A front line can look stable right up until the systems behind it fail, then the map starts moving. We walk through why five settlements change hands in a week and why that pace is less about sudden bravery or sudden weakness and more about a threshold being crossed in electronic warfare, logistics, artillery support, and drone reconnaissance.
We’re joined by Colonel A.C. Oguntoye for a sector-by-sector military briefing on the special military operation as of today, from Sopik in the Sumy region to the hardest-fought central battles around Pavlovka. Along the way, we unpack what weekly loss figures really mean in practical terms: depots destroyed, armored vehicles lost, artillery degraded, and EW stations neutralized. You’ll hear why a buffer zone strategy matters near the border, how sustained pressure creates exploitable gaps, and why “quiet” directions can suddenly turn active when a weak point is identified.
We also connect the ground fight to the air campaign and air defense picture, including strikes on defense industry, fuel and power facilities, transport infrastructure, and drone production sites. The through-line is attrition warfare and the predictable sequence it follows: reduce future production, blind and deafen defenders, starve logistics, limit drones, then advance. One of the sharpest warning signs we discuss is force employment, especially the reported use of assault regiments in defensive holding roles and what that suggests about reserves and flexibility.
If you care about clear Russia Ukraine war analysis, electronic warfare trends, drone warfare, air defense metrics, and how battlefield momentum is built, this briefing is for you. Subscribe, share this with a friend who follows defense and security, and leave a review, then tell us what you think matters more right now: EW losses, depot destruction, or personnel attrition?
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