December 16th, 2025 Happy Hanukkah! (14th-22nd)
For the next two weeks summaries will be intermittent…
MERRY CHRISTMAS!
Politics - Negotiations continue - “progress” but no details
- Germany - 2 Patriot batteries to Ukraine
Combat Ops - Kilo SS hit
- Ukrainians clearing Kupyansk
- Russian gains Hulyaipole, Pokrovsk, maybe Siversk
Weather
Kharkiv
34 and cloudy. Cloudy all week. Daily highs in the mid 30s, daily lows near freezing, except Thursday, which will see highs around 40. Winds variable, 5-10kts.
Melitopol
35 and cloudy. Mostly cloudy all week. Daily highs in the low 40s, daily lows in the lower 30s. Winds variable, 5-10kts.
Kyiv
34 and mostly cloudy. Cloudy or mostly cloudy for the next week. Daily highs will be in the mid 30s, daily lows near freezing, wind chills in the low 20s. Winds variable, 5-10kts.
Politics
President Trump on negotiations:
An agreement is: “closer than ever” … “very long and very good talks”
“We’re having tremendous support from European leaders. They want to get it [the war] ended also.”
“We had numerous conversations with President Putin of Russia, and I think we’re closer now than we have been, ever, and we’ll see what we can do.”
Chancellor Merz commented:
“What the US has placed on the table here in Berlin, in terms of legal and material guarantees, is really considerable. We now have the chance for a real peace process,”
He added:
“Only Ukraine can decide about territorial concessions. No ifs or buts.”
Russia’s ForMin Lavrov commented on the peace proposals:
"Now we need to remove these root causes, and it is good that the Americans have understood this. They have clearly said that there can be no NATO. And they have clearly said that those lands where Russians have lived for centuries must once again become Russian, part of Russia.”
Germany has, with Norway and Poland, transferred 2 Patriot batteries and 9 IRIS-T systems to Ukraine, as well as funding packages totaling $700 million.
The UK has announced a 600 million pound ($810 million) to be spent on Ukrainian air defenses. There was no breakdown as to what specifically would be bought with the money.
Jürgen Hardt, a Bundestag MP, had a comment fro President Putin on the negotiations: Accept the peace proposals or else:
“…the Western world will increase its military support for Ukraine, which makes it more difficult for Putin to reach his military goals…And therefore he should now take what is on the table. It's more than he should get.”
He added that the US is "strongly committed to that plan and therefore I'm optimistic that the alliance between the US, Ukraine and the European states is sustainable and also a strong word to Putin.”
"We are convinced that only Ukraine and the Ukrainian president and the Ukrainian parliament can take such a decision. By the way, also the Constitution of Ukraine makes it necessary that the Rada is agreeing on that."
Ground Operations
SUMY AND KHARKIV OBLASTS
Fighting continues north of Sumy City but there were no were no confirmed changes in the lines.
North-east of Kharkiv City imagery confirmed Ukrainian forces made gains in the terrain east of Vovchansk, some time last week.
NORTH OF THE DONETS RIVER
Fighting continues in Kupyansk but the Russian presence appears to have been whittled down to, at most, 2 companies, and probably less. The size of the force that actually held Kupyansk was never clear (estimates were all over the map) and while there was some reporting suggested two brigades, it appears that it was never more than 2 battalions inside the city. Perhaps 150 now remain in several small lodgments and Ukrainian forces are in the process of clearing them.
South-east of Kupyansk fighting continues south of Pishchane (9 miles south-east of Kupyansk and in the terrain west of that town, but there are no confirmed changes in the lines.
Unconfirmed reporting also notes Russian activity west of Kupyansk, near Petropavlivka, but again, there are no confirmed changes.
A good deal of fighting was reported further south, to include Russian forces claiming to have taken Novoplatonivka, north of Borova, but this has not been confirmed.
BAKHMUT - TORETSK- POKROVSK
There are multiple claims of changes in the lines in and around Siversk, some Russian sources suggesting that Russian forces have overrun the entire town, but that can’t be confirmed and seems unlikely, as taking the western edge of the town would be very difficult if they did not control the high ground (bluffs about 150 - 200 feet above the terrain of the town) just west of the town; and there is no indication that the Russians control this terrain.
If, however, it does develop that the Russians have control of the high ground, control of the town itself will be virtually a “gimme."
North-west of Toretsk, imagery confirmed small gains by Russian forces in the south-east corner of Kostiantinivka.
West of Toretsk, north of Pokrovsk, fighting in three separate towns but there were no changes in the front lines.
There continues to be a good deal of reporting of fighting in Myrnohrad (the Pokrovsk pocket), and along the northern edge - and just north of Pokrovsk, but there were no confirmed changes to the front lines. Heavy cloud cover continues to hamper the commercial imagery that is used to sort out movement of the front lines. Drone imagery does confirm Russian recon probes continue through the lines, into Ukrainian held territory.
Fighting continues south-west of Pokrvosk to the Vovcha River, but there were no confirmed changes in the front lines. That said, there is credible reporting that Russian forces are making gains in “filling in” the unoccupied farmland along the front, and straightening and shortening their lines, particularly in the area of the Donetsk - Dnipropetrovsk border area.
SOUTHERN UKRAINE
Fighting continues along the entire front from the Vovcha River south to Hulyaipole but there were no confirmed changes in the front line.
The Russian MOD claimed that Russian forces had seized Pishchane, a small town about 12 miles north-north-west of Hulyaipole, on the west side of the Haichur River. Ukrainian forces answered that the town is in Ukrainian hands. Ukrainian reporting also insists that Russian forces do not hold Vavarivka. That said, Russian forces continue to probe into Pishchane and nearby villages as they try to push across the Haichur River and through the Ukrainian defensive lines immediately west of the river. Both Ukrainian and Russian reporting note multiple Russian probes across the river and through the defensive lines.
Unconfirmed reporting also notes that Russian forces appear to be attacking into Hulyaipole all along the east edge of the city (across the Haichur River, which runs south-east to north-west through Hulyaipole), but also now appear to be attacking from due south.\
Well west of Orikihiv, imagery confirms that Ukrainian forces made gains south if the center of Stepnohirsk, pushing south and regaining a foothold in the”dacha” area, the small apartment building complex just south of the city. As you may recall, these small apartment complexes built outside of many Ukrainian cities have been used by Ukrainian forces as ad hoc forts, with concrete apartment buildings (5-10 floors high) strongly reinforced so that they can withstand nearly any sort of ordnance short of a 500lb bomb. The result is that in every city there have developed hard fights for control of these “dachas.”
Of interest, Russian forces appear to be using a new tactic to inflict casualties on Ukrainian forces: a small element of Russian forces will probe forward and get their picture taken by a drone, two soldiers standing and holding a Russian flag; the men then withdraw to Russian lines. The picture is then published and a recon drone then watches until Ukrainian troops press into the area to “reclaim" the spot, and these men are then struck by Russian drones. This tactic was apparently recently used, and proved effective, in drawing out Ukrainian forces in the small towns north-west of Hulyaipole.
Fighting was again reported near the Antonovskiy bridge, but again there were no details. Fighting was also reported on several of the island in the Dnepr, from Kherson city to the mouth of the river.
While there were no details reported, these engagements in the past have consisted of small element raids by both sides across the river to sabotage and sometimes just to harass.
Air and Maritime Operations
During the night of December 15th-December 16th, Russian forces launched at least 69 x Shahed drones into Ukrainian airspace. The UAF claimed it shot down, or defeated with EW, 57 drones.
Damage was reported in Donetsk, Kharkiv, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia oblasts. Energy infrastructure was again the primary target.
Civilian casualties include at least 14 civilians injured.
RuAF tacair struck targets in 4 towns.
Released video clearly shows a large detonation beside the Russian Kilo class submarine in Novorossiysk, validating the report of a submerged drone striking the sub.
Remarkably, the Russian flotilla in port had no simple netting around the piers - a la torpedo nets first deployed in the 1890s…
The Russian Navy continues to contribute to Ukrainian morale.
During the night of December 14th-December 15th, Russian forces launched at least 153 x Shahed drones into Ukrainian airspace. The UAF claimed it shot down, or defeated with EW, 133 drones.
Damage was reported in Chernihiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk, Kharkiv, Kherson and Zaporizhzhia oblasts. Energy infrastructure was again the primary target. The attack initially left 430,000 people without electricity in Odessa oblast.
Civilian casualties include at least 6 civilians injured.
RuAF tacair struck targets in 6 towns.
Economic Reporting
Feb22 Sep9 Oct8 Nov7 Dec8 Dec15 Dec16
Brent 94.71 67.03 66.18 63.86 62.94 60.65 59.33
WTI 92.10 63.26 62.48 59.94 59.26 56.90 55.55
NG 3.97 3.12 3.44 4.33 4.96 4.01 3.87
Wheat 8.52 5.22 5.06 5.32 5.38 5.23 5.15
Ruble 85 84.03 81.28 80.95 76.52 79.25 79.48
Hryvnia 28.6 41.23 41.48 41.89 42.15 42.10 42.24
Urals 91.66 60.12 61.15 56.56 54.92 51.53 51.35
ESPO 94.52 68.32 66.74 65.18 61.95 59.12 53.30
Sokol 99.31 62.97 61.91 60.71 60.62 57.84 56.72
Urals oil is now at its lowest price since March 06, 2023 ($48.64)
Thoughts
Negotiations continue… A recent OpEd from Leonard Ragozin summed up the drama: at the heart of the discussion among the European nations is how to keep funding the war, as the leadership of Europe appear to not want to make any concessions to Russia. The war (funding Ukraine’s army, the government and the country’s social programs) calls for tens of billions per year that must come from one of two places: either from frozen Russian assets, or from EU states themselves. Exactly how much money Ukraine needs varies from source to source; Kyiv has a budget for 2026 of roughly $120 billion, with tax revenue of about $70 billion, a $50 billion deficit. The National Bank of Ukraine puts the gap at $35 billion, and there is speculation that they will need several billion at the end of this month. This need for external financing for day-to-day operations decreases over time, but extends out at least another 4 years (through 2029).
Nor does this address the estimated $600 billion to $1 trillion in real damage to the countries buildings and infrastructure.
And whatever the precise numbers, Ukraine doesn’t have the money.
They could spend Russian assets but seizing Russian assets would presumably leave the rest of the world wondering about the security of banking in Europe, and, such an action is predicated on the assumption that spending the money on the war itself would lead to military defeat for Russia some time in 2026 or 2027. But as Ragozin notes: The obvious problem here is that exactly nobody – except war cheerleaders who have been promising Russia’s defeat for the past four years – believes this outcome is even remotely realistic.
Which leaves Europe with the only out being to fund the war through the EU budget, which would be strongly resisted by most of the people of Europe.
But, Ragozin notes that no additional funding “...would allow him [Zelenskyy] to declare that the West has betrayed Ukraine and proceed with the inevitable: accepting an unsavoury peace largely on Russia’s terms.”
Frederick the Great described strategy as a bridge connecting assets to your goal… When you run out of assets the plan needs to change. If you truly run out of assets, the goal needs to change. The talks in Europe seem to be silently pointing to participants recognizing that Ukraine may well run out of assets in 2026 and that it may be time to change the goal.
v/r and Merry Christmas - pete