Seems like what Russia is going to do is take Slavyansk and Kramatorsk
It would be a major success for Russia if it could capture Sloviansk and Kramatorsk by the end of the year.
But that is not the whole of Donbas.
For the most part, everything depends on how Russia handles strikes deep within its own territory.
Last night, Ukraine launched an attack involving more than 600 drones.
Russia is currently trying to push drone launch sites back beyond the Dnieper River. They are destroying gas stations and truck stops where drone launchers might potentially be located; on this side of the Dnieper, the Russians have already destroyed 160 gas stations. So far, there are no fuel shortages in our city.
In Russia—even as far away as Siberia—there are massive, miles-long lines for gasoline.
As I said back in the spring, Russia needs a decisive push to turn the tide. Right now, things aren't going very well for Russia in that regard.
Russia is also currently losing the information war.
Basically, Russia is winning and right now situation is under control.
Not quite, Comrade. Right now, the situation at the front is mixed. The AFU is still conducting successful counter-offensive operations in the Zaporizhzhia sector. Russia has lost the territory it had previously captured there.
Russia is seeing successes in other sectors as well, though the pace is not as dynamic. In some areas, the situation has been at a standstill for months.
You surely realize, Comrade, that Russia’s very slow rate of advance—combined with the fact that Ukraine can strike Moscow—is precisely what convinced Trump to drastically change his opinion.
No matter how weak the US might be, Russia is going to face a very difficult time in the coming months.
One more brief note: Ukraine struck deep inside Russia with Storm Shadow missiles for the first time—this set a precedent.


With the exception of the $600 billion trade volume—where, yes, China sells more to the U.S. than it buys—and high-tech developments that China has not yet created itself but which are possessed by the U.S. (or Taiwan, which utilizes U.S. technology)...
Yes, due to panic, among other things.
Comrade, you can't fuel a car with crude oil...)))
Once again:
https://korrespondent.net/world/russia/4888980-rossyia-prosyt-benzyn-u-druzhestvennykh-stran
You got a bit carried away regarding the "major cities," Comrade. )))) I only heard of that particular city at the start of the war... )))) When you're driving along the highway, you're hardly going to remember the names of every village you pass. In the USSR, that kind of place was classified as an "urban-type settlement." To a resident of Kharkiv, it’s just a backwater village. I know Sloviansk well—I used to visit often; there was a really good "cook" there... you know, Breaking Bad style... )))) People would travel all the way from Kharkiv just to get his "product." It’s a real hick town, too—they speak Surzhyk there.
The major cities—or rather, not "major," just cities—that Russia has captured are Berdyansk, Mariupol, and Kherson.
As for Sloviansk, they’ve turned it into a fortress city. I doubt the Russians will be able to capture it quickly. It’s the next city on the list after Mariupol.
Look, this is Ukrainian TV. Things got to the point where they had to announce this to the whole country.
This woman, the Ukrainian ombudsperson who visited "Skelya," shares her "impressions."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0mrkC8kV0Bc&t=275s
And take a look at the comments below—it’s all those "pot-heads" finally seeing the light; all the comments are in Ukrainian!!! Morons—what were they thinking before?
The NABU, of course, "got involved" in the "investigation."
https://ukranews.com/en/amp/news/1159661-lubinets-launches-urgent-investigation-into-skelia-regiment-following-allegations-of-torture
For now, this is only in theory.
Yes, I completely agree with you; it will be a mafia, armed to the teeth, terrorizing all of Europe. The consequences of the war will continue to haunt Europe for a long time to come.