Russian troops cross the Oskil river in Kharkiv region – reports
Source: DeepState
In an unexpected maneuver on Sunday, Russian troops crosses the Oskil river on boats and started to dig in south of Novomlynsk in the Kharkiv region.
According to DeepState, the operation, launched from the area of Dvorichna, allowed them to seize the positions earlier held by a Ukrainian brigade. Analysts believe the move can make things harder for the Ukrainian defenders.
Residents of Dvorichna and Kupiansk communities have been urged to evacuate due to the elevated threat level as the area is likely to see intensified artillery and mortar fire. Analysts though believe Ukraine has resources to reclaime the lost positions.
Meanwhile, Ukraine’s General Staff reported 198 combat engagements across the front as of 10 pm on November 24. Key developments included:
- Kharkiv Sector: Russian forces launched six assaults on Ukrainian positions near Kozacha Lopan, Tykhe, and Vovchansk.
- Kupiansk Sector: Attacks were recorded near Novomlynsk, Kolisnykivka, Kruhliakivka, Senkove, and Lozova. Ukrainian forces repelled 11 assaults, while four engagements were ongoing at the time of reporting. Additionally, an airstrike targeted Bohuslavka.
In October, British intelligence predicted that Russian troops may step up pressure on the Kupiansk front as they were conducting operations 20 kilometers south of Kupiansk.
In 2025, the deadliest year yet for civilians, Ukraine’s three largest charitable foundations raised a record 105.9 billion hryvnias. It is more than the years 2022–2024 combined. According to the UN, humanitarian aid in Ukraine was delivered by more than 450 organisations, reaching five million people over the course of the year. Civic foundations hold licences to purchase lethal weapons, which is a function states have monopolised for centuries. These record sums were underwritten by international government grants, which means foreign states now channel billions directly through Ukrainian civic funds, bypassing inter-state channels. It is hard to imagine a stronger institutional trust in civil society.
During the GLOBSEC Defence Forum 2026 in Prague, representatives of “Steel Front”, an initiative by Rinat Akhmetov, discussed with NATO delegations, military officials, and representatives of the European defense industry the lessons learned from Russia’s full-scale war against Ukraine.
After the start of the full-scale invasion in February 2022, Ukraine witnessed an unprecedented wave of private support for the army. Citizens, big businesses, charitable foundations, and international philanthropists began financing the country’s defense alongside state assistance provided by international partners. Estimates of total private contributions range from tens to hundreds of billions of hryvnias. However, determining the exact amount remains difficult. In many cases, companies combine military aid, humanitarian programs, tax payments, social spending, and employee support in their reporting.
Rinat Akhmetov’s military initiative, “Steel Front”, has delivered a batch of drones worth UAH 214 million to the 1st “Azov” Corps of the National Guard of Ukraine. This shipment is part of the Metinvest Group’s ongoing support for the unit in 2025.
On October 6, the Administrative Cassation Court within the Supreme Court of Ukraine continued hearing case No. 990/80/25, in which the fifth President and leader of the party “European Solidarity”, Petro Poroshenko, seeks to have Presidential Decree No. 81/2025 from February 12, 2025 — enacting sanctions by the decision of the National Security and Defense Council (NSDC) — declared illegal and annulled. The plaintiff claims the document was falsified and that the sanctions are a tool of political persecution of the opposition, contrary to international norms. Government representatives deny the allegations and insist their actions were lawful. Journalists of Bukvy were present at the hearing.