A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Jul 7, 2026

Russia's 2026 Offensive Failed, War's Balance Tilted, Ukraine 'Strongest In Years'

The consensus among informed observers is that the war's balance has shifted in Ukraine's favor. this does not mean that it is over - nor that it has been won. But it may well mean that, to paraphrase Churchill's famous line, Ukraine is well past 'the end of the beginning,' and that it has far more leverage to control the timing, location and pace of the fighting than it ever has. JL

Mick Ryan reports in Futura Doctrina:
Putin's appearance in military uniform at a military briefing (described as “a forward command post” but in reality, it looked like a room in the Kremlin lined with camouflage nets) is attempting to sell a story of Russian success when the reality is quite different. Russia’s 2026 Spring Offensive has failed. Its long-range strike campaign is not bending the will of Ukraine’s citizens. And even the US President appears to have lost interest in Russia’s case. Russia continues to employ infiltration by small groups moving through the kill zone rather than massed assault. This might avoid catastrophic losses in a single stroke but produces a steady stream of casualties as those groups are detected and struck. Set against the wider picture, these are marginal gains bought at extraordinary cost. The balance of the war has tilted (giving) Ukraine the strongest position it has held in years. 

"Industrial Scale" Damage: Eight Russian Shadow Oil Tankers Hit By Ukraine Drones

It's not just that Ukraine can now hit Russian targets almost anywhere in that vast country, but that it can do so at scale.

Destruction of crucial economic and military assets in such numbers cannot be sustained, even by a willfully stubborn autocrat. JL

Asami Terajima reports in the Kyiv Independent:

Ukrainian long-range drone strikes hit eight Russian shadow fleet tankers in the Sea of Azov. The overnight aerial naval battle reached "industrial-scale results." The Ukrainian drones also hit a dry cargo ship and a ferry, alongside a convoy of eight fuel tankers. The tankers Ukraine identified include Venera-3, Sanar-1, Sanar-17, Climene, Teti, Aleksey Savrasov, and Penelope. The fuel tankers were "badly damaged and on fire." The Ukrainian drone strikes on a convoy of Russian tankers come as Ukraine ramps up its long-range attacks across the Russian-occupied territories and inside Russia in recent weeks, inflicting a domestic fuel supply crisis on Russia. Russia still seems to lack a good answer."

Russia Launched 11 Attacks On Kostiantynivka In One Day. None Succeeded

Those Kremlin claims that its troops have captured Kostiantynivka are proving to be somewhat exaggerated, if not entirely delusional. 

Russian forces are reported to be suffering such 'staggering' casualties that they are infiltrating soldiers - not in small groups as at Pokrovsk - but literally individuals, one at a time. Approximately100 of them are believed to have survived so far, mostly holed up in damaged  buildings where they await Ukrainian troops finding and eliminating them. And when the Russians attempt actual assaults, as they did 11 times on Friday, they are decimated. JL
 
Carlotta Gall and Stanislav Kozliuk report in the New York Times:
Russian forces have targeted Kostiantynivka for months although independent analysts say Russian troops are largely stalled in their advance, and at the cost of staggering casualties. Ukrainian troops are holding designated lines and repelled 11 separate Russian assaults on Friday. "There is no specific area under the enemy’s control. There are individual buildings controlled by the enemy, and we are fighting that.” Russian soldiers were not infiltrating in units or even in pairs, but one at a time. “The situation remains under the control of the Defense Forces of Ukraine” 

Internal US Treasury Report Compares "Overinflated" AI To Dotcom Bubble

No, the sky is not falling. Yet. And because a number of the larger AI companies are much bigger, profitable and with healthier balance sheets, if there is an eventual collapse in the market, it may have less impact than did the dotcom bubble bursting 25 years ago. 

But, to be realistic, the report - which has not yet been released, at least in part because it contradicts the otherwise enthusiastic Trump administration's AI boosterism - does make an explicit comparison with the dotcom experience. The key point is that investors are so heavily committed to AI expectations, which many believe are overinflated, that any failure to achieve those goals could have a negative impact on the broader economy. The flip side of the AI companies size (which makes them less vulnerable than the dotcoms) is that they are much more deeply entrenched in the global financial system. The positive implication is that there are, finally, growing, realistic and influential assessments of the risks associated with AI, which may serve to make that market stronger in the long run. JL

Eric Katz reports in NOTUS:

A leaked report from the Treasury Department warns of  risks posed by the AI market, likening aspects of it to the dotcom bubble. AI investors are taking risks so significant that much of the financial system now rests upon AI meeting expectations for productivity gains and profitability. Treasury analysts found AI firms are more deeply entrenched in the U.S. economy than their dotcom predecessors and pose significant risk to the entire system if financial conditions change, productivity goals are missed or choke points stymie growth. The report concluded that the AI bubble’s popping would lead to less of an immediate crash than the U.S. economy experienced with dotcoms. Many of the top AI companies are more mature, profitable and maintain healthier balance sheets, which could blunt the impacts of the “bubble” bursting, if it bursts. Fears of an AI bubble have grown over the last year on Capitol Hill, among Wall Street executives and even within the ranks of top AI principals

Jul 6, 2026

Ukraine Destroys Russian Rubikon Drone Base In Pokrovsk

Drone operators from Ukraine's 7th Corps, deployed in the Pokrovsk sector, identified and destroyed a Russian drone base, killing a number of Russian crews and some instructors from the Kremlin's most effective 'Rubikon' unit. 

The successful targeting of such facilities is a significant loss to the Russians, whose drone resources and capabilities trail those of Ukraine. JL

Ukrinform reports:

Ukrainian drone operators from the 7th Corps, deployed in the Pokrovsk sector, destroyed high-rise building in the ‘Lazurnyi’ neighborhood, which the Russians had long used as a base for pilots. Additionally, there were also instructors from the ‘Rubicon’ center present, who were training UAV crews. "This was confirmed among enemy units stationed in this neighborhood.” The Russians were storing ammunition—including toxic chemicals—in one of the buildings. “As a result of the strike, the enemy two UAV crew operating posts, a communications node, ammunition stocks, and up to 10–15 personnel,”

New Pocket-Sized Ukrainian Launcher Takes Down FPV Drones

In the constant battle for innovation dominance, Ukraine has introduced a new pocket-sized portable anti-drone defensive weapon for frontline troops. 

It fires a net at an approaching FPV or reconnaissance drone, disabling the attacking object. JL

Ivan Khomenko reports in United 24:

Ukrainian defense company has developed a new lightweight, single-use anti-drone device designed to counter enemy FPV drones and reconnaissance quadcopters. It provides short-range drone interception using a rapidly deploying entanglement net. Weighing just 365 grams, the MITLA launcher measures 200 mm in height and 40 mm in diameter, allowing for easy storage in a pouch, backpack, or uniform pocket. The system operates manually and requires no external power or setup. To activate it, the user aims and fires, releasing a net that entangles the drone’s rotors mid-flight. 

Russia Has Lost the Initiative Against Ukraine. Is Unlikely to Regain It

Media headlines tell the story: Ukraine is systematically destroying Russia's military capabilities and broader, oil-based economy, while Russia responds with terror attacks on Ukrainian civilians. 

The former reflects strategic thinking aimed at achieving an analytically-driven outcome. The latter is simply an expression of impotent rage. Russian battlefield tactics, such as they are, amount to the infiltration of small groups of soldiers, many of whom are almost immediately eliminated by drones. The Kremlin is no longer capable of mounting offensives in the traditional sense of the word. The result is that Ukraine has achieved momentum, choosing when and where to fight, while Russia responds, hoping the world will lose interest before the Russian economy collapses. JL 

Seth Jones and colleagues report in the Center For Strategic and International Studies:

Ukrainian forces, after more than two years on the defensive, began clawing back ground that reversed the front’s direction in some areas for the first time since 2023. Even where Russia concentrates its resources, it has not been able punch through Ukraine’s defensive lines and advance quickly. Russian battlefield fatalities in Ukraine are more than 28 times greater than Soviet fatalities in Afghanistan during the 1980s, more than 18 times greater than during Russia’s First and Second Chechen Wars. (And) Russian battlefield casualties are significantly greater than Ukraine's. Russia’s territorial control in Ukraine shrank in the spring of 2026. The war in Ukraine heavily favors the defender, a dynamic that has frustrated Russian offensives. It’s progress on the battlefield has been historically poor, with Russian casualties, fatalities, and average rates of advance among the worst of any major power in any war since World War II.