Ukraine pushes back some Russian advances, Zelensky says

Ukrainian forces have pushed back some of the advances Russia made over the summer, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Thursday, calling the operation an "important success" after months of battlefield setbacks. (X/@ZelenskyyUa)
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Updated 18 September 2025
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Ukraine pushes back some Russian advances, Zelensky says

  • Zelensky said his troops had reclaimed 160 square kilometers of land near the eastern coal mining town of Dobropillia
  • He did not say when Ukraine made the gains, but said Russia had “suffered thousands of losses“

KYIV: Ukrainian forces have pushed back some of the advances Russia made over the summer, President Volodymyr Zelensky said Thursday, calling the operation an “important success” after months of battlefield setbacks.

Zelensky said his troops had reclaimed 160 square kilometers (62 square miles) of land near the eastern coal mining town of Dobropillia, where Russia pierced Ukraine’s defenses in August.

US President Donald Trump, meanwhile, expressed mounting frustration at his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin for not halting the invasion.

Russia, which has been chipping away at Ukrainian territory for months, did not immediately comment on Ukraine’s claims but announced Thursday that more than 700,000 of its soldiers were fighting on the front line.

Diplomatic efforts to end the three-and-a-half year war have fallen apart in recent months, with Russia last week announcing peace talks were on “pause” and Zelensky warning Russia still wanted to occupy “all of Ukraine.”


Following a meeting with troops in the eastern Donetsk region on Thursday, Zelensky said his army was “achieving results” in an ongoing counteroffensive there.

“Since the start of the operation, our warriors have already liberated 160 square kilometers,” he said in a video address.

He said Ukrainian forces had “cleared” Russian troops from an additional 170 square kilometers of land, but had not yet formally taken the territory.

Zelensky did not say when Ukraine made the gains, but said Russia had “suffered thousands of losses.”

“Ukraine is quite rightly defending its positions, defending its land,” he added.

DeepState, an online battlefield tracker linked to the Ukrainian army, showed Russian troops made rapid advances near Dobropillia last month but that some of their gains had evaporated in recent weeks.

- Putin ‘let me down’ -

Ukraine and its Western allies say Russian troops are making huge losses for comparatively small territorial gains, while leaving towns and villages destroyed in their wake.

Trump, who has been seeking to broker an end to the war, said Thursday he was disappointed in Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin’s apparent refusal to accept a peace deal.

“He’s let me down. He’s really let me down,” Trump said at a press conference with British Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Britain.

Trump promised to end the war quickly after taking office in January, but has failed to extract concessions from the Kremlin, despite a landmark summit with Putin in Alaska in August.

Russia accuses European countries of frustrating the peace process, but Kyiv and its European allies say Putin is deliberately stalling to buy time and seize more Ukrainian territory.

Russia, which currently occupies around a fifth of Ukraine, accelerated its advances over the summer and has indicated it will achieve its war goals via military means if a peace deal is not possible.

Moscow claims five Ukrainian regions as its own, including Crimea, which it annexed in 2014.

Tens of thousands of people — including civilians — have been killed since Russia invaded, with towns and cities across the east and south of Ukraine left in ruins.

Millions of people have been forced to flee their homes in the biggest war in Europe since World War II.

A Russian air strike on the Donetsk region town of Kostiantynivka earlier Thursday killed five people, Ukrainian police said.

The town lies about eight kilometers (five miles) from the front line and is surrounded by Russian troops on three sides, according to DeepState.

Kyiv has been trying to hit back with long-range strikes on Russia’s vital oil sector, with the latest attack on Thursday morning triggering a fire at a refinery in the central Bashkortostan region, some 1,400 kilometers (870 miles) behind the front line.


Myanmar arrests hundreds under new election law ahead of December vote

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Myanmar arrests hundreds under new election law ahead of December vote

Myanmar’s junta said this week it had arrested more than 200 people under a new law against undermining ​elections, drawing criticism from a monitoring group that the legislation is being used to block criticism of the regime and prevent scrutiny. The military government is set to begin a general election on December 28, the first since a 2021 coup overthrew the civilian administration.
The Asian Network for Free Elections (ANFREL), which served as an accredited international observer during the 2015 and 2020 polls, said in an assessment that the election protection law enacted by the junta in July is a major concern.
Myanmar authorities ‌have charged ‌at least 229 people under the law for attempting ‌to ⁠sabotage ​the election ‌process, the junta-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper reported this week.
It did not provide details on those charged or exactly what punishment they faced. Myanmar junta spokesman Zaw Min Tun did not respond to calls seeking comment.
The law prohibits actions aimed at disrupting the election as well as staging protests, including criticism on social media. Those convicted of breaking the law can face punishments ranging from three years in prison to the death ⁠penalty.
The law has been used against young people putting up boycott stickers, film directors and artists who ‌posted reactions on social media, and to charge journalists, according to ‍ANFREL.
“Rather than ensuring peaceful, competitive elections, ‍the Election Protection Law is being deployed to silence dissent, deter protests, and block ‍independent scrutiny – turning any form of election monitoring into a criminal risk,” the group said.

ELECTION AMID CIVIL WAR
Several countries, the United Nations, and rights groups have described the upcoming multi-phase elections as a sham designed to keep Myanmar’s ruling generals in power through proxies, although the junta ​insists the polls have public support. Over 100 townships, including the commercial capital of Yangon, will vote in the first phase of the elections ⁠in late December, followed by another 100 in the second phase on January 11. The details of a possible third phase are yet to be announced. The elections will be held amidst a raging civil war, triggered by the 2021 coup in which the military ousted an elected civilian government led by Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy. Her party remains dissolved under the junta’s directions and several other political groups are also boycotting the polls, drawing international criticism over the credibility of the elections. The junta, however, has defended its plan to go ahead with the polls.
“The election is being conducted for the people of Myanmar, not for the international community,” junta ‌spokesman Zaw Min Tun said at a press conference in Yangon last week, according to the state-run newspaper.
“Whether the international community is satisfied or not, is irrelevant.”