Russian forces seized Hryshyne, northwest of Pokrovsk, extending control over terrain that the Institute for the Study of War and the Center for European Policy Analysis have assessed as among the last defensible ground before the Donbas opens into flat steppe 1. Ukraine's Operation Task Force East reported Russia massing reserves near both Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad for a renewed push. The Pokrovsk-Dobropole corridor is now described as 'increasingly tense.'
Pokrovsk itself fell in December 2025 . Ukraine's southern counteroffensive in Zaporizhzhia — which reclaimed 460 sq km and eight settlements since late January — forced Russia to redeploy elite airborne and naval infantry away from the Donetsk axis. That redeployment was expected to ease pressure at Pokrovsk. It has not.
Russia's total force generation still exceeds what Ukraine can simultaneously contain on multiple axes. Even with a net monthly recruitment deficit of 9,000 , Russia retains enough mass to concentrate forces at Pokrovsk while contesting the Zaporizhzhia gains further south. If the Pokrovsk-Dobropole line breaks, the terrain beyond offers few natural chokepoints — open agricultural land that favours the side with more artillery and air superiority over the contact zone. The Zaporizhzhia counteroffensive bought Ukraine strategic initiative in the south; it has not bought relief in the east.
