13 January 2025

The Kyiv Independent // Center for Defense Strategies

Ukrainian drone commander "Boxer" (R) in the Ukrainian-controlled city of Sudzha, Kursk Oblast, Russia, Aug. 18, 2024.

Ukraine’s new Kursk push brings minor gains, raising concerns over limited resources

by Asami Terajima

Since the new push in Russia’s Kursk Oblast in early January, Ukraine has made small gains and managed to capture the first North Korean prisoners of war in the area but experts have raised. . .


Small tactical gains Ukraine’s recent attacks against Russian positions in Kursk Oblast are “very limited” due to severe manpower and resource shortages, Ivan Stupak, a Ukrainian military commentator and former Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) officer, said.

  • Estimating the push to involve from hundreds to 2,000 Ukrainian troops at most and dozens of heavy equipment, Stupak said that the renewed operation appears to be 70% for political purposes and 30% for military purposes.
The operation appears to be Kyiv’s attempt to inflict “pain” one more time on Russia and provide Ukrainians with “a bit more victories” in the tough time when the front-line situation continues to deteriorate, according to the expert. 
He added that it may also be to relieve the situation across hot spots of the war in Ukraine, such as in the Donbas, by trying to force Russia to deploy more troops to the Kursk axis, as well as to possibly disrupt Moscow’s tactical plans in the area.
“I expect that it will be maybe a couple of weeks of offensive operation but within Kursk Oblast,” Stupak told the Kyiv Independent.
Ukraine currently controls about 450 kilometers of Kursk Oblast territory, which is roughly the size of Detroit, according to Stupak. . .
The overall Russian offensive – supported by North Korean soldiers – continues in Kursk Oblast despite the local Ukrainian attacks on the corner of the salient, making it extremely difficult for the Ukrainians to hold the ground. About 12,000 North Korean troops were deployed to Kursk Oblast, a senior Ukrainian official familiar with the intelligence told the Kyiv Independent in December.
Stupak also argued that gaining territory is just one side of the medal, the other one is holding it.
“It's a big question because we are using the best of the best soldiers in this land and of the best supplied Western equipment and lots of other directions, such as Donetsk or Zaporizhzhia oblasts, they are suffering from a shortage of shells, manpower, equipped and motivated detachments.”

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Monday, January 13, 2025
The Kyiv Independent was born out of a fight for freedom of speech. 
  • It was co-founded by a group of journalists who were fired from the Kyiv Post, then a prominent newspaper, as the owner attempted to take the newsroom under control and end its critical coverage of Ukrainian authorities.
Instead of giving up, the fired team founded a new media outlet to carry on the torch — and be a truly independent voice of Ukraine. 
  • Jnomics, an international media consultancy with Ukrainian roots, co-founded the publication, bringing their expertise in media management.

Team

Center for Defense Strategies

Center for Defense Strategies is an independent think tank that brings together leading Ukrainian and international experts to address Ukraine’s pressing security and defense issues and develop its respective strategies to advance key reforms.

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10 years of war: A timeline of Russia's decade-long aggression against Ukraine




Explaining Ukraine
10 years of war: A timeline of Russia's decade-long aggression against Ukraine

Almost immediately following the end of the EuroMaidan Revolution in Ukraine in February 2014, Russia swiftly moved to annex and occupy the Crimean Peninsula. Within a couple of months, unrest erupted in eastern Ukraine followed by Russian-backed militias taking over administrative buildings.   The events mark the start of Russia's 10-year

November 2023:

Failed counteroffensive with
victories in Black Sea

In early June 2023, the Ukrainian military launched its long-awaited counteroffensive aimed at pushing toward the Sea of Azov to cut Russia's land corridor to Crimea. Failing to reach its goals, it was limited to the liberation of a few villages in Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk oblasts, significantly slowed down by Russian minefields and a lack of air superiority and equipment. Ukraine did carry out a series of surprising operations in occupied Crimea and destroyed a number of Russian Black Sea Fleet’s vessels.

A still from a video Ukraine's Military Intelligence (HUR) produced about the operation to regain control of the 'Boyko Towers' oil drilling platforms, published online on Sept. 11, 2023. (Ukraine's Military Intelligence / Facebook)

Read more: Uncertain Triumph: Ukraine picks apart Russia's best air defenses in Crimea

Feb. 8, 2024:

Zelensky dismisses
Commander-in-Chief Zaluzhnyi

President Volodymyr Zelensky dismissed Commander-in-Chief Valerii Zaluzhnyi on Feb. 8, 2024 following months of speculation about a rift between the two. The general, who had led the country's army since July 2021, was replaced by Commander of the Ukrainian Land Forces Oleksandr Syrskyi as part of a broader military leadership reshuffle.

President Volodymyr Zelensky, Defense Minister Rustem Umerov, and Ground Forces Commander Oleksandr Syrskyi during a meeting at a military command post in Kupiansk, Kharkiv Oblast, on Nov. 30, 2023. (President's Office)

Read more: Who is General Syrskyi, Ukraine's new chief commander?

Feb. 17, 2024:

Ukraine withdraws
from Avdiivka

Ukrainian soldiers retreated from Avdiivka on Feb. 18 after months of fierce fighting resumed in October 2023. The city, located north of Russian-occupied Donetsk in eastern Ukraine, had been a Ukrainian stronghold for 10 years and a target of Russia’s since 2014. Ukraine’s Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi said that the decision to withdraw was made to avoid encirclement and to preserve the lives of fighters, however, some of them were captured by Russian troops during the withdrawal.

Ukrainian soldiers on an armored infantry vehicle on the road to Avdiivka, Feb. 14, 2024. (Vlada Liberova/Libkos/Getty Images)

Read more: Russia takes Avdiivka at steep price, as Ukraine forced to face shortcomings

Institute for the Study of War (@TheStudyofWar) / X

Ukraine

The question isn't if China will turn on Russia, but when

The question isn't if China will turn on Russia, but when

by Sarah C. Paine

Like Czar Nicholas II, Russian President Vladimir Putin has misidentified his primary foe. Fighting a war of choice, he allows the real menace to his country to gather strength. China, not Ukraine, constitutes Russia’s existential threat. In the Russo-Japanese War (1904-05), Nicholas fought Japan over Manchuria for concessions that

Ukraine war latest: 'Irrefutable evidence of North Korea's involvement' — Ukraine says it captured 2 North Korean POWs in Kursk Oblast

Ukraine war latest: 'Irrefutable evidence of North Korea's involvement' — Ukraine says it captured 2 North Korean POWs in Kursk Oblast

by The Kyiv Independent news desk

Key developments on Jan. 12: * 'Irrefutable evidence of North Korea's involvement' — Ukraine says it captured 2 North Korean POWs in Kursk Oblast * Ukrainian drone hits large oil refinery in Russia’s Tatarstan, head of Ukraine’s Center for Countering Disinformation confirms * Russia launches double airstrike on nursing home in Kursk

Poland and Ukraine: A Partnership Forged in Resilience

The Week Ahead: Key Developments Impacting Global Politics & Markets
by KI Insights
January 12, 2025 10:38 PM4 min read

With 8 eight days left until the Jan. 20 inauguration of Donald Trump, global policy makers are ramping up preparations for what a Trump 2 presidency could bring. Although the incoming administration has hardly been quite (incl. with concerning statements on NATOGreenlandCanada and the Panama canal), the coming weeks will provide an indication on what is posturing and what is policy – and what decisions need to be made.

Military planning and security, as well as the viability of major global alliances, will be a key theme. On Jan. 13 NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte will attend a joint committee meeting at the European Parliament. The session takes place amid questions about the US commitment to European security (a live stream of Rutte’s remarks and session transcript will be available on the NATO website).

Jan. 15-16 NATO’s Military Committee will convene in Brussels. The meeting will bring together Allied Chiefs of Defense and over 20 counterparts from NATO Partner nations to discuss strategic issues and foster cooperation in addressing global challenges. The first session will feature General Cavoli, the United States European Command commander, briefing on NATO’s readiness to deter and defend the Euro-Atlantic region while safeguarding its one billion inhabitants.

Discussions will explore NATO’s ongoing missions and support for Ukraine, including the NATO Security Assistance and Training for Ukraine (NSATU), which has taken on responsibilities to bolster Ukraine’s defense. . .


KI I

Media Center Ukraine

Media Center Ukraine is the main communication platform of the country mediacenter.org.uaand 3 more links
Russia intensifies assaults on Ukraine ahead of Trump’s inauguration
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Geopolitics and Policy - Defence Connect
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