Commander-in-Chief Syrskyi visited frontline units on 15 March and reported that Russia has made Zaporizhzhia its primary axis of operations, concentrating "large numbers of troops and resources" 1. Offensive intensity around Huliaipole was "significantly higher compared to other directions." The assessment aligns with combat data from earlier in the month: Huliaipole was already one of three axes recording the heaviest fighting , alongside Pokrovsk and Kostiantynivka.
Russia's reorientation is reactive. Moscow held a Donetsk-first posture through 2024 and most of 2025, prioritising the grinding advance through Avdiivka, then Pokrovsk , and the push toward the Kramatorsk–Sloviansk twin cities. Ukraine's counteroffensive — 460 sq km and eight settlements reclaimed since late January — forced a choice. Russia redeployed elite airborne and naval infantry from eastern Donetsk to the southern front. The shift confirms Ukraine achieved something real in February: Russia changed its main effort not because Zaporizhzhia offered a better offensive opportunity, but because it had to defend ground it was losing.
The operational question for both sides is what the redeployment leaves exposed. For Russia, maintaining pressure at Pokrovsk — where the terrain offers little defence beyond the current line — while simultaneously contesting Zaporizhzhia requires force generation that Syrskyi's own data calls into question. The net monthly recruitment deficit compounds the problem further .
For Ukraine, the calculus is different but equally constrained. The Zaporizhzhia gains have not eased pressure on any other axis. Russia is fighting harder in the south while sustaining its offensive tempo in the east.
An army running a net monthly deficit of 9,000 cannot do this indefinitely — but Russia's total force remains large enough to absorb losses across multiple fronts for months yet. Ukraine's February success bought time and initiative in one sector. It did not buy relief in any other.
