A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Jul 6, 2026

Ukraine Destroys Russian Rubikon Drone Base In Pokrovsk

Drone operators from Ukraine's 7th Corps, deployed in the Pokrovsk sector, identified and destroyed a Russian drone base, killing a number of Russian crews and some instructors from the Kremlin's most effective 'Rubikon' unit. 

The successful targeting of such facilities is a significant loss to the Russians, whose drone resources and capabilities trail those of Ukraine. JL

Ukrinform reports:

Ukrainian drone operators from the 7th Corps, deployed in the Pokrovsk sector, destroyed high-rise building in the ‘Lazurnyi’ neighborhood, which the Russians had long used as a base for pilots. Additionally, there were also instructors from the ‘Rubicon’ center present, who were training UAV crews. "This was confirmed among enemy units stationed in this neighborhood.” The Russians were storing ammunition—including toxic chemicals—in one of the buildings. “As a result of the strike, the enemy two UAV crew operating posts, a communications node, ammunition stocks, and up to 10–15 personnel,”

New Pocket-Sized Ukrainian Launcher Takes Down FPV Drones

In the constant battle for innovation dominance, Ukraine has introduced a new pocket-sized portable anti-drone defensive weapon for frontline troops. 

It fires a net at an approaching FPV or reconnaissance drone, disabling the attacking object. JL

Ivan Khomenko reports in United 24:

Ukrainian defense company has developed a new lightweight, single-use anti-drone device designed to counter enemy FPV drones and reconnaissance quadcopters. It provides short-range drone interception using a rapidly deploying entanglement net. Weighing just 365 grams, the MITLA launcher measures 200 mm in height and 40 mm in diameter, allowing for easy storage in a pouch, backpack, or uniform pocket. The system operates manually and requires no external power or setup. To activate it, the user aims and fires, releasing a net that entangles the drone’s rotors mid-flight. 

Russia Has Lost the Initiative Against Ukraine. Is Unlikely to Regain It

Media headlines tell the story: Ukraine is systematically destroying Russia's military capabilities and broader, oil-based economy, while Russia responds with terror attacks on Ukrainian civilians. 

The former reflects strategic thinking aimed at achieving an analytically-driven outcome. The latter is simply an expression of impotent rage. Russian battlefield tactics, such as they are, amount to the infiltration of small groups of soldiers, many of whom are almost immediately eliminated by drones. The Kremlin is no longer capable of mounting offensives in the traditional sense of the word. The result is that Ukraine has achieved momentum, choosing when and where to fight, while Russia responds, hoping the world will lose interest before the Russian economy collapses. JL 

Seth Jones and colleagues report in the Center For Strategic and International Studies:

Ukrainian forces, after more than two years on the defensive, began clawing back ground that reversed the front’s direction in some areas for the first time since 2023. Even where Russia concentrates its resources, it has not been able punch through Ukraine’s defensive lines and advance quickly. Russian battlefield fatalities in Ukraine are more than 28 times greater than Soviet fatalities in Afghanistan during the 1980s, more than 18 times greater than during Russia’s First and Second Chechen Wars. (And) Russian battlefield casualties are significantly greater than Ukraine's. Russia’s territorial control in Ukraine shrank in the spring of 2026. The war in Ukraine heavily favors the defender, a dynamic that has frustrated Russian offensives. It’s progress on the battlefield has been historically poor, with Russian casualties, fatalities, and average rates of advance among the worst of any major power in any war since World War II.

60% of C-Suite Execs Worry AI Is Causing 'De-Skilling,' Critical Thinking Atrophy

As if AI wasn't facing enough challenges to its financial and operational efficacy, a growing body of research is finding that it may be leading to what, in the bone-dry jargon of managerial performance, is being called de-skilling. 

Put more simply, there is concern, backed up by data, that over-reliance on AI may be making users lazy. They are more willing to take at face value whatever AI tells them, and less willing to debate, think critically, challenge assumptions and collaborate on finding original solutions. Consequently, they are less willing to take ownership - after all, AI said it was so - and become advocates for their ideas. The result could be a homogenization of strategies. While probably not an immediate threat to the growth of AI, what this could, interestingly, lead to is a change in the way AI is applied, eg, as a supplement and complement rather than replacement for human input, in order to achieve optimized outcomes. JL

Sagar Goel and colleagues report in Boston Consulting Group:

60% of C-Suite executives believe de-skilling will pose a threat within the next three to five years. growing body of research points to the erosion of critical thinking, judgment, curiosity, and originality among frequent AI users; the skills most important to organizational performance. The larger danger is when skill erosion across hundreds or thousands of people in an organization - distributed de-skilling -undermines organizational intelligence. Because AI produces acceptable ideas efficiently enough, employees’ ideation abilities can atrophy; and because its strength in pattern recognition creates the illusion of analytical rigor, workers’ causal reasoning and assumption testing can erode. This starts with overreliance on AI outputs without stress testing or challenge, cited by 90% of surveyed leaders. Reduced ownership and accountability, fewer debates, less diversity of thinking, and reduced collaboration and teaming follow.

Jul 5, 2026

As Russian Advances Collapse, Its Casualties Exceed Stalingrad

The battle of Stalingrad between the Russians and Nazis in WWII is considered the bloodiest in human history. But it has now been surpassed by Russian casualties in Ukraine. 

That is an interesting factoid, but the broader implication is that because Russian casualty rates are significantly higher than those of Ukraine, it is becoming harder for Russia to sustain its war. JL

Ivana Kottasova reports in CNN:

Russia has suffered 1.4 million casualties, including killed, wounded and missing soldiers – 1% of the country’s population. The losses are not spread evenly across Russia, with poorer areas and ethnic minorities suffering significantly higher casualty rates. Stories of male populations of small remote villages being virtually wiped out are becoming more common in Russian media. Russia is unable to recruit new troops at the same rate as it is losing them. In terms of casualties, the war is becoming much more costly for Russia than it is for Ukraine. For every Ukrainian soldier killed, wounded or missing, there are eight Russians casualties.

Jul 4, 2026

Putin Knows He's Losing - And Needs An Exit Strategy

Even as Putin's statements of defiance and his wanton attacks on Ukrainian civilians become more horrific, the reality is that he is losing - and knows it. He desperately needs an exit strategy, but it has to be one that does not result in him being thrown out of a high-rise building window. 

A negotiated peace cleverly disguised as a victory of some sort may be his only option. But his options are narrowing and Ukrainian advances on the ground his time is short. 

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon reports in The Telegraph:

Putin needs an exit strategy. His difficulties are mounting. Ukraine has regained the strategic initiative. The governor of annexed Crimea has declared a state of emergency after fuel shortages and power outages hit Sevastopol. This amounts to a public admission that Russia's military can no longer guarantee the security of Crimea, a territory Putin has long portrayed as untouchable. If he can present any agreement to the Russian people as something short of a complete defeat, he may yet secure a managed retirement from power and thus may just be able to leave via the stairs rather than the window! There may still be room for a negotiated settlement, but for the Kremlin this prospect is narrowing rapidly, and killing more civilians in Ukraine is unlikely to help.

Russia Suffered Net Loss of Ukrainian Territory Again In June

Russian forces suffered a net loss of Ukrainian territory for the second month in a row as Ukrainian forces' counterattacks
are pushing the Russians back across a number of sectors along the front. 

The Ukrainians' impact on Russian casualties as well as the medium and long range effect on logistics and reinforcements is giving Ukraine momentum that the Russians have now lost. JL

Euromaidan Press reports:

Russian forces fell back in June. In key sectors south and north of Kostiantynivka, the Russians lost ground. Russia advanced 30 sq km across the front in June, but once Ukrainian counterattacks are subtracted,  Russian forces ended June with a net loss of around 40 sq km of Ukrainian soil. The reasons are: Ukrainian drones are better and more numerous than ever. Ukrainian fortifications are deeper and denser than ever. And Ukrainian forces are hitting Russian logistics in the middle zone between the disputed gray zone and Russia proper with greater intensity than ever, weakening Russian regiments before they can even organize an assault.