Analysis: Why effective use of manpower will define who is winning the war in Ukraine in 2026
Reporter Francis Farrell Tuesday, Jan. 6 9 minutes read Kyiv Indepentent In a dimly-lit wooden bunker, a tall, formidably-built Ukrainian officer is filmed from behind, wishing his men good fortune one by one with firm handshakes before a mission. The soldiers in question — a few dozen mobilized Ukrainian men mostly in their forties, each dressed in issued pixel fatigues and with a basic rifle by their sides — respond mostly without enthusiasm, looking forward with blank stares as they accept their commander's greetings. With context, this seemingly innocuous bit of military social media content, Ukraine's 425th Assault Regiment, better known as Skelia, takes on a darker tone, illustrative of the country's grim manpower situation as the fifth year of Russia's full-scale war approaches. Skelia is the poster child of Ukraine's Assault Forces, a new branch of the military created in fall 2025 out of a handful of separate assault units known for their penchant for atta...