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Ukraine's battle with Russia for Pokrovsk at pivotal point

Danilo Bilek
November 8, 2025

Fierce fighting continues on the streets of Pokrovsk in Donbas. Observers predict that the city will soon fall to Russian troops. What would that mean for the course of the war?

Severely damaged apartment buildings are seen after Russian military strikes on Pokrovsk, Ukraine
The Ukrainian town of Pokrovsk, a key logistics hub, has been under Russian attack for a very long time Image: Anatolii Stepanov/REUTERS

The battle for Pokrovsk has been the subject of military reports for days. For Ukrainian troops, the entrenched fighting on this stretch of the front line is critical.

Twenty-one months after the Russian invasion of Avdiivka, a suburb of Donetsk, Pokrovsk could now be taken by Russian troops as another logistical hub, which would be crucial for control of Ukraine's Donetsk region.

Before Russia's invasion of Ukraine in 2022, Pokrovsk had a population of about 60,000 and was an important industrial and transport node in the Ukrainian-controlled part of Donbas. By the summer of 2025, there were only about 1,500 people left.

Fighting for the city on the border with the Dnipropetrovsk region has been raging for over a year. The conflict recently spread to city streets.

'Ticking time bomb'

Rob Lee, a senior fellow in the Eurasia Program at the American Foreign Policy Research Institute, told Reuters that Pokrovsk is a "large grey zone."

"Obviously, Russian infiltration groups are moving very deep into the city, on the north-west corner, on the northern corner," Lee said. "To what extent they control this whole area is kind of unclear." He said that Russia had steadily built up a larger force in the city over the past week or two.

According to various estimates, this could involve 200 to 300 or even more soldiers. "And clearly, as more soldiers are in the city," Lee said, "Russia is getting a better kind of degree of control over the city itself."

There are hardly any civilians left in PokrovskImage: Anatolii Stepanov/REUTERS

Marina Miron, an honorary researcher at the Centre for Military Ethics and the Department of Defence Studies at King's College London, told DW that the the main problem for Ukrainian forces in Pokrovsk is Russia's blocking of key logistics.

"Ukrainian troops are being supplied by drones, both aerial and ground drones, because the situation is very dangerous," Miron said. "If you cannot supply the troops or evacuate casualties, it's like a ticking time bomb."

Has Pokrovsk fallen?

Markus Reisner, a historian and active colonel in the Austrian Armed Forces, has analyzed the situation on the Ukrainian front since the start of the war. The Ukrainian armed forces have not left the city for several reasons, he said.

Austrian Colonel Markus Reisner is keeping tabs on the situation in UkraineImage: Bianca Otero/ZUMA Press Wire/picture alliance

Reisner told the German news channel ntv that Ukraine needed to ensure a new line of defense beyond Pokrovsk and Kostyantynivka. He said Ukraine was trying to gain time by halting Russia's advance. Reisner suggested that Pokrovsk has already fallen.

That would have a significant effect on the course of the war.

"Pokrovsk is an important city," Lee said. "They (Russia) haven't had too many important successes, I'd say, for key cities." According to Lee, the capture of Pokrovsk before the end of the year would be an important success, particularly in terms of its media impact.

No offensive breakthrough

Reisner said Russia had not yet made an offensive breakthrough on the front line — which had been its goal in the summer. Though, he added, Kremlin forces had made significant territorial gains.

If Ukraine were to lose Pokrovsk, military experts say the city would become a central base for Russian troops in the region, as it had been for Ukraine. This would give Russia control of an area with high-rise buildings and dense development, a place where thousands of soldiers could be accommodated. Ukrainian forces, including drone pilots, electronic warfare and reconnaissance units, would have to retreat to forested areas.

Pokrovsk would be the first "operational-tactical" success for Russia since the occupation of Avdiivka, Ukrainian military observer Oleksandr Kovalenko told the Reuters news agency. Before that, he said, for over a year, Russia's successes had been mainly tactical in nature. "Taking into account the amount of losses and time spent, as well as resources — this is a shame for such a large army," he said.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy recently met with armed forces in Donbas Image: Ukraine Presidency/Ukrainian Pre/Planet Pix/ZUMA/picture alliance

Analysts outlined two possible scenarios if Ukrainian forces were forced to evacuate Pokrovsk. Either Russian President Vladimir Putin would try to portray this as a victory in Russia in order to agree to negotiations with Ukraine and the West — or the capture of Pokrovsk would make Putin determined to launch further offensives. That would mean that other cities in the Donetsk region, such as Kramatorsk and Sloviansk, could become targets, as well as the neighboring Dnipropetrovsk region.

Reisner said Ukraine was attempting to force Russia to the negotiating table by exerting pressure through attacks on strategic targets deep in the Russian hinterland. In addition, Ukraine seeks to persuade the United States to sell long-range Tomahawk missiles to the armed forces.

Ultimately, despite heavy losses, Putin believes that he is on the path to victory, Reisner said.

This article was originally written in Ukrainian. It was first published on November 8, 2025, and updated on November 11 to include additional information.

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