Russian troops have advanced at a glacial pace in recent months, but gains in southern and eastern Ukraine could give Moscow an edge in U.S.-mediated peace talks.
A family preparing to evacuate from their homes in Rivne, a village near Huliaipole, in southeastern Ukraine, in January.
For over a year, Russian forces have slogged through battlefields in Ukraine without seizing a single urban stronghold.
Now, these attritional advances are on the verge of paying off. Russia appears poised to complete the capture of three strategic areas in the coming weeks or months, according to military experts and independent battlefield monitors.
Capturing all three areas — the town of Huliaipole in the southeast and the cities of Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad, about 60 miles northeast — would give Russia an urban foothold to base troops and organize logistics for future offensives, as well as new leverage in U.S.-mediated peace talks.

Since Jan. 1
Gained by Russia
Gained by Ukraine
RUSSIA
Kharkiv
UKRAINE
Kupiansk
KHARKIV
LUHANSK
HELD BY
RUSSIA
Luhansk
Dnipro
Kostyantynivka
Myrnohad
Dnipropetrovsk
Pokrovsk
Donetsk
Zaporizhzhia
DONETSK
Huliaipole
Dnipro
River
ZAPORIZHZHIA
Melitopol
Ukraine
Sea of Azov
40 miles
In Donetsk, Ukraine has focused on defending the cities of Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad, which together had a prewar population of more than 100,000. Troop deployments there, combined with sophisticated drone warfare, have slowed Russian assaults to a crawl.
A report in January from the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington-based think tank, found that Russian troops had advanced only 230 feet per day in their year-and-a-half-long offensive on Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad — slower than the movement by Allied troops in the Battle of the Somme during World War I.
Russia has captured less than 1.5 percent of Ukrainian territory since 2024, according to the report.
The think tank also estimated that Russian forces suffered about 415,000 dead, wounded and missing last year in battles that were largely focused on the two cities. Russia has sustained about 1.2 million battlefield casualties since it invaded Ukraine in 2022, according to the think tank, roughly double Ukraine’s losses.
Despite the toll, Moscow believes it can outlast Kyiv in a war of attrition, relying on constant recruitment to replenish its ranks. Russia has repeatedly poured troops into Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad. Only small sections on their outskirts remain contested.
Should Russia fully capture those cities, it could use them to conceal drone operators and exploit roads and railways to streamline logistics.
The next target is Kostyantynivka.

Military experts say capturing Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad would give Moscow a springboard to push north and pursue its goal of taking all of the Donetsk region, about three-quarters of which it already controls.
A major target could be Kostyantynivka, 25 miles farther east.
Kostyantynivka is the southern gateway to a chain of cities forming Ukraine’s last major defensive belt in Donetsk. Should it fall, nearly all cities farther north would come within range of Russian drones, and Moscow would gain access to a key road linking these cities.
After partly surrounding the city last year, Russian forces began infiltrating it this winter, according to battlefield maps. Moscow has also intensified drone strikes against roads that Ukrainian troops use to resupply the city.
A Ukrainian brigade commander recently said that approaching Kostyantynivka had become so dangerous that most supply missions into the city were entrusted to robot-like remotely operated vehicles.
If Russian troops advance on the battlefield, Ukraine is likely to face more pressure on the diplomatic front — including from President Trump, who has echoed Moscow’s argument that Ukraine should cede land in a peace deal to avoid more fighting.
At a meeting in December with President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine, Mr. Trump asked: “Are you better off making a deal now?”
Olha Konovalova contributed reporting.
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A caption with a picture on an earlier version of this article misidentified the location of the photograph. It was Pokrovske, a settlement in the Dnipropetrovsk region of Ukraine, not Pokrovsk, a town in the Donetsk region.