Ukraine's counteroffensive in the southern oblasts of Zaporizhzhia and Dnipropetrovsk has taken several hundred kilometers of territory, disrupted Russia's own offensive plans - and, most importantly - exposed how Russian commanders are lying to the Kremlin about the progress of the war.
Putin's refusal to negotiate seriously is based in part on his belief that his forces are advancing and wearing down the Ukrainians. But the recent Ukrainian advances, which are far more noteworthy than anything the Russians have achieved in months, has been designed to some degree to undermine the Kremlin's already shaky trust in its military by showing that the glowing reports of ground taken and held are illusory. Much of the land the Ukrainians have taken was never really 'held' in the classic sense: it was gray area in which competing teams of Russian and Ukrainian scouts hunted each other. Now that the Ukrainians have actually moved in force, Putin has further reason for concern as his supporters in the Trump administration must face the reality of their putative ally's weakness. JL
Phillips O'Brien reports in his substack:
The Russians never actually controlled the area the Ukrainians have taken back. The Russians had troops there, but they were the small infiltration units. As such, the Russians did not have control and the Ukrainians have cleared them out. This would be revealing. The Russians (claimed) they were making major advances in this region and the Russian military was telling Putin that. The Russians regularly claim greater advances than they actually are able to undertake (remember Kupiansk?). Putin was, once again, being given an overoptimistic picture of what his military was doing . The Ukrainians are trolling the Russians: their boasting and lack of honesty has been exposed, illuminating the lack of honesty about the state of the war being fed upwards into the Kremlin.