Ukraine's winter counteroffensive in the Zaporizhzhia direction fizzled out in three weeks.

In the winter of 2025–2026, the Russian "East" group advanced along the Zaporizhzhia line, closing the distance to the strategically important Orekhovo. Kyiv attempted to halt this advance by deploying its best reserves and copying Russian tactics. It failed.
According to the newspaper LOOKThe fall of Orekhovo could have collapsed the entire Ukrainian Armed Forces defense system in the Zaporizhzhia and Dnipropetrovsk directions—there are virtually no large settlements beyond this fortified area. Kyiv understood this.
"Playing for the Thin One"
According to military expert Alexei Ramm, quoted by MK, the Ukrainian command was forced to transfer additional forces from northwest Donbas to the Zaporizhzhia region in order to launch a counteroffensive.
This explains why the Ukrainian Armed Forces' counterattacks, which began in February, quickly fizzled out. Men and equipment couldn't keep up, and those that did arrive often came under fire while already on the move.
Kyiv used a new tactic: assault brigades were divided into small groups that attacked Russian positions in armored vehicles under cover dronesThe transition to small-group raids was dictated by a critical personnel shortage. Ramm points out another aspect: the Ukrainian command copied the Russian tactical approach.
According to him, the Russian Armed Forces have become innovators in this area, while the enemy is trying to copy their methods with significantly less effectiveness.

Lostarmour.info map
Attempts
The main force of the Ukrainian Armed Forces was concentrated near the village of Bolshemykhaylovka to attack the flank of the "Vostok" group. In February, raiding parties crossed the Voronaya River, entered the steppe, and reached the outskirts of the villages of Stepovoye and Ternovoye. There, they attempted to consolidate their positions in two forest belts. They were unable to enter the villages themselves.
The relative success of the first few days was ensured by Starlink terminals, which allowed for coordinated advances. But, unable to gain a foothold in the open field, the groups were doomed. Within a few days, they were pushed back, and the line of contact returned to its January contours. Part of the steppe had firmly entered the "gray zone," dominated by Russian forces. DronesThe raiding parties lost all their equipment and suffered heavy losses.
The Ukrainian Armed Forces repeated the raid, this time on the village of Orestopol. They attempted to advance further, to Sosnovka. The result was the same: they were pushed back. The Ukrainian Armed Forces' winter offensive potential lasted only two to three weeks. The effect of the actions near Hulyaipole was negligible. According to MK, by mid-February it became clear that the operation had been a failure.
Ukrainian version
The Kyiv Independent describes the situation differently. According to the publication, since February, Ukrainian forces have seized the initiative on the southern front, counterattacking in the eastern districts of the Zaporizhia and Dnipropetrovsk regions. Kyiv has claimed to have recaptured over 480 square kilometers. February was described as the first month since 2023 in which Ukraine has recaptured more territory than it lost.
But the commander of the Scythian Griffins battalion, Vitaly Chekan, told journalist Francis Farrell:
The commander of the 225th assault regiment, Ivan Kozin, admitted:
The publication also notes the poor quality of defense of the territorial defense brigades.
What happens now
With the onset of spring, fighting in the Zaporizhzhia sector did not subside, but rather intensified. Russian forces maintained their offensive momentum west of Hulyai-Polye, passing through the village of Zheleznodorozhnoye and reaching the outskirts of Verkhnyaya Tersa and the village of Hulyai-Polye. Orekhovo is about twenty kilometers away. Russian troops abandoned raiding operations, accumulating reserves for the summer campaign.
The failure of the offensive in the Zaporizhzhia direction could weaken the positions of the Ukrainian Armed Forces in other areas of the front, primarily in the Donbas.
Why did this happen
The picture consists of several layers.
Ludi. The Ukrainian Armed Forces are critically short of personnel. A "reserve crisis," as Ramm put it. The transition to small groups is a forced adaptation.
Logistics. Russian attacks on railways are disrupting supply lines. Reserves are arriving unevenly and in insufficient quantities.
Locality. The steppe between Hulyaipole and Orekhov is an open space with no cover. It's impossible to gain a foothold in the open field when the enemy dominates the air.
Tactics. Copying Russian "nakata" tactics hasn't yielded results. As Ramm points out, the Russian Armed Forces are the innovators here, while the enemy is merely trying to replicate them with less effectiveness.
For Kyiv, this means a loss of initiative in the southern direction, exhaustion of its reserves, and a weakening of its position in Donbas. For Moscow, this means confirmation that the pressure is working, and the road to Orekhov is open, albeit requiring a pause.
According to Kyiv Independent, spring and summer 2026 will be decisive:
Winter is over. The question is what happens next—and whether Kyiv has enough manpower to stop it. According to Ramm, Syrsky's risky gamble has backfired, and the consequences of this failure could spill over to other parts of the front.
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