Ukraine sends special forces to embattled eastern city

1 / 2
A view shows apartment buildings hit by Russian military strikes in the front line town of Pokrovsk in Donetsk region on May 21, 2025. (REUTERS/File Photo)
2 / 2
Members of the White Angel unit of Ukrainian police officers who evacuate people from the frontline towns and villages, check an area for residents in the frontline town of Pokrovsk in Donetsk region on May 21, 2025. (REUTERS/File Photo)
Short Url
Updated 01 November 2025
Follow

Ukraine sends special forces to embattled eastern city

  • The city’s capture would provide a major propaganda boost for the Kremlin
  • “A comprehensive operation to destroy and displace enemy forces from Pokrovsk is under way,” Ukrainian commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrsky said

KYIV: Ukraine has deployed special forces to the eastern city of Pokrovsk, where it is under pressure from an intense Russian assault involving thousands of troops, Kyiv’s top commander said Saturday.
Pokrovsk, in Ukraine’s Donetsk region, lies on a major supply route for the Ukrainian army and has been in Moscow’s sights for over a year.
Hundreds of Russian soldiers have infiltrated the logistics hub, Kyiv said earlier this week. Others are closing in on its outskirts in a pincer-shaped movement, according to battlefield maps published by the Institute for the Study of War.
The city’s capture would provide a major propaganda boost for the Kremlin, which has rebuffed US calls to halt its nearly-four year invasion and instead pushed forward with its ground assault.
“A comprehensive operation to destroy and displace enemy forces from Pokrovsk is under way,” Ukrainian commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrsky said in a post on Facebook.
“By my order, consolidated groups of Special Operations Forces are operating in the city,” he added, without elaborating.
Videos published on social media purported to show helicopters flying over Pokrovsk, while another purportedly taken by a Russian drone showed figures scrambling from a helicopter that had landed in a field.
Special forces are a branch of the military trained to carry out covert operations, often through unconventional warfare such as sabotage and diversion.
Syrsky said Pokrovsk was under pressure from an “enemy group thousands strong,” but denied reports that Moscow had encircled the logistics hub, saying there was “no blockade.”
“We are doing everything to implement logistics,” he said.
Pokrovsk city, home to 60,000 people before the war, is now a largely deserted wasteland devastated by fighting.
Moscow has been grinding forward on the front line for over a year in costly, meter-for-meter battles that Kyiv and its allies say have little strategic value.
Russia currently occupies a fifth of Ukraine, including the Crimean peninsula, which it seized in 2014.

- Missiles record -

Kyiv’s announcement came as data showed Russia fired more missiles at Ukraine in overnight attacks during October than in any month since at least the start of 2023.
The strikes, which have targeted Ukraine’s fragile energy grid for the fourth winter running, have cut power to hundreds of thousands of people.
It is part of what Kyiv and its backers say is a deliberate and cynical strategy to wear down Ukraine’s civilian population — a charge Russia denies.
Russia’s army fired 270 missiles over October, up 46 percent on the previous month, according to an AFP analysis of daily data published by Ukraine’s air force.
That was the highest one-month tally since Kyiv started routinely publishing statistics at the beginning of 2023.
As in previous winters, the authorities have introduced rolling blackouts in every region of the country, including Kyiv, to deal with shortfalls in power.
Russia also fired 5,298 long-range drones at Ukraine in October, the same data showed — down by around six percent on the number it fired in September but still close to record highs.
Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, describing it as a “special military operation” to demilitarise the country and prevent the expansion of NATO.
Kyiv and its European allies say the war, the largest and deadliest on European soil since World War II, is an unprovoked and illegal land grab that has resulted in a tidal wave of violence and destruction.
Tens of thousands of civilians and military personnel have been killed since the invasion began while millions of Ukrainians have been forced to their leave homes.
Russian drone and missile attacks on Ukraine killed at least two people earlier Saturday, according to Ukrainian officials.


Zelensky says Ukrainian air force needs to improve as Russian drone barrages take a toll

Updated 9 sec ago
Follow

Zelensky says Ukrainian air force needs to improve as Russian drone barrages take a toll

  • Zelensky said Friday he had discussed with his defense minister and the air force commander what new air defense measures Ukraine needs to counter the Russian barrages
  • Russia fired 328 drones and seven missiles at Ukraine overnight and in the early morning

KYIV: Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Friday described the performance of the air force in parts of the country as “unsatisfactory,” and said that steps are being taken to improve the response to large-scale Russian drone barrages of civilian areas.
The repeated Russian aerial assaults have in recent months focused on Ukraine’s power grid, causing blackouts and disrupting the heating and water supply for families during a bitterly cold winter.
With the war about to enter its fifth year later this month following Russia’s all-out invasion of its neighbor, there is no sign of a breakthrough in US-led peace efforts following the latest talks this week.
Further US-brokered meetings between Russian and Ukrainian delegations are planned “in the near future, likely in the United States,” Zelensky said.
Zelensky said Friday he had discussed with his defense minister and the air force commander what new air defense measures Ukraine needs to counter the Russian barrages. He didn’t elaborate on what would be done.
Russia fired 328 drones and seven missiles at Ukraine overnight and in the early morning, the air force said, claiming that air defenses shot down 297 drones.
One person was killed and two others were injured in an overnight Russian attack using drones and powerful glide bombs on the central Dnipropetrovsk region, according to the head of the regional military administration, Oleksandr Hanzha.
A Russian aerial attack on the southern Zaporizhzhia region during early daylight hours injured eight people and damaged 18 apartment blocks, according to regional military administration head Ivan Fedorov.
A dog shelter in the regional capital was also struck, killing 13 dogs, Zaporizhzhia City Council Secretary Rehina Kharchenko said.
Some dogs were rushed to a veterinary clinic, but they could not be saved, she said. Seven other animals were injured and are receiving treatment.
Amid icy conditions in Kyiv, more than 1,200 residential buildings in multiple districts of the capital have had no heating for days due to the Russian bombardment of the power grid, according to Zelensky.
The UK defense ministry said Friday that Ukraine’s electricity network “is experiencing its most acute crisis of the winter.”
Mykola Tromza, an 81-year-old pensioner in Kyiv, said he has had his power restored, but recently went without heating and water at home for a week.
“I touched my nose and by God, it was like an icicle,” Tromza said. He said he ran up and down to keep warm.
Russia’s Defense Ministry said that air defenses downed 38 Ukrainian drones overnight, including 26 over the Bryansk region.
Bryansk Gov. Alexander Bogomaz said the attack briefly cut power to several villages in the region.
Another Ukrainian nighttime strike damaged power facilities in the Russian city of Belgorod, disrupting electricity distribution, Gov. Vyacheslav Gladkov said.
Local reports said that Ukrainian missiles hit a power plant and an electrical substation, cutting power to parts of the city.
Fierce fighting has also continued on the front line despite the frigid temperatures.
Ukraine’s Commander in Chief, Col. Gen. Oleksandr Syrskyi, said the front line now measures about 1,200 kilometers (750 miles) in length along eastern and southern parts of Ukraine.
The increasing technological improvements to drones on both sides mean that the so-called “kill zone” where troops are in greatest danger is now up to 20 kilometers (12 miles) deep, he told reporters on Thursday in comments embargoed until Friday.