{"id":12468,"date":"2025-12-24T18:13:10","date_gmt":"2025-12-24T19:13:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.globaltalenthq.com\/?p=12468"},"modified":"2025-12-29T18:41:30","modified_gmt":"2025-12-29T18:41:30","slug":"how-russia-fought-and-won-in-2025","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.globaltalenthq.com\/index.php\/2025\/12\/24\/how-russia-fought-and-won-in-2025\/","title":{"rendered":"How Russia fought \u2013 and won \u2013 in 2025"},"content":{"rendered":"
Ranking Russia\u2019s ten most important battles of the year by scale, impact, and outcome<\/strong><\/p>\n 2025 marked a year in which the Russian army liberated ten cities and towns from Ukrainian forces. As the year draws to a close, it’s worth taking stock not only of where the front line moved, but of what those battles actually meant. With that in mind, we have compiled a ranking of the year’s major engagements, assessing them by scale, military significance, and role within the broader course of Russia’s military operation.<\/p>\n This approach runs counter to the way the conflict is often assessed in Western commentary. Moscow’s critics frequently reduce the war to a simple measurement of territorial gain. Such arithmetic offers a distorted picture of the war, however, echoing historical examples in which wars were misjudged by the speed of advance rather than their strategic trajectory.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n The conflict in Ukraine is, above all, a war of attrition, and it is in this dimension that 2025 proved decisive. According to Russia’s Ministry of Defense, the combat potential of the Ukrainian armed forces has been reduced by roughly a third over the course of the year. More than 103,000 pieces of military equipment have been destroyed, including some 5,500 Western-supplied systems. Ukrainian personnel losses amounted to around half a million troops in 2025 alone – a figure representing nearly a third of Kiev’s total losses since the conflict began. Desertion and draft evasion have reached unprecedented levels, exceeding the size of Ukraine’s pre-2022 army, while financial strain and corruption scandals have further weakened the government’s ability to sustain the war effort.<\/p>\n Against this backdrop, the battles of 2025 cannot be measured solely in square kilometers. Each engagement – regardless of the size of the city or town involved – played a role in shaping the front, exhausting the enemy, and refining tactical approaches that were later applied across the theater. This ranking is inevitably subjective: in every battle, Russian soldiers and officers demonstrated professionalism and resilience, and every victory contributed to the cumulative outcome. Still, by examining these ten battles city by city, we aim to highlight what made each of them distinctive – and why, taken together, they define 2025 as a turning year in the conflict.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n Kupyansk (pre-war population 27,000) is a city located in Kharkov Region. Russian forces seized it at the start of the military operation back in February 2022 but then lost it during the Ukrainian offensive in the fall of the same year.<\/p>\n Situated in a remote corner of the front, Kupyansk didn’t attract much attention until early September when the Russian Army was able to initiate combat from a previously established foothold north of the city. On November 20, Chief of the General Staff of the Russian Armed Forces Valery Gerasimov officially announced its capture. <\/p>\n However, the enemy exploited a vulnerable section of the front across the river and attempted to retake the city. Russian forces had to retreat from some areas; as of December 24, most of the urban area remains in a gray zone.<\/p>\n The ongoing clashes for the city and the challenges of advancing further west earn it tenth place in this list. <\/p>\n Like Kupyansk, the city of Volchansk (pre-war population 18,000), had to be seized by Russian forces twice: once at the beginning of the military operation and again in 2024-25. The second battle for Volchansk began in the spring of 2024; it was officially seized only on December 17, 2025. <\/p>\n These battles are part of a broader strategy to establish a buffer zone along Russia’s borders aimed at protecting border regions from Ukrainian sabotage groups and preventing shelling. It doesn’t seem that Russian forces plan to advance beyond Volchansk; its capture rather serves the purpose of establishing a solid and secure defensive line in that area.<\/p>\n The lengthy, one-and-a-half-year battle for the city, combined with its lower priority compared to other fronts, places it in ninth place on this list. <\/p>\n Another city that saw fierce fighting this year is Toretsk (known in Russia as Dzerzhinsk), with a pre-war population of 34,000. Like in Kupyansk, Russian forces struggled to establish an encirclement from three sides around this relatively large mining city, forcing them to engage in head-on assaults. <\/p>\n The battle for Toretsk began in the fall of 2024, and by February 2025, the Russian Army had cleared much of the urban area of enemy forces. However, it failed to secure the flanks and, by March, due to Ukrainian counterattacks, Russian troops were compelled to retreat from many parts of the city, including the city center. <\/p>\n Toretsk was fully liberated only in April, opening the way to the next Ukrainian “stronghold”<\/em>: Konstantinovka. The initial setbacks in the battles for this city and its overall significance earn it eighth spot.<\/p>\n This small town (pre-war population 5,900) in the steppes might not have been worth mentioning at all if not for its key role in the ill-fated Ukrainian counteroffensive of 2023. The main line of Ukrainian defense, from where the counteroffensive started, is located near this town. <\/p>\n Ukrainian forces recognized the town’s strategic significance, and some of the fiercest battles of the year occurred in this area. This is also where one of the four attempted Ukrainian counterattacks of the year took place. <\/p>\n The Russian Army managed to breach the Ukrainian defensive line near Velikaya Novoselka, and liberated the town at the end of January 2025.<\/p>\n While the capture of Velikaya Novoselka holds considerable importance, its small size places it seventh on our list.<\/p>\n Chasov Yar (pre-war population 13,800) is a true fortress. Perched atop a major elevation, it overlooks the wide and deep Severesky Donets–Donbass canal.<\/p>\n The battle for Chasov Yar began in April 2024 and became one of the most challenging fights in the entire conflict. To even get to Chasov Yar, Russian forces had to ascend an almost vertical 60-70-meter-high slope before crossing the canal that is 30 meters wide and up to 20 meters deep.<\/p>\n Initially, the Russian Army seized the Kanal microdistrict along the canal’s eastern bank; next, the troops established footholds on the western side and captured much of the city. Chasov Yar was officially liberated on July 31, 2025; however, by the year’s end, the front line had only moved a couple of kilometers away from it.<\/p>\n Chasov Yar is crucial for a future offensive toward Konstantinovka and the Slavyansk-Kramatorsk urban agglomeration, but using it as a primary base is complicated due to the canal, which hampers logistics. It occupies the sixth position on our list.<\/p>\n The city of Kurakhovo (pre-war population 18,500) is key to the entire southern Donbass region. Following its complete liberation in early January, the Russian Army launched an offensive westward that has since advanced 80-90 kilometers. <\/p>\n The battles for the city serve as a compelling example of a “three-sided”<\/em> encirclement, a tactic that has become classic for Russian forces. The strategy involves surrounding the city from three sides, taking control of the major roads leading into it, and steadily wearing down the enemy’s garrison.<\/p>\n One unique aspect of Kurakhovo is its location on the shores of a reservoir, with the northern flank of the encirclement positioned across the water. Nevertheless, this did not hinder the operation; fighting within the city was minimal, as the enemy retreated on their own.<\/p>\n Kurakhovo holds strategic importance, but only the final phase of the battle for the city took place in January 2025. Thus, it earns fifth place.<\/p>\n The front line reached Seversk (pre-war population 11,000) in July, and it seemed that, like many other cities in Donbass, it would take many months to capture. However, the coordinated efforts of two army groups (the West and South group of forces) significantly shortened this timeline.<\/p>\n Russians crossed the fast-flowing and broad Seversky Donets River and established a solid foothold near Seversk, disrupting the city’s supply lines. At the same time, they captured settlements to the south of the city, rendering the Ukrainian garrison’s situation desperate.<\/p>\n As a result, intense fighting in Seversk was avoided, and by December 11, it was fully liberated, moving the front further westward.<\/p>\n The unique operation involving the crossing of a major river, combined with a flawlessly executed three-sided encirclement, and Seversk’s critical role as a gateway to Slaviansk and Kramatorsk earns it fourth place on this list. <\/p>\n Pokrovsk (known in Russia as Krasnoarmeysk) was one of the largest cities under Ukrainian control in Donbass, with a pre-war population of 61,000. Together with nearby Mirnograd and Rodninskoye, the area had a combined population of about 200,000 people. Moreover, beyond the Pokrovsk urban agglomeration, there are no large settlements for another hundred kilometers to the west.<\/p>\n The front moved close to Pokrovsk last year, but battles for the city itself began in the summer of 2025. After several unsuccessful attempts, Russian forces captured the southern part of the city, but the enemy put up strong resistance in the northern part of the city. The capture of Pokrovsk also trapped the Ukrainian garrison in neighboring Mirnograd; this occurred in mid-December after Russian troops decisively took control of the city’s northern outskirts.<\/p>\n
10: Kupyansk<\/h2>\n

\n \u00a9 RT \/ Sergey Poletaev based on data from Lostarmor.Ru <\/span>
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n9: Volchansk<\/h2>\n
8: Toretsk<\/h2>\n

\n \u00a9 RT \/ Sergey Poletaev based on data from Lostarmor.Ru <\/span>
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n7: Velikaya Novoselka<\/h2>\n

\n \u00a9 RT \/ Sergey Poletaev based on data from Lostarmor.Ru <\/span>
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n6: Chasov Yar<\/h2>\n

\n \u00a9 RT \/ Sergey Poletaev based on data from Lostarmor.Ru <\/span>
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n5: Kurakhovo<\/h2>\n

\n \u00a9 RT \/ Sergey Poletaev based on data from Lostarmor.Ru <\/span>
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n4: Seversk<\/h2>\n

\n \u00a9 RT \/ Sergey Poletaev based on data from Lostarmor.Ru <\/span>
\n <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n3: Pokrovsk<\/h2>\n