A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Apr 14, 2026

Renewed Ukrainian Advances In Zaporizhzhia Further Weakens Russia's Hold

Renewed advances by Ukrainian troops in Zaporizhzhia oblast are taking advantage of Russian weaknesses in some sectors. This is further evidence of Ukraine's opportunistic attack strategy, which is enhancing Ukrainian positions wherever possible while challenging Russia's overstretched forces in ways that degrade their capabilities across the front, further diminishing their chances for advances this year. JL

Sofiia Syngaivska reports in Defense Express:

Ukrainian forces are conducting a coordinated effort to clear Stepnohirsk in Zaporizhzhia oblast. The fighting has resulted in significant Russian losses, with several hundred personnel eliminated, more than 20 armored vehicles destroyed or damaged, including tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, and multiple prisoners captured directly within urban areas. The scale of the engagement suggests a sustained and high-intensity battle. The broader operational significance of the fighting lies in regaining control of the settlment which would eliminate a staging ground for Russian advances, and expand Ukraine's fire control over key enemy logistics routes in the area.

Kremlin's 2026 Recruitment Rate Has Fallen 20% Versus 2025

The word is out in Russia: signing up to fight in Ukraine is almost certainly a one-way ticket to death. As a result, Kremlin recruiting in the first three months of 2026 is 20% lower than it was in 2025 despite a dramatic increase in the financial incentives being offered. 

Ironically, one of the reasons why recruiting of contract soldiers may be down is that the enhanced signing bonuses are putting tremendous pressure on the Russian regions bearing that cost. As a result, it may be that the regions are less enthusiastically pursuing new recruits. To make up the shortfall, the Kremlin is demanding that 2% of all university students either volunteer or be 'volunteered' by their schools. In addition, Russians with any sort of debt are being forced into joining. And if the debtor is a woman, her male relatives are targeted. This does not sound like a long term solution that the Russian people will embrace. JL

Roman Pryhodko reports in Militarnyi:

The rate of recruitment of contract soldiers into the Russian Armed Forces fell by 20% compared to 2025. In early 2026, Russia was recruiting approximately 800 soldiers per day, whereas in the first quarter of 2025, this figure was approximately 1,000–1,200 people. On average, Russia recruits about 30,000 new soldiers each month. This is enough to offset current losses, but not enough for a large-scale expansion of the army. (This is despite the fact that) a new record in the amount of payments for signing a contract—the average amount in his sample in March reached 1.47 million rubles, while the median was 1.55 million rubles. (But), this places increasing financial pressure on Russian regions. 

For 1st Time, Ukraine Ground 'Bots, Drones Capture Russian Position Without Troops

For the first time in Ukraine's war against the Russian invasion, ground robots and aerial drones advanced and captured without human infantry a Russian position, forcing the Kremlin troops engaged to surrender. 

Ground robots have now carried out 22,000 missions in the first three months of 2026. As many as 80% of logistics operations are carried out by ground robots in some sectors, with a growing percentage of combat missions now being added. 30% of Ukrainian infantry could be replaced by these bots this year, saving lives and allowing for the redeployment of human troops to other tasks for which they are better suited. JL

Matthew Robinson and Ellie Cook report in Newsweek:

Ukrainian troops have retaken territory from Russia using only unmanned robots for the first time. Russian soldiers "surrendered" when they were met exclusively with ground systems and drones advancing without infantry against Russian forces on the ground. “The occupiers surrendered, and the operation was carried out without infantry and without losses on our side.” Ground robots have carried out over 22,000 frontline missions in the past three months, venturing into the most dangerous clashes in place of Ukrainian soldiers. Ground robots completed more than 9,000 combat and logistics missions on the front line in March alone, an increase from under 3,000 in November. 30% of Ukraine's infantry could be immediately replaced by UGVs. This could surge to 80% in the future. 

Science PhD's Double Outperformance of AI But Embrace It For Research

Stanford University released its report on the state of AI yesterday, widely considered the definitive take on trends, performance, education and all related indices. 

There is a wealth of data in the report, much of which is available online, but two notable issues stand out. The first is that China and the US are clearly in the lead in most categories, now almost equal, with the US maintaining a slight lead. The other is that the embrace of AI in all fields continues to grow, but for the time being, PhDs in various sciences continue to outperform AI by a significant degree - approximately double - in multistep workflows. This will probably not be permanent, but it does add to the considerable body of evidence suggesting that AI's global dominance is likely to take longer than Silicon Valley would have the rest of the world believe. JL

Nicola Jones reports in Nature:

Many researchers have started to rely on AI ‘agents’ that autonomously carry out actions including scientific workflows, but the report is skeptical about their performance. AI agents still struggle to reliably perform multistep workflows, it reports, with the best AI agents scoring roughly half as well as human specialists with PhDs. “Agents are wonderful, but we are still far from a place where we use them effectively.” (Despite that) in 2025, more than 80,000 papers, preprints and other types of publication in the natural sciences — which includes life, physical and Earth sciences — mentioned AI, 26% more than in 2024. The subcategory of physical sciences had the largest number of publications that mention AI (33,000). The Earth sciences category had the highest percentage (9%).

Apr 13, 2026

Three Weeks Into Spring Offensive, Russia Has Actually Lost Territory

Historically, three weeks into a major offensive, the attacking military should have gained ground as the defenders struggle to reorganize and respond. But not so for the Russian army in Ukraine.

Three weeks into their spring offensive, they have actually lost ground to the Ukrainians, who are taking advantage of Russian predictability and weakness by opportunistically advancing themselves at points along the line where the Russians are weakest. JL

Phillips O'Brien reports in his substack:

The Russian spring offensive started around March 20, 2026. (But) the net amount of territory gained by Russia in that time is actually a net loss. During the first week, Russia gained. During the last week, the Russians lost territory. It is notable that three weeks into a large offensive, the Russians are losing ground. When you add that in March, the Ukrainians gained more territory than they lost even with the Russian Spring Offensive starting, overall the Russians are still losing more than they are taking. If the Russians are using their reserves and it gains them nothing, the initiative will return more and more to Ukraine. This failure (offers) echoes of Putin planning his 2022 victory parade in Kyiv

Ukraine's Secret Network of 3D Bomb Builders

In yet another example of Ukraine's entrepreneurial tech innovation, a network of volunteers is supporting the Ukrainian military by 3D printing parts for drone-delivered bombs and other weapons, as well as related components. 

The volunteers have produced 100 tons of manufactured plastic items in the past last year. JL

Kathryn Diss reports in the Australian Broadcasting Corporation:

A volunteer network that stretches across Europe, fills the gaps when supplies through official channels dry up. Last year, the network of 400 volunteers produced 100 tons of manufactured plastic items for Ukraine's military, including parts for ammunition and casings for bombs that are strapped to drones as well as safety switches and LED torches to antennas to help steer drones. "Everyone who volunteers is [a] civilian, so we don't work with explosives or detonators. We print the shell and then it gets sent to the military, where they add explosives, shrapnel and detonators to make a bomb." The printers, which quickly produce small parts en masse and can be adapted for new designs, have proved vital for Ukraine. "It's like an e-commerce website. Once they order something, it is sent to volunteers so they can manufacture it and send it directly to the soldiers."

Russian Armor Now Rarely Makes It To Front Due To Ukraine's 20Km Kill Zone

The extension of Ukraine's Drone Line to what is now a 20 kilometer 'robotic kill zone' has meant that Russian tanks, infantry fighting vehicles and other armored equipment 'rarely' makes it as far as the front line, let alone deployed in a position to attack Ukrainian,  defenses. 

The weapons and vehicles are almost always spotted, targeted and eliminated behind what is roughly conceived of as a front in historical terms, making the entire battle zone a gray area in which it has become impossible for the Kremlin to move large units - even if they had such formations at their disposal. For the same reason, evidence of Kremlin deployment of strategic reserves from elsewhere in Russia now reveal that Russian forces can be replenished, but not accumulated, all of which confirms the degradation of Russian military capacity. JL 

Yuri Zoria reports in the Euromaidan Press:

Russian heavy equipment usage has become limited across the front and the reason is structural. Due to the 20 kilometer kill zone, "Russian equipment usually doesn't get through, especially tanks and infantry fighting vehicles," reducing Russia's tank and IFV advantage from a battlefield asset to a logistics problem that sits 20 km away from the positions it was built to overrun. Ukraine's Drone Line, funded at $880 million and operational since March 2025, is creating " a robotic kill zone" with continuous drone coverage along assault corridors.