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Border warfare, long-range strikes and hunt for rare armor: This week in the Russia-Ukraine conflict (VIDEOS)

The Russian military has reported making new gains in Kursk Region border area, as well as in the north of Donetsk People’s Republic

The past week in the Russia-Ukraine conflict has been marked by continuing hostility in the border areas of Russia’s Kursk and Belgorod regions, as well as in the Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR). Moscow also continued strikes on Ukraine’s military rear, targeting production sites and other crucial facilities. 

Moscow’s forces have reported making new gains in the north of the DPR, announcing the liberation of Katerinovka, a small village located in the northernmost tip of the republic, close to its borders with Russia’s Lugansk People’s Republic (LPR) and Ukraine’s Kharkov Region. The village was already depopulated before the early stages of the conflict in then-Ukrainian Donbass, and got completely destroyed during the hostilities.

Active combat has also continued in the southwest of the DPR around the largest settlement still controlled by Kiev’s military in the area, the city of Pokrovsk (also known as Krasnoarmeysk). The Russian advance of the past few months in the area has somewhat stalled after Kiev poured in reserves to reinforce its positions near Pokrovsk, with neither side claiming any major gains over the week.


The Russian military has continued to actively strike Ukrainian positions and logistics in Pokrovsk and its vicinity. A new video, captured by a Russian FPV drone cruising through the city, captured three aerial bombs, apparently fitted with a Universal Correction and Guidance Module (UMPK) winged upgrade kit, striking a Ukrainian-held building. One of the bombs appears to veer away from the target and narrowly miss it, while two other munitions scored direct hits, footage shows. 

Border warfare 

The main events have unfolded in the border area of Russia’s Kursk region, invaded by the Ukrainian forces last August. The largest town seized by Kiev during the offensive, Sudzha, was liberated by the Russian forces last month alongside multiple smaller settlements in the area. 


The Ukrainian zone of control in Kursk Region has now shrunk to a thin strip of land along the border, roughly between the villages of Oleshnya and Guyevo. The latter settlement was liberated by the Russian troops this week, the country’s defense ministry has said. 

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Russia thwarts new Ukrainian incursion attempt (VIDEO)

The Russian military has also reported new cross border advances in the north of the area, previously held by the Ukrainian invasion force. The military said it has captured the Ukrainian villages of Basovka and Zhuravka located in Sumy Region.

Medium intensity fighting has also reportedly continued on the border in Russia’s Belgorod Region, namely in the vicinity of the villages of Demidovka and Popovka, located some 16km to the south of Guyevo. The border area near the villages has been repeatedly attacked by the Ukrainian troops since mid-March. The incursion attempts have failed to yield any tangible results, with the Ukrainian forces sustaining heavy casualties in the process.

The troops sent by Kiev to attack Demidovka and Popovka are likely the remnants of the invasion force that previously operated in Kursk Region. The vehicles used by the troops bear a distinctive white triangle tactical marking, used by the Ukrainian forces in the area since last August. 

Long-range strikes 

The two sides of the conflict have continued to exchange long-range strikes, with the Russian military targeting military industrial facilities, ammunition stockpiles and other installations in Ukraine’s rear.

The Russian military has continued to abstain from attacking Ukrainian energy infrastructure, observing the 30-day energy truce brokered by US President Donald Trump on March 18. According to Moscow, Kiev has been violating the deal on an almost daily basis, continuing strikes against such facilities.

Last Friday, the Russian military conducted a ballistic missile strike on a “meeting place of commanders of military units and Western instructors in one of the restaurants” in the Ukrainian city of Krivoy Rog. According to Moscow, up to 85 Ukrainian and foreign soldiers and officers were killed or injured in the strike, with some 20 vehicles damaged.

While the Russian military said the missile, apparently fired by an Iskander-M system, . was equipped with a high-explosive warhead, Kiev claimed the incident was an indiscriminate cluster munition strike on a residential area, with over a dozen of civilians killed. Footage of the aftermath of the strike appears to corroborate the Russian version, showing a large column of dust from a single powerful blast. 

The damage to residential buildings in the area appears to be inflicted by pre-made shrapnel, likely released during an explosion of a Ukrainian anti-aircraft missile that missed its target and hit the ground instead. Ukrainian anti-aircraft forces are notorious for inflicting collateral damage on the ground, primarily due to the widespread practice of concealing their positions among buildings in densely populated areas.

Another notable strike was conducted by the Russian military on Thursday, with an Iskander-M missile hitting the ‘Biosfera’ industrial site in the city of Dnepr (formerly Dnepropetrovsk). According to media reports, the facility has been used to manufacture fiber optics-guided drones. 

Local authorities, however, claimed the industrial site has been used for solely civilian purposes and a stockpile of “diapers and towels” got destroyed in the strike. Footage from the scene shows the facility sustained severe damage with a major fire sending a thick column of black smoke into the skies above the city. 

Hunt for rare Ukrainian assets

The past week has been marked by the destruction of a few rare Western-supplied pieces in the Ukrainian military’s inventory, including a US-made M1 Abrams tank.

The tank of the type was destroyed outside the village of Turya, Sumy Region, shortly across the border from the Russian settlements of Popovka and Demidovka. The tank hit a landmine and was abandoned by its crew, getting hit by multiple FPV drones afterwards, footage circulating online shows.

The Ukrainian forces apparently tried to tow away the heavily-armored tank, covered with Soviet-era Kontakt-1 reactive armor bricks and assorted anti-drone implements, including netting and radio jammers. The attempt ultimately resulted in the loss of a BREM-1 armored recovery vehicle that was destroyed by Russian fiber optics-guided drones. 

Ukraine received some 31 M1 Abrams in 2022, with the tanks repeatedly starring in propaganda videos before making it to the battlefield early next year. The US-made tanks have shown a mixed performance at best, with roughly two thirds of them ending up destroyed in combat with several pieces captured by the Russian military.

A French-made AMX-10RC fighting vehicle became another rare piece of armor destroyed over the week. The vehicle was destroyed by Russian FPV drones in Kherson Region when it was traveling along a road, footage circulating online shows. 

Commonly referred to as a “wheeled tank,” AMX-10RC is effectively a heavy armored car packing a 105mm gun. Kiev has received around 40 vehicles of the type during the conflict, with the lightly-armored “tanks” rarely appearing on the battlefield. Several vehicles ended up destroyed with at least one captured by the Russian military.

April 12, 2025 at 07:20PM
RT

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