Key Takeaways:
•
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky appointed Lieutenant General
Oleksandr Pavlyuk as Ukrainian Ground Forces Commander, replacing
current Ukrainian Commander-in-Chief Colonel General Oleksandr Syrskyi.
•
Russian forces appear to have constructed a 30-kilometer-long barrier
dubbed the “tsar train” in occupied Donetsk Oblast, possibly to serve as
a defensive line against future Ukrainian assaults.
•
Ukrainian military observers indicated that the Russian defense
industrial base (DIB) is not as productive as Russian authorities
portray it to be, but that the Russian DIB is still capable of
sustaining Russia’s war effort.
•
Russia’s current limited DIB production capacity and insufficient
serial tank production lines are not guarantees that Russia will
struggle to produce enough materiel to sustain its war effort at its
current pace or in the long term.
•
Russian forces made confirmed advances near Avdiivka and in western
Zaporizhia Oblast amid continued positional engagements along the entire
frontline.
•
CNN reported on February 11 that Russia has recruited as many as 15,000
Nepalis to fight in Ukraine, many of whom complained about poor
conditions and lack of adequate training before their deployment to the
most active frontlines in Ukraine.
•
Russian authorities continue efforts to solidify social control over
youth and students in occupied Ukraine and to culturally indoctrinate
them into Russian identity and ideology.
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