
Putin plotting ‘final killer offensive' to attack Ukraine on 3 fronts to win war – even as his losses near ONE MILLION
VLADIMIR Putin is plotting a final killer offensive along three fronts to win the war, a new report claims.
It comes as the
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Ukrainian troops fire at Russia in Donetsk
Credit: Shutterstock Editorial
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Ukrainian soldiers take cover as they fire a canon towards Russian positions in Kharkiv
Credit: AFP
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Russia has been attacking the Donetsk city of Kramatorsk since the beginning of the war
Credit: Getty
The tyrant is still looking for a knockout blow despite initially saying he would win the war in a matter of days.
Putin is hoping to change that this summer, with a widely expected fresh offensive to begin.
Some 125,000 Russian soldiers are reportedly massing along the Sumy and Kharkiv frontiers, according to Ukraine's military intelligence.
Over the past fortnight border villages have fallen to Russia as it is believed to be preparing the ground for the invasion.
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But some senior commanders in Ukraine believe that could be a feint and Russia is actually preparing to attack further south to push further into the Donbas,
Russia is likely to attack through three areas near each other in the Donbas - Kramatorsk, Kostiantynivka, and Pokrovsk.
Vlad already controls more than 95 per cent of Luhansk, but capturing Donetsk would cement his control over the Donbas region and achieve a war aim, albeit a scaled-down one.
The Donbas is an important industrial and mining area - and some 200,000 to 300,000 people still live in four cities controlled by Ukraine.
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Moscow's military planners will be weighing up whether they want to fight through the cities like they did in Bakhmut or encircle them by going around through farmland.
Kramatorsk is the closest city to the front line and is under constant attack by Russia.
Clearest vid yet of daring Op Spiderweb shows 35 Ukrainian bomb drones blowing up plane after multimillion dollar plane
A recent drone strike managed to get inside an armoured vehicle carrying Ukrainian soldiers.
Russia has an opportunity to conduct a pincer movement around Kostiantynivka with its soldiers controlling land to the east and west of the city.
Instead of attacking the city directly, the could bypass it and attack Druzhkivka behind it - thereby cutting Kostiantynivka and any Ukrainian soldiers still there off.
In nearby Pokrovsk, Russia already has a salient, a bulge, out from the front line after a previous advance.
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Ukrainian soldiers fly a drone near Pokrovsk
Credit: Getty
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Members of Ukraine's White Angel police unit evacuate people from Pokrovsk
Credit: Reuters
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Ukraine reports also daily contact with Russian troops in the area.
The Pokrovsk front line is also very near Dnipropetrovsk Oblast - a region of Ukraine the Kremlin hasn't yet officially claimed.
A successful breakthrough there might mean Putin can actually expand his war goals.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is prepared for a summer offensive and has publicly said Russia is set to escalate the war.
His officials believe peace talks are a ruse - with Putin only wanting to talk to demand the terms of surrender.
The Ukrainians will not give in and any advance by Russia is going to come at a high cost.
Vlad's army has been making incremental gains along the front line, with troops overwhelming Ukraine in meat grinder assaults.
But for that Russia has suffered 434,000 dead and wounded in the last year, 270 for every square mile they have seized.
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Residents ride bicycles at a street near buildings in Pokrovsk
Credit: Reuters
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Firefighters extinguish a fire in Kostiantynivka
Credit: Getty
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Ukrainian firefighters battle a blaze after a building was bombed by Russians
Credit: Getty
Ukraine has used drones and Western-supplied arms to grind the Russians down into a WW1-style trench war.
But observers worry a massive new Russian offensive could break the deadlock.
Moscow has spent the winter recruiting more troops, improving tactics, and enhancing their drones.
An offensive likely won't use tanks, Polish military analyst Konrad Muzyka told the
He said, instead, Russian troops were advancing using lighter motors.
Muzyka said: 'Any large-scale deployment of armour is going to be destroyed relatively quickly.
"We have seen the Russians shift to focused, small-unit attacks, often of just three to five men. Company-size assaults of 50 to 100 men hardly ever happen anymore.'
Donald Trump has said he expects Putin's retaliation following the stunning Opertion Spiderweb "is not going to be pretty".
The US President spoke to Vlad on Wednesday - with the Russian saying, according to Trump,
The call followed
Operation Spiderweb — a daring
, in a coordinated assault likened to WWII's most audacious missions.
Inside Operation Spiderweb
By James Halpin, foreign news reporter
Ukraine's shock sleeper drone blitz on Russia's bomber fleet has delivered a hammer blow to Vladimir Putin's nuclear arsenal.
The SAS-style strike against
Volodymyr Zelensky oversaw Operation Spiderweb - much like Winston Churchill did as Britain struck deep behind enemy lines.
The Ukrainian said: "It's genuinely satisfying when something I authorized a year and six months ago comes to fruition and deprives Russians of over forty units of strategic aviation.
"We will continue this work."
Putin's doomsday bomber fleet is now crippled with 41, or a third, of his most prized aircraft lying in smouldering wrecks on tarmac.
Ukraine said the sneak attack was worth $7bn (£5.2bn) in damage to Russia - caused by only 117 cheaply made drones.
Like Israel's mass pager sabotage against Hezbollah, Kyiv has rewritten the rule book in how to strike the heart of their enemy.
Ukraine's spies spent 18 months putting the plan into action and struck on the eve of

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The Irish Sun
4 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
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Irish Daily Star
8 hours ago
- Irish Daily Star
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According to those closest to Trump, the White House has scheduled a call with Musk to try to broker a peace between the former pals. (Image: The Washington Post via Getty Images) "It's going very well, never done better," the president added. "The numbers are through the roof, the highest polls I've ever had and I have to go." The president's comments are a stark contrast to his earlier lambasting of Musk during his meeting with the German Chancellor yesterday. Several Republican allies attempted to ease the tensions between the two. Earlier in the day, the billionaire raged that the cost of legislation is projected to add $2.4 trillion to the deficit (Image: AFP via Getty Images) "I support @realDonaldTrump and @elonmusk and they should make peace for the benefit of our great country," hedge fund manager Bill Ackman wrote. Musk then retweeted the post, writing, "You're not wrong.' 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(Image: AFP via Getty Images) The telling off from MAGA allies came almost two hours after Musk attacked the president on his own social media site, X. "Elon was 'wearing thin,' I asked him to leave," Trump wrote in the first post. "[I] took away his EV Mandate that forced everyone to buy Electric Cars that nobody else wanted (that he knew for months I was going to do!), and he just went CRAZY!" Trump then doubled down on his comments in a second , but equally fiery post. "The easiest way to save money in our Budget, Billions and Billions of Dollars, is to terminate Elon's Governmental Subsidies and Contracts," he added. "I was always surprised that Biden didn't do it!" This barrage against the former head of the Department of Government Efficiency did not sit well with many people on the MAGA site. Many of the users were spotted commenting on the post, saying that it was "not a good look" for the president. 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RTÉ News
8 hours ago
- RTÉ News
Three drones targeting Moscow shot down, Russia says
Russian air defence forces have shot down three drones attempting to attack Moscow, according to the capital's Mayor Sergei Sobyanin. He did not provide further details but said that emergency services were working at the sites where debris had fallen. Russia's aviation watchdog said that Domodedovo and Zhukovsky airports in the Moscow region had temporarily suspended operations to ensure flight safety. It announced soon afterwards that services had resumed. Elsewhere, overnight strikes by Ukraine injured three people in the western Tula region, Russian officials said. Earlier, Ukrainian officials said that Russia had carried out a barrage of drone strikes across the country, killing at least four people in the capital Kyiv. "Kyiv came under another attack involving UAVs and ballistic missiles" overnight, the State Emergency Service of Ukraine wrote on Telegram. Kyiv's Mayor Vitali Klitschko said that four people had been confirmed dead and 20 were wounded - 16 of whom were hospitalised. Several fires broke out in various districts as a result of the shelling, including at a residential building, a civil infrastructure facility and a metal hangar while train tracks were damaged in the Kyiv area. Strikes also hit the western city of Lutsk and Ternopil region. "Today, the enemy carried out the most massive air attack on our region to date. There are multiple strikes," head of Ternopil's regional military administration Vyacheslav Negoda said. "We have begun extinguishing fires and assessing the damage and other consequences," he added. The shelling in Lutsk wounded five people. "We also have numerous broken windows in private homes, several educational institutions, and one damaged government facility," the city's Mayor, Igor Polishchuk, said on Telegram. Meanwhiile, buildings and cars were damaged in the western city of Khmelnytsky, according to the region's governor. Russian President Vladimir Putin vowed to take revenge following a recent drone attack by Ukraine on Russian soil, which destroyed billions of euro worth of nuclear-capable bombers. He appeared to rule out a ceasefire or any direct talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Mr Zelensky said that Russia had issued an "ultimatum", demanding that his country fully pull out of four regions that Moscow claims to have annexed but does not fully control.