A Ukraine war update focused on heavy Russian losses, repeated long-range strike activity on both sides, and a growing campaign against logistics, fuel, and infrastructure in Crimea and occupied regions. The speaker emphasizes that Ukraine is increasingly able to hit depots, bridges, rail, and rear-area military targets, while Russia continues large-scale drone and missile attacks on Ukrainian cities and critical facilities.
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This is a Ukraine war news roundup framed as a daily battlefield and strike update. Jonathan MS Pierce argues that the war is increasingly defined by attritional strikes deep in the rear, especially against logistics, fuel, rail, bridges, and storage sites. He repeatedly stresses that Russian losses remain very high in personnel, armor, artillery, MLRS, and vehicles/fuel tanks, and that Ukraineโs long-range drone and sabotage campaign is becoming more systematic and more damaging to Russiaโs operational depth. A major theme is the reported strike pressure on Crimea and adjacent logistics corridors. He says Chonhar Bridge was damaged by drones, Russian sources claimed an attempted Neptune strike on the Kerch Bridge, and that these routes matter because they connect Crimea to the rest of the southern theater. โฆ
Near term, the immediate setup is continued pressure on Crimea, fuel logistics, and Russian rear-area infrastructure, with risk of more bridge or depot damage and more retaliation against Ukrainian cities. The tactical watchpoint is whether repeated strikes start forcing visible transport disruptions or fuel shortages beyond isolated incidents.
Over the next few weeks to months, the base case is a sustained attritional campaign where Ukraine keeps targeting logistics nodes while Russia responds with large drone and missile salvos. The view changes if repairs, interception rates, or stock constraints reduce the persistence of either sideโs strike tempo.
Structurally, the war is evolving into a long-duration infrastructure and drone contest rather than a pure front-line maneuver war. The durable implication is that industrial capacity, targeting systems, and rear-area resilience may matter more than isolated battlefield advances.
Russia appears to have targeted a centralized spent nuclear fuel storage facility in Kyiv region, but no spent fuel was stored inside and radiation levels stayed normal.
He reports the attack, then cites Atom/official statements that the container reception building was damaged but no fuel was stored there and no radiation leak occurred.
Ukraine is increasingly able to hit Russian logistics nodes, especially fuel, rail, and rear-area equipment in Crimea and occupied regions.
He repeatedly points to depot fires, bridge damage, rail sabotage, and rerouted traffic as evidence of a systematic strike campaign.
Russian battlefield losses remain extremely high, with especially steep damage in artillery, MLRS, vehicles, and fuel tanks.
He cites the daily loss figures and chart trends, arguing the lines are steeply rising and that the pattern has persisted for weeks.
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