Russia has amassed 111,000 troops near Pokrovsk, Syrskyi says
Pokrovsk remains the “hottest spot” along Ukraine’s front lines, with Russia concentrating its largest group of personnel in that direction — a force numbering 111,000 troops, Commander-in-Chief Oleksandr Syrskyi reported on June 27.
Russia has for months focused its offensive efforts on the embattled town of Pokrovsk in Donetsk Oblast and has recently been escalating attempts to break through to neighboring Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, a region that has not yet seen combat. Ukraine denied reports that Russian forces breached the regional border in May and June.
In May, Syrskyi reported that Ukraine had stabilized the situation in Pokrovsk.
After a working visit to the Pokrovsk sector, Syrskyi on June 27 said that the city is still “the hottest spot along the entire 1,200-kilometer front line” with nearly 50 combat clashes recorded per day. It’s also where Russia has concentrated the bulk of its forces in Ukraine.
Russia has amassed “about 111,000 personnel” in the Pokrovsk sector, Syrskyi said, but Ukrainian forces are holding the line.
“The enemy continues to try to break through to the administrative border of Donetsk Oblast … Russian sabotage and assault groups were particularly active here two weeks ago,” Syrskyi said.
“But they were all destroyed or neutralized, and the remnants were pushed back from the administrative border. The situation is under control."

Russia is attempting to break into Dnipropetrovsk Oblast not only for operational reasons, but also for performative ones, Syrskyi said.
“To achieve a psychological effect: to put the infamous ‘foot of the Russian soldier’ there, plant a flag, and trumpet another pseudo-‘victory.'"
Syrskyi’s comments echo recent remarks by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who claimed in a propaganda-heavy speech on June 20 that “wherever the foot of a Russian soldier steps is Russian land.” President Volodymyr Zelensky fired back the next day, promising “Ukrainian drones for the foot of every Russian soldier.”
While Putin claimed on June 27 that Moscow is “ready” for a third round of peace talks with Kyiv, the Kremlin has sent no signal that it’s ready to abandon its maximalist ambitions in Ukraine.
Russia’s so-called “peace memorandum” demands that Ukraine recognize Russia’s annexation of Crimea, as well as Kherson, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia, and Luhansk oblasts — none of which are fully under Moscow’s control.
Zelensky’s Deputy Chief of Staff Pavlo Palisa said on June 6 that Russia aims to occupy all Ukrainian territory east of the Dnipro River and advance toward Odesa and Mykolaiv in a broader plan to sever Ukraine’s access to the Black Sea amid a renewed summer offensive.
