Back to Headlines
World Wide
Jun 05, 2026
Analyzed by Llama- 4 Scout 17B 16E Instruct

Ukraine Brings Russia's Army to Standstill with Ballistic Missile Tactics

AI Summary
Ukraine's military has brought Russia's army to a standstill by impeding the flow of supplies and personnel to the front lines, while also striking refineries and munitions factories deep inside Russia. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has written an open letter to Russian President Vladimir Putin, saying that Russia's resources are dwindling and that ballistics will not be enough to win the war.

The Standstill on the Front Lines

Ukraine's ability to impede the flow of Russian supplies and personnel to the front lines has grown in recent days, from the southern regions of Zaporizhia and Kherson to the eastern front, and has forced the Russian army to a standstill, according to battlefield analysis.

Ukraine's Deep Strikes

Ukraine has continued to strike refineries and munitions factories deep inside Russia, weakening its war effort. On May 30, it destroyed a ballistic missile launcher and two Tupolev-142 long-range strategic bombers at the Taganrog airbase on the Sea of Azov. On Sunday, it hit the Saratov and Rostov oil refineries, followed by the Ilsky refinery, one of Russia's largest, and the Novoshakhtinsky refinery on Tuesday.

The Ballistic Missile Threat

Russia produces 120 ballistic missiles a month, Zelenskyy told the Ukraine-NATO Council, twice as many as the Patriot interceptors the United States produces. However, Ukraine intercepted 91.7 percent of the drones and 90.6 percent of the cruise missiles, but only 27 percent of the ballistic missiles, according to its Air Force.

Zelenskyy's Open Letter

Zelenskyy invited Putin to face-to-face talks, saying that Russia's resources are significantly dwindling and that it won't have enough money and political power to continue buying the loyalty of Russians. He also wrote that ballistics is the last Russian argument in the war.

Russia's Deteriorating Situation

The Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank, recently assessed that Russia had made a net gain of just 104 square kilometres (40 square miles) this year. In the past week, it said it had used new evidence to reassess those gains at 40.64sq km (15sq miles), including December 2025, judging that many of the areas previously thought to be Russian-controlled were merely infiltrated and contested.