Updated · Center for European Policy Analysis · Jun 8
Kyiv Pushes Back Frontline After Taking More Territory in May Than It Lost
Updated
Updated · Center for European Policy Analysis · Jun 8
Kyiv Pushes Back Frontline After Taking More Territory in May Than It Lost
3 articles · Updated · Center for European Policy Analysis · Jun 8
Summary
Ukraine regained more ground than it lost in May for the first time since 2023, reinforcing NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte’s assessment that Kyiv is pushing the frontline back.
Russia’s battlefield edge has weakened as manpower losses outpace recruitment, Black Sea control has eroded, and Ukrainian strikes have hit refineries, airfields and ammunition sites deep inside Russian territory.
That shift is forcing G7 leaders meeting on June 17 with Volodymyr Zelenskyy to think beyond sustaining Ukraine and toward what a possible Russian defeat would mean for Europe’s security order.
Europe still lacks a settled postwar plan: eastern members favor long-term containment, while Paris and Berlin worry a permanently isolated Moscow could deepen dependence on China.
Ukraine’s reconstruction bill already exceeds $588 billion, and nearly 150,000 damage claims have been filed, underscoring pressure for a coordinated G7-European framework using frozen Russian assets where legally possible.
With Ukraine's reconstruction bill at $588B, are frozen Russian assets a viable solution or a diplomatic minefield?
Is Europe's post-war plan for Russia already being undermined by the powerful new Russia-China axis?
Ukraine's drone supremacy is turning the tide. Can Russia and China's industrial might counter this technological revolution?
May 2026 Ukraine War Report: 281 km² Retaken, Deep-Strike Campaigns, and Shifting Frontlines
Overview
In May 2026, Ukrainian forces successfully halted Russia's Spring-Summer offensive, marking a turning point on the battlefield. Ukraine's strategic push in the south and southeast disrupted Moscow's broader plans, especially around key areas like Pokrovsk. As a result, Russian forces managed to gain only a small amount of territory while losing much more to Ukrainian counter-attacks, leading to a significant net loss for Russia. Compared to the previous year, Russia's territorial gains were minimal, highlighting Ukraine's evolving strategies and growing ability to limit Russian advances and reclaim ground.