Systematic work that is felt at the front
Timely and well-built fortifications are not an episodic expense but a strategic resource. According to the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, this is the factor that allows holding back the enemy even when they have numerical superiority.
"A large volume of work has been carried out to prepare populated areas for defense. At the same time, these measures must continue to be implemented systematically and consistently."
— Oleksandr Syrskyi, Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of Ukraine
What was done on the lines
Engineer troops, in cooperation with local authorities and military administrations, implemented a set of measures that increased the resilience of the defense:
- trench systems and networks of foxholes for organizing layered defense;
- anti-tank ditches and other obstacles for tracked and wheeled vehicles;
- dugouts and shelters for personnel and equipment;
- improved anti-drone protection — limiting enemy reconnaissance and precision strikes.
Context and timeline of events
- 22 December — official reports: up to 100 Russian occupiers in Kupiansk, over 1,000 in Pokrovsk.
- 28 December 2025 — the National Guard commander reported that the Defense Forces are preparing local counter-attacks near Pokrovsk.
- 2 January 2026 — the military reported that an attempt to transfer additional forces to Pokrovsk was struck: HIMARS hit the equipment.
Why this matters
Engineering fortifications and anti-drone measures operate in tandem with firepower — they not only delay the enemy but increase the effectiveness of countermeasures. The tactic of degrading reconnaissance and slowing the movement of forces gives command time to prepare local counter-attacks and precision strikes (including with high-precision artillery).
Analysts and commanders note: the combination of systematic engineering and high-precision strike capabilities (HIMARS) produces a multiplicative effect — fewer vulnerable targets, greater losses for the enemy when attempting an advance, and more opportunities for initiative on our side.
Conclusion
The lesson from the Pokrovsk‑Myrnohrad agglomeration is simple and practical: investments in engineering defense and counter-drone measures deliver measurable results on the battlefield. The next question — whether these local successes can be turned into a sustained tactical and strategic advantage — depends on resource provision, operational coordination, and partner support.