In fighting reminiscent of the Ukrainian advances around Kharkiv and Kherson in late 2022, Ukraine's forces have optimized what was originally some tactical opportunities and turned them into what is now widely called a counteroffensive.
Having pushed the Russians back 300 kilometers in Zaporizhzhia and Dnipropetrovsk oblasts - an advance being called 'The Zaporizhzhia Run,"
Ukraine has not only disrupted a Russian gain that began last summer but has forced the Kremlin to redeploy forces from other sectors including Pokrovsk. Though much of the credit for the Ukrainian success has been attributed to the Russians' loss of Starlink and Telegram access, the reality appears to be that the Russian 'advances' were really more like probing reconnaissance actions by small units, not territory gained and held by substantial units. When viewed against the backdrop of the Kremlin's well publicized difficulties in recruiting new troops, these Ukrainian attacks appear to signal a further degradation of Russian military capabilities. JL
Decimus reports in Daily Kos:
2026 was (supposed) to be the year in which Zaporizhzhia City (as well as the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant) became Russian propaganda coups as a dispirited Ukraine caved. But Ukraine's unanticipated, vicious and devastating counter punch into the Russian underbelly in Zaporizhia upended what it had done since last summer as well as the Kremlin's plans for 2026. Russian forces are now 'spinning their wheels halfway to their intended staging positions." The tempo of Russian advances nearly halted. Ukrainian units struck across multiple axes: Oleksandrivka, along the Haichur River, northwest of Huliaipole and liberated Dobropillia. These actions were 80 kilometers east of Zaporizhzhia City, an area where Russian forces had made progress since summer. The strategic impact of reversing Russian momentum is substantial.