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Home News

Russia Goes After Ukraine With Distant Strikes and New Tactics

August 9, 2025
in News
Russia Presses Ahead With Massed Forces, Drones and Saboteurs
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Russia has shown no signs of pulling back in its war against Ukraine. Instead, it has intensified its long-range strikes on Ukrainian cities and attacks across the front line. It has also adopted new tactics, military experts say, in the use of drones and small units.

In the midst of all the fighting, on Friday, President Trump said he would meet next week with President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia in Alaska to try to end the war. He suggested that a peace deal between the two countries could include “some swapping of territories,” signaling that the United States may join Russia in trying to compel Ukraine to permanently cede some of its land.

But even as the Kremlin seeks to use negotiations to lay claim to land it has been unable to win on the battlefield, Russian forces are still trying to push ahead on the ground.

Moscow is betting that, no matter the diplomatic wrangling, it can eventually come out on top in a long war of attrition in which it has both numeric and military superiority.

Russia has been unable to turn small gains on the battlefield into strategic breakthroughs, although it has suffered staggering human losses. For more than a year, its troops have concentrated on Pokrovsk, in eastern Ukraine, with relentless attacks from a large force that has been getting closer.

Late last month, a few Russian soldiers infiltrated the city for the first time, according to Ukrainian troops defending it. The Russians set ambushes and attacked vehicle convoys before they were tracked down in several city blocks, and at least four people were killed, said Staff Sgt. Oleksandr Kanivets, a mortar battery commander with the Ukrainian 68th Jaeger Brigade.

Since then, attacks by small groups of Russian soldiers backed by drones have increased, Sergeant Kanivets said. “Our clearing operations continue, just as their raids into the city do,” he said when reached by phone on Monday.

Using Drones for Offense

Driving the Ukrainians out of Pokrovsk would allow Russian troops to bolster their attacks on the remaining cities of the Donbas region that form the spine of the Ukrainian defense in the east.

In the fight for Pokrovsk, Moscow has deployed some 110,000 troops, attacking from multiple directions, Ukrainian officials say. “This is an army capable of capturing a medium-sized European country,” said Viktor Trehubov, a Ukrainian military spokesman.

Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi, Ukraine’s top military commander, said Russia continues to expand the size of its forces fighting inside Ukraine, which, he said, needed to intensify its own struggling mobilization effort.

After a siege that has lasted more than a year, Moscow has increasingly been turning to small units like the one that infiltrated Pokrovsk last month, backed by drones.

The troops are integrating the drones into offensive operations, deploying them with elite units to wreak havoc on Ukrainian supply lines.

“How Ukraine adapts to and counters this evolving drone threat is critical,” said Michael Kofman, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, who recently visited Ukrainian troops on the front.

The Front Transformed

Fighting also continues to rage across a long front, from the Dnipro River and Kharkiv in the north, to Chasiv Yar in the heart of the eastern Donbas region and Zaporizhzhia in the south.

In the northeast near Sumy, months of persistent attacks by Russia have yielded minimal gains and the Ukrainians have pushed the troops back in places, according to combat footage verified by military analysts. Major assaults in the south have also recently been repelled, soldiers said.

The fiercest fighting is in the eastern Donetsk region. Most of Russia’s gains in June and July — which amounted to about 400 square miles, according to military analysts — were there.

But the fighting that has taken place this summer scarcely resembles the war’s early days, or even last year’s battles, military experts say.

Coordinated assaults with armored columns battling between trench lines are rare. Now, Ukrainian forces are scattered in small teams occupying foxholes or basements, watching mine-strewn fields under constant drone surveillance.

“The lines are not comprised of sprawling trenches, but small defensive positions which serve as pickets, while much of the fighting is done by drones and artillery,” Mr. Kofman said.

While maps show clear front lines, in reality, both sides bleed into one another across vast battlefields.

The Russians more often than not move in small groups on foot, occasionally followed by groups racing forward on motorbikes or buggies, sometimes even bypassing Ukrainian positions rather than engaging them.

The Ukrainians at times do not open fire so as to not reveal their positions.

Valerii Zaluzhnyi, Ukraine’s former top military commander and now ambassador to Britain, offered a blunt description of the new reality in a recent interview on Ukrainian television. “Now the front line is mainly designed so that people are killed there,” he said.

This grim calculus can be seen in underground command posts, where Ukraine’s losses are tracked on whiteboards with code names for fighting positions and tallies of drones lost, electronic warfare systems destroyed and soldiers killed or wounded.

Capt. Dmytro Filatov, who oversees a three-mile section of the front, spends day and night monitoring nine video feeds offering near-constant bird’s-eye views of his patch of land.

One morning this summer, a drone team spotted a lone Russian soldier emerging from a tree line.

“There is the Russian. There!” Captain Filatov barked, ordering attack drones launched. But the soldier vanished back into foliage before a large bomber drone, the Vampire, could strike.

The captain angrily threw down his phone in frustration.

Six men in his regiment had died a day earlier after being sent forward to block an assault. Surrounded, they fought for five days before being overrun.

“Did I know it was a big risk? Yes,” he said. “Did I hesitate? No.”

The Battle for Pokrovsk

While Russia has kept up relentless attacks across the front, Pokrovsk faces a particularly urgent threat, Ukrainian soldiers and commanders said.

Sergeant Kanivets, the Ukrainian mortar unit commander, was sent to the Pokrovsk area in March 2024.

Russian troops had recently taken Avdiivka, about 25 miles to the east, and were moving steadily in the direction of Pokrovsk, which at the time was a critical logistical hub for Ukrainian forces in the region.

They reached the outskirts of the city before their march was halted.

A year later, as Russian forces once again ramp up attacks, the skies are thick with drones, Sergeant Kanivets said. Soldiers are often forced to spend weeks at fighting positions without rotation and only limited resupply.

Squeezed from all sides, Ukrainian forces could once again be faced with a choice they have confronted time and again, deciding when the price of holding their ground outweighs the cost of retreating.

They have already dug extensive defensive lines behind the city. Families in nearby villages are being evacuated as the war closes in. And the city itself is steadily being destroyed.

Captain Filatov, on the front line, said there was no time for wishful thinking about diplomacy or leaders bringing an end to the conflict.

“We’ve fought so long that we rely only on ourselves, not on presidents, gods or talks,” he said. When asked if his men maintain hope, he glanced at a passing soldier: “Vasyl, do you have hope?”

The soldier laughed. “No,” he replied.

Liubov Sholudko contributed reporting from Kyiv.

Marc Santora has been reporting from Ukraine since the beginning of the war with Russia. He was previously based in London as an international news editor focused on breaking news events and earlier the bureau chief for East and Central Europe, based in Warsaw. He has also reported extensively from Iraq and Africa.

Maria Varenikova covers Ukraine and its war with Russia.

David Guttenfelder is a Times visual journalist based in Minneapolis.

Tyler Hicks is a senior photographer for The Times. In 2014, he won the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Photography for his coverage of the Westgate Mall massacre in Nairobi, Kenya.

The post Russia Goes After Ukraine With Distant Strikes and New Tactics appeared first on New York Times.

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