OCTOBER 7th, 2025 2nd ANNIVERSARY OF HAMAS ATTACK ON ISRAEL
Politics - President Trump comments on Tomahawk cruise missiles
- Drones, artillery near nuclear power plants
Combat Ops - Marginal gains, both sides
- Air strikes continue on Ukrainian power grid
Economics - Ukrainian GDP adjusted down
- China buying more Russian oil
Weather
The Autumn rains appear to have arrived. This will complicate logistics, and also reduce drone performance and degrade sensors.
Kharkiv
62 and cloudy. Cloudy all week, rain starts Monday and showers possible through next Monday. Daily lows in the low 50s, daily highs in the upper 50s. Winds variable, 5-10kts.
Melitopol
67 and cloudy, gusting to 20. Cloudy through the weekend, rain showers possible daily through the weekend. Daily lows upper 50s, daily highs in the 60s. Winds variable, 10-15kts.
Kyiv
55 and cloudy. Cloudy all week, rain showers daily through the weekend. Daily lows upper 40s, daily highs upper 50s. Winds north-easterly, 5-10kts.
Politics
President Trump commented on the proposal to transfer Tomahawk cruise missiles to Russia (as requested by President Zelenskyy):
"I think I want to find out what they're doing with them. Where are they sending them? I guess I'd have to ask that question. I would ask some questions. I'm not looking to escalate that war."
Russia’s Rosenergoatom (the agency that runs Russia’s nuclear reactors) reported that during he night of October 6th-7th a drone impacted the cooling tower of the Novovoronezh Nuclear Power Plant (VNPP) - located south of the city of Voronezh about 100 miles). Investigation revealed that a Ukrainian drone was jammed by Russian EW and crashed into the cooling tower and exploded, leaving a scorch mark but apparently causing no other damage.
UN’s IAEA reports that “2 artillery rounds” struck about a mile from the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant (ZNPP) on Monday afternoon. Russia is in the process of transferring the ZNPP to feed into the Russian power grid.
EU Official continue reporting on unidentified drones in EU airspace, most recently near the airfields at Oslo, Munich and Frankfurt, each time causing temporary shutdowns and delays in air activity. Chancellor Merz has commented that Russia is to blame; Russia has, of course, denied it.
Ground Operations
SUMY AND KHARKIV OBLASTS
Imagery confirmed small Ukrainian gains in the town of Yunakivka (north-east of Sumy city), and Russian reports claimed small Russian gains in Oleksiivka due north of Sumy City). Fighting continued along most of the line of contact.
North of Kharkiv, fighting continues in the general area of Vovchansk, but there were no confirmed changes in the front line.
East of Kharkiv, in the border area north of the Oskil River, imagery has confirmed Russian gains in the small town of Odradne, and the Ukrainian General Staff (UGS) reported troops in contact at multiple points stretching from Odradne south to the terrain just west of Stroivka, and from there west to Kolodiazne as Russian force movements around Odradne have created a small pocket, triangular in shape, about 4 - 5 miles on a side, and they are now attacking into the the pocket to try to circle the Ukrainian forces inside.
Also of note, a Russian engineer battalion has moved into this area, suggesting the Russians have begun to build defensive positions in the would-be buffer zone.
NORTH OF THE DONETS RIVER
Imagery confirmed Russian gains about 7 miles south-east of Kupyansk, in the town of Pishchane; at the same time Russian forces claimed gains inside and in the immediate area of Kupyansk, but these have not confirmed.
Other reporting suggest Russian recon elements have pushed across the P07 roadway that runs westward from Kupyansk and is the major Ground Line of Communication (GLOC) into and out of Kupyansk.
Further south fighting continues in a broad arc east of Borova, as well as in a long line running west from the Torske area out to the Dobrysheve area along the Nitrius River. Over the past 24 hours there have been numerous exchanges and minor shifts in the front lines, suggesting that gruesome grind that has been seen before during the spring and fall wet seasons when fighting takes place at very close range and there is a repeated exchange of positions held as the fighting see-saws back and forth. This continues with the support of FPV drones and artillery fire…
BAKHMUT - TORETSK - POKROVSK
North of Bakhmut, fighting continues north-west, north, and in a close arc to the east of Siversk down to the T0513 roadway that runs into Siversk from the south, and imagery confirms Russian forces have reached the center of Kuzmynivka, a tiny village of fewer that a dozen homes, located on an oxbow in the Bakhmutovka River, about 4 miles south of Siversk.
Given the extended capabilities of Russian fiber-optic FPV drones, and the advent of the rains of autumn to force vehicles onto roads, Russian forces are now in position to interdict the GLOCs and thereby cut logistics support to Siversk.
Russian forces continue to attack west of Chasiv Yar and west of Toretsk, but there were no confirmed changes in the front line in this area.
West of the T0504 roadway imagery confirmed Russian control over Volodymyrivka and Pankivka, which strengthens the Russian positions on the east side of the August salient.
On the west side of the salient the picture is more confused, with Russian and Ukrainian forces advancing over the same ground that they lost one or two days ago.
At the north end of the salient Ukrainian sources confirmed Russian forces had pushed into Zolotyi Kolodiaz as of the 5th, while further south Ukrainian forces had retaken Vilne, while just to the south of the Ukrainian gains, Russian forces had retaken Ivanivka and Dorozhnie.
A good deal of fighting was reported around Pokrovsk, with the UGS reporting engagements in 18 different towns to the immediate east and west and to the south-west, to the Vovcha River.
Just to the north and north-east of Pokrovsk, Ukrainian sources confirmed that Russian forces have taken control of Krasni Lyman and Novoekonomichne, with unconfirmed reports of small gains inside the south side of Pokrovsk.
There were no other gains north of the Vovcha River.
SOUTHERN UKRAINE
South of the Vovcha River saw both sides make gains in the Stepove area. Imagery confirmed Ukrainian forces have retaken Sichneve, while further south, Russian forces appear to have taken Novovasylivske and Fedorivka.
At the west end of the line, along the Dnepr River, west of Orikhiv, Russian forces continue to probe into Prymorske and Stepnohirsk, but there were no confirmed changes in the line in this area.
More fighting was reported around the Antonovskiy bridge, up river from Kherson. Reporting from both sides seems deliberately vague, so I'm speculating, but it appears that special operations personnel from each side are probing across the river in the area of the bridge, and the various units are regularly engaged in recon and sabotage on the “other side” of the river. But details beyond that are lacking.
Air and Maritime Operations
During the night of October 6th - October 7th, Russian forces launched 2 x Iskander ballistic missiles and 152 x Shahed drones into Ukrainian air space. The UAF claimed it shot down or defeated by EW, 88 Shahed drones.
Initial damage from missile and drone strikes was reported in Donetsk, Kharkiv, Kherson, Kyiv, Poltava, Sumy Zaporizhzhia oblasts.
RuAF tacair struck at least 8 Ukrainian towns.
Preliminary reports note 2 killed and 5 wounded civilians.
Ukrainian drones continued strikes against Russian industrial targets, but damage is difficult to assess. Ukrainian drones struck the Kirishinefteorgsintez Oil Refinery in Kirishi, Leningrad Oblast, during the night of October 3rd-4th. Ukrainian sources told Reuters that the refining unit that was struck has a capacity of 160,000 barrels per day, representing 40% of the refinery’s total output. The source told Reuters that damage will take 1 month to repair and will mean a reduction of 30% in output (48,000 barrels per day) from that unit for that time period.
Russian fiber optic FPV drones struck targets in the Kramatorsk area, hitting vehicles on the GLOCs that were 12 miles closest point of approach from Russian controlled terrain. Normally, Russian drone operators are 2 or 3 miles behind the lines (sometimes more), suggesting a 15 mile deep strike with a fiber optic drone.
Russia is currently producing 50,000 fiber optic FPV (first person video) drones per month.
During the night of October 5th - October 6th, Russian forces launched 116 x Shahed drones into Ukrainian air space. The UAF claimed it shot down or defeated by EW, 83 Shahed drones.
Initial damage from missile and drone strikes was reported in Chernihiv, Cherkasy, Donetsk, Kharkiv, Kherson, Kyiv, Odessa and Sumy oblasts, with struck targets mainly focused on energy infrastructure. A maternity hospital in Sumy was also struck, there was no associated casualty report as the hospital had already been evacuated.
RuAF tacair struck at least 5 Ukrainian towns.
At least 2 civilians were killed and 13 were injured.
Economic Reporting
Feb22 Jun9 July8 Aug8 Sep9 Oct6 Oct7
Brent 94.71 66.80 70.44 66.90 67.03 65.23 65.36
WTI 92.10 64.89 68.65 64.29 63.26 61.47 61.63
NG 3.97 3.69 3.35 3.06 3.12 3.37 3.47
Wheat 8.52 5.49 5.49 5.18 5.22 5.17 5.10
Ruble 85 79.27 78.47 79.74 84.03 83.18 81.93
Hryvnia 28.6 41.55 41.80 41.39 41.23 41.29 41.35
Urals 91.66 60.84 64.07 63.17 60.12 60.37 61.33
ESPO 94.52 63.97 71.58 68.63 68.32 66.44* 67.29*
Sokol 99.31 61.51 64.38 62.57 62.97 61.41 61.97
*The price for ESPO oil seems to have fallen out of reporting, but there was one report that it was being selling in Shandong at $1.70 above Dubai. That is the price noted above.
China intends to buy Russian (and Iranian) oil and Reuters reports that China is in the process of increasing the capacity of its strategic oil reserves at 11 sites, adding 169 million barrels of storage capacity by the end of 2026, adding 530,000 barrels of oil to their stockpile very day. China's current storage capacity is 2.03 billion barrels. China currently uses about 16.5 million barrels of oil per day, about 12 million of which is imported.
The World Bank dropped its forecast for Ukrainian GDP growth for 2026 to 2% from 5.2%
Ukraine’s real GDP growth for 2025 is now expected to reach 2%
Thoughts
As noted above, the ground fight appears to have slowed again and once more the two armies are locked into this very slow, see-saw fight at close range, with the added lethality of drones and artillery (“World War I with cell phones” if you will). For the Russians, as they chose to fight a war of attrition, this plays to their preferred operational art; for the Ukrainians it means more grind and, in the end, more casualties.
I have to note the grim persistence of the grunts on both sides; they get up each day and go back to this brutal fight. There is a question asked by many as to how long they can endure, and how many casualties the two societies can endure. As to how many casualties the soldiers will endure, history is full of armies enduring even as the face - and suffer - complete destruction, others have collapsed or quit when the leadership commits an egregious act of perfidy; so, forecasting when an army will collapse is purely a guess.
As to how long a society will fight? I recall a lecture I received at the war college years ago, the result of one professors research into that very question: when do nation’s simply give up, what does it require to break a nation’s will? There were cases where some gave up after only a relatively small number of casualties, but the overwhelming majority needed to suffer tremendous numbers of dead before the society turned and said “No more.” What he found was that that usually meant in excess of 1.5% of the entire population had been killed, and often much more; in many cases it was far more than that. History has cases of national suffering 5% or even 10% killed and not quitting.
1.5% of Ukraine’s population is 500,000; 1.5% of Russia’s population is 2.1 million.
Of course, his research proves nothing, as every case is different, but it does give you some sense that this war could last for a long time.
v/r pete