Russian forces likely seized Vuhledar as of October 1 following a reported Ukrainian withdrawal from the
settlement, though it is unclear if Russian forces will make rapid gains beyond Vuhledar in the immediate
future. Geolocated footage published on September 30 and October 1 shows Russian forces planting Russian
flags and freely operating in various parts of Vuhledar, and Russian milbloggers claimed on October 1
that Russian forces seized the settlement. A Ukrainian servicemember reported on October 1 that a part of
the Ukrainian force grouping conducted a planned withdrawal from Vuhledar to avoid encirclement, and
Russian milbloggers claimed that Ukrainian forces began to withdraw from Vuhledar as of the end of
September 30. Russian milbloggers claimed that Russian forces did not completely interdict Ukrainian
egress routes before Ukrainian forces withdrew but that Russian artillery and drones inflicted
unspecified losses on withdrawing Ukrainian personnel. The scale of Ukrainian casualties is unknown at
this time, however, but the widespread reports of Ukrainian withdrawal suggest that the larger Ukrainian
contingent likely avoided a Russian encirclement that would have generated greater casualties. Russian
sources credited elements of the Russian 40th Naval Infantry Brigade (Pacific Fleet, Eastern Military
District ), 36th Motorized Rifle Brigade (29th Combined Arms Army , EMD), 5th Tank Brigade and
37th Motorized Rifle Brigade (both part of 36th CAA, EMD), 430th Motorized Rifle Regiment (likely a
mobilized unit of the 29th CAA), and 14th Spetsnaz Brigade (Special Forces of the Main Directorate of the
General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces ) for directly seizing or assisting in the seizure of
Vuhledar. Russian sources also claimed that Russian forces continued to advance west of Vodyane
(northeast of Vuhledar).
The Russian seizure of Vuhledar follows a series of costly, failed
Russian assaults near the settlement over the past two and a half years. A prominent Russian milblogger
celebrated reports of Vuhledar’s seizure by recalling an alleged conversation he had with a Russian
high-ranking officer, who told him that the Russian decision to attack in the Vuhledar direction in March
2022 was ill-advised because Russian forces would get “stuck” on the settlement. The milblogger implied
that the officer was wrong given that Russian forces eventually seized Vuhledar, although the milblogger
failed to acknowledge that Russian forces struggled to advance in the Vuhledar area for over two years.
Russia attempted at least two major offensive efforts to seize Vuhledar in October-November 2022 and
January-February 2023, both of which resulted in heavy personnel and military equipment losses. Russia's
previous defeats around Vuhledar notably resulted in the attrition of the 155th Naval Infantry Brigade
(Pacific Fleet, EMD).
Key Takeaways:
Russian forces likely seized Vuhledar as of
October 1 following a reported Ukrainian withdrawal from the settlement, though it is unclear if Russian
forces will make rapid gains beyond Vuhledar in the immediate future.
Some Russian sources
expressed doubts that Russian forces would be able to rapidly advance and achieve
operationally-significant breakthroughs immediately after seizing Vuhledar.
Ukrainian
officials continue to highlight how Ukraine is reducing Russia's battlefield artillery ammunition
advantage, likely in part due to recent Ukrainian strikes on Russian ammunition depots.
The
United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (UN OHCHR) issued its June-August 2024
report detailing Ukrainian civilian casualties, systemic Russian mistreatment of Ukrainian prisoners of
war (POWs), and limited Ukrainian mistreatment of Russian POWs. The UN OHCHR report highlighted the
difference between official Russian and Ukrainian reactions to the mistreatment of POWs, and Russian
state media largely misrepresented the report by ignoring assessments about Russia's systemic
mistreatment of Ukrainian POWs.
The Russian federal budget for 2025-2027 has carved out
funding to support online platforms belonging to a prominent Kremlin propagandist and a former opposition
outlet, further highlighting the Kremlin's efforts to adapt its propaganda machine to Russians’ growing
reliance on social media for information.
Russian forces recently advanced near Vovchansk,
Kreminna, Toretsk, Pokrovsk, and Vuhledar.
Russian authorities are reportedly planning to
increase recruitment within Russian pre-trial detention centers.
Ukraine continues efforts to expand domestic production of significant military equipment and maintain
its drone advantage over Russia. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky stated on October 1 that
Ukrainian companies can currently produce four million drones annually and that Ukraine has already
contracted the domestic production of 1.5 million drones (presumably in 2024). Russian President Vladimir
Putin recently claimed that Russia plans to increase drone production by tenfold to 1.4 million drones in
2024, which will be lower than the two million drones that Ukraine aims to produce in 2024. Zelensky also
stated that Ukraine can produce 15 "Bohdan" self-propelled artillery systems every month and recently
conducted a successful flight test for an unspecified domestically produced ballistic missile. Ukrainian
Defense Minister Rustem Umerov stated on October 2 that Ukraine will continue prioritizing domestic
production of drones and long-range missiles, including ballistic missiles. Ukrainian Prime Minister
Denys Shmyhal stated on October 2 that Ukraine has allocated $7 billion for the purchase of weapons and
military equipment in the Ukrainian draft 2025 state budget — a 65 percent increase from the 2024 state
budget. Shmyhal stated that Ukraine increased domestic weapons production by a factor of three in 2023
and by factor of two in the first eight months of 2024. ISW continues to assess that Ukrainian efforts to
expand domestic military production will allow Ukraine to reduce its dependence on Western military
assistance in the long-term, but that Ukraine still requires considerable Western assistance for the next
several years in order to defend against Russian aggression and liberate strategically vital areas that
Russian forces currently occupy.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov condemned
the Israel Defense Force's (IDF) ground operation in southern Lebanon during a meeting with the Lebanese
ambassador to Russia on October 1. Bogdanov met with Lebanese Ambassador Shawki Bou Nassar and discussed
the military-political situation in the Middle East. Bogdanov expressed "strong condemnation of Israel's
ground invasion of Lebanon and emphasized Russia's opposition to alleged Israeli political
assassinations. Bogdanov highlighted the importance of providing humanitarian assistance to Lebanon and
safely evacuating Russian citizens from Lebanon. Russian Ambassador to Israel Anatoly Viktorov called for
an immediate end to the conflict in the Middle East, and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met with
ambassadors of unspecified Arab states and called for the immediate end of military operations in the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict area. The Kremlin likely seeks to take advantage of the conflict in the
Middle East to promote Russian-dominated international structures, including some connected to the
Kremlin's effort to establish an alternative "Eurasian security architecture." Russian Deputy Foreign
Minister Sergei Ryabkov stated on October 2 that Palestinian Authority (PA) President Mahmoud Abbas has
accepted Russia's invitation to attend the BRICS summit in Kazan on October 22–24 and that participants
will discuss the situation in the Middle East. The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) recently
condemned Israel’s “political assassination” of Hezbollah Secretary General Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah,
Israel's decision to simultaneously detonate thousands of pagers belonging to Lebanese Hezbollah (LH)
members across Lebanon and Syria, and previous Israeli strikes against Iran.
Key
Takeaways:
Ukraine continues efforts to expand domestic production of significant military
equipment and maintain its drone advantage over Russia.
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister
Mikhail Bogdanov condemned the Israel Defense Force's (IDF) ground operation in southern Lebanon during a
meeting with the Lebanese ambassador to Russia on October 1.
Latvian forces enhanced air
defense near the Russian border following a recent Russian drone crash in the country.
Russian
and Ukrainian forces continued assaults in Kursk Oblast.
Russian forces recently marginally
advanced near Svatove, Siversk, and Vuhledar and east and southeast of Pokrovsk
Russian
defense enterprises are recruiting tens of thousands of new workers due to acute personnel shortages amid
increased production of weapons due to the war in Ukraine.
The Russian offensive effort in eastern Ukraine that began in fall 2023 continues to produce gradual
Russian tactical gains in specific sectors of the front, but operationally significant gains will likely
continue to elude Russian forces. Ukrainian forces are conducting an effective defense in depth along the
frontline, inflicting significant losses upon Russian forces while slowly giving ground but preventing
the Russian military from making more rapid gains on the battlefield. Ukrainian forces do face serious
operational challenges and constraints, which are providing Russian forces with opportunities to pursue
tactically significant gains. Russian forces do not have the available manpower and materiel to continue
intensified offensive efforts indefinitely, however, and current Russian offensive operations in eastern
Ukraine will likely culminate in the coming months, if not weeks, as Ukrainian officials and ISW have
previously assessed.
Russian forces have recently made notable tactical gains but have not
demonstrated a capacity to seize operationally significant objectives. ISW distinguishes between tactical
gains, which are relevant at the tactical level of war in the near vicinity of the fighting, and
operational gains, which are significant at the operational level of war and affect large sectors of the
entire frontline. Russian forces seized Vuhledar in western Donetsk Oblast as of October 1, and the
settlement will likely afford Russian forces an improved tactical position for pursuing their operational
effort to advance towards the H-15 (Donetsk City–Zaporizhzhia City) highway and eliminate the wide
Ukrainian salient in western Donetsk Oblast. The Russian seizure of Vuhledar will not on its own
radically change the operational situation in western Donetsk Oblast, however, and Russian forces will
likely struggle to achieve their operational objectives in the area during the ongoing offensive
operation in western Donetsk Oblast. Russian offensive operations that are pursuing operationally
significant objectives, like the Russian effort to seize Chasiv Yar or to push Ukrainian forces off the
left (east) bank of the Oskil River, have either stalled or are resulting in particularly gradual gains
over long stretches of time, respectively. Russian forces continue to prioritize their offensive push
towards Pokrovsk, and the operational significance of seizing the city will likely in part depend on the
Russian military's ability to leverage the city in wider operational maneuver in Donetsk Oblast.Russian
forces have tried and failed to conduct wide operational maneuver across several axes throughout Donetsk
Oblast on several occasions during the full-scale invasion and are currently conducting intensified
offensive operations in pursuit of more limited objectives on only two mutually supporting sectors of the
frontline in Donetsk Oblast (western Donetsk Oblast and the Pokrovsk direction).
Key
Takeaways:
The Russian offensive effort in eastern Ukraine that began in fall 2023 continues
to produce gradual Russian tactical gains in specific sectors of the front, but operationally significant
gains will likely continue to elude Russian forces.
Ukrainian forces are conducting an
effective defense in depth along the frontline, inflicting significant losses upon Russian forces while
slowly giving ground but preventing the Russian military from making more rapid gains on the
battlefield.
Ukrainian forces do face serious operational challenges and constraints, which
are providing Russian forces with opportunities to pursue tactically significant gains.
Russian forces do not have the available manpower and materiel to continue intensified offensive
efforts indefinitely, however, and current Russian offensive operations in eastern Ukraine will likely
culminate in the coming months, if not weeks, as Ukrainian officials and ISW have previously assessed.
Russian forces have recently made notable tactical gains but have not demonstrated a capacity to
seize operationally significant objectives.
The Russian military command prepared the ongoing
Russian summer 2024 offensive operation for months in advance and accumulated operational reserves and
resources for the operation that the recent months of attritional fighting have likely heavily
degraded.
Russian forces have reportedly committed a significant portion of their intended
operational reserves to offensive operations in Donetsk and northern Kharkiv oblasts, indicating that the
Russian military command may have prioritized forming operational reserves to support offensive
operations in priority sectors of the frontline over developing theater-wide strategic reserves for the
entire offensive campaign in Ukraine.
The Russian military command is continuing to prioritize
offensive operations in priority sectors of the frontline over long-term planning for Russia's
theater-wide campaign in Ukraine, but the Ukrainian incursion into Kursk Oblast appears to have
significantly complicated the development of Russia's operational reserves.
Russian President
Vladimir Putin appears to be using the "Time of Heroes" veteran support program to militarize regional
and local government administrations and further solidify a pro-war ideology into the Russian state and
society.
Russian authorities continue to arrest Russian officials on charges related to
mismanagement and corruption within the Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD).
Strikes reportedly
targeted an ammunition depot near Russia's Hmeimim Airbase in Latakia Province, Syria overnight on
October 2 to 3.
Russian forces recently advanced south of Siversk and east and southeast of
Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast.
Russian authorities continue to nationalize Russian enterprises
for the benefit of the federal government.
Ukrainian forces struck a fuel storage facility in Anna, Voronezh Oblast on the night of October 3 to 4.
The Ukrainian General Staff reported that the Ukrainian Security Service (SBU) and Ukrainian military
struck at least one vertical fuel reservoir at the Annaneftprodukt fuel and oil storage facility and that
Ukrainian military officials are still clarifying the damage at the facility. Voronezh Oblast Governor
Alexander Gusev claimed that Russian electronic warfare (EW) interference caused a Ukrainian drone to
fall onto the fuel storage facility and start a fire at an empty fuel reservoir. Footage published on
October 4 shows a fire at a purported fuel storage facility near Anna.
Key Takeaways:
Ukrainian forces struck a fuel storage facility in Anna, Voronezh Oblast on the night of October 3 to
4.
Russian forces recently advanced in Vovchansk, near Kreminna, Toretsk, Pokrovsk, and
Donetsk City.
The Russian Government plans to allocate 90 billion rubles ($948 million) to one-time payments for
concluding a military contract with the Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD) between 2025 and 2027,
indicating that the Kremlin plans to continue relying on ongoing crypto-mobilization efforts to meet the
manpower requirements of its war in Ukraine for as long as the crypto-mobilization system works. The
Russian federal government currently offers 400,000 rubles ($4,200) one-time payments for signing a
military contract (in addition to one-time payments offered by regional governments, some of which
recently exceed one million rubles), suggesting that the Kremlin intends to recruit 225,000 new personnel
through contract service between 2025 and 2027, assuming current rates hold, which is unlikely given
these rates have steadily increased since 2022. Russian authorities have significantly increased
financial incentives, particularly one-time payments, in recent months for signing military contracts,
and the Kremlin may have allocated 90 billion rubles to one-time payments with the intent of further
raising federal payments between 2025 and 2027. Russian authorities have reportedly expressed concerns
that ongoing recruitment efforts are producing diminishing results, however, and the significant increase
in financial incentives in recent months suggests that existing recruitment efforts were insufficient for
maintaining the consistent generation of new forces that the Russian military relies on for sustaining
its offensive tempo in Ukraine. ISW assesses that there are medium- to long-term constraints on how many
recruits the ongoing Russian crypto-mobilization campaign can generate, and increased financial
incentives are unlikely to significantly address these constraints. Russian President Vladimir Putin
remains committed to the ongoing crypto-mobilization campaign in order to avoid declaring another widely
unpopular partial mobilization call-up of reservists, although he maintains the option to call another
round of partial mobilization — as he did in Fall 2022. Putin and the Russian military command appear
unwilling to accept reducing the intensity of Russian combat operations in Ukraine since they view
maintaining the theater-wide initiative as a strategic imperative, and it remains unclear whether Putin
will respond with another round of mobilization if faced with another crisis similar to or worse than the
crisis the Kremlin faced in Fall 2022.
A recent Ukrainian missile strike near occupied Donetsk
City reportedly killed several North Korean military officials. Unspecified sources in Ukraine's
intelligence community told the Kyiv Post that an October 3 Ukrainian missile strike near occupied
Donetsk City killed 20 Russian soldiers, including six unidentified North Korean officers "who came to
confer with their Russian counterparts," and injured three other North Korean soldiers. The Kyiv Post,
citing Russian social media posts, reported that Russian forces were demonstrating infantry assault and
defense training to the North Korean military personnel. ISW cannot independently confirm the presence of
North Korean military officials in occupied Donetsk City. ISW has previously observed unconfirmed reports
in June 2024 that North Korea planned to dispatch a large-scale engineering force to occupied Donetsk
Oblast as early as July 2024. ISW also observed reports in July 2024 that a delegation from North Korea's
Kim Il Sung Military University visited Russia, which against the backdrop of deepening bilateral
relations, suggests that the North Korean military likely intends to learn from the Russian military's
experience in the war in Ukraine.
Key Takeaways:
The Russian Government plans to
allocate 90 billion rubles ($948 million) to one-time payments for concluding a military contract with
the Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD) between 2025 and 2027, indicating that the Kremlin plans to
continue relying on ongoing crypto-mobilization efforts to meet the manpower requirements of its war in
Ukraine for as long as the crypto-mobilization system works.
Ukrainian officials continue to
provide statistics regarding Russian war crimes, shedding light on the extent of violations committed by
Russian forces and authorities.
The Russian government appears to have amended its plan to
deanonymize Russian social media accounts following significant backlash within the Russian
ultranationalist information space.
A recent Ukrainian missile strike near occupied Donetsk
City reportedly killed several North Korean military officials.
Russian forces recently
advanced within the main Ukrainian salient in Kursk Oblast, near Toretsk, near Pokrovsk, and southwest of
Donetsk City.
Russian forces have reportedly lost at least five divisions’ worth of armored vehicles and tanks in
Pokrovsk Raion since beginning their offensive operation to seize Avdiivka in October 2023 and during
intensified Russian offensive operations in western Donetsk Oblast in Summer 2024. An open-source X
(formerly Twitter) user tracking visually confirmed Russian vehicle and equipment losses in Ukraine
stated on October 4 that the user has confirmed that Russian forces have lost 1,830 pieces of heavy
equipment in Pokrovsk Raion since October 9, 2023. The X user stated that Russian forces have lost a
total of 539 tanks (roughly a division and a half's worth of Russian tanks) and 1,020 infantry fighting
vehicles (roughly four to five mechanized infantry divisions’ worth of vehicles) during offensive
operations in Pokrovsk Raion and specified that Ukrainian forces destroyed 381 of the 539 Russian tanks
and 835 of the 1,020 armored vehicles. The X user noted that Russian forces have also lost 26 infantry
mobility vehicles, 22 multiple launch rocket systems (MLRS), 11 towed artillery systems, and 92 unarmored
trucks. The X user noted that he confirmed that Russian forces lost 25 tanks and 59 armored vehicles
(roughly two battalions' worth of mechanized equipment) in Pokrovsk Raion since September 6, 2024.
Russian forces launched an intensified four-month-long offensive operation to seize Avdiivka in October
2023 and later continued assaults west of Avdiivka and west and southwest of Donetsk City in spring and
summer 2024, and the user's data should reflect Russian vehicle losses accrued during these offensive
efforts. The X user’s assessment based on visually confirmed vehicle losses is likely conservative given
that not all Russian vehicle losses are visually documented. The actual number of Russian vehicle losses
in the Pokrovsk area is likely higher than reported.
The Russian military command may not be
willing or able to accept the current scale and rate of vehicle loss in the coming months and years given
the constraints in Russia's defense industrial production, limits to Russia’s Soviet-era vehicle
stockpiles, and the Russian military's failure to achieve operationally significant territorial advances
through mechanized maneuver. Russian forces expended a significant number of armored vehicles during the
first weeks of their offensive effort to seize Avdiivka in October 2023 and later limited their armored
vehicle usage while fighting within Avdiivka's administrative boundaries. Russian forces appear to have
limited their armored vehicle use in the area immediately west of Avdiivka in recent months, although
Russian forces have simultaneously intensified their offensive operations west and southwest of Donetsk
city and frequently conduct largely unsuccessful platoon- and company-sized mechanized assaults in the
area. Russian forces have conducted several battalion-sized mechanized assaults in western Donetsk Oblast
since July 2024, the majority of which resulted in significant armored vehicle losses in exchange for
marginal territorial advances. The commander of a Ukrainian bridge operating in the Donetsk direction
recently reported that Russian forces are losing up to 90 percent of the vehicles used in mechanized
assaults in the Donetsk direction. The British International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) think
tank previously estimated that Russian forces were losing over 3,000 armored fighting vehicles annually
as of February 2024, although Russia's current rate of armored vehicle losses may be higher given that
the X user's data notably does not account for Russian equipment losses throughout the entire frontline.
Russian forces have only advanced about 40 km in the Avdiivka/Pokrovsk operational direction since
October 2023 and a loss of over five divisions’ worth of equipment for such tactical gains is not
sustainable indefinitely without a fundamental shift in Russia‘s capability to resource its war.
Russian forces have likely accumulated a large amount of equipment for these assaults, although the
medium- to long-term constraints of Russia's armored vehicle stocks and production rates alongside
mounting equipment losses may force the Russian military to rethink the benefit of intensified mechanized
activity in this sector over Russia's longer-term war effort in Ukraine. The Russian military command's
willingness to pursue limited tactical advances in exchange for significant armored vehicle losses will
become increasingly costly as Russian forces burn through finite Soviet-era weapons and equipment stocks
in the coming months and years. Russia will likely struggle to adequately supply its units with materiel
in the long term without transferring the Russian economy to a wartime footing and significantly
increasing Russia's defense industrial production rates — a move that Russian President Vladimir Putin
has sought to avoid thus far.
Key Takeaways:
• Russian forces have reportedly lost
at least five divisions’ worth of armored vehicles and tanks in Pokrovsk Raion since beginning their
offensive operation to seize Avdiivka in October 2023 and during intensified Russian offensive operations
in western Donetsk Oblast in Summer 2024.
• The Russian military command may not be willing or
able to accept the current scale and rate of vehicle loss in the coming months and years given the
constraints in Russia's defense industrial production, limits to Russia’s Soviet-era vehicle stockpiles,
and the Russian military's failure to achieve operationally significant territorial advances through
mechanized maneuver.
• Ukrainian officials continue to document and prosecute Russian war
crimes committed against Ukrainian forces.
• Russian authorities reportedly arrested the
administrator of the Russian Telegram channel Thirteenth, who has previously criticized the Kremlin and
Russian Ministry of Defense (MoD), on October 5.
• Russian forces recently advanced southeast
of Pokrovsk.
Ukrainian forces struck an oil terminal in occupied Feodosia, Crimea on the night of October 6 to 7. The
Ukrainian General Staff reported on October 7 that Ukrainian forces struck an oil terminal in occupied
Feodosia causing a fire near the facility and that Ukrainian authorities are clarifying the damage to the
facility. The Ukrainian General Staff also reported that Feodosia houses the largest oil terminal in
occupied Crimea and that Russia uses this terminal to transport petroleum products to the Russian
military. Feodosia occupation mayor Igor Tkachenko acknowledged the fire at the oil depot and claimed
that it did not cause an oil spill. A Crimea-focused source claimed that the Russian military had
deployed a Pantsir-S1 air defense system to the area in June 2024 to protect the Feodosia oil terminal.
Footage published on October 7 shows a fire purportedly at the Feodosia oil terminal.
Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada Human Rights Commissioner Dmytro Lyubinets reported on October 7 that
Ukrainian authorities are investigating another case of Russian forces' unjust abuse and execution of
Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs). Lyubinets reported that he sent letters to the United Nations (UN) and
the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in response to recent aerial footage of Russian
forces torturing and executing three unarmed Ukrainian POWs near Niu York, Donetsk Oblast. Lyubinets
noted that a Ukrainian brigade operating in the area published the footage on October 6 and highlighted
that the highest levels of the Russian military command appear to be tolerating Russian war crimes in
Ukraine. The Geneva Convention on POWs prohibits the "mutilation, cruel treatment, and torture" of POWs,
as well as the execution of POWs or persons who are clearly rendered hors de combat. Head of the
Ukrainian Department for Combating Crimes in Conditions of Armed Conflict Yuri Bilousov stated on October
4 that Ukrainian sources documented evidence indicating that Russian forces have executed 93 Ukrainian
prisoners of war (POW) on the battlefield since the start of the full-scale invasion and that 80 percent
of the recorded cases occurred in 2024. Bilousov noted on October 5 that these war crimes are systemic
and that Russian authorities clearly condone these crimes. ISW has extensively reported on previous
footage and reports of Russian servicemembers executing Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs) and observed a
wider trend of Russian abuses against Ukrainian POWs across various sectors of the front that appeared to
be enabled, if not explicitly endorsed, by individual Russian commanders and unpunished by Russian field
commanders.
Key Takeaways:
• Ukrainian forces struck an oil terminal in occupied
Feodosia, Crimea on the night of October 6 to 7.
• Ukrainian Verkhovna Rada Human Rights
Commissioner Dmytro Lyubinets reported on October 7 that Ukrainian authorities are investigating another
case of Russian forces' unjust abuse and execution of Ukrainian prisoners of war (POWs).
• Russian authorities announced an "unprecedented" cyberattack against Russian state media
infrastructure on October 7.
• Russian forces recently advanced in northern Kharkiv Oblast, in
Donetsk Oblast, and in western Zaporizhia Oblast.
Ukrainian forces reportedly struck a Shahed drone storage facility in Krasnodar Krai and an ammunition
warehouse in the Republic of Adygea on October 9 and 10. The Ukrainian General Staff reported on October
9 that Ukrainian naval forces and Ukraine's Security Service (SBU) struck a Russian Shahed drone storage
facility near Oktyabrsky, Krasnodar Krai and that Russian forces stored around 400 Shahed drones at the
facility. The Ukrainian General Staff reported that there were secondary detonations at the facility
immediately following the strike, and footage published on October 10 shows a large fire and secondary
detonations near the facility. Krasnodar Krai officials stated on October 9 that Ukrainian drone strikes
damaged several houses near Oktyabrsky and that unspecified warehouses in the area caught fire but
claimed that the strike did not significantly damage the facilities. The Ukrainian General Staff reported
on October 10 that drone operators from the SBU, Ukraine's Main Military Intelligence Directorate (GUR),
and Ukraine's Special Operations Forces (SSO) struck an ammunition warehouse at the Khanskaya Air Base in
the Republic of Adygea. The Ukrainian General Staff reported that Russian forces base Su-34
fighter-bombers and Su-27 fighter aircraft at the Khanskaya Air Base, and Ukrainian outlet Suspilne
reported that sources within Ukrainian special services stated that there were 57 Russian training and
combat aircraft and helicopters at the airfield at the time of the strike. Suspilne's sources stated that
Russian forces use the Khanskaya Air Base to refuel planes during air strikes against frontline Ukrainian
units and settlements. Ukrainian forces are still determining the extent of the strike's damage to the
airfield, and it is unclear whether Ukrainian forces struck any Russian aircraft at the Khanskaya Air
Base as of the time of this report. Russian sources published footage on October 10 purportedly showing
Ukrainian drones striking the airfield and noted that the Russian 272nd Training Aviation Base of the
Krasnodar Higher Military Aviation School of Pilots is based at the Khanskaya Air Base.
Russian forces have reportedly struck three civilian vessels docked in Ukrainian ports since October 5,
likely as part of intensified Russian military, political, and economic pressure to undermine confidence
in Ukraine's grain corridor, Western support for Ukraine, and push Ukraine into premature negotiations.
Ukrainian Odesa Oblast Military Administration Head Oleh Kiper stated on October 9 that Russian ballistic
missiles struck port infrastructure in Odesa Raion and that Russian missiles struck a civilian container
ship under the flag of Panama. Kiper noted that this was the third Russian strike on a civilian vessel in
the last four days and stated that these strikes are an attempt to disrupt Ukraine's grain corridor, kill
civilians, and destroy Ukrainian infrastructure. Ukrainian officials reported that a Russian ballistic
missile struck a civilian vessel under the flag of Palau in Odesa's port on October 7 and that Russian
missiles damaged a civilian cargo ship on the night of October 5 to 6 near Odesa City. Russian sources
have attempted to justify the recent Russian strikes against civilian ships by claiming that the ships
were carrying weapons, but ISW has not observed independent confirmation of these claims. Ukrainian
officials reported that Russian forces conducted a cruise missile strike against a civilian cargo ship
under the flag of St. Kitts and Nevis transporting Ukrainian wheat to Egypt as it was leaving Ukrainian
territorial waters in the Black Sea on the night of September 11. Russian forces have previously heavily
targeted Ukrainian ports and grain infrastructure in southern Ukraine and have engaged in threatening
military posturing in the Black Sea in an effort to damage Ukrainian grain exports and undermine
international confidence in Ukraine's grain corridor. Russian strikes against civilian vessels in the
grain corridor are almost certainly intended to undermine confidence in Ukraine's ability to enforce and
defend the corridor, influence ongoing Western discussions about long-term Western support for Ukraine,
and negatively impact Ukraine's efforts to economically recover amid the ongoing war.|
Key
Takeaways:
• Ukrainian forces reportedly struck a Shahed drone storage facility in Krasnodar
Krai and an ammunition warehouse in the Republic of Adygea on October 9 and 10.
• Russian
forces have reportedly struck three civilian vessels docked in Ukrainian ports since October 5, likely as
part of intensified Russian military, political, and economic pressure to undermine confidence in
Ukraine's grain corridor, Western support for Ukraine, and push Ukraine into premature negotiations.
• An unspecified senior US defense official stated on October 9 that Russian forces have suffered
over 600,000 casualties since the start of the full-scale invasion in February 2022 — a stark increase
from a prior US intelligence assessment that Russian forces suffered about 315,000 casualties in Ukraine
as of December 2023.
• An Iranian outlet affiliated with former Islamic Revolutionary Guards
Corps (IRGC) Commander Major General Mohsen Rezaei claimed on October 8 that Russia provided Iran with an
S-400 air defense system and a squadron of Su-35 fighter jets but provided no evidence for this claim.
• Ukrainian forces recently advanced near Toretsk. Russian forces recently advanced in Kursk
Oblast and near Chasiv Yar, southeast of Pokrovsk, and southwest of Donetsk City.
• The
Russian military appears to be increasingly recruiting older Russian volunteers in order to sustain
ongoing crypto-mobilization efforts.
Russian forces intensified their ongoing effort to dislodge Ukrainian forces from Kursk Oblast around the
evening of October 10 and have recently advanced further into the main Ukrainian salient in Kursk Oblast
while reportedly eliminating almost the entirety of the smaller Ukrainian salient in Glushkovsky Raion.
Russian forces reportedly simultaneously intensified counterattacks in Glushkovksy Raion, on the left
flank of the main Ukrainian salient in Korenevsky Raion, and on the right flank of the main Ukrainian
salient in Sudzhansky Raion on the evening of October 10. Geolocated footage published on October 10
indicates that Russian forces recently advanced into central Kremyanoye (east of Korenevo) and to the
northern outskirts of Zeleny Shlyakh (southeast of Korenevo) and enveloped Ukrainian positions near
Lyubimovka (southeast of Korenevo). Russian milbloggers claimed that Russian forces operating in
Korenevsky Raion seized Olgovka (east of Korenevo) and Nizhny Klin (southeast of Korenevo and
Lyubimovka), advanced up the outskirts of Tolsty Lug and Novoivanovka (both southeast of Korenevo), and
broke through Ukrainian defenses near Lyubimovka during an alleged battalion-sized mechanized assault.
ISW has yet to observe confirmation that Russian forces recently conducted a battalion-sized
mechanized assault in the area or recaptured any settlements. Russian milbloggers widely claimed that
Russian forces enveloped Ukrainian forces in Lyubimovka and Tolsty Lug, although some milbloggers claimed
that Russian forces have encircled up to two Ukrainian battalions in Korenevsky Raion. ISW has not
observed confirmation that Russian forces have encircled any Ukrainian units in Kursk Oblast, however.
Elements of the Russian 155th Naval Infantry Brigade (Pacific Fleet, Eastern Military District ) and
810th Naval Infantry Brigade (Black Sea Fleet, Southern Military District ) are reportedly
conducting these intensified counterattacks in Korenevsky Raion.
Russian milbloggers claimed
that Russian forces operating in Sudzhansky Raion broke through Ukrainian defenses near Martynovka and
Mykhailivka (both northeast of Sudzha), advanced two kilometers deep north of Malaya Loknya (north of
Sudzha), and are enveloping Ukrainian positions near Plekhovo (southeast of Sudzha). A Russian milblogger
claimed that elements of the 155th Naval Infantry Brigade advanced up to the northwestern outskirts of
Sudzha, although a prominent Kremlin-affiliated milblogger repeatedly denied these reports. ISW has not
observed any visual confirmation of Russian advances in Sudzhansky Raion since the start of intensified
Russian counterattacks in the area on the evening of October 10. Elements of the 810th Naval Infantry
Brigade, 40th Naval Infantry Brigade (Pacific Fleet, EMD), 11th Airborne (VDV) Brigade, 1220th Motorized
Rifle Regiment (likely a mobilized unit), and unspecified Chechen Akhmat units are reportedly conducting
the intensified counterattacks in Sudzhansky Raion.
Russian milbloggers claimed that Russian
forces pushed Ukrainian forces out of most of Glushkovksy Raion on October 10 and 11, although ISW has
yet to observe visual confirmation of these alleged Russian advances. Russian milbloggers claimed that
Russian forces operating south of Glushkovo pushed Ukrainian forces back from Veseloye, advanced near
Medvezhye, and approached the international border with Sumy Oblast. Russian milbloggers claimed that
Ukrainian forces only retain limited positions near Krasnooktyabrskoye and on the outskirts of Novy Put
(both south of Glushkovo and immediately on the border with Sumy Oblast) and declared the Ukrainian
offensive effort in Glushkovsky Raion a failure. Ukrainian forces began ground assaults into Glushkovsky
Raion on September 11, 2024, following the start of Russian counterattacks in Kursk Oblast on September
10, 2024, but have not yet established a significant foothold in the area. Elements of the Russian 155th
Naval Infantry Brigade, 1434th Akhmat "Chechnya" Regiment, 56th VDV Regiment (7th VDV Division), 83rd VDV
Brigade, and 106th VDV Division are reportedly conducting intensified counterattacks in Glushkovsky
Raion.
Key Takeaways:
• Russian forces intensified their ongoing effort to dislodge
Ukrainian forces from Kursk Oblast around the evening of October 10 and have recently advanced further
into the main Ukrainian salient in Kursk Oblast while reportedly eliminating almost the entirety of the
smaller Ukrainian salient in Glushkovsky Raion.
• Intensified Russian counterattacks likely
aim to push Ukrainian forces out of Kursk Oblast before poor weather conditions in Fall 2024 and early
Winter 2024-2025 begin to constrain battlefield maneuver.
• The Russian military command
likely aims to rapidly push Ukrainian forces out of Kursk Oblast in order to free up combat power for its
priority offensive operations in Donetsk Oblast and to ease the theater-wide operational pressures that
the Ukrainian incursion has generated.
• South Korean and Ukrainian officials reportedly
continue to identify North Korean military personnel already fighting in Ukraine as well as training in
Russia for possible future deployments alongside the Russian military.
• Western partners
continue to announce and provide new military assistance to Ukraine.
• Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelensky continues diplomatic efforts to establish and clarify Ukraine’s strategic vision for
peace.
• Chechen Republic Head Ramzan Kadyrov declared a "blood feud" against Russian
legislators, suggesting that Kadyrov is becoming increasingly emboldened in his personal political
disputes.
• Ukrainian officials confirmed that Ukrainian journalist Viktoriya Roshchyna died
in Russian captivity.
• Ukrainian officials announced new appointments in the Ministry of
Defense (MoD).
• Russian forces recently advanced near Pokrovsk and Kurakhove.
• The Kremlin is deceptively recruiting young African women to assemble Iranian-designed Shahed drones
in the Republic of Tatarstan, likely to address labor shortages in Russia.