The fastest way to misunderstand this war is to stare only at the front line. We zoom out and follow the logic a field-grade officer uses to connect long-range precision strikes, drone warfare, and ground maneuver into a single campaign system aimed at breaking an opponent’s ability to keep fighting.
We start with the claimed purpose behind a surge of high-precision missile and drone strikes against defense industrial sites, energy infrastructure, transport hubs, and airfields, framed as a doctrine-driven effort to destroy “critical nodes” and reduce the tempo of Ukrainian artillery and counterattacks. Then we walk the map sector by sector, including reported actions in the Kharkiv region, the forested and river-cut terrain near the Kupyansk-Svatove line, and the incremental but compounding advances described in the Donetsk direction. Along the way, we unpack what “improving the tactical situation” means on the ground: taking key heights, tightening observation, and gaining fire control over supply roads.
From there, we dig into operational art concepts like tactical depth versus operational depth and why penetrating deeper changes what targets become reachable, from artillery positions to command posts and logistics routes. We also explore the distinct fight along the Dnipro River where water barriers limit maneuver and where the standout claim is an intense hunt for electronic warfare and counterfire radars using drone-enabled targeting. We close with the air war lens, including eye-watering drone numbers and how air defense is portrayed as shaping the battlefield before ground forces move.
If you care about military strategy, battlefield updates, drones, electronic warfare, and the Russia-Ukraine conflict, hit subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What part of the modern battlefield feels most decisive to you right now?
From the Frontline Updates team, this is episode 247. I’m your host. For the past week, Russian forces have conducted five coordinated group strikes alongside massive long-range precision attacks against Ukrainian defense industrial sites, energy infrastructure, and military airfields. On the ground, six army groups, North, West, South, Center, East, and Dnepr, all report tactical gains or improved positions, with the most significant territorial advance in the Kharkiv region. But what does this weekly snapshot tell us about Russian operational art, logistics warfare, and the broader campaign design? To break it down, we’re joined again by Colonel AC. Oguntoye, an infantry officer who leads combined arms forces on the ground.
It’s a critical moment in the operation, and I appreciate the opportunity to explain not just what happened, but why it matters.
#OperationalArt #LogisticsWarfare #AttritionCampaign #ForcePosture #RussiaUkraineWar #CombatBriefing #auc3i #bf7 #mw3
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