For the reason that starting of the day, 107 fight engagements occurred within the frontline: occupants are attempting to assault in 11 sectors
Over the previous day, 107 fight engagements occurred between the Ukrainian Armed Forces and Russian troops. Most assaults have been recorded within the Pokrovsk sector, the place the enemy misplaced 265 occupants and a major quantity of kit.
Editor’s be aware: In accordance with the safety protocols of the Ukrainian navy, troopers featured on this story are recognized by first names and callsigns solely.
DONETSK OBLAST – Scanning an array of 9 video feeds from a command level in an deserted summer season, mortar battery commander Tymur “Babai” searches for motion.
On this work video name that continues 24/7, every consumer is a colleague, however the cameras don’t look into residing rooms.
As an alternative, every display screen exhibits the eyes of a unique Ukrainian drone, scanning the battlefield for Russian targets.
On a few screens, the unmistakable slanted tower and large pulley of a Ukrainian coal mine might be seen.
Yesterday, drone pilots of his unit, the twenty third Particular Objective Battalion of Ukraine’s Presidential Brigade, had been looking Russian squaddies within the mine buildings; movies on Babai’s cellphone present the final moments of the enemy troopers’ lives, caught unaware because the drones flew proper by means of the home windows.
“It’s simply meat, meat, meat;” says Babai of his enemy’s ways, “they mobilize somebody, and inside per week, they’re already sitting in a trench. They’ve this human conveyor belt, they usually’ll hold sending an increasing number of.”
“Right here, the troopers are unprepared — there’s no elite assault power or something like that, simply cannon fodder. They provide them a rifle, inform them, ‘Go there, these are your comrades, and shoot at something that strikes.’”
A photograph of a Ukrainian video feed displaying a coal mine close to Kotlyne, Donetsk Oblast, on Feb 2, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)
Rising by the railway simply outdoors the village of Kotlyne, this small mine, certainly one of dozens dotting the panorama of Donetsk Oblast, represents the very frontier of Russia’s westward advance to outflank the embattled metropolis of Pokrovsk.
Failing to make progress with a direct assault on Pokrovsk since approaching the southern outskirts of the town in September, Russian forces have turned to a time-honored tactic of making an attempt to encompass defenders with extensive pushes to Pokrovsk’s west and east.
Day-to-day, the offensive additionally brings with it a grim new actuality: that Russia’s conflict might quickly enter a brand new Ukrainian area.
In response to open-source mapping, Russian forces are actually lower than 5 kilometers from the border of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, which has not up to now seen combating on the bottom.
The freeway from Pavlohrad to Pokrovsk, Donetsk Oblast, on Feb 2, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)
Although Pokrovsk remains to be removed from being surrounded, additional south, the state of affairs is markedly extra dire.
Within the aftermath of the autumn of Kurakhove in January, elite Ukrainian brigades, although badly depleted, continued to cling on to a pocket of territory simply west of the town, regardless of being encircled on three sides.
In mid-February, the Kurakhove pocket started to break down, and now, the query looms of whether or not a extra evened-out entrance line will probably be what Ukraine wants to actually knock the wind out of Russia’s offensive, if solely briefly.
On the geopolitical entrance, the final frosty weeks of winter have introduced with them chilling indicators for Ukraine.
However because the world’s focus fixates on U.S. President Donald Trump and his alignment with Moscow’s conflict narrative, a determined battle to stabilize the Donetsk Oblast entrance line is constant uninterrupted.
The Kyiv Impartial spent two weeks within the Pokrovsk and Kurakhove sectors of the entrance line, chatting with infantry and artillery commanders, medics, and drone pilots.
Although all spoke of heavy combating and frequent Russian assaults, assaults had been reported to have seen a relative lull within the remaining weeks of winter.
“While you take a look at the entire state of affairs, you possibly can say it's a small operational pause that we've noticed,” Emil Kastehelmi, a Finnish navy analyst and member of the Black Chook Group open-source intelligence collective, informed the Kyiv Impartial
“They’ve stored the contact, advancing small steps right here and there, however the larger-scale offensive operations have died down.”
In a slender treeline between fields of frost, three Ukrainian mortarmen get to work by the dim crimson gentle of head torches.
Dropping 82mm shells right into a weapon that hasn’t modified a lot for over a century, they go about their work with out seeing the end result, laying hearth down on the coordinates given by Babai’s officers on the command level.
The crew fires round half a dozen shells all through the night time, laying down hearth on Russian infantry positions within the hope of crippling the subsequent deliberate enemy assault.
These mortar positions are lower than two kilometers (1.2 miles) from the Russian forces digging in round Kotlyne and the coal mine.
Every week earlier, stated mortarman Artem “Rio,” issues had been quite a bit hotter right here.
“Once we got here in, it was a chaotic state of affairs, it appears to have evened out,” he stated.
“We held on to our positions effectively, however the flanks had been pushed again, and we had been principally surrounded for some time there.”
In response to commander Babai, the hectic month his unit has spent combating right here outdoors Pokrovsk bears all of the hallmark indicators of systemic group issues within the Ukrainian navy.
“Once we had been introduced right here our battalion was already not combat-effective. We had lower than 30 squaddies left,” he stated.
“Once we got here in right here, into the chaos we discovered ourselves in, the place there was no established place, no correctly constructed provide routes, we ended up in a head-on battle. A few of us had been killed whereas disembarking close to trenches that had been purported to be ours, however in actuality, they had been occupied by the enemy.”
Two Ukrainian mortarmen put together shells at a firing place close to Pokrovsk, Donetsk Oblast, on Feb. 3, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)
Issues in communication in command are solely exacerbated by the manpower disaster, asserted Babai, who has routinely needed to take the painful step of transferring his personal artillerymen into the infantry.
“When the excessive command seems to be on the roster and sees 400 troops within the battalion, they suppose it’s a combat-effective unit,” he stated. “They don’t really examine what number of troopers are assigned to every firm or notice that there isn’t any infantry, and ship us in anyway.”
“Our infantry ran out fairly shortly, whereas our flanks folded, and we needed to retreat to Kotlyne.”
The overall chaos recalled by Babai testifies to the vital conditions that come up when positions are misplaced in fast succession, leaving the flanks of neighboring items uncovered with out their data, and leaving mortarmen like Rio’s crew at risk of being trapped in a direct firefight.
Worst of all is the lot of the infantry in such situations, pressured to battle off assaults from makeshift positions, with little prospect for deliberate rotation.
“A soldier deploys and may sit there for per week, two weeks, a month — till he will get wounded or till another person returns from the hospital to switch him,” stated Babai.
“Beneath these situations, with fixed assaults, guys maintain out for per week or two, after which we see desertion instances. These are guys who fought laborious, repelled dozens of assaults — however the assaults don’t cease, and their minds can’t maintain up perpetually. Their psyche breaks.”
Ukrainian mortar battery commander Tymur "Babai" close to Pokrovsk, Donetsk Oblast, on Feb 2, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)
With the arrival of freezing temperatures in mid-February, Russian offensives within the Kotlyne sector have died down, even permitting for profitable native counterattacks.
On the southern outskirts of Pokrovsk, Ukrainian troops took again the village of Pishchane, whereas in Babai’s sector, Ukrainian assault battalions and particular forces took again the coal mine.
“Within the Pokrovsk sector, the initiative is starting to shift to us,” stated a Ukrainian Particular Forces sniper combating within the space, who declined to be recognized for safety causes.
“They’re taking loopy losses; I’ve by no means seen something prefer it.”
If Ukraine can sustain the strain and makes use of its time to reorganize its protection, Russian assaults within the space may very well be stopped useless of their tracks for a very long time, in response to Babai.
“The enemy loses morale and might now not assault,” he stated.
“They scatter, hiding not even in trenches however in basements, they usually don’t transfer anyplace. Their commanders don’t know the place their personnel are, whereas we merely end off the remnants.”
In a grove of timber someplace southwest of Pokrovsk, firm commander Oleksandr “Willy” arrives together with his crew at nightfall in an armored car to start his shift.
“I hope the day will probably be quiet, however perhaps we might see some motion from their infantry,” he says as he takes his place in entrance of the pc display screen.
“They might attempt to crawl as much as our positions of their small teams.”
This group is an infantry firm of Ukraine’s 14th Nationwide Guard Brigade, higher often called Chervona Kalyna (Purple Viburnum) after the topic of a well-known Ukrainian people music.
Fashioned in 2023 as a part of the Assault Guard group of latest brigades combating beneath the Inside Ministry, Chervona Kalyna first noticed motion within the 2023 Zaporizhzhia Oblast counteroffensive earlier than being transferred to the protection of Pokrovsk within the latter half of 2024.
This small dugout, divided crudely right into a workspace and a flat space for sleeping, is the mind of the day-to-day positional infantry warfare that has outlined this conflict.
Ukrainian firm commander Oleksandr "Willy" at a command publish of the 14th Chervona Kalyna Nationwide Guard Brigade close to Pokrovsk, Donetsk Oblast, on Jan. 31, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)
Subsequent to the ever present drone feeds, a neat Excel spreadsheet shows the names of the corporate’s males at the moment out on positions.
Every column of callsigns within the desk represents a small, remoted group of Ukraine’s most valuable useful resource at this stage of the full-scale conflict: educated, motivated squaddies.
Even when manning organized traces of protection, Ukrainian infantry have discovered themselves in remoted situations that solely get extra brutal with every month, because the skies get more and more saturated with Russian drones.
Each hour all through the night time, Willy and his crew examine in on every place, one after the other.
The calm, laconic replies throughout the radio “450 (Ukrainian navy code for every little thing beneath management), on-line,” present a testomony that the night time is unusually quiet.
A rarity within the Pokrovsk space, the Chervona Kalyna brigade has been capable of maintain the identical positions for a lot of months, thanks each to favorable terrain of their sector and a well-organized, well-manned protection.
In response to Willy although, this hasn’t stopped Russian forces from trying to interrupt their line with near-daily assaults.
“We attempt to take care of them earlier than they make it to the place, particularly with drones,” he stated, "the issue is that generally they handle to take shelter within the basements and dig in.”
“They’re on the lookout for weak factors, and once they discover them, that's once they convey in additional autos, from bikes to tanks.”
Ukrainian troopers rotating positions close to Pokrovsk, Donetsk Oblast, on Feb. 3, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)
Certain sufficient, as daybreak breaks, Russian forces are noticed on the transfer on the outskirts of the occupied city of Hrodivka.
Two outdated bikes carrying two enemy squaddies every might be seen rushing alongside the final avenue in direction of the Ukrainian traces.
Earlier than reaching their vacation spot, the troopers might be seen rapidly abandoning their steeds in the course of the street; certain sufficient, a number of seconds later, the bikes are struck with two small explosions, one after the opposite.
Abandoning no matter their authentic mission was, the 4 Russian troopers take shelter in a wrecked basement.
Now, all through the day their location will probably be recognized to Ukrainian hearth and drone groups, who’ve the remainder of the day to smoke them out.
Additional south, in an unassuming hut on the sting of a village, the true price of the fierce battles within the Kurakhove sector is on full show.
At a stabilization level run by Ukraine’s thirty seventh Marine Brigade, casualties evacuated from the combating proper within the epicenter of the Kurakhove pocket are given emergency remedy earlier than additional transportation to bigger navy hospitals.
Simply earlier than the Kyiv Impartial arrived for the medics’ night time shift, a big group of wounded and useless had handed by means of, victims of a Russian Lancet drone strike on their car.
The shift continues, first with a drone crew who made it out of a Russian assault on their basement with not more than concussions, then a lone, newly-mobilized infantryman who took gentle shrapnel injury to the arm on his very first fight mission.
Ukrainian medics at a stabilization level close to Kurakhove, Donetsk Oblast, on Feb. 10, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)Ukrainian medics at a stabilization level close to Kurakhove, Donetsk Oblast, on Feb. 10, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)A stabilization level close to Kurakhove, Donetsk Oblast, on Feb. 10, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)Ukrainian medics at a stabilization level close to Kurakhove, Donetsk Oblast, on Feb. 10, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)
Together with the thirty seventh Marines, the Kurakhove pocket is being defended by a few of Ukraine’s high brigades, together with the forty sixth Airmobile and 79th Air Assault Brigades, who’ve fought within the space for the reason that battle of Marinka, over 30 kilometers to the east.
Regardless of their heroic effort, the Ukrainian excessive command’s resolution to carry onto semi-encircled areas like this one has come beneath criticism for inflicting pointless personnel loss and exacerbating the already dire manpower disaster.
“In some locations, it is perhaps value it to remain and defend, if there are particularly favorable areas,” stated Kastehelmi, “however in lots of locations, plainly the Ukrainians are simply holding floor for the sake of holding floor.”
“Entering into pockets stretches the entrance line, and creates extra quantities of entrance line in a state of affairs the place the items are already depleted of manpower.”
“In the meanwhile, all of the wounded are all both very severe or very delicate,” stated senior medic Illia “Ptakh,” talking in between treating the wounded.
“Both they’ve been hit and might't be evacuated for days, making gentle wounds grow to be severe, or they managed to get out as quickly as they had been hit.”
With the exercise of enemy drones solely rising over 2024, the evacuation of troopers a number of days after being wounded — what was once a nightmare situation in navy drugs — is now a grim new normality.
Because the crimson winter solar rises over the steppe, a wounded infantryman is delivered to the stabilization level.
“Shrapnel wounds on the correct aspect of the face, together with the attention” — the paramedic’s name lets the medics know who and what they will count on to return by means of the doorways.
Kostiantyn “Hostryi,” the wounded soldier, stumbles in, the medics serving to him gingerly take away his garments.
“It's very tense,” he says, with an impressively calm tone because the medics have a tendency his wounds with disinfectant swabs.
“I used to be the final one standing, I held on there for 4 days by myself (after being wounded). There have been assaults. My group was all killed, they usually couldn't get us out. They only dismantled our dugouts with FPVs.”
Ukrainian medics attend a wounded soldier at a stabilization level close to Kurakhove, Donetsk Oblast, on Feb. 10, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)
Inside half an hour, Hostryi’s firm commander arrives, asking him in regards to the hellish state of affairs that his soldier escaped from.
“While you had been retreating, had been you shouting out to the fellows that had been hit?” the commander requested.
“As I ran to the opposite basement, I couldn’t keep outdoors lengthy, they had been dropping bombs on us from drones,” Hostryi replied. “However sure, I shouted, and no person referred to as again.”
“Good job, now get healed up,” the commander replies after a pause, tapping Hostryi’s arm earlier than heading out.
For Ptakh, Hostryi’s laconic tone after such a dramatic ordeal isn’t any shock; all in all, whereas everyone seems to be drained, morale in his unit stays resolute.
“After all, those that have misplaced limbs have misplaced part of themselves, it's fairly laborious to return again from that,” he stated, “however the others, who simply took a little bit shrapnel, are essentially the most motivated folks I’ve seen, they get patched up and off they go to battle once more.
“Folks have motivation, their nation is being taken from them. It's not a query of combating morale, it's motivation to proceed residing in any respect.”
The arrival of spring will probably convey with it new challenges to the protection of Donetsk Oblast, because the recent leaves supply higher cowl from sight for enemy infantry assault teams, and the clearer skies open the sector for the widespread use of Russia’s feared heavy glide bombs.
Going ahead, the results of these battles will in the end hinge tremendously on Moscow’s means to maintain feeding males into Russian infantry assault groups, stated Kastehelmi.
“With the ways the Russians use, it's actually tough to really attrit them to the purpose the place their offensive would culminate in any respect,” he stated.
A Ukrainian soldier speaks to a navy chaplain in a village close to Pokrovsk, Donetsk Oblast, on Feb. 8, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)
Over a yr after consideration was first delivered to the necessity to construct robust fortifications to wage the best defensive conflict attainable, the failures to construct in depth, well-designed traces of protection upfront have been well-documented.
Shortcomings in fortification-building — a job normally break up between navy engineers and civilian contractors — have been significantly stark in Donetsk Oblast, the place Russia’s speedy advance and the proliferation of drones imply that excavators are steadily focused, whereas chaotic retreats impede Ukraine’s means to arrange coherent traces of protection as positions get shortly overrun.
Within the case of the Kurakhove space, a formidable line of Ukrainian fortifications alongside the Vovcha River was rendered successfully ineffective, dealing with south relatively than east, from the place Russia attacked.
Extra naturally favorable terrain in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, which has been well-fortified upfront, presents some hope that Russian advances may very well be stopped of their tracks in the event that they enter the area, in response to Kastehelmi.
“There are some higher locations to defend, and there are new traces to retreat to,” he stated, however the issue is that when you don't have sufficient folks to carry the worst positions, then the defensive position is principally solely as robust as its weakest spot.”
With Trump’s willingness to get robust on Russia in severe doubt, Moscow have to be floor down right here on the battlefield, by the palms of Ukrainians, in response to Babai.
“What we want is to determine a strong defensive position after which transfer within the infantry,” he stated. “We’ve the mortars, UAVs, and strike drones — we simply must arrange a powerful protection.”
“Counting on Western companions is pointless.”
A makeshift memorial on the entrance signal to Donetsk Oblast, on Feb. 1, 2025. (Francis Farrell/The Kyiv Impartial)
Right here and now, the position of the Ukrainian troopers combating right here in shifting the worldwide steadiness of energy in opposition to Moscow is pivotal, however not one thing lots of them concentrate on.
“I don't watch the information anymore, it's simply laborious,” stated Willy within the dugout, “my responsibility is to look after my folks, not take heed to politicians.”
“Earlier than, once you examine the potential for negotiations, you may suppose: 'Possibly quickly I'll be on the seaside with my fiance, perhaps I can begin eager about elevating a toddler.' However now it's the third yr of the conflict, I'm not on this theater.”
Natalia Yermak contributed to reporting.
Word from the writer:
Hello, that is Francis Farrell, the writer of this piece. It's fairly a uncommon factor that as a journalist spending only a day with troopers, that you’re witness to this a lot motion. What I noticed in my time with Achilles is proof of two issues: first, how rattling good these guys are at their jobs, and second, how rattling good Russia is at throwing infinite waves of people at Ukrainian defenses. Any such cyberpunk battlefield matchup may very well be defining for the conflict in 2025. No matter finally ends up taking place, you may rely on the truth that we’ll take you proper there. Please consider supporting our reporting.
Ukrainian forces assault oil pumping station in Russia's Krasnodar area – Normal Workers
The SBU and the Protection Forces struck on the Novovelychkivska oil pumping station in Russia. The power serves the Tikhoretsk-Novorossiysk-2 oil pipeline and is concerned in supplying the occupation military.
Ukraine will begin working to conclude an settlement with the U.S. for its pure sources on Feb. 24, Ruslan Stefanchuk, speaker of Ukraine's parliament, informed Japanese media outlet NHK.
The U.S. is reportedly trying to get hold of an curiosity in 50% of Ukraine's pure sources via a joint funding fund as payback for its assist for Kyiv, in line with a leaked model of the deal handed alongside to President Volodymyr Zelensky by U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent.
In accordance with the NHK report revealed on Feb. 22, the Ukrainian authorities will assemble an professional group to start engaged on finalizing the settlement on Monday, which additionally marks the third anniversary of the Russian full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Stefanchuk stated Ukraine is able to work with companions on the settlement however needs to "obtain particular safety ensures," in line with the report. He additionally stated Ukraine seeks to have "constructive discussions" and a summit with the U.S.
Zelensky beforehand stated Kyiv was not able to signal the doc because it didn’t embrace any safety ensures.
Earlier within the day, Bloomberg reported, citing its supply with information of the talks, that Ukraine and the U.S. want extra time to finalize the settlement for Ukraine's pure sources.
In accordance with Bloomberg, the draft settlement proposed by the U.S. President Donald Trump administration "presently has some questionable parts" for the Ukrainian aspect, with out specifying them.
Sky Information additionally reported, citing its supply, that the settlement “isn’t but able to be signed” as a result of quite a few "problematic points," including that Zelensky isn’t prepared to simply accept the present type of the draft.
Nevertheless, U.S. Nationwide Safety Advisor Mike Waltz stated on Feb. 21 that the deal “was going to be achieved” this week, in line with Sky Information.
"Right here's the underside line, President Zelensky goes to signal that deal, and you will notice that within the very quick time period," he stated throughout the Conservative Political Motion Convention, as quoted by Sky Information.
Trump stated in early February that he needed to strike a take care of Ukraine involving entry to uncommon earth minerals in trade for continued assist. Trump later claimed that Kyiv had "primarily agreed" to a $500 billion useful resource deal.
Nevertheless, the newest studies come shortly after Trump accused the Ukrainian president of being "a dictator with out elections," saying that "Zelensky higher transfer quick or he received’t have a rustic left."
On Feb. 19, Trump additionally stated he goals to "resurrect" talks on the settlement for Ukraine's pure sources.
"I believe I’m gonna resurrect that deal, you already know, we'll see what occurs, however I’m gonna resurrect it, or issues are gonna not make him (President Volodymyr Zelensky) too completely happy. And look, it’s time for elections," Trump stated, with out elaborating on the results for Ukraine and its president if the deal isn’t signed.
Poland reacts to alleged US risk to chop off Starlink for Ukraine
Poland's Minister of Digitalization says the nation has a business settlement to pay for Starlink for Ukraine. He expressed doubt about the potential of terminating the contract as a consequence of US threats.
Russian troops launched a number of airstrikes towards the town of Kostiantynivka in Donetsk Oblast, killing not less than two civilians and injuring 4 on the morning of Feb. 22, Governor Vadym Filashkin reported.
The variety of casualties could rise as individuals may nonetheless be trapped below the rubble, Filashkin wrote on Telegram. Rescue operations are ongoing.
Fishkin stated the assault broken 10 house buildings, 21 personal homes, three industrial amenities, a retailer, 16 garages, two energy traces, two fuel pipelines, and 9 automobiles.
The aftermath of the Russian assault on Donetsk Oblast on Feb. 22, 2025. (Vadym Filashkin/Telegram)
Settlements throughout the Ukrainian-controlled a part of Donetsk Oblast endure every day Russian assaults.
Over the previous day, two individuals have been killed in Kostiantynivka and the village of Nykanorivka, and 11 individuals have been injured throughout the oblast, in line with Filashkin.
Efforts to evacuate civilians from front-line cities in Donetsk Oblast have intensified as Russian forces proceed to advance in japanese Ukraine. Filashkin says 162 individuals, together with 49 kids, have been evacuated from frontline areas on Feb. 21.
54 fight engagements in a day: the place the occupants tried to interrupt by the Ukrainian Armed Forces' protection
There have been 54 fight engagements in varied sectors of the frontline, the most popular spot was within the Pokrovsk sector with 23 assaults. The enemy launched air strikes on a number of localities, however the Ukrainian Armed Forces efficiently repelled the assaults.
Drones operated by Ukraine’s Safety Service (SBU) struck a substation powering the Novovelychkovskaya oil pumping station in Russia’s Krasnodar Krai on Feb. 20, successfully disrupting its operations, a safety supply instructed the Kyiv Impartial.
In keeping with the supply, the station is likely one of the "key services for transporting oil within the Kuban area, supplying the Afipsky and Ilysky oil refineries." Russian authorities are at present assessing the harm, the supply mentioned.
On Feb. 20, a number of native Russian media shops and Telegram channels reported explosions within the Krasnodar Krai area, claiming Russian air protection repelled the drone assault and there was no hearth.
"That is the eighth profitable SBU particular operation for the reason that starting of the yr focusing on Russia's oil refining and pumping services. Every such explosion leads to multimillion-dollar losses for Russia and complicates the availability of gas to the Russian military," the supply mentioned.
The Kyiv Impartial couldn’t confirm the claims.
Ukraine routinely launches deep strikes towards army and industrial services in Russia, primarily counting on domestically developed drones. Kyiv has notably taken intention at Russia's fossil gas infrastructure as a part of its technique to undermine funding for the Kremlin's battle chest.
Earlier on Feb. 20, a supply in Ukrainian army intelligence (HUR) confirmed they have been behind the detonations of goggles for first-person-view (FPV) drones utilized by Russian troopers.
In keeping with the supply, HUR purchased a big batch of FPV goggles for the operation and rigged them with explosives and a detonation mechanism.
Russian troops strike at Konstantinovka: no less than 2 folks killed and 4 wounded
On account of the air strikes on Kostyantynivka, 2 folks had been killed and 4 wounded. 10 multi-storey buildings, 21 personal homes and different infrastructure amenities had been broken, and the seek for folks underneath the rubble continues.
Russia has misplaced 866,000 troops in Ukraine because the starting of its full-scale invasion on Feb. 24, 2022, the Normal Employees of Ukraine's Armed Forces reported on Feb. 21.
This quantity consists of 1,140 casualties Russian forces suffered simply over the previous day.
In keeping with the report, Russia has additionally misplaced 10,161 tanks, 21,139 armored combating autos, 38,234 autos and gas tanks, 23,528 artillery programs, 1,295 a number of launch rocket programs, 1,080 air protection programs, 370 airplanes, 331 helicopters, 26,311 drones, 28 ships and boats, and one submarine.