1/🧵 The situation in and around fortress Kostyantynivka: is it in danger, what are the main problems, and what's next.
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Kostyantynivka is a quite sizeable city in northern Donetsk Oblast, with a population of 67,000 as of 2022, and is part of Ukraine's formidable Kostyantynivka - Druzhkivka - Kramatorsk - Slovyansk defensive node, where Kostyantynivka is the southernmost city of the four.
These four cities are factually the last of their size still in Ukrainian-controlled Donbas.
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Ever since 2023, up to this day, Kostyantynivka has served, and continues to serve, critically important purposes for Ukrainian forces in some of the hottest areas of eastern Ukraine, like the Bakhmut, Toretsk, Chasiv Yar, and Rusyn Yar sectors, being used, for example, as an accumulation hub, logistical base, and (probably) command point.
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Since mid-2022, Ukrainian forces have been active in reinforcing this fortress city even further, constructing 4 defensive lines and rings around and in front of the city, identifiable in the two pictures below.
The time to do this was found thanks to sacrifices on the Bakhmut/Chasiv Yar and Toretsk sectors, which, as fortresses themselves, held for months or years and gave the time for Ukrainian engineers to build new improvised but numerous defenses in the close rear.
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After the factual fall of Toretsk, though, the southern gate of Kostyantynivka suddenly found itself uncovered, and a big effort, especially from the 100th, 28th, and 36th Brigades, was needed to somewhat stabilize the situation and slow the Russians down.
The effort had mostly successful results, and the Russians were bogged down in the fields dotted with strongpoints and barbed wire everywhere.
Today, the status quo remains, with the Russians still experiencing severe difficulties in advancing through such open areas and under a very big number of Ukrainian drones. In the picture below, you can see what are now Russia's favorite attack routes. In particular, we note how they have settled for attacking through urban areas, thick treelines, and forests where possible, exactly to avoid the problem that they have been having for a long time, though with very limited success.
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About the current situation.
In early-mid January, the city experienced some hardships, and doubts began to surface about the further, difficult defense of Kostyantynivka.
At the time, Russian forces launched a series of attacks on an identified weak point in Ukrainian defenses in the Stepanivka - Illinivka - Berestok sectors.
The Ukrainians had known for a long time that this area was endangered and that it was a weak spot, and the Russians had been bombing and mining the southwesternmost part of Kostyantynivka heavily even before the start of this "wave" of assaults, so these new vectors didn't come as a surprise to the Ukrainians.
After a period in which Russian reconnaissance groups were reaching even northern Illinivka and southwestern Kostyantynivka, the Ukrainians managed to somewhat stabilize the situation with the help of heavy drones and possibly physical clearings.
The freezing temperatures, which to this day go as far down as -18°C, also forced the Russians to scale down their offensive operations here, but the situation still remains very tense and dangerous.
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The importance of this sector is impossible to underestimate.
As you can see from the picture, Russian consolidation in Illinivka and Berestok would be catastrophic for Ukrainian supplies into Kostyantynivka, already severely limited and harassed by extremely high Russian drone and remote mining activity.
First of all, Russian forces would be able to bring limited amounts of drone operators in the southwestern parts of these two villages, which are very close to the main supply road and are also on the dominant heights.
Worst of all, the Russians would be able to secure the area of the former blockpost, which is exactly on the peak of the dominant hill of the whole southwestern sector of this front.
At that point, they could place a massive number of drone operators in the well-built Ukrainian trench systems near the former blockpost, which would render supply runs into Kostyantynivka a lottery at the same level as supply runs into Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad some months ago.
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Moving on to the other flank of Kostyantynivka city, the northern one, the situation is different: somewhat more stable and fortified, but lacking any margin of error at all.
Here, the units are generally fresher and less exhausted than, for example, the 28th and 36th in the southern part of Kostyantynivka, as they have experienced a long period of general inactivity in and north of Chasiv Yar, after Russian forces got bogged down in the city.
The Ukrainians exploited this and created a series of interesting and different fortifications.
Up north near Maiske, Ukrainian forces consolidated their infantry in the covered parts of large trench systems behind a line of barbed wire, making it painfully hard for Russian drones to dislodge them from their positions.
Near Virolyubivka, the Ukrainians opted for a similar approach, with the help of much more barbed wire and a bigger urban area in the close rear that supported their movements and accumulations.
At the border with Chasiv Yar, Ukrainian infantry holds strong positions in well-built trench systems right on the railway line and a very big number of small, concealed dugouts under the trees, which, again, makes detection and destruction tedious for Russian forces.
In Chasiv Yar itself, Ukrainian forces went for a different approach: they fortified individual houses over the course of a long period of inactivity, thus forming a node of independent strongpoints in basements and houses that need to be captured individually to advance further.
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Here, though, the Ukrainians face a problem: Virolyubivka is indeed well defended, in some places by 13 (!) lines of barbed wire, but that's about it: if Virolyubivka is lost, supplies into Kostyantynivka are lost as well, just like if Illinivka and Berestok are lost, so, as I was saying, the Ukrainians have no margin of error whatsoever.
In other words, they need to be extremely careful to guard well the strongpoints on the railway, which is basically an infantry highway on the dominant heights for the Russians, and also the heights overlooking Virolyubivka, both east and west of it.
From the picture below, we can also clearly see why most of the drone attacks on the main supply road into Kostyantynivka come from the Chasiv Yar direction: Chasiv Yar is exactly on the peak of the dominant hill of the region, and Russian forces have access to high-rise buildings and sturdy industrial areas right on top of this hill, a drone operator's paradise.
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You might've noticed that I have talked and focused a lot on supplies and drone attacks in this thread, while I usually focus much more on fortifications and the actual contact line.
This is exactly because of Kostyantynivka's nickname: "fortress".
The city is packed full of strong points everywhere. In the picture below I circled in white the main ones: industrial areas, high-rise areas, multi-story apartment areas, artificial and natural obstacles and chokepoints, forests, and more. The southwestern high-rise area alone is 8 times bigger than Toretsk's central high-rise area, which, if you remember, was a formidable fortification that caused Russia a ton of problems.
So, we can see Kostyantynivka city as Toretsk's bigger brother.
If it took Russia about a year to capture Toretsk, capturing Kostyantynivka would be borderline impossible without first acting on what goes to defend the city in the first place, which has to come from only two roads.
Now, we also start seeing how vulnerable Kostyantynivka's supplies are, and the problem with the city's flanks underlines itself.
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I'm often asked if the anti-drone nets that have been placed on the main artery to Kostyantynivka help or not.
The answer is yes, but they're not a game changer.
They are useful up to a certain point when they can still be reliably repaired (in other words, when the frontline is still somewhat far), and they are designed to save lives, not make the road 100% safe to pass through.
Ukraine employs special groups to repair and maintain such anti-drone net tunnels, which were proven to be effective, but Russian drones are, as you can understand, much, much more numerous than those teams, and the road to Kostyantynivka remains unsafe.
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Let's look at the following hypothetical scenario, with Kostyantynivka mostly captured by Russian forces, just like the surrounding areas and some territory in the Shakhove direction, and with some Ukrainian remnants still clinging onto the last districts of Kostyantynivka.
In the second photo is the same scenario and represented area, but with the topographic overlay.
We can clearly see how the next steps for Russian forces would be Oleksiievo-Druzhkivka and Druzhkivka itself, which, again, will be quite hard to take on from the east and south.
Furthermore, with the fall of Kostyantynivka, the frontline would significantly shorten, slightly bettering Ukraine's manpower problem (but also concentrating Russian forces).
It is logical to assume that the Russians would want to repeat the Kostyantynivka scenario: an advancement on the flanks that threatens Druzhkivka's supplies in the first place, through drones.
For this to be achieved, the Russians would need a foothold on the hill east of Druzhkivka, which, though, is guarded by a convenient chokepoint near Izhevka that you can see on the topographic map, and the crucial hill west of Druzhkivka, which is instead guarded by 3 vertical lines of obstacles and some weaker horizontal lines along rivers and creeks, which would funnel Russian forces into a kill zone.
Coupled with the experienced units defending the area west of Druzhkivka, gaining a foothold on any of the two hills on Druzhkivka's sides would not be easy at all for Russian forces, and securing their foothold by enlarging it on the sides would be even harder because of Ukraine's obstacle lines.
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In conclusion, from this thread you should take that it is of crucial importance for Ukrainian forces to focus the bulk of their efforts on the Shakhove front: a good occasion to cause catastrophic casualties to Russian forces, thus exhausting their offensive potential there, but also a critical area to defend for Ukraine if they want to continue holding Kostyantynivka and Druzhkivka.
Then, it's important to understand that anti-drone nets are not as much of a game changer as some think, even though they're still very useful, and finally that the supply situation for Kostyantynivka is slowly degrading and getting more vulnerable every day that passes, and retreat plans from Kostyantynivka must already be drawn to be ready for the worst-case scenarios: Ukraine can't afford a catastrophe here at all. The command should watch this area very closely and check for dangerous movements because, as I said, there is no more margin of error.
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Thanks for reading this (pretty long) thread!
Feel free to ask questions in the comments (or in my DMs).
If you're currently fighting in this direction, please message me in my DMs, I'm extremely interested in hearing your opinion on the situation.
Remember to join my Telegram channel: t.me/PlayfraOSINT
My Discord server: discord.gg/P3XsgQFBPV
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Have a nice day/night!
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Pokrovsk - Dobropillia general update (26/12 - 01/01)
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Pokrovsk industrial area. Russian soldiers move in waves of groups of 1-3 soldiers along the highway.
In the orange square, very frequent and large traffic of infantry is recorded.
From there, they cross the railway into the industrial zone along the indicated routes. Russian forces seem to still be unable to consolidate their positions there.
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Just east of this area, Russian forces tend to move as shown in the picture, mostly following the urbanized area but also attempting infiltrations in the treelines just north of Pokrovsk.
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About the recent severe worsening of the situation in #Siversk: events that led to this and information from the field.
Unfortunately, in the last 2 weeks, after more than 3 years of effective defense of the sector by Ukrainian units, Russian forces made significant progress in the Siversk direction and in the city itself.
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The main unit commanding the city's defense is the very experienced 54th Mechanized Brigade (with battalion "K-2" drones "Sky Fury").
Because of the gradual prioritization of other directions and the de-prioritization of more dormant and/or stable ones like Siversk, the Ukrainian command has not allocated any big amount of resources to the Brigade in the last months, or even years, choosing to distribute them in more critical sectors instead. As such, because of slow attrition, manpower and other needs of the brigade were not replenished at a sufficient rate, making it slowly become severely understaffed in manpower up to today.
Taking advantage of this, recently the Russian command finally reinforced the sector with new brigades, adding them to the ones made up of terrible-quality DPR and LPR forces, which severely impeded any progress on their part in the last years, among other reasons.
1/🧵Uspenivka sector, Pokrovske front, according to information from the field. Short update thread.
In the last few days, the situation, finally, significantly improved for Ukrainian forces after the transfer of the reinforcements I talked about here ().
After a period of generally large successes in this sector, in the last days Russian forces have been suffering a lot in wounded and dead servicemen, and, while further north near Vyshneve fast advancements are still recorded, they factually didn't advance by a meter near Uspenivka in recent days (the orange polygon you see is a correction, and DeepState updates are being published with a delay and generally diminish Russian gains here).
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Until now, the Russians advanced well to Uspenivka, effectively exploiting the very well-built Ukrainian trenches (that were simply abandoned by Ukraine) to accumulate their own manpower and transfer it without Ukrainian FPV threat. Once they reached the Yanchur river, it was imperative for them to force it immediately to exploit an almost complete lack of any Ukrainian organized defense effort, but to do this it was essential to secure the farm at 47.770945, 36.454224 (east of Novomykolaivka), and the small part of Novomykolaivka located east of the Yanchur river (1 single line of houses) at 47.771161, 36.447422.
🇺🇦⚔️🇷🇺 Day 1300, comprehensive frontline and rear situation report: territorial changes, trends, strategies and objectives of both sides, fortifications.
🧵Thread🧵1/⬇️
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Zaporizhzhia Oblast', Stepnohirsk sector.
Russian forces continue offensive operations in the sector, despite generally low media coverage.
The Russians gather up in Plavni's center to move through the gray zone to northern Plavni, and accumulate there. After this, they try to move into southern Prymorske, but are eliminated in the accumulation phase or cleared out by frequent Ukrainian infantry raids.
The Russians also often try to move through the kill zone in the fields north of Kamyanske, but the area is open enough for Ukrainian drone operators to control well and eliminate any movement, causing high casualties to the Russians.
Further northeast, the Russians constantly attempt to move into the 3rd microdistrict. This is because the district is composed of still mostly intact high rise buildings, that can be used for a safer accumulation for further assault operations.
From the 3rd microdistrict, the Russians seem to prefer attacking Ahrarna St. in southern Stepnohirsk.
Because of this predictability, the Ukrainians are zeroed in and constantly counterattack with all fire methods available.
Because of little successes evidenced after trying to take Stepnohirsk head-on, the Russians are slowly shifting their attention eastwards. An accumulation is recorded northeast of Kamyanske in the indicated area.
In general, the Ukrainians seem to be effectively holding the borders, combining fire damage with active defense, and achieving a favorable ratio of casualties with the Russian side. Russian successes here, at the moment, are not significant in any way.
White = trenches
Yellow = ditches
Blue = dragon's teeth
Gray = barbed wire
In the Uspenivka sector, Russian forces are advancing through vast rural areas. The Ukrainians can do little to nothing to counter this because of the almost total lack of manpower in this particular direction, that has not seen activity since 2022, and from which many units were transferred to other areas deemed more critical.
The trenches you see in this direction are either empty, because of the critical lack of men to man them, or unused, because they are outdated relative to drone warfare, as they are situated in the middle of fields and uncovered.
At the moment, fighting is ongoing for Olhivske, and Russian forces came close to Novoivanivka, for which fighting will likely soon start.
A bit north, after the capture of Zaporizke without much resistance, the village of Novomykolaivka was captured soon after. Russian forces are expected to continue along this small valley to Kalynivske, which suffered heavy FAB bombardments last week.
Near fortified Berezove, Russian forces decided to bypass both this village and Ternove, seemingly after encountering resistance, and advanced significantly between the 2 villages in the treelines.
This forced the Ukrainians to retreat from Ternove, for which fighting is ongoing, in favor of some outdated fortifications just north of it, which, as said multiple times, provide only an extremely small advantage.
Lyman and the 3rd battle for the city at 5km on the horizon.
Russian 🇷🇺 plans, Ukrainian 🇺🇦 defenses, logistics, and what's next.
🧵Thread🧵 1/⬇️
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Lyman is a medium-sized town located in the northern corner of Donetsk Oblast' and counted about 20,000 inhabitants in 2022.
Immediately after the start of the invasion, while the Russians were able to advance with almost no resistance in Luhansk and eastern Kharkiv Oblasts, they encountered very strong resistance in Donetsk Oblast' along strong and prepared defensive lines, reinforced for 8 years since 2014.
Nonetheless, after being pushed out of northern Ukraine and having scaled down their plans to capture Ukrainian-controlled Donbas, the Russians immediately recognized the importance of precisely 2 cities to reach their goals: the cities of Lyman and Izyum.
Control over these two cities allowed the Russians to pose an extremely serious threat to Slovyansk and Kramatorsk, the two "capitals" of Ukrainian-controlled Donbas, from the northeast and northwest.
Old "panic fortifications" built facing westwards from Slovyansk and Kramatorsk can still be easily found to this day, proving this strong problem that the Ukrainians faced.
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In August 2022, in fact, the Ukrainians started a small scale "preparation"counteroffensive south of Izyum, with the likely aim of pushing the Russians back to the Siversky Donets river, to strenghten Donbas' northern flank.
Just a month later, the successful September 2022 counteroffensive started exactly in this general sector, with the aim of reaching the Oskil river to finally secure the Donbas, understanding that a frontal attack was already impossible at this time and that the flanks were their only vulnerability.
Izyum city was recaptured on September 12th with almost no Russian resistance, and Lyman on October 1st, with the Russians retreating disorganizedly and with losses under threat of encirclement to Zarichne.
Summing everything, in total the project took about 2 weeks of mapping, or about 30 hours if I hadn't stopped (haven't counted exactly, that's an estimate).
In the project is included just about everything:
- Trenches visible from updated satellite imagery ESRI
- World War 2 trenches and emplacements
- Singular foxholes
- Invisible trench systems under foliage, only visible through Planet imagery
- Dragon's teeth obstacles
The covered area goes from the village of Torske to Kreminna, totaling 175 km².
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This thread won't really be a standard one, but rather some sort of "gallery" with photos and descriptions of different kinds of interesting things I found in the forest and the trenches dug in it.