Stalemate or warm-up?
Is it true that Ukraine’s counter-offensive has lost traction, while Russia also has no particular prospects for an advance? Military expert Yury Fedorov explains

The Russian-Ukrainian war has reached a stalemate. Neither warring party can gain a decisive advantage and inflict on the enemy the kind of damage that will force them to make significant and principled concessions. The Ukrainian advance is moving ahead too slowly or has even bogged down completely, therefore, Moscow and Kyiv should declare a ceasefire and launch talks to work out a model that would settle the conflict. These headlines and alike have flooded global news agencies and media outlets and are seen by many as the absolute truth. But here’s a question: do these claims actually describe what’s happening right now on the frontlines? At Novaya-Europe’s request, military expert Yury Fedorov analyses key narratives of the current stage in the Ukraine war.
However, the occupation of Lysychansk in early July 2022 showed that Russia’s advance potential had almost exhausted itself due to huge personnel and weapon losses.
Generally, the situation right now truly resembles a positional stalemate:
The Ukrainian Armed Forces have significantly fewer combat jets than Russia, who also has an advantage, albeit dwindling, in artillery and armoured vehicles.
Ukraine’s offensive will truly begin when the military command and President Zelensky conclude that success chances significantly outweigh the defeat potential.

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