The comparison, drawn by the Russian Telegram channel Military Informer, marks a significant shift in internal Russian discourse. While the Kremlin continues to insist on the term "special military operation," the acknowledgment of a "stalemate" and the open discussion of heavy losses suggest a stark departure from earlier narratives of rapid victory. The reality on the ground is defined by a lack of maneuverability, where artillery and drone swarms have replaced the Maxim guns of 1914, yet the outcome remains a slow, kilometer-by-kilometer crawl at a devastating human cost.
Russian forces are attempting to break this inertia through increased aerial pressure. By modifying Su-34 bombers to carry six precision-guided munitions instead of four, the Russian military aims to boost strike effectiveness by 50 percent. However, this strategy faces logistical constraints, particularly a shortage of qualified ground crews and the mechanical wear inherent in high-intensity operations. Meanwhile, the battle for Kostyantynivka nears a conclusion, threatening to remove a key defensive stronghold that has long blocked the path toward Kramatorsk. As the front shifts toward towns like Druzhkivka, Ukraine's defense relies increasingly on urban fortification and the tactical use of drones to counter Russian advances across open terrain.
Deep inside Russian territory, the "Flamingo" cruise missile project has demonstrated a new reach, with a strike on the VNIIR Progress plant in Cheboksary, 1,000 kilometers from the front. The facility, which produces components for Iskander missiles and guidance systems, was hit by two improvised Ukrainian weapons. This vulnerability, coupled with chronic fuel shortages in occupied Crimea—where residents face strict rationing and QR-code systems for petrol—highlights the widening strain of a war that has outlasted its original strategic projections.

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