First Russian Truck Enters Pokrovsk As Fog Blinds Ukrainian Drones
For an entire year, Ukrainian troops prevented Russian vehicles from reaching Pokrovsk; that changed this week
For the first time, a Russian vehicle has infiltrated Pokrovsk in eastern Ukraine
Winter fog reportedly obscured the truck as it motored into the city
Exhausted and outnumbered, the Ukrainian garrison in Pokrovsk cannot defeat every incursion
As more and heavier Russian troops reach the city, a Ukrainian retreat is probably imminent
A thick fog blanketed Pokrovsk and neighboring Myrnohrad on Thursday. For the Russians, it was a long-awaited opportunity—to rush more forces past Ukraine’s drones and into the embattled settlements.
They succeeded more than they failed. For the first time since the Russian Center Group of Forces arrived on the outskirts of Pokrovsk around a year ago, the Russians managed to get a vehicle into Pokrovsk. A truck.
That truck’s crew immediately got to work removing obstacles from a road on the southern edge of Pokrovsk. Potentially clearing the way for more Russian vehicles to motor into Pokrovsk as the long, bloody battle for the city enters its final phase.
A surveillance drone from Ukraine’s Peaky Blinders unit managed to get a clear view of the truck. But it seems conditions were too nasty for attack drones to strike the vehicle. “Unfortunately, the bad weather is now playing into the hands of the occupier,” Peaky Blinders reported.
“If earlier we saw the infiltration of Russian troops into Pokrovsk exclusively on foot,” the drone unit added. “At most, there were sometimes attempts to break through on a motorcycle. Today, through the fog, we noticed the first Russian military pickup in the city. They took their time throwing down the barricades and drove through the streets of Pokrovsk.”
The truck’s arrival was a long time coming. The Russian group of forces reached Pokrovsk’s outskirts in late 2024 but struggled to slip infantry into to the city—to say nothing of getting vehicles in. The Russians outnumbered the Ukrainians five to one, but Ukrainian drones, mines, and artillery blasted every Russian assault group.
In early 2025, the Russians switched their strategy. As the weather warmed and the ground firmed up, Russian field armies parked their surviving armored vehicles and began sending infantry toward and around Pokrovsk on foot or on motorcycles.
These infiltration tactics were extremely costly in lives and light equipment.
Tens of thousands of Russians have been killed, wounded and captured around Pokrovsk. But the Ukrainian garrison in Pokrovsk struggled to keep infantry in every fighting position.
If a Russian infiltration team could get across the drone-patrolled no-man’s-land and reach the edge of Pokrovsk, it could shelter in a basement and await reinforcements.
“The situation around Pokrovsk deteriorated over time as Russian forces kept infiltrating through the southern part of the city,” explained Michael Kofman, an analyst with the Carnegie Endowment in Washington, D.C. “Ukrainian positions grew increasingly thin.”
The coming of fall, with its wetter, colder and cloudier weather, was a turning point. “Worsening weather enabled Russian troops to get more men into the city in recent weeks,” Kofman added.



