Ukraine Can’t Defend the Entire Front. Russia Is Finding the Gaps.

| Huliaipole offensive (image not from article) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of the southern front of the Russo-Ukrainian war (2022–present) | |||||||
Map of the offensive as of 17 December 2025 | |||||||
| |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
| Units involved | |||||||
Constant Méheut and O
Constant Méheut, Olha Konovalova and Tyler Hicks embedded with Ukrainian forces and traveled across towns and villages in the Zaporizhzhia region of southeastern Ukraine.
It came under cover of fog, with Russian troops slipping into the town by moving along a river that bisects it. Drawn by the hum of a generator, they charged into a Ukrainian command post. A firefight erupted. Caught off guard, the soldiers defending the post retreated, leaving behind laptops and battlefield maps that exposed the positions of nearby Ukrainian drone operators. Soon enough, those teams came under heavy Russian fire.
“It was a catastrophe,” said Capt. Dmytro Filatov, commander of the Ukrainian First Separate Assault Regiment, whose unit was rushed in to reinforce Huliaipole, in southeastern Ukraine.
The fall of the command post in late December — recounted by Captain Filatov, who said he tracked it through radio communications — highlights the central challenge facing the Ukrainian Army after four years of grinding war. Stretched by Russian assaults across a 700-mile front line, Ukraine lacks enough troops to defend every sector equally, creating gaps where Moscow’s forces can advance more easily.









Constant Méheut reports on the war in Ukraine, including battlefield developments, attacks on civilian centers and how the war is affecting its people.
Tyler Hicks is a senior photographer for The Times. In 2014, he won the Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Photography for his coverage of the Westgate Mall massacre in Nairobi, Kenya.
Comments
Post a Comment