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RUSSIA is reportedly building up a 50,000-strong force alongside the border of Kharkiv amid fears of a fresh summer offensive to capture the city.
With the US backing out of direct negotiations to broker a peace deal and Vladimir Putin stalling ceasefire talks, experts fear a major Russian offensive in the coming weeks would be timely.



The Ukrainian military in April reported that the Kremlin was amassing troops to prepare for a fresh assault on Kharkiv – Ukraine’s second largest city.
Meanwhile, President Volodymyr Zelensky also said that Moscow has been attempting to gain ground in the border regions of Sumy in the northeast.
Military analysts believe he is trying to press home his advantage and capture more Ukrainian land.
They warn that Putin only has a “four-month window” to get a breakthrough in Ukraine this year.
And this could be the beginning of Russia’s summer offensive targeting the border city of Kharkiv – the “fortress” city of Ukraine which put up the maximum resistance at the start of the invasion.
Andrii Pomahaibus, the chief of staff of Ukraine’s 13th National Guard Khartiia Brigade, said this week: “The enemy is trying to pull its personnel closer to the line of combat contact and conduct at least some assault actions.”
Reports of troops massing near Kharkiv came after Putin successfully flushed out the Ukrainians from Kursk, which Kyiv captured last year.
Putin is said to have deployed 50,000 soldiers – including troops from North Korea – to regain the land he lost.
And some of the most experienced Russian soldiers were reportedly part of the Kursk counteroffensive – not too far from Kharkiv’s backyard.
Professor Michael Clarke, a renowned military analyst, told Sky News: “If they have left those units there, that would suggest they want them to spearhead something else.”
Defence experts say Moscow could – at least – try to get back the land they lost back in 2022 when Ukraine launched its counteroffensive, if not launch direct attacks on the cities.
Dr Jack Watling, a military expert from the RUSI thinktank, argues Russia will likely “soft launch” its offensive rather than going for a rapid manoeuvre by large mechanised units.
“The Russians lack the force quality to operate in this way,” he says.
Instead, the summer offensive will likely see a “steady increase in the number and scale of assaults across a broadening area”, he added. “Indeed, there are indications this process has already started.”
This is because even though Russia is hellbent on continuing the bloody war, it does not have the resources to sustain a large-scale ground offensive.
Professor Clarke says Russia only has a “four-month window” to put together a final assault before its already-dwindling reserves dry up.
He said: “I think they must know this is their last year of build-up before they reach a plateau [in tank productions].”
Dr Watling added: “Russian stockpiles of legacy Soviet equipment, from tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, to artillery pieces, will be running out between now and mid-autumn, such that Russia’s ability to replace losses will be entirely dependent on what it can produce from scratch.”


Inside Putin's 'meat grinder' war
by Patrick Harrington, Foreign News Reporter
VLADIMIR Putin will continue to hurl troops into his “meatgrinder” war in 2025 at such a rate that he won’t be able to arm them all, experts have said.
Putin will keep on luring soldiers to the frontline with propaganda and promises of cash in order to pry more land off Ukraine this year.
But the tyrant may pay for his arrogance – with experts predicting Russia will fall short “at some point in 2025” of enough military equipment to to supply its forces.
Some 3,500 Russian tanks and 7,500 armoured vehicles have already been taken out of action.
Russian soldiers were slaughtered at an ever-growing rate in 2024, with each of the last five months breaking the record for the highest losses yet.
On November 4, Russia lost 2,030 men – the first time during the war that figure exceeded 2,000 for a single day.
Luke Pollard, the UK’s under-secretary for defence, predicted Russian losses – soldiers killed, wounded or captured – would reach one million within six months.
And Nick Reynolds, a land warfare expert at RUSI, warned that Putin Putin’s conscience is untouched by the mass deaths.
Mr Reynolds told The Sun: “Putin is notorious, historically, for being not particularly moved by human suffering.”
The dictator has plenty of what British Defence Intelligence calls “tolerance for casualties”.
Putin’s moves in recent weeks suggest he has no intention of giving up on the war just yet.
And with the US finally pulling out of direct peace efforts, the Russian tyrant would certainly look to capitalise on the situation and leverage it to gain more from a future peace deal.
Even though Putin himself suggested direct peace talks, he failed to show up at Istanbul to meet Ukraine’s boss Zelensky.
And while diplomats from both countries did manage to strike a largely ceremonial deal to swap 1000 orinsons from each side, they failed to make concrete gains towards a permanent solution to the war.
This is because Putin is still hellbent on making maximalist demands while claiming his forces can fight for years.
Meanwhile, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said there was no agreement on where the next round of talks would take place.
European leaders, including Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer ,have accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of dragging his feet in peace efforts.


It comes as Russia intensified its air attack on Ukraine in the past 48 hours.
Nato scrambled fighter jets after the Russian forces last night launched 367 missiles and drones in the largest single attack since the start of the war in 2022.
Yuriy Ihnat, a spokesperson for Ukraine’s Air Force, said Moscow used a mix of 69 ballistic and cruise missiles and 298 drones, including Iranian-designed Shahed drones.
Sounds of explosions boomed throughout the night as Ukrainian air defence forces worked to thwart the Russian onslaught.
Twpo nights ago, the Russian forces launched a massive air assault on Kyiv with 250 drones and 14 Iskander-M ballistic missiles.
Apartment blocks were set ablaze by the barrage as residents in the Ukrainian capital fled to underground shelters amid the sound of anti-aircraft fire.
Explosions rocked the city during a seven-hour raid as fireballs lit up the skyline long into the early hours.


