Ukrainian troops slice 25km deep to liberate six villages in Dnipropetrovsk region
Just when the news cycle felt like a repetitive loop, the guys from the Skelya battalion decided to remind everyone how a classic, deep-penetration breakthrough is done.
The 425th separate assault battalion, known as Skelya, just pulled off something beautiful. They didn't just push the line; they snapped it, driving 25 kilometers deep into occupied territory and liberating six villages in the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast.
For those keeping score, the freed spots are Ternove, Zaporizke, Novogeorgiivka, Vorone, Sichneve, and Maliivka.
This wasn't some slow, grinding crawl. A 25-kilometer leap means they bypassed the fortified static lines and left the occupiers wondering where their rear went. It’s the kind of fast, aggressive maneuvering that reminds us of the early Kharkiv vibes.
It turns out Russian defensive lines look great on paper until someone actually drives right through them.
Source: ArmyInform
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