The Ukrainian General Staff recorded 286 combat engagements on 18 March, the highest single-day total of 2026 and within reach of the all-time record of 311 set on 28 November 2025 1. Pokrovsk absorbed 72 assault actions and Kostiantynivka faced 46 — together accounting for 118 of the day's clashes. Estimated Russian casualties reached 1,710, the heaviest daily toll of the year 2. The aerial barrage was proportional: 7,466 kamikaze drones, 257 guided aerial bombs, and 78 airstrikes in a single 24-hour period.
The escalation was abrupt. On 17 March, the front recorded 171 engagements ; ground combat nearly doubled overnight. The concentration at Pokrovsk and Kostiantynivka confirms these as Russia's primary operational axes. Since Pokrovsk fell in December 2025 , Russian forces have pushed toward Kostiantynivka, aiming to encircle the Kramatorsk–Sloviansk twin cities that anchor Ukraine's eastern defence in Donetsk Oblast. The seizure of Hryshyne northwest of Pokrovsk days earlier removed what ISW and CEPA described as among the last defensible terrain before open steppe — the corridor between Pokrovsk and Kostiantynivka is now the front's centre of gravity.
The daily casualty figure of 1,710, if sustained over a month, would yield roughly 51,000 losses — well above the 30,000–32,000 monthly average recorded through early 2026 and more than double Russia's estimated recruitment of 22,000–22,700 per month. Commander-in-Chief Syrskyi reported a net personnel deficit of 9,000 per month in January . These are Ukrainian estimates; Russia does not publish comparable data. Mediazona's independent verification, drawn from obituaries, court records, and social media, had reached 203,300 confirmed Russian deaths by 13 March — a floor figure that by methodology undercounts total losses.
By 19 March, engagements dropped to 235 and drone volumes fell to 6,831, suggesting the 18 March peak was a surge rather than a new baseline. The broader trajectory is upward nonetheless: daily drone volumes have not fallen below 6,000 since mid-March, triple the 2025 average of 2,000–3,000 . Russia is expending personnel and munitions faster than it replaces them, yet continues to press both axes. The pattern points to a command decision to accept unsustainable attrition for territorial momentum — a calculation that depends on the Zaporizhzhia counteroffensive not forcing further redeployments south before the twin cities can be encircled.
