Ukraine's military chief says Russia's 2025 offensives have failed


  • World
  • Friday, 26 Sep 2025

FILE PHOTO: Commander in Chief of the Ukrainian Armed Forces Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskyi speaks with lawmakers during a parliament session in Kyiv, Ukraine November 19, 2024. Ukrainian Presidential Press Service/Handout via REUTERS/ File Photo

KYIV (Reuters) -Russia's spring and summer offensives this year have failed to meet their goals, Ukraine's military chief Oleksandr Syrskyi said, adding that Russia was firing twice as much artillery as Ukraine on the battlefield.

"It can be said that the Russians' spring and summer campaign has effectively been disrupted," Syrskyi told reporters at a meeting.

Russia has been making incremental gains across several parts of the front line, after large-scale deployment of reconnaissance and attack drones has prevented quick progress of the sort seen in 2022.

Ukraine says the small advances are coming at a high human cost. Both sides in the war only rarely discuss casualties, but some Western intelligence estimates put the number of killed and wounded in Ukraine at more than one million.

SMALL RUSSIAN INFANTRY ASSAULTS

Syrskyi said the active front line was now 1,250 km (777 miles) long, and that an estimated 712,000 Russian personnel were involved in the fighting in Ukraine.

Syrskyi said Russian plans to create a "buffer zone" in Sumy and Kharkiv regions in the north and northeast, to take the city of Pokrovsk and to capture all of Donetsk region had failed.

The capture of all of Donetsk is a key aim of the war for Russia, which currently controls over 70% of the region.

Syrskyi said that since the beginning of summer the Russians had been attacking with a tactic that he called "a thousand cuts" - a high number of tiny infantry assaults.

"This consists of the simultaneous use of a large number of small assault groups – 4-6 servicemen who advance using the terrain, ravines, and wooded areas, with the main aim of penetrating as deeply as possible into our territory."

Speaking about a Russian breakthrough in August near the Donetsk town of Dobropillia, Syrskyi said Ukraine had cut off Russian forces along the Kazenyi Torets river in what he called a "trap".

SUDDEN CHANGE IN TRUMP'S RHETORIC

The commander added that in the last two months, Ukraine had hit 85 military or military-industrial facilities on Russian territory, including air bases, depots and factories.

This week, U.S. President Donald Trump suddenly changed his view of the war from one where he said Kyiv had no cards to play to one where Ukraine could take back all of the ground it has lost so far - roughly 20% of its total territory.

He did not, however, offer substantial new assistance to Ukraine to achieve these goals and has shifted the onus on to European allies.

Russia says it is advancing in Ukraine and that Kyiv would be best advised to negotiate peace sooner rather than later. Ukraine has rejected Russia's terms for negotiations, saying they would amount to surrender.

(Reporting by Max Hunder; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Aidan Lewis)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Australia social media watchdog sees common cause with US as age ban begins
Japan did not aim radar at Chinese jets during Saturday's incidents, defence minister says
Australia says it will meet 'challenges' of AUKUS nuclear submarine timeline
Honduran election turmoil grows as president decries 'electoral coup'
USTR Greer says he's open to 'different treatment' of South Africa under trade initiative
Democrat elected Miami mayor for first time in nearly three decades
Justice Department unveils new charges in alleged Russia-backed cyberattacks
Jair Bolsonaro's lawyers request his removal from jail to hospital for 'surgical procedures'
Lula's party chief questions Flavio Bolsonaro's Brazil presidential bid
Top Trump aides brief Congress, as Trump open to broader Latin America campaign

Others Also Read