{"id":2154,"date":"2025-08-26T17:00:41","date_gmt":"2025-08-26T17:00:41","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.youtubexyoutube.com\/?p=2154"},"modified":"2025-08-29T13:47:55","modified_gmt":"2025-08-29T13:47:55","slug":"this-is-how-a-front-line-fails-russias-summer-offensive-is-breaking-the-war-wide-open","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.youtubexyoutube.com\/index.php\/2025\/08\/26\/this-is-how-a-front-line-fails-russias-summer-offensive-is-breaking-the-war-wide-open\/","title":{"rendered":"This is how a front line fails: Russia\u2019s summer offensive is breaking the war wide open"},"content":{"rendered":"
Abandoned trenches, collapsing bastions, encirclements, and empty strongpoints: the warning signs of collapse are no longer subtle<\/strong><\/p>\n Something shifted on the Ukraine conflict front lines this summer.<\/p>\n Throughout July and the first half of August, a series of cascading events signaled a dramatic turn. Most decisive among them was the breach of Ukrainian defenses along the Pokrovsk axis \u2013 a rupture so deep, so sudden, and so destabilizing that even Ukrainian sources began calling it a \u201cfull-dress rehearsal for the collapse of the front.\u201d<\/em> It marks the most serious crisis for the Armed Forces of Ukraine since the battles of spring 2022.<\/p>\n But this was not an isolated breakthrough. From the forests near Liman to the urban ruins of Konstantinovka, from the encircled streets of Pokrovsk to the shifting borderlands of the Dnepropetrovsk region, the tempo of the Russian offensive has changed. Advances that once came meter by meter are now measured in kilometers. Positions once fiercely contested now fall empty. And in sector after sector, the Ukrainian command scrambles to plug gaps faster than they appear.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n The front is creaking under pressure \u2013 and the sound is growing louder.<\/p>\n As always, we examine the most active sectors of the Russo-Ukrainian front, moving from north to south.<\/p>\n For nearly three years, this axis has remained largely secondary. The city of Liman in the Donetsk People\u2019s Republic (prewar population: 20,000) was abandoned by Russian forces on October 1, 2022, during Ukraine\u2019s Kharkov offensive. Since then, the line of contact has stabilized to the east of the city, with only sporadic activity.<\/p>\n However, the broader exhaustion of Ukrainian forces across the front has begun to show here as well. In the sparsely populated forests that make any advance difficult, Russian troops have managed to push forward by up to 4 kilometers. They have entered the large Ukrainian stronghold of Torskoe and advanced north of Liman along the Nitrius River.<\/p>\n What\u2019s happening now suggests a broader operational plan: to cut off Liman from its supply lines by seizing control of the roads on the northern bank of the Seversky Donets River. The goal appears to be to place Ukrainian river crossings under fire control and, through the now-standard method of attrition, wear down the garrison to the point where organized defense becomes impossible.<\/p>\n As the map makes clear, the encirclement of Konstantinovka from three sides is now largely complete. The likely advance along the Stepanovka\u2013Dolgaya Balka\u2013Nikolaypolye line, combined with control over the surrounding high ground, would allow Russian forces to place the city\u2019s only major supply route \u2013 running through Druzhkovka \u2013 under full fire control.<\/p>\n One of the most significant developments for the Russian army this past month has been progress on the northern edge of Konstantinovka, near Chasov Yar. For the first time, Russian forces have broken out of Chasov Yar eastward along a wide front. This marks a turning point: the northern pincer \u2013 the \u201cChasov Yar claw\u201d<\/em> of the Konstantinovka encirclement \u2013 is no longer the bottleneck it once was.<\/p>\n Another major achievement came with the clearing of the pocket south of the Kleban-Byk Reservoir. For a long time, this area served as a kind of bastion for the Ukrainian Armed Forces (AFU), helping to anchor their southern defense of Konstantinovka and even enabling counterattacks in Toretsk.<\/p>\n But the capture of two key strongpoints \u2013 Kleban-Byk and Aleksandro-Kalinovo \u2013 effectively sealed the pocket. Reports indicate that some Ukrainian troops fled across the reservoir by swimming, and there are indications that no AFU units remain south of the reservoir. Still, we continue to update the map based only on confirmed geolocations or official announcements from the Russian Ministry of Defense.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n On August 21, Russian forces liberated the village of Aleksandro-Shultino on the Konstantinovka axis. This effectively marks the entry into the urban area itself \u2013 and the beginning of direct combat for control over Konstantinovka.<\/p>\n
Liman and Seversk fronts: slowly but steadily<\/h3>\n

\n \u00a9\u00a0RT \/ Sergey Poletaev based on data from Lostarmor.Ru <\/span>
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\nChasov Yar and Konstantinovka axes: When quantity becomes quality<\/h3>\n

\n \u00a9\u00a0RT \/ Sergey Poletaev based on data from Lostarmor.Ru <\/span>
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n
Pokrovsk front: A demo version of disaster<\/h3>\n