Updated
Updated · CNN · Jul 16
Russia Falsely Claims Capture of 66-Sq-Km Kostyantynivka as Ukraine Says Defense Still Holds
Updated
Updated · CNN · Jul 16

Russia Falsely Claims Capture of 66-Sq-Km Kostyantynivka as Ukraine Says Defense Still Holds

3 articles · Updated · CNN · Jul 16

Summary

  • July 3 videos of Russian troops waving flags in Kostyantynivka did not prove control of the town, with later footage, Ukrainian testimony and independent frontline maps showing Moscow still lacked significant areas.
  • The false capture claim fit a broader pattern of overstating battlefield gains, likely aimed at convincing Russians and foreign counterparts that the campaign in eastern Ukraine had not stalled.
  • Deep State mapping and on-the-ground reporting show Russia spent more than a year grinding toward the town, while Western officials cited up to 35,000 Russian dead or wounded a month during that phase of the war.
  • By May, Russian drone range had turned the 5-kilometer access route into a lethal 'Road of Life,' even as Ukrainian forces still operated in the center and posted drone-strike footage again a week after Moscow's claim.
  • Kostyantynivka's strategic value lies in opening a path toward Kramatorsk and Sloviansk, but its devastation underscores how slowly and expensively Russia is advancing even toward small objectives.

Insights

As Ukrainian drones create a battlefield 'kill zone', are Russia's human wave assaults now obsolete?
Why would Russia claim a false victory that can be so easily disproven by battlefield evidence?
With casualties outpacing recruitment, can Russia's costly war of attrition in Donbas be sustained?