble and resolve

Kostyantynivka today is without gas, without postal service, and with only part of its pre-war population left. The city is not yet reduced to rubble, but it faces the same risk as Mariupol or Bakhmut if the assaults continue.

General Syrskyi insists that “the front is still holding,” and militarily that may be true. But for ordinary Ukrainians still in Kostyantynivka—living without utilities, services, or certainty—such statements feel distant from their daily reality.

What Russia presents as a path to “peace” already looks different on the ground: damaged homes, disrupted services, and families leaving under fire. Reports on Ukrainian military-linked Telegram channels now place Russian units within about 5 km of the city—evidence that Kostyantynivka has not fallen, but stands on the edge.

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Russia seeks entire Donbas in exchange for ceasefire promises, Zelenskyy says it would take them four years to occupy it

russia seeks entire donbas exchange ceasefire promises zelenskyy says take four years occupy president volodymyr stressed russian forces have only managed seize about one-third donetsk oblast since full-scale invasion began

Zelenskyy told reporters on 21 August that Russia has captured only a third of Donetsk Oblast since launching its full-scale invasion in 2022. He added that Moscow would need four more years to take the rest of the Donbas by force. 

The Donbas is the historical name for Ukraine’s easternmost oblasts: Donetsk and Luhansk. Russia seized about half of both in 2014. Since 2022, it has concentrated most of its operations on expanding control over this area. It now occupies almost all of Luhansk Oblast and large parts of Donetsk Oblast. Ukrainian forces still hold key areas in Donetsk, including a fortified defense line often described by military observers as the fortress belt. Ceding the region would endanger the adjacent Kharkiv, Poltava, and Dnipropetrovsk oblasts.

Russia holds about two-thirds of Donetsk Oblast, but most of it since 2014

Liga reports that Zelenskyy’s comments came during a press meeting. Before discussing Ukraine’s position, Zelenskyy said it is necessary to understand Russia’s intentions. Using Donetsk Oblast as an example, he said he explained the situation during his meeting with US President Donald Trump. According to Zelenskyy, Russia did not seize 69% of Donetsk Oblast after February 2022, as claimed in some assessments, but only about one-third.

Current control map of Luhansk and Donetsk oblasts. Russian-held areas are marked in red; territory occupied before 2022 outlined in red.
Map source: Liveuamap

He clarified that Russian forces currently control around 67–69% of Donetsk Oblast. That includes territory Russia had already occupied before 2022. Nearly four years of full-scale war produced only marginal gains in the oblast, he said.

Zelenskyy dismissed speculation that Russian troops could take the rest of Donbas by the end of this year. He called such talk baseless and said the Kremlin would need four years more to achieve that objective.

On 12 August, Zelenskyy stated that Ukraine’s defense forces would not pull back from Donbas.



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Massive Russian air attack hits Ukraine with 574 drones and 40 missiles, including city near Hungarian border

massive russian air attack hits ukraine 574 drones 40 missiles including city near hungarian border smoke rises zakarpattia oblast after missile strike mukachevo 21 2025 b9e04c98-aad7-450c-8b4b-7fa77cb60dbf kalibr struck american factory

A massive Russian air attack involving 574 drones and 40 missiles struck Ukraine overnight into 21 August, hitting cities across the country, including Mukachevo — a city in Ukraine’s far west close to the Hungarian border. Ukrainian Air Force units downed the majority of the aerial threats, but multiple oblasts reported civilian casualties and infrastructure destruction. The Russian attacks again inflicted civilian casualties.

Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Moscow attacks Ukrainian civilians and civilian infrastructure every day. Last night’s massive attack comes days after a meeting of the US and Ukrainian leaders, Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskyy, initiated by Trump to organize a future meeting with Russia’s leader Vladimir Putin, allegedly to end the war. The attacks time and again show an obvious thing to everyone but Trump, who keeps pushing for Kyiv-Moscow talks: Russia doesn’t want peace.

Mukachevo struck with Kalibr missiles, drone crashes in Khust district

At around 04:40 on 21 August, Russian forces launched two Kalibr missiles at an industrial facility in Mukachevo, Zakarpattia Oblast. According to Myroslav Biletskyi, head of the Zakarpattia Oblast Military Administration (OVA), the strike destroyed warehouse premises and triggered a large fire, causing significant smoke pollution. Authorities deployed an emergency operations center to the site.

The Mukachevo City Council said ten people had been taken to hospital and two more had sought medical care on their own. All received treatment, and their condition was described as stable.

Evhen Meshko, director of Saint Martin Hospital, told Suspilne that by 08:50, 12 people had been brought in: six hospitalized, six treated on an outpatient basis, and one transferred to the oblast hospital. He noted that patients were in mild to moderate condition, with no critical cases reported at that time. A total of 15 ambulance brigades and eight State Emergency Service units worked on-site.

Later, the Zakarpattia Oblast Police later updated that 15 people were injured, including one in serious condition.

Following the missile impact and resulting fire, Biletskyi warned residents about heavy smoke and the presence of potentially harmful combustion products. He urged residents of Mukachevo and Uzhhorod districts to close all windows and doors and stay indoors, particularly children, the elderly, and individuals with chronic respiratory diseases.

Biletskyi also reported the crash of a Shahed-type drone in the village of Lypovets, Khust district. No injuries were reported. However, a utility building was damaged, windows were blown out in a nearby residential house, and a power line was struck.

Ukrainian foreign ministry denounces strike on US-linked company

Deputy Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha wrote on X that one of the Russian missiles targeted a major American electronics manufacturer in Zakarpattia Oblast. He stated that the facility was entirely civilian and accused Russia of targeting businesses deliberately.

Sybiha added that this was not the first time Russia attacked US-linked facilities, referencing previous strikes on Boeing offices in Kyiv earlier this year. He said the attack proved the need for stronger air defense and reiterated Ukraine’s commitment to diplomacy through bilateral Ukraine-Russia and trilateral Ukraine-US-Russia negotiations. He also called for security guarantees from the US and European partners.

Fatal strike in Lviv

In Lviv, Russian forces launched a combined drone and missile strike, resulting in one person killed and three injured, according to Lviv Oblast head Maksym Kozytskyi.

Mayor Andrii Sadovyi said the explosions damaged at least 26 buildings in Zaliznychnyi district, the third time this area was hit over the past year. He confirmed over 150 shattered windows and 10 destroyed rooftops.

Sadovyi reported that one of the injured victims was in critical condition and undergoing surgery, while another had chest and leg wounds and was in moderate condition. At 08:37, he confirmed a third injury — a 38-year-old woman with a superficial chest wound, hematomas, and lung contusion, being treated at Saint Panteleimon Hospital.

Deputy Mayor Andrii Moskalenko said the same buildings were previously struck on 4 September and 12 July. A kindergarten was also damaged. Emergency commissions were launched to manage repairs and temporary relocation for affected residents.

Local residents described the horror to Suspilne. Ihor Husak said the entire building shook as families sheltered in fear. Zina Pensko said she survived by divine luck, sustaining a minor finger injury. Orysia Kovpak said her home was just repaired after the previous attack when new blasts shattered the ceiling and windows again.

Zaporizhzhia hit by missiles and bombs

In Zaporizhzhia, two missile strikes damaged several industrial sites and nearby residential buildings, with eight apartment buildings and two private houses sustaining broken windows and damaged facades, according to OVA head Ivan Fedorov. He reported no injuries in this attack.

This morning, the Russians struck a village in Polohy district by three air-dropped bombs, injuring an 85-year-old woman who suffered fractures, lacerations, and a concussion.

The Zaporizhzhia Oblast Military Administration reported that in the last 24 hours:

  • 647 attacks were carried out across 14 settlements
  • 433 FPV and other drones struck at least 11 populated areas
  • 204 artillery strikes targeted various towns
  • Three airstrikes and five MLRS attacks occurred
  • Russian attacks killed one woman and injured another in Polohy district

Civilian sites hit across multiple oblasts

In Kherson Oblast, the local administration said that from 06:00 on 20 August to 06:00 on 21 August, one person was killed and three others injured. Two Shahed-131/136 drones were destroyed by air defense.

In Kharkiv Oblast, two civilians — a 70-year-old man and 71-year-old woman — were killed near Petrivka, Zolochiv community. A 41-year-old man was injured in Kharkiv city on 18 August. According to the regional administration, Russian forces used:

  • One missile
  • Six Shahed-136 drones (repeatedly referred to by their Russian designation as “Geran-2” by Kharkiv officials)
  • One Lancet drone
  • Two Molniia drones
  • Three FPV drones

In Donetsk Oblast, the regional administration reported that Russian forces killed three civilians in Kostiantynivka on 20 August, and six more people were injured across the region.

In Rivne Oblast, drone debris hit a private residence and public utility building, igniting a roof fire and shattering windows. No injuries were reported, per the OVA.

In Volyn Oblast, including its capital city of Lutsk, the region was attacked by drones and missiles, with 12 aerial targets engaged. Authorities said no casualties occurred, though minor building damage was confirmed.

Air Force: 577 threats intercepted

According to the Ukrainian Air Force, from 18:40 on 20 August into 21 August, Russia launched 614 aerial weapons, including:

  • 574 Shahed drones and decoys
  • Four Kh-47M2 Kinzhal missiles
  • Two Iskander-M/KN-23 ballistic missiles
  • 19 Kh-101 cruise missiles
  • 14 Kalibr missiles
  • One unidentified missile from occupied Crimea

Ukrainian forces intercepted or suppressed 577 targets, including:

  • 546 Shahed-type drones and decoys
  • One Kinzhal missile
  • 18 Kh-101 cruise missiles
  • 12 Kalibr cruise missiles
Confirmed strikes or debris fell in 11 locations, and debris from downed threats landed in three others.
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Russia targeted Ukraine with 270 drones and 10 missiles while Trump and Zelenskyy met in Washington

russia targeted ukraine 270 dornes 10 missiles while trump zelenskyy met washington fire poltava oblast after russia's combined missile drone attack overnight 19 2025 telegram/exilenova+ poltava-oblast hit homes greenhouses power

As Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders met with US President Donald Trump in Washington on 18 August, Russia launched a massive overnight air assault on Ukraine. The attack, which began in the evening and continued into 19 August, struck at least six oblasts, leaving civilians wounded and civilian infrastructure in ruins.

Russia continues its daily air attacks against Ukrainian civilians and civilian infrastructure. On 16 August — the day Trump met Russian President Vladimir Putin in Alaska — Russia fired one Iskander-M and 85 drones at Ukraine. On 17 August, it launched one missile and 60 drones. On 18 August, four ballistic missiles and 140 drones targeted Ukrainian cities. That day, Russian drones killed civilians in a Kharkiv apartment building, struck an oil depot near Odesa, destroyed part of a university in Sumy, and hit Zaporizhzhia with ballistic missiles.

280 air weapons launched

The Ukrainian Air Force reported Russia’s 270 Shahed-type drones and 10 missiles launched from multiple directions, including Kursk, Millerovo, Primorsko-Akhtarsk, occupied Crimea, and the Caspian Sea. These included five Iskander-M ballistic missiles and five Kh-101 cruise missiles. Ukrainian air defense shot down 230 drones, 2 Iskander-Ms, and 4 Kh-101s, but 40 drones and four missiles still hit their targets across 16 confirmed sites.

Poltava: power cut, energy sites hit

In Poltava Oblast, Russian drones and missiles struck energy sector facilities in Kremenchuk and Lubny districts, local authorities said. Damage to utility buildings left 1,471 households and 119 legal entities without power. No injuries were reported. Repairs began immediately.

Donetsk Oblast: Five civilians killed in separate attacks

Sloviansk Military Administration chief Vadym Liakh reported that Russian forces fired two Iskander-M missiles at Sloviansk around 21:00 on 18 August. Both missiles struck the industrial zone in the Lisnyi microdistrict, injuring one woman. She was hospitalized in moderate condition. Fires broke out after the impact.

Earlier that day, the Donetsk Oblast Military Administration said that Russian shelling killed five civilians: three in Kostiantynivka, one in Dobropillia, and one in Novodonetske. Eight others were injured across the oblast.

Kharkiv Oblast: Russian drone injures family in Peremoha

Mayor of Lozova Serhii Zelenskyy reported that Russian drones — for some reason, identified by the regional prosecutor’s office by Shahed-136’s Russian designation Geran-2 type — struck a residential building in the village of Peremoha around 04:58 on 19 August. The blast injured a woman, who was hospitalized with a leg injury. Her husband and two children — an 8-year-old boy and a 2-year-8-month-old girl — suffered psychological shock and cuts from broken glass. The family remains in emotional distress, according to community leader Tetiana Kukhmeister, who spoke to Suspilne.

Sumy Oblast: Russia shells town, follows with drone strikes

Head of the executive committee of the Seredyna-Buda city council Ksenia Piatnytsia told Suspilne that Russian forces shelled Seredyna-Buda with tanks around 01:00 on 19 August and followed up with FPV drone strikes around noon. The attacks damaged local infrastructure.

Acting head of the Sumy community Artem Kobzar reported that Russian drones attacked the Pishchanske community twice — first with a Shahed drone that shattered 34 windows and damaged a slate roof, then with a Molniya-type drone that damaged six more windows and a door.

On 18 August after 17:00, the Sumy Oblast Military Administration said that five Russian drones targeted the Sumy community. Three drones struck civilian infrastructure; two were intercepted. According to Suspilne reporters, one drone exploded near a shopping center in the city of Sumy. No casualties were reported.

Dnipropetrovsk Oblast: Man wounded, school burns after drone strikes

Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Military Administration head Serhii Lysak reported that Russian FPV drones and artillery struck Nikopol, Marhanets, and Pokrovsk communities overnight on 19 August. The attack injured a man, who was hospitalized. Fires destroyed a greenhouse and a utility structure. A residential building, another utility building, and a car were also damaged.

In the Vasylkivska community of Synelnykove district, Russian drones hit a school, setting it on fire. Lysak confirmed that Ukrainian air defense shot down seven Russian drones over the oblast during the night.

Kherson Oblast: Child, pensioners injured in Russian attacks

The Kherson Oblast Military Administration reported that Russian forces injured six civilians in the oblast over the past 24 hours. These figures do not include additional victims reported later this morning.

On the morning of 19 August, officials confirmed that a 71-year-old resident of Kozatske, who was attacked by a Russian drone on 16 August, had been hospitalized with abdominal blast trauma and shrapnel injuries. He remains under medical supervision.

Later that morning, Russian artillery struck residential areas of Chornobaivka. An 11-year-old boy, who was walking down the street at the time, suffered a concussion, a shrapnel wound to his shoulder, and a closed traumatic brain injury. Neighbors gave him first aid before emergency services transported him to a hospital.

In Kherson city, a 61-year-old man was also wounded in a Russian drone attack. He sustained a blast injury and shrapnel wounds to his arm and leg and is receiving medical treatment.

 

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ISW: Russia’s advance near Dobropillia is fracturing under Ukrainian counterattacks

isw russia’s advance near dobropillya fracturing under ukrainian counterattacks north-of-pokrovsk-direction-august-18-2025-(1) troops retook key villages base narrow penetration dobropillia donetsk oblast forces reversing attempted breakthrough institute study war (isw) reported 18

Ukrainian forces are reversing Russia’s attempted breakthrough near Dobropillia. The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) reported on 18 August that Russian troops are struggling to turn their limited infiltration into a deeper advance as Ukrainian counterattacks reclaim settlements and cut off the penetration base.

This comes as Russia continues its all-out war against Ukraine, focusing on capturing the rest of eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast. 

Ukrainian forces retake key settlements

Ukrainian military observer Kostyantyn Mashovets said Ukrainian troops had liberated Zapovidne (formerly Nykanorivka) and Dorozhnie, both southwest of Dobropillia. These villages were at the base of Russia’s push into the area. Geolocated footage published on 14 August and verified on 18 August shows Ukrainian forces detaining Russian soldiers in a windbreak southwest of Petrivka, northeast of Dobropillia. Additional footage published on 17 August shows Ukrainian troops raising a flag in Zolotyi Kolodyaz, confirming they had retaken the area after Russian forces previously entered it.

Russia unable to support or widen the penetration

ISW noted that Russian forces are struggling to turn their initial tactical gains into a wider breakthrough. Colonel Viktor Trehubov of Ukraine’s Dnipro Group of Forces said Ukrainian troops collapsed the Russian salient by cutting off infiltration elements from their main force, preventing supplies and reinforcements from reaching them.

Ukrainian flanks move faster than Russian forces

Mashovets reported that elements of Russia’s 150th Motorized Rifle Division, part of the 8th Combined Arms Army, attempted to bypass Volodymyrivka from the east. The move aimed to flank Ukrainian forces pressing on Russian units of the 51st Combined Arms Army between Zapovidne and Novotoretske. However, Ukrainian forces on the western side of the breach are advancing faster than Russian units in the east.

Russian brigades under pressure inside a narrow corridor

Mashovets said Russian forces inside the penetration — specifically the 5th, 110th, and 132nd Motorized Rifle Brigades — are fracturing under pressure and only holding a 2.5-kilometer-wide strip. A Russian milblogger warned the depth of the advance is too great for such a narrow width, making it vulnerable to counterattacks.

Russian focus shifts to another direction

ISW observed that Russian milbloggers are now focusing on the Rodynske direction, north of Pokrovsk and southeast of Dobropillia. This shift suggests a loss of confidence in the Dobropillia axis after failure to reinforce the original infiltration.

 

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Trump reportedly threatened to end talks in Alaska when Putin wanted entire Donetsk Oblast – media

US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin sit for talks at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage, Alaska on 15 August 2025 during their first summit since Trump's return to office aimed at ending the war in Ukraine.

    President Donald Trump nearly walked away from negotiations with Russian President Vladimir Putin during their Alaska summit when the Kremlin leader demanded complete control over Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast, according to Axios.

    Putin presented maximalist demands regarding five disputed Ukrainian oblasts during the meeting on 15 August, with particular focus on Donetsk, where Russia currently controls approximately 75% of the territory, according to the reports. The Russian president wanted all of it.

    “If Donetsk is the thing here and if there is no give, we should just not prolong this,” Trump told Putin during the talks, according to a source cited by Axios. Putin reportedly backed off the demand following Trump’s threat to end negotiations.

    The Alaska summit represents the opening phase of Trump’s diplomatic strategy to end the Russia-Ukraine war. Administration advisers describe the approach as focused on bringing both leaders to direct negotiations rather than securing an immediate ceasefire.

    “Everything else is foreplay,” a Trump adviser told Axios. “Everything is to get to that moment for peace.”

    The administration has outlined a three-step process: securing bilateral agreements with both Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy separately, followed by trilateral talks involving all parties. Trump is scheduled to meet with Zelenskyy in Washington on 18 August.

    US intelligence assessments present conflicting timelines for Russian military capabilities. One evaluation suggests Putin could capture all of Donetsk by October, while another predicts a more difficult and inconclusive campaign.

    Putin agreed for the first time that the US and European allies could provide “security guarantees” to prevent further Russian aggression, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and special envoy Steve Witkoff said on 17 August.

    “It would be a very big move by the President if he were to offer a US commitment to a security guarantee,” Rubio said on Fox News.

    When asked whether such guarantees could include US troops stationed in Ukraine, one Trump adviser privately confirmed the possibility to Axios, while another said the details remained unclear.

    Reuters previously reported Putin’s ceasefire demands from Alaska, which include Ukraine withdrawing its forces from Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts entirely.

    Rubio emphasized Sunday that the US would not pressure Ukraine to surrender territory as part of any peace agreement. Zelenskyy has stated that negotiations must address the current front lines and that Ukraine’s Constitution prevents territorial concessions or land exchanges.

    The Alaska summit concluded abruptly, with Trump departing Anchorage so quickly that administration officials left summit materials on a hotel printer, NPR reported. A planned working lunch between the leaders was canceled.

    “20,000 Russian soldiers were killed last month, in July, in this war,” Rubio told CBS. “That just tells you the price they’re willing to pay. It’s a meat grinder, and [the Russians] just have more meat to grind.”

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    •  

    Frontline report: Azov corps encircles 800 Russian soldiers after 18-kilometer breakthrough collapses

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    Day 1271

    On 17 August, the biggest news comes from the Pokrovsk direction.

    The Azov army corps has taken up full operational control over stabilizing the Russian breakthrough at Pokrovsk. With the situation reaching critical levels and threatening to overturn a year of Ukraine’s fortification work, Azov and its battalions are immediately getting to work on smashing the Russian salient back across the river.

    Become one of our 700+ patrons!
    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    As Russians took Ukrainians by surprise, they broke through 18 kilometers deep behind the Ukrainian front line and penetrated through Ukraine’s new Donbas defense line while it was unmanned. However, as the reality of the situation got through to the Ukrainian high command, they acted quickly and redeployed Ukraine’s 1st national guard army corps, led by the famed Azov brigade at its head. The Russian salient is deep but narrow, enough so that it could be pincered, cut off from reinforcements, and destroyed if the Azov corps was up to the task.

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    The recently redeployed forces immediately got to work, as the first step was to prevent the Russians from expanding their salient, allowing them to entrench and threaten Ukrainian logistics further on an operational scale. Open source military analysts show that the 1st Da Vinci assault regiment attacked the Russian breakthrough head-on, and during the first day of clashes, they were able to blunt the spearhead and push the Russians back to Zolotyi Kolodiaz. Recent reports from various Russian, Ukrainian, and Western military analysts now show that they conducted a follow-up operation the next day, and pushed Russians out of the settlement and are overrunning Russian positions up to 4 kilometers below; recapturing the New Donbas Defense line in the process.

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    Further south along the thin Russian salient, elements of the Azov brigade launched rapid counterattacks on the Russians’ left flank, as the 93rd mechanized brigade assaulted the Russians from the east. Satellite data shows numerous impact craters of Russian aviation glide bombs all over both sides of the salient, the locations of which indicate the Ukrainian attack was very successful and resulted in the capture of Kutuzivka, with prominent Russian and Ukrainian sources noting Ukrainians have fully encircled the Russians in two separate pockets.

    Possibly realizing their goals were becoming too ambitious, Russians attempted an offshoot maneuver between Rodynske and Bilytske, hoping to at least achieve an operational encirclement of Pokrovsk as their larger breakthrough was faltering.

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    However, Azov quickly responded to this maneuver as well, rapidly cutting off the Russian axis of advance and eliminating dozens of Russian soldiers.

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    Command of the Azov units reports that in the past several days of fighting, the 1st Army Corps has eliminated 271 Russian soldiers, wounded over 101, and has taken 13 Russian men as prisoners of war. Geolocated combat footage shows Ukrainian drones dropping grenades on Russian soldiers in fields and captured Ukrainian-made fortifications, fiber optic FPV’s eliminating Russians in houses and around the settlements, and four young Russian men having been taken prisoner after immediately surrendering to Ukrainian forces once the counterattacks commenced.

    Notably, while Russians have crossed the Kazenyi Torets River, they did not take control of any major river crossings or a particularly wide base to transfer manpower and logistics over. Therefore, Russian sources report that Ukraine’s highly mobile drone detachments have now focused their fire on the base of the Russian salient at the river.

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    Russian analysts note they have completely lost control over this area, as Ukrainians have now officially and effectively cut off the Russian breakthrough through drone fire control, without having to expend any manpower to conduct a physical counterattack. Notably, Ukrainians were then able to physically move into Nykanorivka and Nove Sakhove, with the rest of the area being returned to the grey zone and under tight Ukrainian drone control.

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    Overall, Ukrainians have curbed the immediate threat of the Russian Dobropillia breakthrough and completed the encirclement of an estimated 800 Russian soldiers, hundreds of whom have already been eliminated in the fighting of the past few days. The Azov army corps’ decisive actions have been highly successful, blunting the Russian spearhead, pushing Russian forces away from critical supply lines, dismantling additional attempts to branch out, encircling Russians in several pockets with little cover to hide, and most importantly, clearing Russians out of the New Donbas Defense line; eliminating the operational-level threat posed by the Russian salient only days earlier.

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    Now, Ukrainians are poised to finish the job, to completely destroy what remains of the already brutalized Russian soldiers.

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    In our regular frontline report, we pair up with the military blogger Reporting from Ukraine to keep you informed about what is happening on the battlefield in the Russo-Ukrainian war.

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    Ukrainian sniper pulls off record 4-km shot that killed two Russians. Yes, it took AI

    A Ukrainian sniper from the elite Pryvyd (“Ghost”) unit has reportedly killed two Russian soldiers with a single bullet through the window of an occupied building from an extraordinary 2.5 miles (4,000 m) away — believed to be the longest confirmed sniper kill ever recorded.

    The shot took place on 14 August, between Myrnohrad and Pokrovsk in eastern Donetsk Oblast, just as Russia claimed a breakthrough near Pokrovsk. Although Ukrainian forces have pressed back with some success, the battle remains fierce. At the same time, President Vladimir Putin demanded that Ukraine withdraw from Donetsk and Luhansk to end the war — a proposal Kyiv firmly rejected, insisting it will not surrender land still under its control.

    A Ukrainian sniper may have set a world record.

    From 4 km (2.5 miles), one round hit a window—
    🎯 2 Russian soldiers fell instantly.

    The rifle: a 14.5 mm Snipex Alligator.
    The assist: drones + AI.

    If confirmed, it’s the longest sniper shot ever reported.

    Video: Butusov+ pic.twitter.com/zxB16TW0pa

    — Euromaidan Press (@EuromaidanPress) August 17, 2025

    How it happened: Tech meets precision

    • Rifle Used: 14.5 mm Snipex Alligator, an anti-materiel rifle originally meant to destroy equipment, not personnel. Its official effective range is 2,000 m—only half the distance achieved in this shot.
    • Guidance Tools: The sniper used AI-assisted targeting and drone surveillance to calibrate the record-breaking strike.

    Journalist Yurii Butusov released the footage and praised the performance:

    “Incredible accuracy and a new world record for the longest range!” he wrote on Telegram.


    Shattering sniper records

    If confirmed, this milestone surpasses the previous Ukrainian record of 3,800 m, set by Vyacheslav Kovalskyi in November 2023 with the Lord of the Horizon rifle.

    Other historic long-range marks include:

    • 3,540 m — Canadian sniper vs. ISIS fighter (2017)
    • 2,478 m — British sniper Craig Harrison vs. Taliban fighter (2009)
    B32 14.5×114 mm armor-piercing cartridge for the Alligator rifle. Photo: Defense Express

    Innovation born of necessity

    Since Russia’s full-scale invasion in February 2022, Ukraine has become a testing ground for battlefield innovation. Sniper teams now regularly combine drones, AI software, and forward observers, often surpassing the original limits of their hardware.

    As Defence Express noted:

    “Real-life experience has shown … the actual capabilities of Ukrainian weapons, which have far exceeded their creators’ expectations.”

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    •  

    Pokrovsk cleared of Russian infiltrators — but Dobropillia front still unstable, Ukrainian military says

    pokrovsk cleared russian infiltrators — dobropillia front still unstable ukrainian military says situation northern donetsk oblast 16 2025 pokrovsk-kostiantynivka-direction ukraine’s defense forces liberated several surrounding villages near general staff said

    Ukraine’s Defense Forces cleared Pokrovsk of Russian infiltrators in Donetsk Oblast and liberated several surrounding villages near Dobropillia. On 17 August, the GenStaff said stabilization actions continue in the area as Ukrainian units fight to secure the frontline.

    This comes as Russia continues its all-out war against Ukraine, focusing on capturing the rest of eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast. Meanwhile, US President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin press Ukraine to surrender Donetsk Oblast — including its strongest defensive line — to Russia in exchange for alleged Russian ceasefire guarantees. Ceding the oblast would make Ukraine significantly more vulnerable to further Russian attacks, especially since Russia has consistently violated every ceasefire in Ukraine.

    Ukrainian troops clear Pokrovsk and villages near Dobropillia

    The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine said the 7th Air Assault Corps, together with supporting units, eliminated Russian infiltrators in Pokrovsk. Ukraine’s Defense Forces also cleared Hruzke, Rubizhne, Novovodiane, Petrovka, Vesele, and Zolotyi Kolodiaz in Donetsk Oblast. The first corps of the National Guard Azov unit joined the battles and helped reclaim the villages.

    The Deep State war zone monitoring map, updated on 16 August, shows that Ukrainian troops cut apart the recent Russian “double panhandle” breakthrough near Dobropillia and surrounded its northern prongs.

    The Russian breakthrough near Dobropillia has been dissected and villages liberated or cleared up from Russian infiltrators. Source: DeepState Map

    Russian forces suffer heavy losses in Donetsk Oblast

    From 4 to 16 August, Ukrainian forces killed 910 Russian soldiers, wounded 335, and captured 37, according to the General Staff. Ukrainian strikes also destroyed eight tanks, six armored vehicles, 103 auto and motor vehicles, one multiple launch rocket system, 18 artillery guns, and 91 drones.

    The General Staff said Ukrainian units continue stabilization operations near Dobropillia in Donetsk Oblast.

    Ukrainian advance in Sumy Oblast

    On 16 August, Ukrainian units advanced in several locations on the North Slobozhansky axis. In particular, the Defense Forces gained up to 1,000 meters near Yablunivka in Sumy Oblast, according to the General Staff.

    Russian bridgehead in northern Sumy Oblast. Map: DeepState.

     

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    Russia launched 60 drones and a missile overnight—Ukraine downed 40, but 12 locations still hit

    russia launched 60 drones missile overnight—ukraine downed 40 12 locations still hit italmas uav — russia's simplified shahed download early hours 17 shahed-type one iskander-m five across its territory ukraine’s

    In the early hours of 17 August, Russia launched 60 long-range drones and one Iskander-M missile from five locations across its territory. Ukraine’s Air Force reported that 40 drones were destroyed or suppressed, but 12 locations were hit in Kharkiv, Donetsk, and Dnipropetrovsk oblasts.

    Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Moscow continues it daily air attacks against Ukrainian civilians. Last night, the Russians targeted the frontline areas in three regions.

    Russia launches 60 drones and a missile, strikes 12 targets

    According to the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, the attack began at 19:30 on 16 August and included both Shahed-type one-way attack UAVs and decoy drones launched from Kursk, Bryansk, Millerovo, Shatalovo and Primorsko-Akhtarsk. Ukrainian defenses used mobile fire groups and electronic warfare systems to counter the assault.

    As of 09:00 on 17 August, 40 drones had been downed or neutralized. However, the ballistic missile and 20 drones reached their targets.

    The Air Force confirmed strikes in 12 locations across the three frontline oblasts.

    Drone strike injures woman in Sloviansk

    Vadym Liakh, head of Sloviansk’s City Military Administration, said the Russian Shahed attack injured a woman in the city last night.

    On the evening of Saturday, 16 August, the city came under two enemy attacks. Around 18:15: Zaliznychnyi neighborhood. Detached housing area. A woman was injured. Homes were damaged. Around 19:30″ Lymany neighborhood. Detached housing area. Homes were damaged. In both cases, Italmas drones were used,” Liakh wrote.

    The mentioned Italmas UAVs also known as Izdeliye 45 is a simplified and cheaper version of the Iranian-designed Shahed 136 long-range kamikaze drone.

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    144 Russian prison guards exposed for torturing Ukrainian POWs—investigation reveals daily routine of cruelty and family life

    144 russian prison guards exposed torturing ukrainian pows—investigation reveals daily routine cruelty family life three identified wardens — denis mirchev vitali sterzhanov alexei glaizer involved prisoners cover molfar intelligence institute's

    A new investigation by a Ukrainian NGO has identified 144 Russian prison wardens responsible for Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs). The registry names those accused of systemic torture, daily abuse, and coercion in detention facilities across Russia and occupied Ukrainian territories.

    Since 2014, Russian military forces have engaged in systematic violations of international humanitarian law in Ukraine, including targeted attacks on civilian infrastructure, mass killings of non-combatants, forced deportations, and the use of banned chemical weapons. Against prisoners of war specifically, Russia has committed extensive violations including torture affecting 90-95% of POWs according to UN reports, summary executions of surrendering soldiers, and illegal trials in civilian courts rather than military tribunals.

    Registry exposes 144 Russian wardens of Ukrainian POWs

    Working with Ukraine’s Security Service (SBU), the Molfar Intelligence Institute, a Ukrainian open-source intelligence NGO, reported that 144 employees of detention facilities across Russia and occupied Ukrainian territories have been identified as jailers responsible for Ukrainian POWs.

    The prison guards in question are the employees of:

    • Colony No. 36 in the city of Sukhodilsk (occupied Luhansk Oblast);
    • Correctional Colony (CC) No. 38 in the city of Sverdlovsk (Dovzhansk) (occupied Luhansk Oblast);
    • Kalininska CC No. 27 in the city of Horlivka (occupied Donetsk Oblast);
    • State Institution “Donetsk Pre-trial Detention Center of the State Penitentiary Service of the Ministry of Justice of the DNR”, in occupied Donetsk city;
    • CC No. 2 in the village of Donskoye, Tula region, Russian Federation;
    • Federal State Institution “Pre-trial Detention Center No. 2”, Stary Oskol, Belgorod Oblast, Russian Federation;
    • Federal State Institution “Pre-trial Detention Center No. 2”, Taganrog, Rostov Oblast, Russian Federation.

    Most of the jailers mentioned in the investigation work at the notorious Taganrog facility.

    The registry contains data on rank and position, place of work, known addresses and contacts, passports and other documents, as well as information about relatives and additional details about each identified individual.

    Tetiana Katrychenko, executive director of a project documenting prisoners, described Taganrog as “hell on earth.” She noted that Azovstal defenders held there since 2022 faced brutal torture and were forced to incriminate themselves before transfer to Rostov courts.

    Ukrainian journalist Viktoriia Roshchyna was also held in Taganrog. She went missing in August 2023 and was later confirmed to have been detained by Russian authorities. She died in captivity in September 2024 allegedly during a prison transfer, according to Russian officials. Her body, showing clear signs of torture, was returned to Ukraine in February 2025, and a farewell ceremony was held in Kyiv in August 2025.

    Ukrainian journalist Viktoriia Roshchyna who died in Russian captivity and her body was returned to Ukraine with signs of torture and missing vital organs.
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    Ukrainian journalist Victoria Roshchyna suffered neck injuries, fractures in Russian captivity – new autopsy

    Daily lives of 144 Russian wardens of Ukrainian POWs

    The Molfar Intelligence Institute emphasized that many of the 144 identified continue to live ordinary lives. Its report described them commuting to shifts, greeting colleagues, chatting about utilities and coffee, then taking part in torture sessions before returning to families in apartments.

    Russians abuse and torture Ukrainian prisoners in a territory closed to the eyes of human rights defenders,” the Institute says.

    The report details information on three jailers.

    Profiles of three wardens

    One case is Denis Mirchev, an ensign at the Stary Oskol detention center in Belgorod Oblast. According to former prisoners, he conducted searches of Ukrainian captives. Investigators linked him to social media activity including comments on posts by Ukrainian musician Yarmak, now commander of a combat drone unit. Records also show Mirchev’s bankruptcy attempts over debts exceeding one million rubles.

    Another prison worker is Vitali Sterzhanov, a Ukrainian citizen who now heads a Russian-run colony in occupied Luhansk Oblast. Ukrainian prosecutors charged him in March 2024 under article 111-1 of the criminal code for joining an illegal occupation body. Registry data shows Sterzhanov’s family also involved in pro-Russian activities, with his mother supporting the so-called “LNR” armed formations and his brother publicly backing the full-scale invasion.

    2011 photo of Vitali Sterzhanov at his wedding to his now wife Yelena, from his Odnoklassniki account.

    The report further describes Alexei Glaizer, deputy head of the Taganrog pretrial detention center. He previously led Rostov detention center no. 1 and declared assets including a Kia Rio and a Rostov apartment. According to insider accounts, enforcement proceedings were opened against him in 2018 over debts. Investigators documented his marriages and residences in Taganrog, presenting him as another official balancing family life with systemic abuse of Ukrainian POWs.

    Wider implications

    The registry’s scope cannot be fully covered in one release. Instead, the Molfar Intelligence Institute has published an open database called “Russian jailers of Ukrainian prisoners,” listing names, photos, documents, family ties, and workplaces. Officials stressed that no rank, change of surname, or hidden address will protect those responsible from eventual justice.

    Those employees of pretrial detention centers and colonies who treat Ukrainian prisoners harshly feel safe in Russia. We are convinced that each of them must bear responsibility and believe that they will not be able to escape civilized justice by hiding behind the thick walls of a pretrial detention center, changing their names, or hiding behind an interest in the history of Ukrainian nationalism,” the MII noted regarding making the resistry public.

    The current number of Ukrainian POWs in Russian captivity is not publicly known. Ukraine’s deputy prime minister Iryna Vereshchuk previously said that as of 1 May 2025, about 8,000 Ukrainians remain in Russian captivity. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced on 21 March 2025 that Ukraine had returned 4,306 POWs since the start of the full-scale invasion.

    Every day in captivity for a Ukrainian is torture. Russians must understand that they will be held responsible for crimes against humanity. They will not be protected by official positions, changes of surname, or re-registration of residential addresses,” the report noted.

    Call for action

    Ukraine’s Center for Countering Disinformation emphasizes that Russia is using prisoners as a propaganda tool. Moscow uses prisoners for staged photos and interviews designed to discredit Kyiv. According to the center and Ukrainian defense forces, Azovstal defenders have been coerced into participating in such propaganda, which violates articles 13 and 14 of the Geneva convention. Analysts say these operations target Western audiences, aiming to fracture support for Ukraine and undermine prisoner exchange agreements.

    ” it is necessary to strengthen control over compliance with international humanitarian law and monitor cases of forced use of prisoners in propaganda. Abuse of human dignity for political purposes must receive a strong global response,” the Molfar Intelligence Institute stressed. 

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    Frontline report: Russian commanders vanish after questioning orders of “meat grinder” near Pokrovsk

    A screenshot from the RFU News - Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    Today, there are interesting updates from the Pokrovsk direction, Donetsk Oblast.

    Here, the Russian command is increasing the use of suicide squads to try to infiltrate Pokrovsk and reach its outskirts. With the Ukrainian defense on high alert, 80% of the Russians are destroyed even before reaching the town, with deceived migrants and forcibly mobilized Ukrainian separatists being thrown into the meat grinder as cannon fodder and acceptable casualties.

    Russian forces recently attempted one of their most ambitious infiltration missions yet to penetrate Pokrovsk from the south. Using Pishchane as a forward base, the Russian command formed three tactical groups of 50 men each, tasked with sabotage inside the city. Their goal was to sow panic behind the frontline and force Ukrainian units to abandon positions, as has happened in other settlements along the front.

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    The infiltration route took 14 days in total: four to reach Pishchane’s industrial zone used as a launch point, and another ten to creep towards the main streets in southern Pokrovsk. Moving roughly 600 meters per day to avoid detection, they relied on drone drops for food, water, and communication updates. 

    Despite careful coordination, camouflage ponchos, and preloaded route trackers, Ukrainian drones intercepted and eliminated most of the saboteurs, as of the original 150 infiltrators, around 120 were killed before even reaching their objectives as confirmed by geolocated footage. 

    The remainder were hunted down inside the city, with Ukrainian units releasing more footage of how some of the Russians surrendered, while others were eliminated in close combat.

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    The cost to Russia was staggering, as the operation incurred roughly 80% casualties just to reach Pokrovsk, not counting those later captured or killed after arrival. While a handful of infiltrators ambushed Ukrainian units, the mission failed to achieve its operational aim. 

    The Ukrainian Defense Forces not only retained control but also captured dozens of enemy troops. Fighters of Ukraine’s 425th Skala Separate Assault Regiment took 32 prisoners over a week of clearing operations alone. Video evidence from the town shows Russian infiltrators being cleared from buildings and hiding spots, their weapons seized as trophies.

    Yet such attritional losses have not dissuaded Russian commanders. On the eastern flank of Pokrovsk, where fighting is intensifying, Moscow is preparing more expendable suicide squads. An entire brigade here is being staffed with deceived migrants from Central Asia and Donetsk People’s Republic volunteers, most of whom are forcibly mobilized men from Russian-controlled Donetsk. 

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    These units, poorly trained and often unwilling, are tasked with advancing toward Pokrovsk’s eastern outskirts to overwhelm defenses through sheer numbers. Since 2014, many DNR formations have been filled with marginalized individuals and criminals, commanded by Russian officers. 

    Now, this volatile mix is being hurled into the bloodiest sector of the front with minimal expectation of survival, with these migrants and separatists being seen as expendable by Russian command.

    The brutality extends up the chain of command, as reports from Russian military analysts indicate that separatist officers who question orders or show reluctance to sacrifice their men in large numbers often simply disappear. 

    Two battalion commanders in the so-called DNR’s 5th Brigade went missing in five days after being summoned by superiors. In one case, the wife of a vanished commander was told he had run away, but no further contact has been made. Such disappearances serve as a warning: obedience is enforced through fear, and dissent is erased without a trace.

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    Overall, despite the chaos these infiltration attempts cause for the defenders, the general picture in Pokrovsk remains in Ukraine’s favor. The destruction of the southern sabotage groups, combined with the capture of surviving infiltrators, shows that the Russian command is gambling everything for even minor symbolic gains in Pokrovsk.

    With success rates near zero, and casualty rates between 80 and 100%, these operations are less about achieving breakthroughs and more about demonstrating activity to higher political leadership. Ukrainian forces remain on high alert, aware that similar infiltration patterns are now being tested from the east. 

    A screenshot from the RFU News – Reporting from Ukraine YouTube video.

    For now, Pokrovsk holds, but the Russians appear willing to keep feeding cannon fodder into the grinder in a desperate bid to change that, regardless of the human cost.

    In our regular frontline report, we pair up with the military blogger Reporting from Ukraine to keep you informed about what is happening on the battlefield in the Russo-Ukrainian war.




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    Russian Grad and tank wiped out in Donetsk by Ukraine’s Phoenix drone unit drones in one mission (video)

    russian grad tank wiped out donetsk ukraine's phoenix drone unit drones one mission before-and-after frames bm-21 multiple launch rocket system destroyed ukraine’s oblast state border guard service ukraine russian-grad ukrainian

    Ukrainian border guard drones from the Phoenix unit have destroyed a Russian BM-21 Grad multiple launch rocket system, a main battle tank, and up to 10 Russian soldiers in Donetsk Oblast. On 14 August, the State Border Guard Service released footage of the strikes, showing FPV drones hitting the targets with precision.

    The State Border Guard Service did not specify the exact sector of the operation. Eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast remains the hottest area on the front, with Russian forces using large numbers of troops in ongoing attempts to seize the remaining parts of the oblast, capturing several major urban agglomerations.
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    Phoenix unit hits Russian Grad, tank, infantry in Donetsk Oblast

    According to the Border Guard Service, the operation targeted high-value Russian assets in the oblast. In addition to the Grad and the tank, the strikes destroyed a UAZ-452 “Bukhanka” van, a Ural military truck, other vehicles, several motorcycles used for troop movement, and fortified positions.

    The released video shows FPV drones striking Russian soldiers, on foot and vehicles, the Grad launcher on the move, and the tank — the latter positioned inside a building at the moment of impact.

    Around 10 Russian soldiers killed

    Preliminary assessments by the Border Guard Service suggest the operation eliminated about ten Russian soldiers. 

    Phoenix

    Defense Express, commenting on the released video, reported that the border guard pilots used unmanned aerial systems capable of both reconnaissance and precision strikes, allowing the unit to operate deep inside contested areas while minimizing exposure to Russian air defenses.

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    From Kharkiv to Kherson, Russia’s war on civilians kills again in latest day of strikes

    kharkiv kherson russia’s war civilians kills again latest day strikes iranian-designed shahed 136 drone hulls russian factory twz shahed-136-factory ukraine’s air force said intercepted 63 97 drones overnight 15 along

    Ukraine’s Air Force said it intercepted 63 of 97 Russian drones overnight on 15 August. Russia also launched two Iskander-M missiles. Despite most drones being destroyed, the strikes killed and injured civilians in Kharkiv, Sumy, Donetsk, and Kherson oblasts, damaging homes, cars, farms, and infrastructure in at least 13 locations.

    Amid the ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war, Moscow continues its daily long-range explosive drone attacks against Ukrainian cities, targeting civilians.

    Nationwide civilian toll in latest wave of attacks

    The Air Force reported that Shahed attack drones, decoy UAVs, and ballistic missiles were launched from five directions, targeting both frontline and rear settlements. Aircraft, electronic warfare units, and mobile fire groups were used to repel the assault, but local officials in four oblasts confirmed fresh deaths and injuries alongside severe property damage.

    Impacts from missiles and 34 UAVs were recorded at 13 locations,” the Air Force reported.

    Kharkiv Oblast: four killed, two injured

    Kharkiv Oblast head Oleh Synehubov said Russian forces attacked five settlements in the last 24 hours, killing four people and injuring two.

    Russian attacks killed a 64-year-old man in Kozacha Lopan. In Nechvolodivka, Russian forces killed a 69-year-old man and a 69-year-old woman and injured a 76-year-old woman. In Nova Kozacha, Russian strikes killed a 38-year-old man and injured another 38-year-old man. The attacks damaged detached houses in Kozacha Lopan and Nova Kozacha, two houses and a car in Nechvolodivka, and a garage, two cars, a tractor, and a vegetable storage building in Borova. Russian forces used guided aerial bombs, a Molniya drone, FPV drones, and other UAVs.

    Sumy Oblast

    The Sumy Oblast Military Administration reported 100 strikes on 46 settlements in 16 communities between the morning of 14 August and the morning of 15 August.

    In Miropilska community, a 32-year-old man was injured by an FPV drone. In Sumska community, a gas station was hit by a Russian UAV, burning a civilian vehicle and injuring its driver, who suffered burns. Damage was reported to houses, apartment buildings, civilian cars, and non-residential buildings in Bilopilska, Velykopysarivska, Vorozhbianska, and Hlukhovska communities. Russian forces used guided bombs, multiple rocket launchers, FPV drones, and other UAVs. Eleven people were evacuated from border areas during the day.

    Donetsk Oblast: two killed, seven injured

    Donetsk Oblast head Vadym Filashkin said Russian shelling on 14 August killed two civilians — one in Kostyantynivka and one in Virivka — and injured seven others across the oblast

    Kherson Oblast: Russian “human safari” continues

    The Kherson Oblast Military Administration’s morning report, covering 06:00 on 14 August to 06:00 on 15 August, said Russian artillery and drone attacks on more than 40 settlements killed one person and injured five others, including a child. Damage included apartment buildings, 22 detached houses, gas pipelines, outbuildings, and a private car.

    This morning, around 08:00 on 15 August, Russian artillery hit central Kherson, injuring a 52-year-old man. Another update said a 40-year-old Kherson resident was injured in the same shelling, suffering blast injuries and a concussion. Also around 08:00, a drone struck a home in Kherson, injuring a 45-year-old woman with a concussion and head injuries.

    Additional information emerged about earlier shelling in Shliakhove, Beryslav community, which killed two men aged 86 and 56 several days before. Later still, three medical workers — two women aged 47 and a 28-year-old man — sought treatment for blast injuries and concussions sustained in a previous day’s Russian shelling of Kherson.

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    Anchorage braces for Trump–Putin summit today as protests warn of deal over Ukraine

    anchorage braces trump–putin summit today protests warn deal over ukraine nancy mcmanamin originally alaska now living seattle holds sign reading “zelenskyy here” during pro-ukraine rally marc lester / daily news

    Alaska’s Anchorage is preparing for the 15 August meeting between US President Donald Trump and Russian leader Vladimir Putin, as local protesters warn it could lead to a deal undermining Ukraine. The meeting is scheduled for 11:00 a.m. Alaska time (22:00 Kyiv time) at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, a Cold War–era military installation once used to counter the Soviet Union.

    Since taking office in January, Trump has failed to make any tangible progress toward ending Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine, despite repeatedly promising to end it within 24 hours. The main obstacle is that Russia has not altered its war goals, which amount to Ukraine’s capitulation, and continues to reject any compromises.

    Trump and Putin’s first meeting since White House return

    This will be the first face-to-face meeting between Trump and Putin since Trump returned to the presidency this January. According to the White House, Trump will leave Washington at 06:45 Eastern time (13:45 Kyiv time) and return early on 16 August, Reuters reports. The Kremlin initially claimed the meeting would begin at 11:30 a.m. local time (22:30 Kyiv time).

    Trump previously told reporters on 14 August that he would know “in the first few minutes” whether the meeting was worth continuing, adding it would “end very quickly” otherwise. He said his aim was to “set the table” for another meeting that would also involve Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

    Speaking to Fox News Radio, Trump said there was a “25% chance” the Alaska talks would fail, according to BBC. He also said “give and take” on boundaries between Russia and Ukraine might be necessary, prompting concern in Kyiv and among allies.

    Putin’s praise and demands

    AP says Putin praised what he described as Trump’s “sincere efforts” to end Russia’s war in Ukraine. The Russian leader suggested long-term peace could include a nuclear arms control agreement with the US.

    Russia demands for a full ceasefire include complete control of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, full occupation of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, NATO membership ruled out for Kyiv, and limits on Ukraine’s armed forces.

    Ukraine rejects these conditions as surrender. A Kremlin source told Reuters some terms could be agreed due to sanctions pressure, but both sides would allegedly face “uncomfortable compromises.”

    European and Ukrainian concerns

    BBC notes that Zelenskyy and European leaders fear Trump could make concessions without Ukraine’s participation. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer met Zelenskyy in London on 14 August and warned that “international borders cannot be, and must not be changed by force.” Macron said Trump had clarified NATO would not be part of any future security guarantees, but the US and other parties should be involved.

    The New York Times reports that five principles agreed in a call between Trump and European leaders include keeping Ukraine “at the table” for follow-up talks, avoiding land swaps before a ceasefire, securing postwar guarantees, and increasing pressure on Russia if negotiations fail.

    Putin-Trump alaska meeting
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    The peace that kills: How the Alaska summit could end Ukraine without ending the war

    Protests in Anchorage ahead of summit

    Anchorage Daily News reports that on 14 August, several hundred demonstrators lined busy intersections in Anchorage, waving Ukrainian flags and holding signs critical of both Trump and Putin. One sign read “Putin won’t stop at Ukraine,” while another declared “Zelenskyy should be here,” reflecting demands that Ukraine be included in the talks.

    Protesters told ADN they feared the summit would exclude Kyiv from decisions affecting its future. Organizers plan additional demonstrations during the summit, while the Alaska GOP will hold a rally in support of Trump at the same location.

    “I’m here protesting to show support for Ukraine and the war effort, but also to protest a war criminal being on US soil, specifically Alaska soil, and also protesting authoritarianism and fascism in general, which Putin and Trump both embody,” one protester told Euromaidan Press.

    BBC reported that Ukrainian MP Oleksandr Merezhko said he has “no high expectations” for the Alaska meeting, calling it “already a diplomatic win” for Putin. He warned that “the fate of Ukraine should be decided by Ukrainians” with the direct participation of President Zelenskyy, and said the lack of transparency around the summit creates “lots of risks” for Ukraine’s security and future.

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    “Get out now”: Ukraine tells families to flee as 5 more Donetsk towns face Russian guns closing in

    Authorities in Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast have expanded the mandatory evacuation zone for families with children, adding five new settlements due to intensifying Russian attacks. The decision was announced by Vadym Filashkin, head of the Donetsk Regional Military Administration (RMA), on 14 August.

    Why Druzhkivka matters

    Druzhkivka, an industrial city of strategic importance, lies about 80 km northeast of Donetsk City and has remained under Ukrainian control since 2014. Once home to nearly 54,000 residents, its population has dropped sharply due to displacement. Its position along key transport routes makes it a vital defensive and logistical hub.

    The new mandate covers Druzhkivka, Andriivka, Varvarivka, Novoandriivka, and Rohanske in the Andriivka community, where about 1,879 children currently live.

    Escalating threats and governor’s warning

    The evacuation decision followed a meeting of the regional commission on technogenic and environmental safety and emergency situations. Filashkin cited relentless Russian shelling—around 3,000 strikes daily—and urged parents to act:

    “Take care of your loved ones — your children. Evacuate in time. Evacuate while it is still possible. Protect your loved ones and do not put them in danger.”

    Children will be evacuated only with parents or legal guardians, using a coordinated process involving regional authorities, law enforcement, and local administrations.

    Donetsk Oblast expanded mandatory evacuation to five more settlements amid rising Russian attacks. Photo: Vadym Filashkin via Facebook

    Russian breakthrough near Pokrovsk raises alarm

    Recent battlefield developments have amplified the urgency. Russian forces achieved a narrow but significant breakthrough north of Pokrovsk, advancing up to 17 km and seizing positions threatening Ukrainian supply lines. Another push near Dobropillia reached the Dobropillia–Kramatorsk highway, a key route for military logistics.

    While Ukrainian commanders report stabilizing the front with reinforcements, analysts warn these advances could shift the strategic balance and increase risks for nearby civilian areas, including Druzhkivka.

    dnipro command flatly denies deepstate report russian control near donetsk's dobropillia deep state russian-breakthrough-donetsk-oblast ukraine’s donetsk oblast's saying troops eliminate every enemy infiltrator shortest possible time statement followed osint frontline-monitoring
    Map: Deep State

    Background on evacuations in Donetsk

    Mandatory evacuations began in March 2023 in Bakhmut during heavy fighting. Since then, similar operations have taken place in Kryvorizka, Dobropilska, Druzhkivska, Lymanska, and Bilozerska communities as the front line has approached.

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    ISW: Russia’s pre-Alaska-summit position leaves no path to genuine talks — it just confirmed its peace plan still means Ukraine’s capitulation

    isw russia’s pre-alaska-summit position leaves path genuine talks — just confirmed its peace plan still means ukraine’s capitulation putin gives trump soccer ball press conference following one-on-one (with translators only)

    The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) reported on 13 August that Russian officials will arrive at the 15 August Trump-Putin summit in Alaska with the same war aims they have maintained for years — the complete political and military capitulation of Ukraine.

    According to ISW, Russian Foreign Ministry Deputy Director of the Information and Press Department Alexei Fadeev said the Kremlin’s position had not shifted since Vladimir Putin’s 14 June 2024 speech. Fadeev claimed the delegation’s goals were dictated “exclusively by national interests” and indicated that Russia would not consider any territorial concessions.

    Demands include land Russia doesn’t even control

    ISW noted that Putin’s 14 June list of ultimatums remains the blueprint for Russia’s stance. It orders Ukraine to withdraw entirely from Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson oblasts — including territories Russian forces do not occupy. It also requires Ukraine’s demilitarization and the so-called “denazification” of its government and society, a phrase ISW said the Kremlin uses to justify removing the country’s democratically elected leadership. Another demand is Ukraine’s “neutrality,” which ISW assessed is aimed at preventing NATO membership.

    ISW: Kremlin shows no interest in real negotiations

    ISW says Fadeev’s remarks confirm that Moscow “maintains its long-standing objectives in the war against Ukraine that amount to Ukraine’s full military and political capitulation to Russia and has not adjusted its position ahead of the Alaska summit.”

    Russian officials reiterated that Russia’s objectives in Ukraine remain unchanged ahead of the Alaska summit on August 15, once again demonstrating that the Kremlin remains uninterested in pursuing serious peace negotiations,” ISW wrote.

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    So you think Ukraine can just leave Donbas? It’s the shield forged in steel — and paid in blood

    As the Trump–Putin summit in Alaska draws near, one demand threatens to overshadow diplomacy: Russia insists Ukraine withdraw entirely from Donbas as part of a ceasefire deal. At first glance, giving up this embattled region might seem a way to halt a war with no clear endpoint.

    Yet the push for withdrawal raises a pressing question: can Ukraine truly afford to abandon Donbas? The stakes go beyond shifting lines on a map—it’s about the survival of Ukraine’s defenses, the fate of its heartland, and what kind of peace, if any, might follow.

    President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been unequivocal:

    “We will not leave Donbas. We cannot do this. Donbas is a springboard for Russia’s future offensive… They want to take about 9,000 square kilometers—around 30% of Donetsk Oblast—and that will be a platform for new aggression.”

    The term Donbas refers to two eastern Ukrainian regions: Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts. As of mid-2025, Russia occupies nearly all of Luhansk—about 99%—and roughly 75% of Donetsk, leaving only a narrow stretch under Ukrainian control.

    It is within this fractured and embattled landscape that Ukraine’s most critical defensive line—the fortress belt—has held firm.


    The fortress belt: Ukraine’s eastern shield

    The fortress belt stretches from Sloviansk through Kramatorsk to Druzhkivka and Kostyantynivka, a 50-kilometer chain of fortified towns and cities. It relies as much on geography as on engineering: Karachun Hill towers over the plain, rivers carve natural moats, and slag heaps, quarries, and railway embankments reinforce defensive positions.

    Victor Taran, a Ukrainian Armed Forces officer and co-founder of the “KRUK” UAV training center, captures its essence:

    “The paths into this agglomeration are mined, re-mined, and controlled with interlocking fire.”

    Within these urban zones, streets are blocked by tank traps and trenches; anti-drone nets span chokepoints. Just behind the front line lie the arteries of resistance—supply depots, repair hubs, and medical evacuation routes—all seamlessly integrated into defense.

    This fortress belt isn’t static—it’s a dynamic defense network, built over a decade. Recreating it farther west would mean starting from scratch, on flat, exposed steppe.


    Why the fortress belt matters

    According to the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), Russian forces have repeatedly failed to break through or encircle it. The belt’s cities aren’t mere strongpoints—they are the linchpin holding back the eastern advance. ISW notes that Russia’s demand for its surrender is a telling admission of its inability to take it by force alone.

    Ukraine’s “fortress belt” in Donetsk Oblast. Photo: ISW maps

    If the belt falls: Why geography turns against Ukraine

    Abandoning the fortress belt would push Ukraine’s front line 82 km west onto open fields—no hills, few settlements, no river buffers. This flat terrain is made for airpower and drones, not defense.

    Again, Taran warns:

    “Without the fortress belt, our troops would be in open fields. The Russians would kill them with bombs and missiles like in a shooting range.”


    The rebuilding problem

    To build a new defensive network farther west—in Kharkiv, Dnipropetrovsk, or Poltava oblasts—Ukraine would need months of engineering, vast resources, and unwavering Western support. And even then, the terrain offers no natural advantages like rivers, industrial strongpoints, or commanding elevations.

    Ruins in Kostyantynivka, Donetsk Oblast in July 2025. Photo: 93rd Brigade via Facebook

    A front under intensifying pressure

    Even without forced retreat, Ukrainian defenses are under growing strain. The situation in Donetsk Oblast worsens daily. Recently, Russian forces made their deepest breakthrough in more than a year near Pokrovsk, advancing 10–17 km into Ukrainian-held territory.

    Though narrow, this salient threatens to sever supply routes feeding the fortress belt. If it widens, Ukrainian positions in Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, and Druzhkivka could face isolation and collapse—a risk that underscores how close the danger already is.

    isw russia’s dobropillya push isn’t operational-level breakthrough — yet situation near pokrovsk dobropillia donetsk oblast direction 11 20 russian forces pushing premature call gains institute study war (isw) think tank
    Situation near Pokrovsk and Dobropillia, Donetsk Oblast. Map: ISW.

    A launchpad for the next offensive

    Without the fortress belt, Russia would gain a direct launchpad to strike deeper into Kharkiv, Dnipro, Zaporizhzhia, and Poltava. The terrain offers nothing to slow such an offensive—unless a strong, pre-prepared defense stands in the way.


    The historical warning

    In 1938, Czechoslovakia ceded its fortified Sudetenland to Nazi Germany, hoping for peace. Six months later, the entire country was occupied. History teaches us: surrendering fortified ground to an expansionist power rarely ends wars—it triggers the next.

    Ukrainian soldiers in Donetsk Oblast. Photo: 93rd Brigade via Facebook

    What’s really at stake

    Donbas is more than scarred land—it is the cradle of Ukraine’s eastern defense. Surrendering it isn’t neutral—it is giving up the very shield that has held since 2014.

    The question remains: can Ukraine afford to abandon Donbas? Some may see it as a pathway to peace. But if peace means sacrificing its strongest defenses, it may be a peace paid for with its survival.


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    •  

    Azov Corps rushes to block Russian advance threatening key cities in Donetsk Oblast

    circus tank

    The 1st Corps of the National Guard Azov has taken defensive positions on the Pokrovsk front, moving to block Russian forces advancing in Donetsk Oblast, according to the corps’ official statement.

    The recent Russian breakthrough towards Dobropillia threatens the defense of Pokrovsk. Russian forces have been trying to take the city and surrounding areas since early 2024. 

    The deployment of one of Ukraine’s most disciplined and combat-experienced brigades comes as Russian forces have advanced more than 23 kilometers deep into Ukrainian positions toward the Dobropillia-Kramatorsk road. 

    Regular Ukrainian defensive units have proven unable to halt the advance in this critical sector, according to Ukrainska Pravda. The 23-kilometer Russian salient now sits equidistant between Pokrovsk and Kostiantynivka.  

    Elite units replace faltering defenses

    The corps moved into what has been described as “one of the most difficult sections of the front.” The area was previously defended by Tactical Group “Pokrovsk,” which “absolutely could not cope with defense on this section,” according to military sources.

    “The situation remains complex and dynamic,” Azov stated. “The enemy, trying to advance in that direction, suffers significant losses in personnel and equipment.”

    Corps units have “planned and implemented measures to block [Russian] forces in the designated area,” though results will be announced later.

    Recent weeks saw intensified pressure, with three sabotage groups of 50 personnel each infiltrating Pokrovsk itself. Ukrainian forces eliminated approximately 120 attackers while capturing others. 100,000 Russian troops are currently stationed in the area. 

    23-kilometer Russian salient threatens encirclement

    Russia’s 10-km breakthrough north of Pokrovsk, Donetsk Oblast. Photo: Deep State

    Russian forces have dramatically expanded their breakthrough along the Pokrovsk-Kostiantynivka road. What began as a 10-kilometer salient in May 2025 near Malynivka, Nova Poltavka, and Novoolenivka has now extended to 23 kilometers.

    On 11 August, DeepState analysts reported a Russian advance northeast of nearby Dobropillia, warning that “after final consolidation and accumulation, there will be mandatory attempts to move deeper into the territory.” 

    Ukraine’s Dnipro command disputed the implications of these advances, stating that Russian infiltration attempts “never lead to territorial capture” and that Ukrainian troops have eliminated infiltrators “in the shortest possible time.”

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    •  

    Trump can’t find Alaska on mental map—thinks he’s traveling to Russia for Putin talks

    trump can't find alaska mental map—thinks he's traveling russia putin talks president donald commenting russia's 25 air attack ukraine cap again falsely claimed ukraine's leader chose begin invasion said give

    US President Donald Trump confused Alaska with Russia, falsely claimed Ukraine started Russia’s invasion, and pushed for Ukrainian territorial concessions during an 11 August press conference. The President announced he was “going to Russia” for his 15 August Putin summit, apparently forgetting the meeting is in Alaska, while declaring Ukraine must accept “land swapping.”

    This comes as Russia continues its ongoing invasion of Ukraine.

    President mistakes US state for aggressor nation

    The Independent says that Trump told reporters from the White House briefing room:

    “I’m going to see Putin. I’m going to Russia on Friday.” 

    Trump’s geographical confusion sparked immediate social media reaction, WION notes. Users asked whether the US plans to give Alaska to Russia as part of Ukraine negotiations.

    USA Today reports the president confirmed the meeting location on Truth Social last week, writing:

    “The highly anticipated meeting between myself, as President of the United States of America, and President Vladimir Putin, of Russia, will take place next Friday, August 15, 2025, in the Great State of Alaska.”

    Trump falsely claims Ukraine started Russia’s invasion

    Trump also returned to Russian narratives by suggesting Ukraine somehow started Russia’s invasion of itself. Axios reports that Trump falsely suggested Zelenskyy chose to start the war. The President said he was “a little bothered” by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s weekend assertion that ceding territory would violate Ukraine’s Constitution.

    Reuters says Trump told the press conference:

    “He’s got approval to go into a war and kill everybody, but he needs approval to do a land swap?”

    Axios notes this represents a return to hostile treatment of the Ukrainian president after months of apparent warming between them.

    Trump pushes territorial concessions despite Ukrainian rejection

    “There’ll be some land swapping going on,” Trump declared, claiming to know this “through Russia and through conversations with everybody, to the good of Ukraine.

    USA Today says Trump claimed some moves would allegedly benefit Ukraine, while others would not.

    It’s very complex, because you have lines that are very uneven,” Trump stated per the outlet.

    European leaders reject concessions before ceasefire

    EU policy chief Kaja Kallas said:

    “Russia has not agreed to full and unconditional ceasefire, we should not even discuss any concessions.”

    Kallas emphasized that “transatlantic unity, support to Ukraine and pressure on Russia” were needed to end the war. The outlet notes she warned concessions would not prevent “future Russian aggression in Europe.”

    Trump reveals negotiation strategy without Ukraine

    According to Axios, Trump said he would call Zelenskyy after meeting Putin. The US President stated per the outlet:

    “I may say, ‘lots of luck, keep fighting.’ Or I may say, ‘we can make a deal.'”

    Trump also claimed he would know “probably in the first two minutes” whether progress with Putin was possible, according to Reuters. Trump plans to “feel out” Putin’s willingness to reach an agreement. 

    President cites misleading Ukrainian opinion data

    Axios reports that Trump falsely cited a poll claiming 88% of Ukrainians want immediate peace. The outlet clarifies the true Gallup figure is 69%, though this still represents a dramatic increase. Nevertheless, the desire for peace does not imply the support for ceding territories.

    According to Reuters, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer spoke with Canadian counterpart Mark Carney on 11 August. According to a Downing Street readout cited by Reuters, they agreed peace “must be built with Ukraine – not imposed upon it.

    Russian demands

    Kremlin officials reportedly demand Ukraine cede strategically vital unoccupied territory in Donetsk Oblast and freeze frontlines elsewhere as ceasefire conditions. Putin appears to offer deliberately unacceptable proposals to delay sanctions and meaningful negotiations while blaming Ukraine.

    Surrendering remaining Donetsk Oblast would force Ukraine to abandon its “fortress belt” defensive line maintained since 2014. This would position Russian forces to renew attacks on more favorable terms without guarantees fighting won’t resume.
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    •  

    Dnipro command flatly denies DeepState report of Russian control near Donetsk’s Dobropillia

    dnipro command flatly denies deepstate report russian control near donetsk's dobropillia deep state russian-breakthrough-donetsk-oblast ukraine’s donetsk oblast's saying troops eliminate every enemy infiltrator shortest possible time statement followed osint frontline-monitoring

    Ukraine’s Dnipro command denies Russian control near Donetsk Oblast’s Dobropillia, saying troops eliminate every enemy infiltrator “in the shortest possible time.” The statement followed OSINT frontline-monitoring project DeepState’s map reporting Russian forces advanced into several settlements in the Pokrovsk sector, threatening key cities.

    This comes as US President Donald Trump prepares for a meeting with Russia’s leader Vladimir Putin later this week. Russia, meanwhile, continues its war in Ukraine, focusing on capturing the rest of eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast. 

    Dnipro command disputes reported Russian gains

    The Operational-Strategic Grouping of Forces Dnipro, formerly Khortytsia, claims Russian forces attempt to infiltrate Ukrainian positions in the Dobropillia and Pokrovsk directions, but such actions never lead to territorial capture. The command explains that Russian troops, using their numerical advantage and suffering heavy losses, push small groups past the first defensive line.

    Officials state that infiltration incidents force Ukraine to deploy reserves to destroy the enemy, but this never equals taking control of the area. They warn that misunderstanding this distinction repeatedly leads to flawed analysis and public debate, particularly in the Pokrovsk–Myrnohrad urban area.

    Fierce battles but allegedly no lasting occupation

    The Dnipro Grouping acknowledges the situation remains difficult and that fighting in the Pokrovsk sector is among the most intense on the entire front line. However, it claims that all infiltrating Russian groups face destruction in the shortest possible time. The command urges the public not to spread information from unverified or poorly informed sources.

    DeepState earlier reported that Russian forces, through sustained pressure and larger infantry numbers, advanced into Kucheriv Yar and Zolotyi Kolodiaz, and also moved into Veselye, reportedly covering 9 to 15 km, according to DeepState’s interactive map. The OSINT project says Russian units try to entrench and build up forces in these settlements.

    The Dnipro command directly challenges this account, insisting the frontline near Dobropillia and Pokrovsk remains intact despite constant Russian attempts to break through.

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    •  

    Russia punches narrow hole in Ukraine’s Pokrovsk front — can Kyiv close it before it widens?

    Russian troops have advanced roughly 10 kilometers north of Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast, seizing key villages and cutting the Dobropillia–Kramatorsk highway near Novovodiane, according to the Ukrainian monitoring project DeepState. The breakthrough threatens a major supply artery and risks a deeper advance that could split Ukraine’s defensive front in Donetsk.

    DeepState reports the attack relied on sustained infantry pressure with superior numbers, allowing Russian units to capture Kucheriiv Yar and Zolotyi Kolodiaz. Both are now being used as staging grounds for further operations. From Kucheriiv Yar, Russian forces also infiltrated Vesele via treelines, with Ukrainian observers counting around two dozen enemy soldiers there in the past 24 hours.

    One frontline defender, quoted by DeepState, summed up the risk bluntly:

    “The worst part is that if they take these positions, we’ll never get them out.”


    Moscow’s demands before peace talks

    The advance comes just days before a planned Trump–Putin summit in Alaska on 15 August, where, according to Ukrainian and Western sources, Russia is expected to demand full control of Donetsk Oblast, including areas still under Ukrainian control.

    Pokrovsk, the southernmost city in Ukraine’s heavily fortified “fortress belt”—which also includes Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, Druzhkivka, and Kostiantynivka—has been under relentless Russian pressure for over a year. Its fall would threaten to unhinge the entire defensive line from the south.

    While military analysts note that taking Sloviansk or Kramatorsk could require years of sustained fighting, bypassing or capturing Pokrovsk could allow Russia to envelop the belt from the west and render its strongest fortifications less relevant.

    Assesed control of terrainin Donetsk Oblast, 10 August 2025. Photo: ISW map

    “This has been building for a long time”

    Defense analyst Bohdan Myroshnykov rejects the notion that the offensive is merely timed for political leverage before the summit.

    “I don’t believe the enemy threw everything into battle ahead of the Trump talks. This has been building for a long time,” he says.

    He points out that Russian forces are approaching their peak operational capacity and have redeployed units from Sumy Oblast to reinforce the Pokrovsk–Dobropillia axis. This groundwork was laid months ago with the capture of Koptyeve and advances near Novoeconomichne—small settlements that drew little public attention but were crucial staging points for today’s breakthrough.

    On Ukraine’s side, Myroshnykov cites disruption during the transfer of operational control from an operational-tactical group to corps-level command, creating “chaos in management.” Reinforcements have arrived, he says, but their full effect is still pending.


    Matveev: A push to cut the front

    Defense analyst Yan Matveev says the Russian advance began from Novotoretske, covering up to 10 kilometers in a single day to reach Kucheriiv Yar and Zolotyi Kolodiaz.

    “The goal is to seize Dobropillia and possibly Bilozerske, cut Pokrovsk’s supply routes, and split the Donetsk front in its center,” he warns.

    Matveev stresses that the situation in the center of the Donetsk front is becoming increasingly tense and difficult for the Ukrainian Armed Forces.

    “They still have a chance for counterattacks — the breakthrough is too narrow. But do they have the forces?”

    Such a move could force Ukrainian forces in Pokrovsk to retreat to avoid encirclement, destabilizing defensive lines further north.

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    A 155th Mechanized Brigade Leopard 2A4 in Pokrovsk.
    A 155th Mechanized Brigade Leopard 2A4 in Pokrovsk. 155th Mechanized Brigade photo.

    Mashovets: The 51st army at the fore

    Military analyst Kostiantyn Mashovets identifies the 51st Combined Arms Army of Russia’s Central Grouping of Forces as the main strike formation here. It has been reinforced by the 39th Motor Rifle Brigade from the 68th Army Corps and elements of the 2nd and 8th Combined Arms Armies.

    While the main push is toward Rodynske and Krasnyi Lyman, Russian commanders are also using small infiltration groups along the Novotoretske–Kucheriiv Yar line—a tactic they have refined through months of urban fighting.

    Rodynske and Krasnyi Lyman remain in Ukrainian hands, but Russian forward units have already reached Novoe Shakhove and Biletske east of Dobropillia.

    “If they continue north, they could undermine the defense not only of Dobropillia and Pokrovsk, but Druzhkivka and Kostiantynivka as well,” Mashovets warns. “The corridor they’re using is still thin, but cutting it now would be ideal—if we have the forces.”


    Multiple threat axes on Pokrovsk

    Even as Russia drives toward Dobropillia, it is tightening pressure directly on Pokrovsk from several directions. From the northeast, Russian forces have taken Suvorove and are assaulting Rodynske. From the southwest, small assault teams are fixing Ukrainian defenders in place and probing city outskirts.

    DeepState describes one infiltration attempt in detail: three Russian groups, each 50 soldiers strong, advanced over 10 days from Pishchane toward Zakhysnykiv Ukrainy Street in Pokrovsk. Supplied by drones with food, water, and communications equipment, they moved along pre-planned routes. Ukrainian drone strikes killed 120 of the 150 attackers before they reached their objectives. The survivors briefly occupied several buildings before being eliminated; a few remain unaccounted for.


    Fortifications bypassed

    Around Zolotyi Kolodiaz and Shakhove, Ukrainian engineers have built heavy fortifications—anti-tank ditches, earthworks, and reinforced positions (VOPs, ROPs). Instead of attacking them head-on, Russian forces have bypassed these defenses, leaving them intact and potentially usable if captured.

    This is why the soldier quoted by DeepState warned that retaking such positions would be nearly impossible once occupied.


    Drones in command of the battlefield

    The opening phase of the offensive relied heavily on drones to establish fire control over Ukrainian supply lines. Now, with the Dobropillia–Kramatorsk highway under Russian control, drones are expected to play an even bigger role in disrupting resupply efforts and troop movements into the threatened area.

    Ukrainian drone. Photo: General Staff

    Strategic implications

    The breach north of Pokrovsk is more than a local setback. Dobropillia’s fall would give Russia a platform to envelop Pokrovsk from the west or north, undermining Ukraine’s fortress belt from its southernmost point.

    While Sloviansk and Kramatorsk are formidable objectives that could take years to capture, bypassing them through Pokrovsk and Dobropillia would neutralize much of their strategic value.

    DeepState warns that without a timely counterattack, Dobropillia could fall before Pokrovsk, potentially forcing Ukraine into difficult decisions about holding ground versus preserving manpower.

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    •  

    DeepState: Russians breach near Pokrovsk, cut highway toward Dobropillia in Donetsk Oblast

    dnipro command flatly denies deepstate report russian control near donetsk's dobropillia deep state russian-breakthrough-donetsk-oblast ukraine’s donetsk oblast's saying troops eliminate every enemy infiltrator shortest possible time statement followed osint frontline-monitoring

    Russian forces have made a limited breakthrough north of Pokrovsk, advancing about 15 kilometers and driving toward Dobropillia, according to the OSINT project DeepStateMap. The advance threatens a key logistics corridor and could deepen Russian penetration of Ukrainian defensive lines in Donetsk Oblast.

    This comes as US President Donald Trump’s deadline for Russia to agree to a ceasefire passed without result. Trump announced plans to meet Russian leader Vladimir Putin instead of imposing new sanctions or tariffs on Russia. Moscow demands that Ukraine cede the remainder of Donetsk Oblast for a ceasefire, offering no guarantees in return.

    Russians advance 15 kilometers in five days

    DeepState reports that Russian troops broke through a narrow front section. The enemy advanced approximately 15 kilometers into Ukrainian defensive positions over five days starting 7 August.

    Militarnyi notes that DeepState analysts confirmed Russian penetration into Kucheriv Yar and Zolotyi Kolodiaz settlements. The General Staff of Ukraine’s Armed Forces map confirms the breakthrough as of 8:00 AM on 11 August 2025.

    Russian infantry units infiltrated Vesele village from Kucheriv Yar through tree lines. DeepState observed about twenty enemy soldiers accumulating in this village over the past day.

    Russians target critical infrastructure

    Russia continues developing success toward the Dobropillia-Kramatorsk highway. Russian infantry appeared near Novovodiane and Petrivka as they push forward.

    DeepState notes the situation remains chaotic. The enemy exploits defense gaps to penetrate deep behind Ukrainian positions. Russian forces quickly establish positions and accumulate troops for further advances.

    The Zolotyi Kolodiaz and Shakhove area contains new heavy engineering fortifications under construction. Enemy forces bypass these structures and may later occupy them for defensive purposes.

    Strategic implications threaten multiple cities

    The narrow breakthrough spans approximately 15 kilometers deep and 5-6 kilometers wide according to DeepState’s evening map on 11 August. This wedge formation creates operational risks for Ukrainian forces.

    DeepState warns that without rapid stabilization, Dobropillia faces immediate danger. The entire Pokrovsk-Myrnohrad agglomeration defense group risks encirclement. The breakthrough also threatens Kostiantynivka from another flank.

    The advance potentially endangers the Sloviansk-Kramatorsk agglomeration in the future. Russian forces could use Donetsk-Kharkiv and Donetsk-Dnipropetrovsk oblast border positions for launching future offensives.

    Ukrainian forces hold key positions

    Ukrainian serviceman “Bakhmut Demon” reports on Telegram that the situation remains difficult near Kostiantynivka-Dobropillia. He confirms Ukrainian forces still hold Pokrovsk despite heavy fighting.

    We cannot be terminators while others live life,” the serviceman wrote. He attributes Russian breakthroughs to personnel shortages in Ukrainian ranks.

    The serviceman notes positive developments in Sumy Oblast where Ukrainian forces advance. He emphasizes that Ukrainian troops maintain positions in both Kostiantynivka and Pokrovsk.

    Russian tactics exploit Ukrainian weaknesses

    DeepState explains that Russian infantry group assault tactics cause extremely high losses among attackers. However, critical Ukrainian infantry shortages allow this costly strategy to succeed.

    Russian command shows no concern for casualties among “volunteers.” The constant influx of replacements enables continued human wave attacks despite massive losses.

    After consolidating positions, Russians will attempt deeper territorial penetration and breakthrough expansion. Enemy drone teams will deploy to complicate Ukrainian logistics and position retention.

    The narrow salient offers opportunities if Ukrainian reserves act quickly. While surrounding enemy forces may prove difficult, controlling their logistics could trap Russian units operationally.

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    You could close this page. Or you could join our community and help us produce more materials like this. We keep our reporting open and accessible to everyone because we believe in the power of free information. This is why our small, cost-effective team depends on the support of readers like you to bring deliver timely news, quality analysis, and on-the-ground reports about Russia's war against Ukraine and Ukraine's struggle to build a democratic society. Become a patron or see other ways to support
    •  

    Axios: US, Ukraine, and NATO allies rush to high-stakes UK meeting to forge united stance before Trump meets Putin

    axios ukraine nato allies rush high-stakes uk meeting forge united stance before trump meets putin left right presidents volodymyr zelenskyy donald usa vladimir russia sources presidentgovua flickr/gage skidmore youtube/kremlin address_by_president_of_ukraine_volodymyr_zelenskyy_usa-trump-rushka-putin

    Senior officials from the US, Ukraine, and several European countries will meet this weekend in a high-stakes UK meeting to coordinate positions before President Trump’s planned talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Axios reported on 8 August. Diplomats are working to align strategies and prevent any agreement that could cement Russian territorial gains in Ukraine.

    This comes as Trump’s 8 August ceasefire deadline for Russia passed without sanctions, with the US president instead setting a 15 August Alaska meeting with Putin on possible territorial swaps, which Zelenskyy rejected as unconstitutional and ISW said would give Ukraine nothing while Russia steps up attacks.

    Allies push for unity before Trump-Putin summit

    Axios said the weekend gathering was arranged after a series of conference calls between US, Ukrainian, and European officials, the third in as many days. The idea for an in-person meeting in the UK came up during a call on Friday, 8 August. Discussions will focus on producing a common stance that could shape Trump’s approach when he meets Putin.

    According to Axios, the urgency stems from concerns among Ukraine and NATO allies that Trump might accept Kremlin proposals without fully taking their positions into account. The Kremlin’s reported offer would freeze Russian control over occupied parts of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia oblasts, including the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, as well as areas of Luhansk and Donetsk oblasts Russia has held since the invasion.

    trump’s russia deadline expires without sanctions — now he’s flying putin alaska ‘peace’ talks president trump speaks during trilateral signing leaders armenia azerbaijan white house 8 2025 trump-in-pshonka-style-white-house-opens-his-mouth-about-putin-and-something has dropped
    Explore further

    Trump’s Russia deadline expires without sanctions — now he’s flying Putin to Alaska for “peace” talks

    Confusion over Russian proposal

    Axios cited two sources saying that during a call on 6 August, White House envoy Steve Witkoff briefed Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European leaders on his meeting with Putin in Moscow. The initial impression among some participants was that Putin might drop his claim to partially occupied Kherson and Zaporizhzhia oblasts, a shift from earlier Russian demands.

    However, Axios said that in a follow-up video call the next day, Witkoff clarified that Putin had agreed only to freeze positions in those oblasts, leaving large portions under Russian occupation. Ukrainian officials remain unsure about the exact details of the Kremlin’s terms and the US position. One

    A Ukrainian official told Axios that Zelenskyy could not cede territory without a national referendum under Ukraine’s constitution.
    Putin's proposed Ukrainian concession. Map: ISW. ISW: Give up Ukrainian fortress belt shield, take nothing in return—Putin’s ceasefire pitch to Ukraine
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    ISW: Give up your fortress belt shield, take nothing in return—Putin’s ceasefire pitch to Ukraine

    Stakes for Ukraine’s security

    Trump announced that he will meet with Putin in Alaska on 15 August. The US President claimed the sides are “getting very close” to a deal. He has spoken of “some swapping of territories to the betterment of both countries” and suggested returning some occupied areas to Ukraine. According to Trump, Zelenskyy is preparing a legal arrangement that would allow him “to sign something” without violating Ukrainian law.

    Zelenskyy, however, predictably replied that the Ukrainian Constitution clearly defines the country’s territory, and rejected any territorial concessions.

    Western officials cited by Axios view the UK meeting as an opportunity to present a united message to Trump before his high-profile summit with Putin. The White House has declined to comment on the planned ally meeting.

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    •  

    Zelenskyy to Trump-Putin’s plan for Ukraine to cede territory to Russia: Ukrainian land is not yours to trade

    zelenskyy trump-putin’s plan ukraine cede territory russia ukrainian land trade president volodymyr during video address morning 9 2025 telegram channel has predictably rejected calling any move unconstitutional unacceptable said give

    The Ukrainian president has predictably rejected Trump-Putin’s plan to cede territory to Russia, calling any such move unconstitutional and unacceptable. Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine will not give land to the occupier in exchange for a ceasefire, stressing that its borders are already defined in the Constitution and cannot be altered.

    This comes as US President Donald Trump’s 10-day deadline for the Kremlin to respond on peace talks expired without new US secondary sanctions on Russia on 8 August. Instead, Trump said he was still awaiting a reply from Russia’s President Vladimir Putin on progress in negotiations and confirmed a meeting with him on 15 August in Alaska, where a possible exchange of Ukraine’s territories is expected to be discussed.

    Zelenskyy rules out territorial concessions in peace talks

    In his 9 August morning video address, Zelenskyy said the answer to Ukraine’s territorial question is already in the Constitution.

    “No one will retreat from this and no one can. Ukrainians will not gift their land to the occupier,” he stated.

    He described any settlement reached without Ukraine’s participation as a “dead decision” that would never work, warning that real and lasting peace must be respected by all parties.

    The President said Ukraine is ready to work with US President Donald Trump and international partners to secure agreements that will hold over time.

    “We are ready together with President Trump, together with all partners, to work for real, and most importantly, lasting peace – peace that will not fall apart because of Moscow’s wishes,” he noted.

    According to earlier reports, the Kremlin’s proposal would see Ukraine cede unoccupied, strategically important areas of Donetsk Oblast to Russia while freezing the frontline elsewhere. Analysts assess that such a move would leave Kyiv in a weaker defensive position and give Moscow a better launch point for future offensives.

    Putin's proposed Ukrainian concession. Map: ISW. ISW: Give up Ukrainian fortress belt shield, take nothing in return—Putin’s ceasefire pitch to Ukraine
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    ISW: Give up your fortress belt shield, take nothing in return—Putin’s ceasefire pitch to Ukraine

    You could close this page. Or you could join our community and help us produce more materials like this. We keep our reporting open and accessible to everyone because we believe in the power of free information. This is why our small, cost-effective team depends on the support of readers like you to bring deliver timely news, quality analysis, and on-the-ground reports about Russia's war against Ukraine and Ukraine's struggle to build a democratic society. Become a patron or see other ways to support
    •  

    ISW: Give up your fortress belt shield, take nothing in return—Putin’s ceasefire pitch to Ukraine

    Putin's proposed Ukrainian concession. Map: ISW. ISW: Give up Ukrainian fortress belt shield, take nothing in return—Putin’s ceasefire pitch to Ukraine

    Kremlin officials are reportedly demanding that Ukraine surrender the Ukrainian “fortress belt” in Donetsk Oblast before any ceasefire, a move the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) says is deliberately designed to be unacceptable. The think tank assessed that Moscow “lacks the means to capture” the fortified cities and instead wants Kyiv to abandon them “in exchange for nothing.”

    This comes after US President Donald Trump’s deadline for Russia to agree to a ceasefire, which ended up in nothing. Instead of imposing new sanctions or any tariffs on Russia, Trump announced plans to meet Russian leader Vladimir Putin on American soil. Meanwhile, Moscow is reportedly demanding that Ukraine cede the remainder of Donetsk Oblast for a ceasefire, offering no guarantees in return.

    Putin’s demands target Ukraine’s strongest defense line

    Bloomberg reported on 8 August that Vladimir Putin’s proposal would require Ukraine to withdraw from Ukrainian-controlled areas in Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts, along with Crimea, before any negotiations. The plan makes no mention of Russian withdrawal from the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant or from positions in Kharkiv, Sumy, Dnipropetrovsk, and Mykolaiv oblasts.

    According to the Wall Street Journal, two European officials briefed on the offer said it included two phases: Ukraine would first withdraw from Donetsk Oblast and freeze the frontline, followed by a peace plan to be agreed between Putin and US President Donald Trump, and later negotiated with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

    Trump said at a press conference on 8 August that “there will be some swapping of territories to the betterment of both,” adding there would be “no further announcements until August 9 or later.”

    trump’s russia deadline expires without sanctions — now he’s flying putin alaska ‘peace’ talks president trump speaks during trilateral signing leaders armenia azerbaijan white house 8 2025 trump-in-pshonka-style-white-house-opens-his-mouth-about-putin-and-something has dropped
    Explore further

    Trump’s Russia deadline expires without sanctions — now he’s flying Putin to Alaska for “peace” talks

    ISW stressed that conceding the Ukrainian fortress belt—a line of four major cities and several towns reinforced since 2014—would allow Russian forces to avoid “a long and bloody struggle for the ground.”

    The belt, stretching dozens of kilometers along the H-20 highway from Sloviansk to Kostiantynivka, has blocked Moscow’s advance for over a decade. Losing it would push the front 82 kilometers deeper into Ukraine, positioning Russian forces within striking range of Kharkiv and Dnipropetrovsk oblasts.

    Animation by ISW.

    Risk of new offensives after a ‘ceasefire’

    The think tank warned that Russian forces “will almost certainly violate any future ceasefire or peace agreement” without robust monitoring and security guarantees. Ceding the belt would also force Ukraine to urgently fortify open terrain at the Donetsk Oblast border, which ISW described as “significantly less defensible than the current line.”

    Russian troops have repeatedly failed to seize Sloviansk, Kramatorsk, and Druzhkivka since 2022. ISW noted that taking them now would require years of combat and high losses, making a negotiated surrender far more advantageous for Moscow. It would also spare Russian forces from costly battles for Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad, and allow them to bypass Ukraine’s westernmost Dobropillia-Bilozerske defensive line.

    Ongoing strikes signal lack of good faith

    While the proposal circulated, the Ukrainian Air Force said Russia launched four jet-powered drones and 104 Shahed-type strike and decoy drones overnight on 7–8 August. Of these, 79 were downed, but 26 struck ten locations, damaging civilian and industrial infrastructure in Kharkiv City’s Saltyvskyi Raion, Bucha Raion in Kyiv Oblast, and in Sumy and Odesa oblasts.

    ISW concluded that these continued strikes, combined with Kremlin messaging that “only Putin will dictate the terms of peace,” show the Russian leader “remains disinterested in good-faith negotiations” and still seeks Ukraine’s capitulation.

    You could close this page. Or you could join our community and help us produce more materials like this. We keep our reporting open and accessible to everyone because we believe in the power of free information. This is why our small, cost-effective team depends on the support of readers like you to bring deliver timely news, quality analysis, and on-the-ground reports about Russia's war against Ukraine and Ukraine's struggle to build a democratic society. Become a patron or see other ways to support
    •  

    Trump’s Russia deadline expires without sanctions — now he’s flying Putin to Alaska for “peace” talks

    trump’s russia deadline expires without sanctions — now he’s flying putin alaska ‘peace’ talks president trump speaks during trilateral signing leaders armenia azerbaijan white house 8 2025 trump-in-pshonka-style-white-house-opens-his-mouth-about-putin-and-something has dropped

    After his own deadline for Moscow to accept a ceasefire expired without any sanctions, US President Donald Trump said he will meet Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Alaska on 15 August. Speaking after signing a peace declaration with the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan on 8 August, Trump said the talks would include proposals for Ukraine to cede territory to Russia.

    This comes as Russia has escalated its air attacks against Ukrainian civilians in rear cities, while pushing hard in attempts to seize the rest of eastern Ukraine’s Donetsk Oblast.

    Trump abandons sanctions threat for Alaska summit

    Trump had earlier warned Putin that failing to meet his ceasefire deadline would trigger US sanctions. The deadline silently expired on 8 August. Instead, he told reporters,

    “I will be meeting very shortly with President Putin. It would have been sooner… I guess there are security arrangements that unfortunately people have to make.

    Later the same day, he confirmed on his Truth Social account that the summit would take place in Alaska next Friday, 15 August.

    The US President claimed the discussions were ostensibly “getting very close” to a deal and said the arrangement would allegedly bring “betterment” to both sides.

    “We’re looking at territory that has been fought over for 3.5 years… We will get some back. We will get some — some switched. There will be some swapping of territories,” he said, calling it “very complicated” but ultimately positive.

    Kremlin confirms date and location

    Russian presidential aide Yuri Ushakov told Russian media the meeting would happen on 15 August in Alaska, describing it as “logical” because the two countries are close neighbors. He added that the Arctic and Alaska are where their economic interests meet, with potential for large-scale joint projects. Ushakov said the key topic would be options for a “long-term settlement” of Russia’s war in Ukraine.

    Secret envoy visit before announcement

    The Wall Street Journal reported that US special representative Steve Witkoff met Putin in Moscow on 6 August for three hours. Sources told the paper that Putin had presented a two-stage proposal: first, the withdrawal of Ukrainian forces from Donetsk Oblast and a freeze of the front line, and second, a final peace deal to be agreed with Trump and later discussed with Ukraine.

    Plan mirrors earlier Russian demands

    The Wall Street Journal, citing a senior European diplomat and a Ukrainian official, said Putin could propose that Russia officially control part of the occupied Ukrainian territories in exchange for pulling troops from other areas. This aligns with Trump’s public stance.

    “He has to get everything he needs. He is getting ready to sign something, and I think he is working hard to get that done,” Trump suggested of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

    Trump repeats false aid claim and praises NATO

    During his remarks, Trump again repeated his debunked claim that the United States had spent $350 billion on Ukraine, saying,

    “$350 billion… the United States has spent on that. It should have spent nothing. It should have never happened.”

    He praised NATO allies for increasing their defense spending from 2% to 5% of GDP, adding,

    “Europe wants to see peace. European leaders want to see peace. President Putin, I believe, wants to see peace and President Zelensky wants to see peace.”

    Although Russia’s 2014 invasion continued throughout Trump’s pre-Biden first term, he again claimed the war would “never have happened” if he had been president earlier, blaming Biden and citing destruction in Ukraine:

    “Magnificent towers, the spires… considered the most beautiful in the world… they are all in a million pieces laying on the ground… So sad. Millions of people have died.”

    It is unclear what “towers and spires” Trump had in mind, as Ukraine has not lost any such world-famous landmarks in the war — the image appears to exist only in his imagination, though Russia has indeed obliterated entire cities like Popasna, Bakhmut, Mariupol, and Vovchansk.

    You could close this page. Or you could join our community and help us produce more materials like this. We keep our reporting open and accessible to everyone because we believe in the power of free information. This is why our small, cost-effective team depends on the support of readers like you to bring deliver timely news, quality analysis, and on-the-ground reports about Russia's war against Ukraine and Ukraine's struggle to build a democratic society. Become a patron or see other ways to support
    •  

    9 killed, 81 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past day

    9 killed, 81 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past day

    At least nine civilians were killed and 81 others injured in Russian attacks across Ukraine over the past 24 hours, regional authorities reported on July 8.

    Ukraine's Air Force said Russia launched 54 drones overnight, including Iranian-designed Shahed-type attack drones, and fired four S-300/400 guided missiles.

    Air defenses intercepted 34 drones, while another eight were likely used as radar-jamming decoys. Drones struck five locations across the country.

    The overnight assault was repelled using aircraft, electronic warfare, mobile fire groups, and missile defense systems, the military said.

    In Kharkiv Oblast, one person was killed and 40 others were injured, including three children, as the city of Kharkiv and seven other settlements came under attack, Governor Oleh Syniehubov reported.

    Russian strikes on Zaporizhzhia Oblast injured 20 people and damaged at least 64 houses and apartment buildings, Governor Ivan Fedorov said.

    In Donetsk Oblast, three civilians were killed — two in Oleksiyevo-Druzhkivka and one in Novotroitske — and 10 more were injured, according to Governor Vadym Filashkin.

    In Sumy Oblast, four people were killed and four more injured in Russian strikes, the local administration reported.

    One person was killed and four others were injured in Kherson Oblast, where Russian forces hit residential areas and public infrastructure, damaging two apartment buildings and 17 houses, according to Governor Oleksandr Prokudin.

    Three people were injured in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, where Russian troops attacked with first-person-view (FPV) drones, Governor Serhii Lysak said.

    The wave of attacks follows Russia's ongoing refusal to accept a ceasefire and comes amid rising use of drone and missile strikes against Ukraine's civilian infrastructure.

    ‘They have to be able to defend themselves’ — Trump says US will send additional weapons shipments to Ukraine, criticizes Putin
    “They’re getting hit very hard. We’re gonna have to send more weapons, your defensive weapons primarily,” U.S. President Donald Trump said.
    9 killed, 81 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past dayThe Kyiv IndependentVolodymyr Ivanyshyn
    9 killed, 81 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past day
    •  

    12 killed, 69 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past day

    12 killed, 69 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past day

    At least 12 civilians were killed and 69 others injured in Russian attacks across Ukraine over the past 24 hours, regional authorities reported on July 7.

    Ukraine's Air Force said Russia launched 101 drones overnight, including Iranian-designed Shahed-type attack drones, as well as four S-300/400 guided missiles. Air defenses intercepted 75 drones, while another 17 likely served as radar-jamming decoys.

    The drone and missile assault was countered using aviation, electronic warfare, mobile fire teams, and air defense systems, the military said.

    The heaviest casualties occurred in Donetsk Oblast, where seven civilians were killed — four in Kostiantynivka, two in Druzhkivka, and one in Novohryhorivka — and 15 others were injured, Governor Vadym Filashkin reported.

    In Kharkiv Oblast, 27 people were injured, including three children, according to Governor Oleh Syniehubov. At least three victims remain hospitalized in moderate condition, and the number may rise.

    Russian forces also attacked critical and residential infrastructure in Kherson Oblast, killing two civilians and injuring nine, Governor Oleksandr Prokudin said.

    Two more civilians were killed in Sumy Oblast in a drone strike, local authorities said. Another person was injured. In Odesa Oblast, one civilian was killed and infrastructure was damaged in an attack on the regional capital, Governor Oleh Kiper reported.

    In Zaporizhzhia, at least 12 people were injured in separate attacks throughout the day, including 10 during a drone strike on the city center, Governor Ivan Fedorov said.

    Five civilians were injured in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast — two women and three men — in the latest wave of attacks, according to Governor Serhii Lysak.

    The mass strikes come amid Russia's continued rejection of ceasefire proposals and its growing use of aerial assaults to pressure Ukrainian defenses.

    Kyiv has repeated its urgent appeals to Western partners to ramp up deliveries of air defense systems to protect civilian areas from drone and missile attacks.

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    12 killed, 69 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past dayThe Kyiv IndependentTim Zadorozhnyy
    12 killed, 69 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past day
    •  

    'Evacuate to safer regions!' — Russian attacks kill 5, injure 1 in Donetsk Oblast

    'Evacuate to safer regions!' — Russian attacks kill 5, injure 1 in Donetsk Oblast

    Russian attacks on two towns in Donetsk Oblast left five people dead and another injured on July 6, Governor Vadim Filashkin reported.

    Russia attacked the front-line towns of Kostiantynivka and Druzhkivka.

    In Kostiantynivka, Russian airstrikes and missile attacks killed four people and injured another person, Filashkin said. The heavy attacks also damaged 14 homes, four high-rise buildings, an administrative building, a car, and five power lines.

    In Druzhkivka, a Russian first-person-view (FPV) drone killed one person and damaged equipement.

    Filashkin warned that both Kostiantynivka and Druzhkivka are "under constant enemy fire" and urged residents to relocate.

    "It is dangerous to stay here! Evacuate to safer regions of Ukraine!" Filashkin wrote on Telegram after the attack.

    In late June, Filashkin reported that Kostiantynivka, in eastern Donetsk Oblast, faces an imminent "humanitarian catastrophe." The town lies just 10 to 15 kilometers (6 to 9 miles) from several areas currently occupied by Russian forces, according to battlefield mapping site DeepState.

    Kostiantynivka has come under intensified attack in recent months as Moscow pushes westward beyond its gains around other nearby towns.

    Ukraine’s army chief warns of new Russian offensives in northeast as he visits Kharkiv Oblast front
    Russian troops are ramping up attacks in the sector using large numbers of troops, Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi said.
    'Evacuate to safer regions!' — Russian attacks kill 5, injure 1 in Donetsk OblastThe Kyiv IndependentTim Zadorozhnyy
    'Evacuate to safer regions!' — Russian attacks kill 5, injure 1 in Donetsk Oblast
    •  

    Russian attacks across Ukraine kill 6, injure 25 over past day

    Russian attacks across Ukraine kill 6, injure 25 over past day

    Editor's note: The story was updated with the latest reports from Mykolaiv and Sumy.

    Russian attacks against Ukraine have killed at least six civilians and injured at least 25 others over the past day, regional authorities reported on July 6.

    Russian forces launched four S-300 anti-aircraft missiles from Russia's Kursk Oblast and 157 Shahed drones from Russia's Shatalovo, Millerovo, and Primorsk-Akhtarsk airfields, as well as from Russian-occupied Crimea, against Ukraine overnight, according to Ukraine's Air Force.

    Ukraine's air defense shot down 98 drones, while another 19 disappeared from radar without causing any damage, according to the statement. Drones that disappear from radar before reaching their targets are often decoys that Russia launches alongside real drones to overwhelm Ukraine's air defense.

    In Kharkiv Oblast, Russian forces attacked 13 settlements, killing two people and injuring 11 others, Governor Oleg Syniehubov reported.

    An 8-year-old boy was killed, while a 3-year-old boy, a 40-year-old man, and a 36-year-old woman suffered injuries in the village of Odnorobivka.

    In the town of Kupiansk, a 59-year-old man was killed, while a 56-year-old man, a 57-year-old woman, and two women aged 65 were injured due to the Russian strikes.

    In Kharkiv, the regional capital, a 46-year-old woman and a 2-year-old girl suffered injuries.

    The casualties were also reported in the villages of Prykolotne and Shyroke, where a 66-year-old man and a 27-year-old woman were injured.

    In Donetsk Oblast, Russian forces killed a person in the town of Myrnohrad, and another person was killed in the village of Andriivka, according to Governor Vadym Filashkin.

    In Andriivka, two people suffered injuries. Two more people were injured in the town of Siversk, and another one in the city of Pokrovsk.

    In Kherson Oblast, Russia targeted 32 settlements, including the regional center of Kherson, over the past day. As a result of the attacks, two people were killed and three others were injured, Governor Oleksandr Prokudin reported.

    In Mykolaiv Oblast, Russian drones attacked the port infrastructure in the regional center of Mykolaiv, damaging the power grid and warehouses.

    A 31-year-old woman was injured and hospitalized, while a 35-year-old man, who also suffered injuries in the attack, was treated at the scene, according to Governor Vitalii Kim.

    In Sumy Oblast, a Russian FPV drone attacked the Khotyn community, hitting a car and injuring a 49-year-old man, the local military administration reported. He was hospitalized.

    In Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, a 39-year-old woman was injured in the attack against the Nikopol district. Russia targeted the area with FPV (first-person-view) drones and artillery, according to Governor Serhii Lysak.

    In Zaporizhzhia Oblast, Russian strikes injured an 89-year-old woman in the village of Yurkivka, the local military administration reported.

    In Kyiv Oblast, Russia attacked the Vyshhorod district, injuring a 35-year-old man. He suffered shrapnel wounds, the local military administration reported.

    In Poltava Oblast, Russian drones struck the city of Kremenchuk, hitting an enlistment office and a neighboring house. The attack caused a fire, but no casualties were reported, according to the local military administration.

    Ukraine's Emergency Service also reported that Russia had carried out double-tap attacks in the cities of Kharkiv and Kherson when rescuers arrived at the impact sites. As a result of the attacks, tanker trucks were damaged, but no rescuers were injured.

    Ukraine’s army chief warns of new Russian offensives in northeast as he visits Kharkiv Oblast front
    Russian troops are ramping up attacks in the sector using large numbers of troops, Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi said.
    Russian attacks across Ukraine kill 6, injure 25 over past dayThe Kyiv IndependentTim Zadorozhnyy
    Russian attacks across Ukraine kill 6, injure 25 over past day
    •  

    Russia captures 2 villages near Dnipropetrovsk Oblast border, monitoring group says

    Russia captures 2 villages near Dnipropetrovsk Oblast border, monitoring group says

    Russian forces have occupied the villages of Zelenyi Kut and Novoukrainka in Donetsk Oblast, located near the administrative border with Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, the battlefield monitoring platform DeepState reported on July 5.

    Russian forces are attempting to push further west, according to DeepState.

    Donetsk Oblast has been a central battlefield since the start of Russia's full-scale invasion in February 2022 in Ukraine. While Dnipropetrovsk Oblast lies further west and has not seen significant Russian incursions, it is frequently targeted with missile, drone, and aerial bomb strikes.

    Russian troops have been escalating their assaults in the area and are attempting to breach into Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.

    "The situation around Dachne is pretty intense," DeepState wrote on Telegram, referring to the nearby front-line settlement in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.

    Ukrainian forces have deployed reinforcements, but Russian units, relying on numerical advantage and constant infantry assaults, have breached some defenses in the area, DeepState said.

    Ukraine's military has not officially confirmed the loss of the settlements.

    Russia captures 2 villages near Dnipropetrovsk Oblast border, monitoring group says
    Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk Oblast (Nizar al-Rifai/The Kyiv Independent)

    Russia's Defense Ministry claimed Novoukrainka was captured as early as June 29, though that assertion was not independently confirmed at the time.

    On July 2, Ukraine dismissed Russian claims of advancing into Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, calling them disinformation. It said that a small Russian reconnaissance unit briefly entered the village of Dachne, took photos with a Russian flag, and was then "eliminated."

    Ukrainian military spokesperson Viktor Trehubov said in mid-June that Russia was escalating attacks in the Novopavlivka sector — in the western part of Donetsk Oblast — and trying to breach into Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.

    DeepState analysts suggest Moscow views an incursion into Dnipropetrovsk Oblast as symbolically significant and a propaganda opportunity, while for Ukraine, holding the administrative line is a strategic priority.

    •  

    4 killed, 37 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past day

    4 killed, 37 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past day

    At least four civilians were killed and 37 others injured in Russian attacks across Ukraine over the past 24 hours, regional authorities reported on July 5.

    Russia launched 322 drones overnight, including Iranian-designed Shahed-type attack drones, according to Ukraine's Air Force. Air defenses intercepted 292 drones, while another 135 dropped off radars, likely used as decoys to overwhelm Ukrainian systems.

    The attack was repelled using aviation, electronic warfare, mobile fire teams, and air defense systems.

    In Donetsk Oblast, Russian strikes killed two civilians and injured four more, Governor Vadym Filashkin said. In Kharkiv Oblast, one person was killed and 15 injured, including two children, according to Governor Oleh Syniehubov.

    In Kherson Oblast, 11 civilians were injured as Russian forces targeted residential areas and other civilian infrastructure, Governor Oleksandr Prokudin reported.

    A 49-year-old postal worker was injured in Chernihiv Oblast by a first-person-view (FPV) drone, Governor Viacheslav Chaus said. The man sustained shrapnel wounds while delivering mail.

    In Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, four civilians, two men and two women, were injured in Russian strikes, Governor Serhii Lysak reported.

    In Zaporizhzhia Oblast, an 84-year-old man was killed, and two others — a 54-year-old man and a 10-year-old boy — were injured, Governor Ivan Fedorov said.

    The latest strikes come as Russia continues to escalate its aerial campaign and reject calls for a ceasefire. Ukrainian officials have repeatedly urged Western partners to bolster Ukraine's air defense capabilities amid persistent drone and missile strikes.

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    4 killed, 37 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past dayThe Kyiv IndependentTim Zadorozhnyy
    4 killed, 37 injured in Russian attacks on Ukraine over past day
    •  

    'A powerful secondary explosion' — Ukrainian drones destroy Russian ammunition depot in Donetsk Oblast, SBU says

    'A powerful secondary explosion' — Ukrainian drones destroy Russian ammunition depot in Donetsk Oblast, SBU says

    Ukrainian drones struck a Russian ammunition depot in occupied Donetsk Oblast overnight on July 3, setting off a series of huge explosions, Ukraine's State Security Service said on July 3.

    "Starting at 10 p.m., explosions rang out at the depots, followed by a powerful secondary detonation of ammunition and a fire," the SBU said in a post on social media.

    According to the SBU, the ammunition depot is located in the occupied Ukrainian city of Khartsyzsk, near Donetsk, which is "of important strategic importance, as it is used by the Russians as a rear base."

    "The enemy has placed command posts, logistics centers, and ammunition depots there. All of them are legitimate military targets," the statement added.

    Unconfirmed videos posted to social media show a fire already burning followed by a large explosion and shockwave.

    Meanwhile in Russian-occupied Khartsyzsk.

    - 1 major Russian munitions depot. pic.twitter.com/uAhnqQONYw

    — Illia Ponomarenko 🇺🇦 (@IAPonomarenko) July 2, 2025

    Elsewhere on July 3, Ukraine confirmed strikes on the Energia factory in Russia's Lipetsk Oblast overnight, a facility that produces components for missiles and drones, including batteries for the Iskander missile system and cruise missiles.

    Andrii Kovalenko, head of the Counter-Disinformation Center at Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council, confirmed the strike, calling Energia "one of the most critical targets for Russia."

    'A powerful secondary explosion' — Ukrainian drones destroy Russian ammunition depot in Donetsk Oblast, SBU says
    Ukraine's Donetsk Oblast (Nizar al-Rifai/The Kyiv Independent)

    According to Kovalenko, the facility manufactures batteries for missile guidance and glider modules, including for the Iskander system and cruise missiles.

    Ukraine's military regularly strikes military targets in Russian-occupied territories and deep within Russia in an attempt to diminish Moscow's fighting power as it continues its war against Ukraine.

    On the evening of June 30, Ukraine similarly struck a command post of the 8th Combined Arms Army of the Russian Armed Forces in the Russian-occupied part of Donetsk Oblast.

    Russia has for months focused its offensive efforts on the embattled town of Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast and has recently been escalating attempts to break through to neighboring Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, a region that has not yet seen combat.

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    'A powerful secondary explosion' — Ukrainian drones destroy Russian ammunition depot in Donetsk Oblast, SBU saysThe Kyiv IndependentAnna Fratsyvir
    'A powerful secondary explosion' — Ukrainian drones destroy Russian ammunition depot in Donetsk Oblast, SBU says
    •  

    Ukraine reportedly strikes ammunition depot in occupied Donetsk Oblast

    Ukraine reportedly strikes ammunition depot in occupied Donetsk Oblast

    Editor's note: This is a developing story and is being updated.

    Ukraine reportedly struck a Russian ammunition depot in the town of Khartsyzk in occupied Donetsk Oblast on July 2, Russian Telegram channels reported.

    Videos posted on social media purportedly show massive explosions near the reported ammunition depot, located just east of the Russian-occupied city of Donetsk.

    The Kyiv Independent cannot immediately verify the reports.

    Ukraine's military has not commented on the reported attack. No information was immediately available as to the extent of the damage caused.

    0:00
    /
    A purported video of explosions at a Russian ammunition depot in occupied Donetsk Oblast on July 2, 2025. (ASTRA/Telegram)

    Ukraine's military regularly strikes military targets in Russian-occupied territories and deep within Russia in an attempt to diminish Moscow's fighting power as it continues its war against Ukraine.

    On the evening of June 30, Ukraine similarly struck a command post of the 8th Combined Arms Army of the Russian Armed Forces in the Russian-occupied part of Donetsk Oblast.

    Russia has for months focused its offensive efforts on the embattled town of Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast and has recently been escalating attempts to break through to neighboring Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, a region that has not yet seen combat.

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    Ukraine reportedly strikes ammunition depot in occupied Donetsk OblastThe Kyiv IndependentThe Kyiv Independent news desk
    Ukraine reportedly strikes ammunition depot in occupied Donetsk Oblast
    •  

    Ukrainian forces hit Russian command post in occupied Donetsk Oblast, General Staff says

    Ukrainian forces hit Russian command post in occupied Donetsk Oblast, General Staff says

    Ukraine struck a command post of the 8th Combined Arms Army of the Russian Armed Forces in the Russian-occupied part of Donetsk Oblast, Ukraine's General Staff reported on July 1, a day after the attack.

    On the evening of June 30, explosions were heard in the Russian-occupied Donetsk, the Russian Telegram channel Shot reported. According to residents, several fires were spotted in different parts of the city.

    The attack has significantly hampered Russia's ability to plan and conduct operations in the Pokrovsk and Toretsk areas of the front line, the General Staff's statement read.

    Russian losses are still being determined.

    Ukraine's military regularly strikes military targets in Russian-occupied territories and deep within Russia in an attempt to diminish Moscow's fighting power as it continues its war against Ukraine.

    Russia has for months focused its offensive efforts on the embattled town of Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast and has recently been escalating attempts to break through to neighboring Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, a region that has not yet seen combat.

    Ukraine denied reports that Russian forces breached the regional border in May and June.

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    Ukrainian forces hit Russian command post in occupied Donetsk Oblast, General Staff saysThe Kyiv IndependentIrynka Hromotska
    Ukrainian forces hit Russian command post in occupied Donetsk Oblast, General Staff says
    •  

    Russia hits evacuation vehicle in Donetsk Oblast, killing civilian

    Russia hits evacuation vehicle in Donetsk Oblast, killing civilian

    The Russian army attacked an evacuation vehicle carrying three wounded civilians, which resulted in the death of one of them, Ukraine's National Police reported on July 1.

    Russia has for months focused its offensive efforts on the embattled town of Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast and has recently been escalating attempts to break through to neighboring Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, a region that has not yet seen combat.

    According to the police, Russian forces attacked the evacuation vehicles provided by chaplains three times: at the entrance to the city, in the city center, and during the evacuation of civilians from Pokrovsk. The police called Russia's actions "targeted hunting."

    The police picked up one injured person in the city, and the other two — on the way to the hospital. In the meantime, the Russian army hit the car with a Molniya drone. As a result of the attack, one of the police officers was injured.

    As the evacuation vehicle came under fire, one of the injured could not be brought to the hospital in time and died of blood loss.

    "We called for reinforcements and sent the injured civilian with them, hoping for a miracle. But it did not happen, Russia took another life," Hennadii Yudin, head of the "White Angel" police unit, said.

    Another injured man, who was evacuated with a shrapnel wound, is undergoing treatment, the police said.

    Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi reported on June 27 that Russia has amassed "about 111,000 personnel" in the Pokrovsk sector, but Ukrainian forces are holding the line.

    Syrskyi's statement came as Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed Moscow is "ready" for a third round of peace talks with Kyiv.

    Russia's so-called "peace memorandum" demands that Ukraine recognize Russia's annexation of Crimea, as well as Kherson, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Luhansk oblasts — none of which are fully under Moscow's control.

    As Russia inches closer to Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, new Ukrainian region might soon be at war
    Moscow said its troops had crossed into Dnipropetrovsk Oblast and were conducting offensive operations in the region, a claim Kyiv quickly denied as “Russian disinformation.” Russian troops have been pushing toward Dnipropetrovsk Oblast for months, trying to solidify the southern flank to capture Pokrovsk and the remaining parts of the
    Russia hits evacuation vehicle in Donetsk Oblast, killing civilianThe Kyiv IndependentAsami Terajima
    Russia hits evacuation vehicle in Donetsk Oblast, killing civilian
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    Russian military, industrial sites allegedly targeted in Ukrainian strikes on occupied Donetsk, Luhansk

    Russian military, industrial sites allegedly targeted in Ukrainian strikes on occupied Donetsk, Luhansk

    Editor's note: This is a developing story and is being updated.

    Ukrainian forces reportedly struck a Russian logistics hub and an oil depot in Russian-occupied Luhansk and a military base in occupied Donetsk on June 30 and July 1, with fires breaking out in the two cities.

    "Russian logistics in temporarily occupied Luhansk are burning," head of Ukraine's Center for Countering Disinformation Andrii Kovalenko said.

    The drone attack was reported by the local media, publishing what appear to be videos of the burning logistics hub and the sound of drones.

    Leonid Pasechnik, head of the Russian occupation authorities in Luhansk Oblast, reported that air defenses shot down 35 of the 40 drones over Luhansk Oblast. Drone wreckage fell on the premises of an oil depot, and a woman was injured, Pasechnik claimed.

    Russian military, industrial sites allegedly targeted in Ukrainian strikes on occupied Donetsk, Luhansk
    Ukraine's Luhansk Oblast (Nizar al-Rifai/The Kyiv Independent)

    Overnight Ukrainian attacks were also reported in occupied Donetsk, with Telegram news channels sharing apparent footage of damaged buildings and fires in the city.

    Denis Pushilin, the head of the Russian occupation authorities in Donetsk Oblast, claimed that one person was killed and three were injured in the attack. Ukrainian news channel Supernova+ reported that the attack targeted the headquarters of Russia’s 8th Combined Arms Army.

    The Ukrainian military has not commented on the claims, which could not be independently verified.

    Videos from occupied Donetsk after Ukrainian strike on the evening of June 30. Ukrainian analysts and media report a military facility was hit, while the “DPR” head says a woman was killed and three civilians injured

    “It appears the Donetsk Institute of Non-Ferrous Metals… pic.twitter.com/evPG9eajl0

    — ASTRA (@ASTRA_PRESS) July 1, 2025

    Ukraine's military regularly strikes military targets in Russian-occupied territories and deep within Russia in an attempt to diminish Moscow's fighting power as it continues its war against Ukraine.

    Ukraine's military intelligence (HUR) destroyed three Russian air defense systems using drones in the occupied Zaporizhzhia Oblast on June 14.

    "Strike drone masters of the Department of Active Operations of the HUR of the Ukrainian defense ministry discovered and destroyed expensive air defense systems of the Russian invaders in the temporarily occupied territory of the Zaporizhzhia region," HUR reported in a post to Telegram.

    A Russian Buk-M3, a Pantsyr S1, and a 9S19 Imbir radar from the S-300V air defense system were destroyed in the Ukrainian drone attack.

    Ukraine war latest: Ukrainian forces push Russian army away from Sumy
    Key developments on June 30: * Ukrainian forces push Russian army away from Sumy, General Staff says * Ukrainian military again denies reports on Russian troops entering Dnipropetrovsk Oblast * After months of stalling, Russia blames Ukraine, US for slow pace of peace talks * Germany vows to pursue ‘every path’ to boost Ukraine’s
    Russian military, industrial sites allegedly targeted in Ukrainian strikes on occupied Donetsk, LuhanskThe Kyiv IndependentThe Kyiv Independent news desk
    Russian military, industrial sites allegedly targeted in Ukrainian strikes on occupied Donetsk, Luhansk
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    Pro-Ukraine partisans disrupt Russian military logistics in occupied Donetsk Oblast, group claims

    Pro-Ukraine partisans disrupt Russian military logistics in occupied Donetsk Oblast, group claims

    The Atesh partisan group set fire to a signal cabinet that helps control traffic on a railway line near the Russian-occupied city of Yasynuvata in Donetsk Oblast, a route used for Russia's military logistics, the group claimed on Telegram on June 28.

    Yasynuvata lies some 22 kilometers (12.5 miles) from the occupied city of Donetsk and is considered to be a major railway junction in the region.

    According to the group, the sabotaged section is located near Russian military units, warehouses, and industrial facilities.

    Atesh said the attack disrupted the delivery of a train carrying fuel for Russian forces.

    "On Ukraine's Constitution Day, we remind the occupiers that this is an independent and free country. And Donetsk will always be Ukrainian," the statement read.

    The Kyiv Independent could not verify these claims.

    The Atesh partisan group regularly conducts sabotage attacks in Russia and Ukraine's Russian-occupied territories.

    In early June, Atesh claimed to have destroyed a signal cabinet on the new Volnovakha-Mariupol railway, which had been recently built by occupying Russian forces.

    Ukraine war latest: Ukrainian drones reportedly strike 4 fighter jets in Russia
    Key developments on June 27: * Ukraine war latest: Ukrainian drones reportedly strike 4 fighter jets in Russia * North Korea deployed 20% of Kim’s elite ‘personal reserve’ to fight against Ukraine in Russia, Umerov says * Pro-Palestinian activists reportedly destroy military equipment intended for Ukraine * Zelensky signs decree to synchronize Russia sanctions
    Pro-Ukraine partisans disrupt Russian military logistics in occupied Donetsk Oblast, group claimsThe Kyiv IndependentThe Kyiv Independent news desk
    Pro-Ukraine partisans disrupt Russian military logistics in occupied Donetsk Oblast, group claims

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    Russian attacks against Ukraine kill 10, injure at least 50 over past day

    Russian attacks against Ukraine kill 10, injure at least 50 over past day

    Russian attacks against Ukraine killed 10 people and injured at least 50 others over the past day, regional authorities said on June 28.

    Ukrainian forces downed 21 out of the 23 drones, including Shahed-type attack drones and decoys, launched by Russia overnight, the Air Force reported.

    One drone was intercepted by electronic warfare or disappeared from radars, according to the statement. Russia usually launches decoys alongside real drones to overwhelm Ukraine's air defense.

    A Russian drone attack on the city of Odesa hit a high-rise building, killing a married couple and injuring at least 14 other people, including three children, Governor Oleh Kiper said.

    A Russian missile strike on the city of Samar in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast killed five people and injured at least 25 others, Governor Serhii Lysak said.

    Three men aged 30, 36 and 53 were injured in a Russian attack on Chuhuiv in Kharkiv Oblast, according to Governor Oleh Syniehubov.  

    Russian attacks near Polohy and Vasylivka in Zaporizhzhia Oblast injured a man and a woman, Governor Ivan Fedorov reported.

    Russian troops injured a man by dropping an explosive device on the Bilopillia community in Sumy Oblast, local authorities reported.

    Two people were killed in Kostiantynivka and Ivanopillia in Donetsk Oblast, Governor Vadym Filashkin said. Two others suffered injuries in the region over the past day.

    In Kherson Oblast, Russian forces targeted 42 settlements, including the regional center of Kherson. One person was killed, and three others injured, Governor Oleksandr Prokudin reported.

    Russia has amassed 111,000 troops near Pokrovsk, Syrskyi says
    Pokrovsk remains the “hottest spot” along the front line but “the situation is under control” and Russia has not crossed the administrative border from Donetsk to Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi said.
    Russian attacks against Ukraine kill 10, injure at least 50 over past dayThe Kyiv IndependentAbbey Fenbert
    Russian attacks against Ukraine kill 10, injure at least 50 over past day
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    Russia has amassed 111,000 troops near Pokrovsk, Syrskyi says

    Russia has amassed 111,000 troops near Pokrovsk, Syrskyi says

    Pokrovsk remains the "hottest spot" along Ukraine's front lines, with Russia concentrating its largest group of personnel in that direction — a force numbering 111,000 troops, Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi reported on June 27.

    Russia has for months focused its offensive efforts on the embattled town of Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast and has recently been escalating attempts to break through to neighboring Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, a region that has not yet seen combat. Ukraine denied reports that Russian forces breached the regional border in May and June.

    In May, Syrskyi reported that Ukraine had stabilized the situation in Pokrovsk.

    After a working visit to the Pokrovsk sector, Syrskyi on June 27 said that the city is still "the hottest spot along the entire 1,200-kilometer front line" with nearly 50 combat clashes recorded per day. It's also where Russia has concentrated the bulk of its forces in Ukraine.

    Russia has amassed "about 111,000 personnel" in the Pokrovsk sector, Syrskyi said, but Ukrainian forces are holding the line.

    "The enemy continues to try to break through to the administrative border of Donetsk Oblast ... Russian sabotage and assault groups were particularly active here two weeks ago," Syrskyi said.

    "But they were all destroyed or neutralized, and the remnants were pushed back from the administrative border. The situation is under control."

    Russia has amassed 111,000 troops near Pokrovsk, Syrskyi says
    Ukraine's Donetsk Oblast (Nizar al-Rifai/The Kyiv Independent)

    Russia is attempting to break into Dnipropetrovsk Oblast not only for operational reasons, but also for performative ones, Syrskyi said.

    "To achieve a psychological effect: to put the infamous 'foot of the Russian soldier' there, plant a flag, and trumpet another pseudo-'victory.'"

    Syrskyi's comments echo recent remarks by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who claimed in a propaganda-heavy speech on June 20 that "wherever the foot of a Russian soldier steps is Russian land." President Volodymyr Zelensky fired back the next day, promising "Ukrainian drones for the foot of every Russian soldier."

    While Putin claimed on June 27 that Moscow is "ready" for a third round of peace talks with Kyiv, the Kremlin has sent no signal that it's ready to abandon its maximalist ambitions in Ukraine.

    Russia's so-called "peace memorandum" demands that Ukraine recognize Russia's annexation of Crimea, as well as Kherson, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Luhansk oblasts — none of which are fully under Moscow's control.

    Zelensky's Deputy Chief of Staff Pavlo Palisa said on June 6 that Russia aims to occupy all Ukrainian territory east of the Dnipro River and advance toward Odesa and Mykolaiv in a broader plan to sever Ukraine's access to the Black Sea amid a renewed summer offensive.

    Ukraine war latest: Ukrainian drones reportedly strike 4 fighter jets in Russia
    Key developments on June 27: * Ukraine war latest: Ukrainian drones reportedly strike 4 fighter jets in Russia * North Korea deployed 20% of Kim’s elite ‘personal reserve’ to fight against Ukraine in Russia, Umerov says * Pro-Palestinian activists reportedly destroy military equipment intended for Ukraine * Zelensky signs decree to synchronize Russia sanctions
    Russia has amassed 111,000 troops near Pokrovsk, Syrskyi saysThe Kyiv IndependentThe Kyiv Independent news desk
    Russia has amassed 111,000 troops near Pokrovsk, Syrskyi says
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    Donetsk Oblast city ‘on brink of humanitarian catastrophe,’ governor says as drones cripple infrastructure

    Donetsk Oblast city ‘on brink of humanitarian catastrophe,’ governor says as drones cripple infrastructure

    The front-line city of Kostiantynivka in Ukraine's Donetsk Oblast is facing a looming "humanitarian catastrophe" as ongoing Russian strikes destroy critical infrastructure and leave thousands without basic services, Governor Vadym Filashkin said on June 25.

    Kostiantynivka, in eastern Donetsk Oblast, lies just 10 to 15 kilometers (6 to 9 miles) from several areas currently occupied by Russian forces, according to battlefield mapping site DeepState. The city has come under intensified attack in recent months as Moscow pushes westward beyond its gains around other nearby towns.

    According to Filashkin, nearly half the city is without electricity due to shelling, and 1,900 households in the Santurynivka district have no access to gas, with restoration currently impossible. Water is supplied just once a day from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m., meeting only 20–25% of the city's needs.

    Drone strikes have halted all city bus operations, while the suburban route to Druzhkivka, a nearby town, is operating on a limited basis, Filashkin said.

    Yevhen Alkhimov, press officer of Ukraine's 28th Mechanized Brigade, which is fighting near Kostiantynivka, told the Kyiv Independent that "the greatest danger at the moment comes from first person view (FPV) drones, including fiber optic models."

    "The enemy is trying to control all logistics and communication routes," he said, adding: "The Russians’ goal right now is not so much to destroy the city as it is to make it unsuitable for defense by controlling all the roads."

    Alkhimov said Russian forces were deliberately targeting vehicles including civilian buses.

    "They are trying to fully control all movement in the city using their drones," he said.

    Donetsk Oblast city ‘on brink of humanitarian catastrophe,’ governor says as drones cripple infrastructure
    Ukraine's Donetsk Oblast (Nizar al-Rifai/The Kyiv Independent)

    Authorities have installed seven large water tanks and 11 smaller containers throughout the city, in addition to 12 wells, six of which are equipped with filtration systems. Five "Points of Invincibility," Ukraine's emergency support hubs, are operational, with two more on standby.

    Despite the risks, emergency crews, doctors, utility workers, and local officials continue to work in the city.

    "Civilians still remain in the city, and life is becoming more and more difficult for them," Alkhimov said.

    "There are fewer people left, the curfew is now longer, but nonetheless, people are still there, and it is truly very dangerous for them to stay in the city."

    Filashkin urged those still in the city to evacuate.

    Russia has intensified its offensive in eastern Ukraine while insisting that any peace negotiations must recognize its claimed annexation of four Ukrainian oblasts and Crimea. Russian forces do not fully control any of the four regions it seeks to claim.

    Ukraine has ruled out ceding its territory as part of any peace agreement.

    Investigation: How Russia prepares its strategic missile plant for ‘eternal war’
    Key findings: * Despite international sanctions, Russia’s strategic missile plant was able to import complex machinery to dramatically increase missile production. * The Kyiv Independent has identified the equipment supplied to the plant, as well as the supply chains, mostly from China. * We located the plant’s new premises, built to house the
    Donetsk Oblast city ‘on brink of humanitarian catastrophe,’ governor says as drones cripple infrastructureThe Kyiv IndependentAlisa Yurchenko
    Donetsk Oblast city ‘on brink of humanitarian catastrophe,’ governor says as drones cripple infrastructure
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