KYIV, Ukraine — The Ukrainian military has spent nearly 15 months exceeding the world’s expectations. Now, senior leaders are trying to lower those hopes, fearing that the outcome of an imminent counteroffensive aimed at turning the tide of the war with Russia may not live up to the hype.
The planned counterattack — made possible by donated Western weapons and training — could mark the most consequential phase of the war, as Ukraine seeks to snatch back significant territory and prove it is worthy of continued support.
Offensive military operations typically require overwhelming advantage, and with Russian forces dug into heavily fortified defenses all across the 900-mile-long front, it is hard to gauge how far Ukraine will get.
The buildup ahead of the assault — the details of which remain secret — has left Ukrainian officials grappling with a difficult question: What outcome will be enough to impress the West, especially Washington?
Some fear that if the Ukrainians fall short, Kyiv may lose international military assistance or face new pressure to engage with Moscow at a negotiating table — not on the battlefield. Such talks would almost certainly involve Russian demands for a negotiated surrender of sovereign territory, which Ukraine has called unacceptable.
“I believe that the more victories we have on the battlefield, frankly, the more people will believe in us, which means we will get more help,” President Volodymyr Zelensky said in an interview Monday with The Washington Post in his heavily fortified headquarters building.
Kyiv is eager to make a rapid breakthrough in what has essentially slowed to a grinding artillery war in the country’s east and south, with neither side making significant territorial gains. Experts say it will be difficult, if not impossible, to push the Russians back to their positions before the invasion started on Feb. 24, 2022, when Moscow held parts of Luhansk and Donetsk and the illegally annexed Crimean Peninsula.
Potential scenarios
for a new Ukrainian counteroffensive
Ukrainian reclaimed territory
through previous counteroffensives
Russian-built fortifications
Russian-controlled area
UKRAINE
Kyiv
Zaporizhzhia
nuclear power
plant
Kharkiv
Kupiansk
Bakhmut
Kakhovka
hydroelectric
plant
Dnipro
Luhansk
Vuhledar
Zaporizhzhia
Donetsk
Area held by
Russian-backed
separatists
since 2014
Kherson
‘Land bridge’
Crimea to Russia
CRIMEA
RUSSIA
Illegally annexed by
Russia in 2014
Potential scenarios
for a new Ukrainian counteroffensive
Ukrainian reclaimed territory
through previous counteroffensives
Russian-built fortifications
Russian-controlled area
UKRAINE
Kyiv
Zaporizhzhia
nuclear power
plant
Kharkiv
Kupiansk
Bakhmut
Kakhovka
hydroelectric
plant
Dnipro
Luhansk
Vuhledar
Zaporizhzhia
Donetsk
Area held by
Russian-backed
separatists
since 2014
Kherson
‘Land bridge’
Crimea to Russia
CRIMEA
RUSSIA
Illegally annexed by
Russia in 2014
Potential scenarios for a new Ukrainian counteroffensive
Ukrainian reclaimed territory through previous counteroffensives
Russian-built fortifications
Russian-controlled area
RUSSIA
BELARUS
POLAND
Kyiv
Kharkiv
Kupiansk
UKRAINE
Lviv
Zaporizhzhia
nuclear
power plant
Bakhmut
Dnipro
Luhansk
Kakhovka
hydroelectric
plant
Vuhledar
Zaporizhzhia
Donetsk
Area held by
Russian-backed
separatists
since 2014
MOL.
Kherson
Odessa
ROMANIA
‘Land bridge’
Crimea to Russia
Black Sea
CRIMEA
Illegally annexed by
Russia in 2014
Potential scenarios for a new Ukrainian counteroffensive
Ukrainian reclaimed territory through previous counteroffensives
Russian-built fortifications
RUSSIA
BELARUS
Russian-controlled area
POLAND
Kyiv
Kharkiv
UKRAINE
Kupiansk
Lviv
Zaporizhzhia
nuclear
power plant
Bakhmut
Area held by
Russian-backed
separatists
since 2014
SLOV.
Dnipro
Luhansk
Kakhovka
hydroelectric
plant
Vuhledar
Zaporizhzhia
Donetsk
HUNG.
RUSSIA
MOL.
Kherson
Mariupol
Melitopol
ROMANIA
Odessa
‘Land bridge’
Crimea to Russia
Black Sea
CRIMEA
Illegally annexed by
Russia in 2014
The pressure comes in part from Ukraine’s past battlefield wins — first repelling Russia’s attempt to capture Kyiv and later dislodging the invaders from strongholds in surprise attacks in the Kharkiv and Kherson regions.
“We inspired everywhere because the perception was that we will fall during 72 hours,” Reznikov said. But the track record means Ukraine’s partners now have a “joint expectation that it would be successful again,” he said.
Western partners have told him, he said, that they now need a “next example of a success because we need to show it to our people. … But I cannot tell you what the scale of this success would be. Ten kilometers, 30 kilometers, 100 kilometers, 200 kilometers?”
A major success could rally more support for the Western arms and ammunition Ukraine needs to continue the fight and offer a much-needed morale boost for the civilian population, which relished Ukrainian forces’ resilience against Russia’s efforts to take Kyiv last spring and later their surprise autumn offensive in the Kharkiv region, which retook hundreds of miles of territory in a matter of days.
But in Kharkiv the Ukrainians had an advantage when they stormed Russian troops — who had lowered their defenses — by surprise. Many who remained simply fled without a fight. And in Kherson to the south, Ukraine had a major geographic edge, with Russia struggling to supply troops west of the Dnieper River.
Now, Russia may have the geographic advantage and stronger numbers. Some 500,000 Russian troops are currently focused in Ukraine, with at least 300,000 inside Ukrainian territory, Reznikov said.
SCENARIO
Reclaiming Zaporizhzhia
nuclear power plant
Ukraine has 15 functional nuclear reactors, which together supplied 51 percent of its electricity in 2020. Six of those reactors are at the Zaporizhzhia plant, the largest facility of its kind in Europe. It has been under Russian control since March 4, 2022.
Zaporizhzhia
nuclear
power plant
Khakovka
Reservoir
Thermal
power plant
Enerhodar
Power
transmission
lines
750kV
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED AREAS
Transmission lines
330kV
2 MILES
SCENARIO
Reclaiming Zaporizhzhia
nuclear power plant
Ukraine has 15 functional nuclear reactors, which together supplied 51 percent of its electricity in 2020. Six of those reactors are at the Zaporizhzhia plant, the largest facility of its kind in Europe. It has been under Russian control since March 4, 2022.
Zaporizhzhia
nuclear
power plant
Khakovka
Reservoir
Thermal
power plant
Enerhodar
Power
transmission
lines
750kV
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED AREAS
Transmission lines
330kV
2 MILES
SCENARIO
Reclaiming Zaporizhzhia
nuclear power plant
Ukraine has 15 functional nuclear reactors, which together supplied 51 percent of its electricity in 2020. Six of those reactors are at the Zaporizhzhia plant, the largest facility of its kind in Europe. It has been under Russian control since March 4, 2022.
Marganets
Nikopol
Zaporizhzhia
nuclear
power plant
Khakovka Reservoir
Dnieper River
Thermal
power plant
Enerhodar
Ivanovka
Power
transmission
lines
750kV
Vodyane
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED AREAS
Transmission lines
330kV
2 MILES
SCENARIO
Reclaiming Zaporizhzhia
nuclear power plant
Ukraine has 15 functional nuclear reactors, which together supplied 51 percent of its electricity in 2020. Six of those reactors are at the Zaporizhzhia plant, the largest facility of its kind in Europe. It has been under Russian control since March 4, 2022.
Marganets
Nikopol
Zaporizhzhia
nuclear
power plant
Khakovka Reservoir
Dnieper River
Thermal
power plant
Enerhodar
Ivanovka
Power
transmission
lines
750kV
Vodyane
Blahovishchenka
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED AREAS
Transmission lines
330kV
2 MILES
One key objective for Ukraine, and perhaps an early sign of success, would be to break the so-called land bridge between mainland Russia and occupied Crimea, severing crucial supply lines to Russian troops in the Zaporizhzhia region, and isolating Russian bases on the peninsula.
SCENARIO
Reclaiming Kakhovka
hydroelectric power plant
This hydroelectric dam is the only crossing in the area and serves as
the source for a vital canal that delivers water south to Crimea.
Railway
Kakhovka
hydroelectric
power plant
Dnieper
River
P47
Nova
Kakhovka
P47
T2202
To the south
To Crimea
Northern
Crimean Canal
3 MILES
SCENARIO
Reclaiming Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant
This hydroelectric dam is the only crossing in the area and serves as the source for a vital canal that delivers water south to Crimea.
Railway
Kakhovka
hydroelectric
power plant
Dnieper
River
P47
Nova
Kakhovka
P47
T2202
To the south
To Crimea
Northern
Crimean Canal
3 MILES
SCENARIO
Reclaiming Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant
Railway
Beryslav
Dnieper River
P47
Kakhovka
hydroelectric
power plant
Kakhovka
Russian-built
fortifications
Nova
Kakhovka
Petropavlivka
This hydroelectric dam is the only crossing in the area and serves as the source for a vital canal that delivers water south to Crimea.
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED AREAS
P47
To the
south
Chornianka
T2202
To Crimea
Semenivka
Northern
Crimean
Canal
3 MILES
SCENARIO
Reclaiming Kakhovka hydroelectric power plant
Railway
Beryslav
Dnieper River
P47
Kakhovka
Kakhovka
Kakhovka hydroelectric
power plant
Lvove
Russian-built
fortifications
Nova
Kakhovka
This hydroelectric dam is the only crossing in the area and serves as
the source for a vital canal that delivers water south to Crimea.
Petropavlivka
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED AREAS
P47
To the
south
Chornianka
T2202
To Crimea
Semenivka
Northern
Crimean
Canal
3 MILES
Another top imperative is to regain control over hugely valuable critical infrastructure facilities, including the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, Europe’s largest atomic energy station, which is located in the occupied city of Enerhodar, and the Kakhovka hydroelectric plant in the southern Kherson region.
Recognizing the formidable obstacles, Ukrainian officials have continued to press for additional materiel from supporters in the West.
Ukraine will be ready to launch the assault “as soon as the weapons that were agreed with our partners are filled,” Zelensky said. The timeline could also depend on weather, because of unseasonably damp ground along the country’s front lines.
Reznikov said that Ukraine’s “first assault formation” is more than 90 percent prepared to begin but that some designated troops are still finishing training programs abroad.
The huge front line creates numerous potential avenues of attack.
Ukraine could focus its efforts south and attempt to seize the city of Melitopol, which Russia has established as the occupied regional capital of Zaporizhzhia, and then push forward in an effort to sever the land bridge.
SCENARIO
Attack south through Zaporizhzhia
region, aiming to take Melitopol
and break the “land bridge”
UKRAINE
Donetsk
Zaporizhzhia
M14
Mariupol
Melitopol
Berdyansk
RUSSIA
E105
Russia controls this road
that creates a land bridge
to Crimea.
50 MILES
CRIMEA
SCENARIO
Attack south through Zaporizhzhia
region, aiming to take Melitopol
and break the “land bridge”
UKRAINE
Donetsk
Zaporizhzhia
M14
Mariupol
Kherson
Melitopol
Berdyansk
RUSSIA
E105
Russia controls this road
that creates a land bridge
to Crimea.
50 MILES
CRIMEA
SCENARIO
Attack south through Zaporizhzhia region,
aiming to take Melitopol and break the “land bridge”
Donetsk
Zaporizhzhia
UKRAINE
M14
Mariupol
Kherson
Melitopol
Berdyansk
RUSSIA
E105
Russia controls this
road that creates a
land bridge
to Crimea.
50 MILES
Sea of Azov
CRIMEA
SCENARIO
Attack south through Zaporizhzhia region,
aiming to take Melitopol and break the “land bridge”
Donetsk
Zaporizhzhia
UKRAINE
M14
Mariupol
Kherson
Melitopol
RUSSIA
Berdyansk
E105
Russia controls this
road that creates a
land bridge
to Crimea.
Sea of Azov
50 MILES
CRIMEA
Ukraine could also attack Crimea itself, probably with naval operations and possibly even beach landings. Satellite imagery shows extensive trenches that Russian forces have dug in preparation for a potential assault.
SCENARIO
Attack on Crimea
From
region
From
region
Dzhankoi has proved to be a strategic target as it is the only point where rail lines can reach the naval base of Sevastopol.
E105
Russian-built
fortifications
E97
Dzhankoi
Kerch
CRIMEA
Railway
Simferopol
Sevastopol
Completed in 2018, the Crimean Bridge was the only link Russia had to Crimea.
An explosion
damaged the bridge on Oct. 8.
100 MILES
SCENARIO
Attack on Crimea
From Kherson
region
From Zaporizhzhia
region
Dzhankoi has proved to be a strategic target as it is the only point where rail lines can reach the naval base of Sevastopol.
E105
Russian-built
fortifications
E97
Dzhankoi
Kerch
CRIMEA
Railway
Simferopol
Sevastopol
Completed in 2018, the Crimean Bridge was the only link Russia had to Crimea. An explosion
damaged the bridge on Oct. 8.
100 MILES
SCENARIO
Attack on Crimea
From Kherson
region
From Zaporizhzhia
region
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED
AREAS
Sea of Azov
E105
Russian-built
fortifications
Henichesk
Dzhankoi has proved to be strategic target as it is the only point where rail lines can reach the naval base of Sevastopol
E97
Dzhankoi
Chernomorskoye
CRIMEA
Illegally annexed by
Russia in 2014
Kerch
Railway
Yevpatoria
Popivka
Simferopol
Primorkyi
Black Sea
Completed in 2018,
the Crimean Bridge
was the only link Russia
had to Crimea. An explosion
damaged the bridge on Oct. 8.
Sevastopol
50 MILES
SCENARIO
Attack on Crimea
From Kherson
region
From Zaporizhzhia
region
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED
AREAS
E105
Russian-built
fortifications
Henichesk
Sea of Azov
E97
Dzhankoi has proved to be a strategic target as it is the only point where rail lines can reach the naval base of Sevastopol.
Dzhankoi
Chernomorskoye
CRIMEA
Illegally annexed by
Russia in 2014
Kerch
Railway
Yevpatoria
Popivka
Simferopol
Primorkyi
Black Sea
Completed in 2018,
the Crimean Bridge
was the only link Russia
had to Crimea. An explosion
damaged the bridge on Oct. 8.
Sevastopol
50 MILES
Other scenarios could see the Ukrainians attacking east through the fiercely embattled city of Bakhmut, or from the town of Kupiansk, in a push to regain control of areas in the Luhansk region.
SCENARIO
Attack east from Kupiansk
On Sept. 9, Ukrainian soldiers reentered Kupiansk, a strategic enclave that has a bridge across the Oskil River as well as a railway depot that can be used for resupply. A counteroffensive from this area would be aimed at controlling eastern cities north of Luhansk.
Donets
River
RUSSIA
Oskil
River
Russian-built
fortifications
Kupiansk
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED
AREAS
Svatove
P07
Izyum
Starobilsk
Severodonetsk
Lyman
Slovyansk
Donets
River
Luhansk
UKRAINE
25 MILES
SCENARIO
Attack east from Kupiansk
On Sept. 9, Ukrainian soldiers reentered Kupiansk, a strategic enclave that has a bridge across the Oskil River as well as a railway depot that can be used for resupply.
A counteroffensive from this area would be aimed at controlling eastern cities north of Luhansk.
Donets
River
RUSSIA
Oskil
River
Russian-built
fortifications
Kupiansk
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED
AREAS
Svatove
P07
Izyum
Starobilsk
Severodonetsk
Lyman
Slovyansk
Donets
River
Luhansk
UKRAINE
25 MILES
SCENARIO
Attack east from Kupiansk
Donets
River
RUSSIA
Kharkiv
Oskil
River
Russian-built
fortifications
UKRAINE
Kupiansk
On Sept. 9, Ukrainian soldiers reentered Kupiansk, a strategic enclave that has a bridge across the Oskil River as well as a railway depot that can be used for resupply.
A counteroffensive from this area would be aimed at controlling eastern cities north of Luhansk.
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED
AREAS
Svatove
P07
Starobilsk
Izyum
Severodonetsk
Lyman
Slovyansk
Lysychansk
Donets
River
Kramatorsk
Bakhmut
Luhansk
25 MILES
SCENARIO
Attack east from Kupiansk
Donets
River
RUSSIA
Kharkiv
Oskil
River
Russian-built
fortifications
UKRAINE
Kupiansk
On Sept. 9, Ukrainian soldiers reentered Kupiansk, a strategic enclave that has a bridge across the Oskil River as well as a railway depot that can be used for resupply.
A counteroffensive from this area would be aimed at controlling eastern cities north of Luhansk.
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED
AREAS
Svatove
P07
Starobilsk
Izyum
Severodonetsk
Lyman
Slovyansk
Lysychansk
Donets
River
Kramatorsk
Bakhmut
Luhansk
25 MILES
Yevgeniy Prigozhin, the founder of Russia’s Wagner mercenary group, has threatened to withdraw his forces from Bakhmut, which would leave the city vulnerable. Another option would be for the Ukrainians to attack Russian positions through the southern city of Vuhledar toward occupied Mariupol on the Sea of Azov.
Zelensky said he would consider reoccupying any Ukrainian territory to be “a success.”
“I can’t tell you which towns or cities, which borders are a significant success for us and which are average … only because I don’t want to prepare Russia for how, in which directions, and where and when we will be,” he said.
SCENARIO
Retaking Bakhmut and Soledar
Donets
River
Lysychansk
Bakhmut has seen the most intense fighting for territorial control for many months now, and the Pentagon indicated that since December, Russia has suffered 100,000 casualties, including more than 20,000 killed.
Soledar
M03
Russian-built
fortifications
Bakhmut
Chasiv
Yar
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED
AREAS
Canal
5 MILES
SCENARIO
Retaking Bakhmut and Soledar
Bakhmut has seen the most intense fighting for territorial control for many months now, and the Pentagon indicated that since December, Russia has suffered 100,000 casualties, including more than 20,000 killed.
Donets River
Lysychansk
Siversk
From Slovyansk
Soledar
Popasna
M03
Russian-built
fortifications
Bakhmut
Chasiv
Yar
Canal
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED
AREAS
5 MILES
SCENARIO
Retaking Bakhmut and Soledar
Kreminna
Bakhmut has seen the most intense fighting for territorial control for many months now, and the Pentagon indicated that since December, Russia has suffered 100,000 casualties, including more than 20,000 killed.
Rubizhne
Severodonetsk
Donets River
Lysychansk
Siversk
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED
AREAS
Slovyansk
M03
Zolote
Soledar
Kramatorsk
Pryviillia
Popasna
Canal
Russian-built
fortifications
Bakhmut
Chasiv
Yar
Druzhkivka
Kostiantynivka
5 MILES
SCENARIO
Retaking Bakhmut and Soledar
Kreminna
Rubizhne
Severodonetsk
Lyman
Lysychansk
Donets River
Bakhmut has seen the most intense fighting for territorial control for many months now, and the Pentagon indicated that since December, Russia has suffered 100,000 casualties, including more than 20,000 killed.
Siversk
Slovyansk
M03
Zolote
Soledar
Kramatorsk
Popasna
Canal
Russian-built
fortifications
Bakhmut
Chasiv
Yar
Druzhkivka
M03
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED
AREAS
Kostiantynivka
5 MILES
Ideally, Reznikov said, the offensive will not only liberate villages and cities but also “cut logistic chains of [Russian] troops” and “reduce their offensive capacity.”
Western leaders insist Ukraine is well-equipped for the fight ahead.
But U.S. intelligence assessments disclosed in a massive leak of classified documents on the Discord forum revealed U.S. misgivings about Ukraine’s ability to make major progress this spring, in part due to assessed “deficiencies in training and munitions supplies.”
“We are currently losing in the sky,” Zelensky said in the interview with The Post in Kyiv. The Ukrainian president has been pleading for American-made F-16s. President Biden has pointedly denied the request, saying Zelensky does not need the planes.
Zelensky said that Ukraine will not wait for more fighter jets to start the offensive but that “it would be much easier for us” if they had them.
And although Ukraine recently received the U.S.-made Patriot missile-defense system, “we also need to remember that the name alone does not protect people,” Zelensky said.
More air defense is “priority number one,” Reznikov said.
Gen. Richard Barrons, commander of the U.K. Joint Forces Command from 2013 to 2016, said there are concerns that Ukraine’s still-depleted air defenses could face a barrage from Russian missiles once the counteroffensive begins.
The United States, he said, might have to strip its own systems in order to counter the weakness. “There is a question mark over Ukraine’s ability to control its own airspace,” Barrons said, adding that it had been a clear Russian tactic throughout winter to try to exhaust Ukrainian air defenses, which had mostly consisted of Russian or Soviet-made equipment.
Ukraine is also pleading for more long-range strike capabilities as the counteroffensive nears its start. Kyiv’s partners have long expressed fears that such equipment could be used to strike inside Russia — potentially triggering a major escalation from Moscow. But the lack of such weaponry is putting Ukraine at a serious disadvantage, Zelensky said.
“I don’t quite understand, I’ll tell you frankly, why we can’t get long-range artillery,” he said, contending he has offered assurances that Ukraine would not use such equipment to strike inside Russia, as some allies fear.
This lack of equipment, Zelensky said, is why Ukrainian forces, after retaking the southern city of Kherson in November, have been unable to push Russian forces out of the territory they control just across the Dnieper River.
It’s from those riverside positions that Russian forces regularly lob ammunition into the now Ukrainian-controlled city. Dozens of civilians have been killed in such shelling in the months since Kherson’s liberation.
“They can take troops from there and move them to the east or to the south. And still, they are reinforcing,” Zelensky said. “Why? Because they know that we cannot reach them … and we suffer every day because they have the ability to shoot at our people.”
SCENARIO
Attack across the Dnieper River
into Kherson region
There are only two
crossing points along
the Dnieper River east of
the Kherson city area.
To Kakhovka
hydroelectric
power plant
Antonovsky
railway
bridge
Antonovsky
Bridge
T2206
Kherson
Dnieper
To Crimea
Russian-built
fortifications
E97
KHERSON REGION
5 MILES
SCENARIO
Attack across the Dnieper River
into Kherson region
There are only two
crossing points along
the Dnieper River east of
the Kherson city area.
To Kakhovka
hydroelectric
power plant
Antonovsky
railway
bridge
Kherson
Antonovsky
Bridge
T2206
Dnieper
Delta
To Crimea
Kardashynka
Russian-built
fortifications
E97
KHERSON REGION
5 MILES
SCENARIO
Attack across the Dnieper River
into Kherson region
Dnieper
Antonovsky
railway
bridge
To Kakhovka
hydroelectric
power plant
Antonovsky
Bridge
Kherson
T2206
Tsiurupinks
There are only two
crossing points along
the Dnieper River east of
the Kherson city area.
Russian-built
fortifications
Kardashynka
Dnieper
Delta
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED AREAS
E97
Nova Zburybka
KHERSON REGION
5 MILES
To Crimea
SCENARIO
Attack across the Dnieper River
into Kherson region
Dnieper
To Kakhovka
hydroelectric
power plant
Antonovsky
railway
bridge
Antonovsky
Bridge
Kherson
T2206
Tsiurupinks
There are only two
crossing points along
the Dnieper River east of
the Kherson city area.
Dnieper
Delta
Russian-built
fortifications
Kardashynka
RUSSIAN-CONTROLLED AREAS
E97
Nova Zburybka
KHERSON REGION
5 MILES
To Crimea
Russian forces in Kherson knew that Ukraine lacked long-distance strike capabilities, so “they withdrew all their command posts, fuel depots, ammunition depots, more than 120 kilometers away,” Reznikov said.
“That’s why we need something interesting with a range capability of 150 kilometers,” he said. “It’s become more difficult for them logistically. But we need to push them deeper and deeper.”
Sources: Institute for the Study of War and the American Enterprise Institute’s Critical Threats Project, OpenstreetMap, Openinframap. Brady Africk, who analyzed satellite imagery from Copernicus Open Access Hub, provided fortifications data, which does not include all fortifications in Ukraine; some defenses predate Russia’s full-scale invasion.
Karklis reported from Washington and Granados from Malaga, Spain. Catherine Belton in London contributed to this report.