Breaking
ESNBA detiene traspaso de Kawhi Leonard por investigaciónESFrancia vence a Marruecos y se mete en semifinales del MundialESMbappé se redime tras fallar un penalti con un golazo y alcanza los 20 en MundialesESFrancia y Marruecos abren los cuartos de final con un duelo de poder a poderESLorde encabeza el Día de la Mujer Mundial en Mad Cool con un pop vibranteESPolémica por un penalti a Mbappé en el Francia-Marruecos: el VAR tardó más de tres minutos en decidirESBelén Aguilera y Paris Paloma deslumbran en la primera jornada del Bilbao BBK LiveESSenadora paraguaya denuncia hackeo de Instagram tras insultos racistas a MbappéESAleksandar Sekulic, favorito para entrenar al Barça de baloncestoESMuchova vence a Gauff y se enfrentará a Noskova en la final de WimbledonESNBA detiene traspaso de Kawhi Leonard por investigaciónESFrancia vence a Marruecos y se mete en semifinales del MundialESMbappé se redime tras fallar un penalti con un golazo y alcanza los 20 en MundialesESFrancia y Marruecos abren los cuartos de final con un duelo de poder a poderESLorde encabeza el Día de la Mujer Mundial en Mad Cool con un pop vibranteESPolémica por un penalti a Mbappé en el Francia-Marruecos: el VAR tardó más de tres minutos en decidirESBelén Aguilera y Paris Paloma deslumbran en la primera jornada del Bilbao BBK LiveESSenadora paraguaya denuncia hackeo de Instagram tras insultos racistas a MbappéESAleksandar Sekulic, favorito para entrenar al Barça de baloncestoESMuchova vence a Gauff y se enfrentará a Noskova en la final de Wimbledon
Newsgather
BackRussian Troops Threaten Key Donbas City Kostyantynivka, Now in 'Grey Zone'
Russian Troops Threaten Key Donbas City Kostyantynivka, Now in 'Grey Zone'
Developing
BBC News6/21/2026World4 min read

Russian Troops Threaten Key Donbas City Kostyantynivka, Now in 'Grey Zone'

Quick Look

  • Russian troops are attempting to encircle Kostyantynivka, a strategic city in eastern Ukraine, which Ukrainian soldiers describe as being in a 'grey zone'.
  • Its potential fall could allow Russia to advance towards Kramatorsk and Sloviansk, key Ukrainian strongholds in the Donbas region.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Russian troops are attempting to surround the strategic city of Kostyantynivka in eastern Ukraine, which Ukrainian soldiers say is now in a 'grey zone'. The city is seen as a gateway to other key Donbas strongholds.

Font size

Russian troops have infiltrated the strategic city of Kostyantynivka in eastern Ukraine and are now trying to surround it.

The entire city is now effectively in a "grey zone", no longer controlled by anyone, Ukrainian soldiers have told the BBC.

"They get into areas behind our backs and in urban conditions it's extremely difficult to push them out," says a Ukrainian drone pilot who operates in that area and prefers to remain anonymous.

Kostyantynivka is a gateway to the rest of the Donbas region.

If it falls, Russian forces would be able push towards Ukraine's last remaining strongholds in the east, the cities of Kramatorsk and Sloviansk, and move closer to seizing Donbas completely, one of the Kremlin's key objectives in this war.

For months Russia's full-scale war in Ukraine has stalled along the front line, and Ukrainian commanders say they have recaptured more territory this year than they have lost, disrupting Moscow's crucial supply lines between the Russian border and occupied Crimea. On Sunday, Russian-appointed authorities in Crimea suspended fuel sales to the public because of the shortages.

And Kyiv's repeated strikes on oil refineries in Moscow, St Petersburg and other cities have also sought to bring the conflict to the attention of Russians far from the front line.

But in Kostyantynivka, Russian soldiers have advanced from the south and have even been spotted at the other end of the city, on the city's northern outskirts.

Moscow says its forces are rapidly advancing in the south-western part of Kostyantynivka and that they have encircled Ukrainian military units.

That is denied by Kyiv and Brig Gen Oleksandr Bakulin, commander of Ukraine's 19th Corp which is in charge of units defending the city and surrounding areas, insists "the situation remains under control" and "the enemy has no success".

However, he does acknowledge there are about 130 Russian soldiers still inside the city.

The situation on the ground may not be as critical as Moscow says, but it does appear far more serious than Ukrainian officials are ready to publicly admit, a Ukrainian officer from a unit that operates inside Kostyantynivka told the BBC.

He too has preferred to stay anonymous, but told the BBC: "We still have clean-up and assault groups inside the city, but the Russians manage to accumulate more and more soldiers there."

Every building in Kostyantynivka acts as a potential shelter for soldiers to hide, and in the summer months the trees provide extra cover.

So Russian forces have found a way to advance inside the "kill zone" where Ukrainian drones can detect any movement and instantly attack.

Russian drone pilots have also focused on destroying Ukrainian drone launch sites.

To give their infantry troops assaulting Ukrainian positions a breathing space, Russian pilots had made Ukrainian crews their priority target.

The Ukrainian drone pilot told the BBC that while his colleagues were targeting Russia's infantry, enemy crews were not: "For such tasks, they use artillery, multiple rocket launchers, military aviation."

He and his comrades have limited numbers and resources, so they are often exhausted and have struggled to expand their operations.

"Since we devote little time to [searching and targeting] enemy pilots, they can freely operate, detect our positions and we are forced to roll back. This is how the frontline moves," he explains.

The Ukrainian officer whose unit is operating in the city maintains the pace of the Russian advance is very slow: "Sometimes they move 100m [109yds] a day. Sometimes they even crawl to reach the next building."

Russian forces in Kostyantynivka have adopted a similar strategy to that used in the capture of Pokrovsk and other major cities in eastern Ukraine, advancing along the flanks to surround the city and cut off supply routes.

In recent days the Russian defence ministry has said it has seized villages to the west of the city.

Such reports have helped divert attention from Ukraine's attacks on oil refineries deep inside Russia and on supply routes to Crimea, and the major fuel shortages they have caused.

That appears to explain the Kremlin's decision to surround and seize Kostyantynivka as quickly as possible.

The situation has become a "major crisis", the Ukrainian drone pilot warns.

Russian drone units do not even need to rely on sophisticated unmanned systems as they are now close enough to use cheap Chinese drones that cannot fly far to conduct surveillance and identify Ukrainian drone launch sites.

Once that happens, logistical operations in the area will be more complicated and even remaining in Kramatorsk will become "extremely dangerous", it reports.

Open Questions

  • Can Ukraine hold Kostyantynivka?
  • What is the full extent of Russian infiltration?
  • How will this affect Ukrainian supply lines?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC News.

Related Stories

Stocks Rebound as Investors Shrug Off U.S.-Iran Tensions; Meta Ramps Up AI, FedEx Launches Healthcare Unit
Developing·2h ago

Stocks Rebound as Investors Shrug Off U.S.-Iran Tensions; Meta Ramps Up AI, FedEx Launches Healthcare Unit

Stocks rebounded Thursday, with the S&P 500 gaining nearly 1% and the Nasdaq jumping over 1%, as investors dismissed concerns about U.S.-Iran conflict escalation. Meta Platforms plans to aggressively ramp up AI compute capacity, releasing its strongest model yet, Muse Park 1.1, with an API for developers. FedEx launched a dedicated healthcare unit, while Starbucks aims to use AI for in-house software tools.

CNBC
More on this topicUkraine