Russia's 2026 primary offensive season kicked off with armored combat vehicles again part of Moscow's arsenal. This time for sure? Or is Russia's home front getting unstable? Will the fires spread?
Russia again intensified their ground attacks against Ukraine:
Ukrainian Commander-in-Chief General Oleksandr Syrskyi reported that Russian forces intensified ground attacks across the theater in the last week, which is — consistent with ISW’s assessment that Russian forces have launched their Spring-Summer 2026 offensive.
Russia's tired troops who may no longer have any delusions about their chances of survival will go up against Ukrainians who once again have to endure the Russian hammer blows.
And Russia's economy seems to be reaching its limits:
Russian President Vladimir Putin reportedly requested that Russia’s top businessmen provide funding for the Russian government, indicating that the Kremlin may be growing desperate for economic relief and may be setting conditions to nationalize their assets to support the war effort.
Yet if Russia's troops, people, or financial pillars can't endure this pace of war, going on the strategic defensive may not only be domestically risky but give Ukraine its opening.
Ukraine has demonstrated an ability to counter-attack successfully this year. But can Ukraine's ground forces expand that to a counteroffensive if the opportunity presents itself? The possibility still seems open notwithstanding the beginning of Putin's latest Big Push:
Ukrainian counterattacks continue to make gains in southern Ukraine, creating operational and strategic effects against Russian forces going into the Spring-Summer 2026 offensive against the Fortress Belt.
And Ukraine's strategic bombing campaign is growing in scale and reach:
Ukrainian forces continued their long-range strike campaign against Russian oil infrastructure near the Baltic Sea on the night of March 26 to 27, marking the fourth strike in five days against Russian oil infrastructure in Leningrad Oblast.
One aspect of Ukraine's war effort is focusing on destroying Russia's air defense assets. This can aid either the ground or strategic bombing efforts by opening the door for more bombardment or troops support. Even Ukraine's small air force could add their weight to those battles instead of being kept mostly on air defense missions.
Will Putin's need to finally win this war before the stresses building up in the ground forces, economy, and population openly crack a foundation of the war effort? Will Ukraine recognize an opportunity even if they have the forces to attack on a larger scale?
UPDATE (Monday): Predictions of stresses breaking Russia's war effort have been repeated over the last four years:
Russia can no longer afford its war in Ukraine. Since 2022 Russia has spent nearly $700 billion and lost 1.3 million troops, with over a million Russian men fleeting the country to avoid the war. There is a labor shortage and a growing number of protests against the war and its human losses and growing poverty.
Yet the stresses never broke Russia. But the stresses are real. One day the effects will happen. And perhaps Russia's rulers will ignore real signs because they endured past false predictions of doom.
NOTE: ISW updates continue here.
NOTE: Also, I put war-related links and commentary in the Weekend Data Dump on Substack. You may read my posts on Substack, at The Dignified Rant: Evolved.
NOTE: Image from ISW.









