He claimed that Ukraine had suffered over 30,000 casualties in just three months of fighting, surpassing its total casualties from the previous year. Putin described this as a "terrible price" for Ukraine, attributing the military operation to political pressures imposed by Western powers, particularly the United States.
Putin argued that the decision to launch the offensive into Kursk made little military sense and was driven by external political motives. He stated that Ukrainian forces were ordered to hold their ground in Kursk at all costs, partly to show the West that its support for Ukraine had not been in vain. He stressed that this was a tragedy for both the Ukrainian people and its military, who were enduring heavy losses for political reasons.
The toll on Ukraine has been not only in terms of human casualties but also equipment. The Russian Ministry of Defense reported that Ukraine had lost 184 tanks, over 100 infantry fighting vehicles and more than 1,000 other armored vehicles. Additionally, Ukrainian forces lost 26 military engineering vehicles in the fighting. Despite these significant losses, Ukrainian officials continue to assert that their offensive has slowed Russian progress along the eastern front. (Related: Bad news for Kyiv: Elite Ukrainian troops SURRENDER to Russians in Kursk.)
While Ukrainian officials claimed their efforts had delayed Russia's advance, independent reports suggested that Russian forces made more territorial gains in October than in any other month this year.
Russia's strategy seems to be to push Ukraine out of the Kursk region while continuing its slow but steady territorial expansion in the Donbas region.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed that Russian forces in Kursk significantly outnumber Ukrainian troops. He estimated that nearly 50,000 Russian soldiers are operating in the region and pledged to reinforce Ukrainian defenses along the most active fronts, particularly around Pokrovsk and Kurakhove. Zelensky also highlighted the ongoing slow encroachment by Russian forces into Ukrainian territory.
The situation in Kursk remains dire. Russia has since mounted a successful counteroffensive and is regaining ground in most theaters of the conflict, particularly in the Donbas region, where its forces are capturing village after village. Russia's goal remains the full capture of this industrial region.
Recent reports have also pointed to the involvement of North Korean soldiers in the conflict. According to multiple sources, North Korea has sent troops to Russia to support its military efforts against Ukraine, a claim that Moscow has neither confirmed nor denied. This highlights the increasing international dimension of the war, as Russia deepens its ties with North Korea through a new strategic partnership.
The human toll continues to climb. Recent Russian artillery strikes in Ukraine's Dnipropetrovsk region killed two people and injured at least 19 others. Additionally, a missile strike on the city of Kryvyi Rih wounded 14 people, including two children. Russian forces have also targeted a dam in Donetsk, which could lead to flooding in nearby villages.
Ukrainian officials are also bracing for new Russian ground assaults on the Zaporizhia region, with military spokespersons warning that attacks could begin at any time. The region, already under heavy pressure from Russian forces, could face further strain as both sides prepare for intensified fighting in the coming weeks.
Watch this conversation between "Dialogue Works" host Nima Alkhorshid and former U.S. Marine Corps intelligence officer Scott Ritter discussing how Ukraine is very close to admitting defeat.
This video is from the What Is Happening channel on Brighteon.com.
Russia has invoked Article 4 of its mutual defense treaty with North Korea, Putin confirms.
Russia pledges military support to North Korea amid rising tensions.
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4 months ago
Morgues overflow, bioslidge technology needed ASAP - it went from whopping 10K not so long ago to triple whopping 30K now (aka transbiblical). Stripping Kursk from ukies is the word. In times of unrest in Kazakhstan fueled by foreign mercenaries, it's President Tokayev commanded not to talk, shoot them in the head, set the roadblocks for those trying to escape. Somehow their corpses were disappearing from the morgues. Putin quickly dispatched airborne rangers with itchy fists too. His semantics suggests to "whack them wet in the torlet," referring to Chechen terrorists in Moscow.
4 months ago
OH ***** Now we're believing putin?
4 months ago
Ukraine is genetically used to handouts - back in time from SU, now from US. Stand firm on your feet? Hell no, not for ukies. Would be glad to sell $12T of natural resources, but damn Putin got in the way with his self-sufficient DNA.
4 months ago
Trumps priority should be...ALL 750 military BASES GO BACK WHERE U CAME FROM..no one elcted you world cops...go build democracy in USA, you have no democracy but an Olegarchy...trump thinks USA is strong...I despice democrats and republicans.