So far it has been successful, advancing up to 30 kilometres in some directions and creating a salient inside Russia some 40 kilometres wide. An area of about 800 square kilometres has been seized so far according to the Institute for the Study of War in the greatest loss of western Russian territory since April 1944. How have the Ukrainians done it, and what might happen next?
First, they have had good operational security (opsec). The US Discord leaks last year that gave away the battle order of Ukraine’s summer 2023 offensive forces didn’t happen this time and the US even initially seemed surprised that the Ukrainians had attacked into Russia, before later endorsing the move. Better opsec means a less prepared enemy, as was the case when Ukraine’s lead brigades rolled over the border early on 6 August.
Second, and perhaps most importantly, they picked a weakly defended stretch of the border to attack, near the Russian town of Sudzha, nearly 200 kilometres northwest of the closest frontline in Kharkiv, and 350 kilometres from the main frontline.