From The Institute For The Study of War:
Kateryna Stepanenko, Grace Mappes, Layne Philipson, George Barros, and Frederick W. Kagan
July 15, 7:25 pm ET
Click here to see ISW’s interactive map of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. This map is updated daily alongside the static maps present in this report.
Russian forces are likely emerging from their operational pause as of July 15. Russian forces carried out a series of limited ground assaults northwest of Slovyansk, southeast of Siversk, along the T1302 Bakhmut-Lysychansk highway, southeast of Bakhmut, and southwest of Donetsk City.[1] These assaults may indicate that Russian forces are attempting to resume their offensive operations in Donbas. The assaults are still small-scale and were largely unsuccessful. If the operational pause is truly over, the Russians will likely continue and expand such assaults in the coming 72 hours. The Russians might instead alternate briefer pauses with strengthening attacks over a number of days before moving into a full-scale offensive operation. A 10-day-long operational pause is insufficient to fully regenerate Russian forces for large-scale offensive operations. The Russian military seems to feel continuous pressure to resume and continue offensive operations before it can reasonably have rebuilt sufficient combat power to achieve decisive effects at a reasonable cost to itself, however. The resuming Russian offensive may therefore fluctuate or even stall for some time.
Ukrainian HIMARS strikes have likely killed or wounded four Russian 106th Airborne Division deputy commanders. Russian news outlets reported the deaths of 106th Division’s deputy commanders Colonel Sergey Kuzminov, Colonel Andrey Vasiliev, and Colonel Maxim Kudrin, seemingly confirming Ukrainian claims that HIMARS strikes on Shaktarsk on July 9 killed or wounded a significant portion of the 106th’s leadership.[2] Ukraine’s Center for Strategic Communications claimed on July 12 that one unspecified 106th Airborne Division deputy commander remains in critical condition.[3]
Key Takeaways
- Russian forces are likely emerging from their operational pause, launching ground assaults north of Slovyansk, southeast of Siversk, around Bakhmut, and southwest of Donetsk City.
- Russian forces continued to defend occupied positions in the Kharkiv City direction to prevent Ukrainian forces from advancing toward the Russian border in Kharkiv Oblast.
- Russian forces continued their systematic attacks on civilian infrastructure targeting residential infrastructure, recreational facilities, and educational institutions in Mykolaiv City on July 15.
- Chelyabinsk Oblast officials announced the completion of a volunteer battalion on July 15.
- Russian occupation authorities continued to institute new societal control measures in occupied territories.
Go here to read the rest. If the Russians are ending the operational pause, it surprises me since it was so brief, and the Russians have done little since it began to refurbish their exhausted offensive ground units.

I disagree with you about pretty much everything, to the point that if you said ice cream was delicious I would six other sources to confirm that assertion. I note this fact, because I want to praise you for your continued support of Ukraine and rejection of the lies of Vladimir Putin about Putin’s war. It would be very easy for you to start writing about the need to give Putin an ‘honorable’ exit to his war, but you have remained steadfast on this.
Thank you.
(And just to be completely fair, plenty of moronic leftists have decided that since the US supports Ukraine, Putin must be the good guy in the conflict. Their argument contains no more evidence than I’ve typed here, but is usually expressed with a lot more references to the ‘proletariat’ and ‘imperial hegemony of capitalism.’
:thumbs up:
It is good to be able to agree on that.
Anyone else note the similarity between Putin and Biden and their programs? Both took countries that had economies that worked reasonably well and ran them into the ground with crazy policies that were doomed to fail. Putin should keep his eye out for a younger ambitious politician who has taken up reading Roman history ca. 44 BC. Biden should have already noticed by now that the rug under his feet is moving.
I think Jordan Peterson’s 51 minute video about these things is worth the viewer’s time.
https://youtu.be/JxdHm2dmvKE