
Luhansk Oblast
Eastern Ukrainian oblast; over 99% Russian-controlled since 2022, formally annexed by Russia.
Last refreshed: 1 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Why is Starobilsk in Luhansk the most contested city in Russia's drone war?
Timeline for Luhansk Oblast
Ukraine kills 65 drone cadets at Snizhne
Russia-Ukraine War 2026Gerasimov files fourth false Luhansk claim
Russia-Ukraine War 2026Mentioned in: Russia claims Luhansk 'liberated'
Russia-Ukraine War 2026- Does Russia control Luhansk Oblast?
- Russia controls more than 99% of Luhansk Oblast. On 1 April 2026, Russia announced the 'completion of liberation' of the area, though no internationally recognised sovereignty exists.Source: ISW
- Where is Luhansk Oblast?
- Luhansk Oblast is the northernmost of Ukraine's two Donbas regions, bordering Russia's Belgorod, Voronezh, and Rostov oblasts. The regional capital is Luhansk city.
- What did Russia declare about Luhansk in April 2026?
- Russia announced on 1 April 2026 that it had completed the 'liberation of the Luhansk People's Republic', despite the oblast being more than 99% occupied since the 2022 annexation.Source: Russian government statement
- How did the UN vote on Russian annexation of Luhansk?
- The UN General Assembly voted 141-7 to condemn the 2023 referendum legitimising the annexation of Luhansk Oblast and three other Ukrainian territories.Source: UN General Assembly
- What is the Rubikon Centre in Starobilsk?
- The Rubikon Centre in Starobilsk, Luhansk Oblast, was Russia's drone operations headquarters. Ukraine struck it overnight 21-22 May 2026 as part of the same operation that destroyed the Sever-Akhmat drone school in Snizhne. Russia cited the Starobilsk strike as justification for its 24 May Oreshnik barrage.Source: event
- How much of Luhansk Oblast does Russia actually control in 2026?
- Russia controls over 99% of Luhansk Oblast. Despite Gerasimov's April 2026 claim of 1,700 sq km of new gains, ISW verifies only around 340 sq km, and records a net Russian territorial loss across the oblast since 1 March 2026.Source: event
- Why does Russia keep claiming it has 'liberated' Luhansk Oblast?
- Gerasimov has filed four 'fully completed' proclamations on Luhansk since 2022. Analysts interpret the repeated claims as diplomatic positioning, seeking to establish a baseline ahead of Ceasefire talks where Russia demands Ukraine formally cede all four annexed oblasts.
Background
Luhansk Oblast is the northernmost of Ukraine's two Donbas oblasts and the most completely occupied territory in the war. Russia controls more than 99% of the oblast. It borders Russia's Belgorod, Voronezh, and Rostov oblasts to the east and north. Russia formally annexed the oblast in September 2022 alongside Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Kherson, a claim condemned by 141 UN member states in a 2023 General Assembly vote and recognised only by Russia itself. The pre-war population was approximately 2.1 million; substantial displacement has reduced residents significantly.
On 21 April 2026, General Gerasimov claimed Russia had 'fully completed' the occupation of Luhansk Oblast, citing 1,700 square kilometres seized in 2026 across eighty settlements. The Institute for the Study of War verifies roughly 340 square kilometres of 2026 gains, records no Russian control of Myman, and finds a net Russian territorial loss since 1 March. It was Gerasimov's fourth such proclamation on Luhansk.
In the week of 19-26 May 2026, Ukraine struck Starobilsk in Luhansk Oblast overnight 21-22 May, hitting the Rubikon Centre that Russia used as its drone operations headquarters. Russia formally cited the Starobilsk attack as justification for the 24 May dual-Oreshnik barrage on Kyiv, the most destructive single attack of the full-scale war. The oblast administration operates in exile from Ukrainian-controlled territory, and Ukraine has continued striking Russian air defence targets inside the oblast throughout 2026.
The repeated 'liberation' proclamations are interpreted as attempts to lock in a diplomatic baseline ahead of any Ceasefire talks. Ukraine and Western governments do not recognise Russian sovereignty over the oblast. Russia's demand that Ukraine pre-commit to ceding all four annexed oblasts remained a central obstacle at Istanbul Round 2 in June 2026.