Ukraine front lines are locked in stalemate, Russian senator says

Ukraine front lines are locked in stalemate, Russian senator says
The front lines in Ukraine have reached an impasse, as parity in equipment, training and morale between Russian and Ukrainian forces stalls momentum on both sides, nationalist Russian senator Dmitry Rogozin said in an interview. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 24 September 2025
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Ukraine front lines are locked in stalemate, Russian senator says

Ukraine front lines are locked in stalemate, Russian senator says
  • “(The map of the front lines) is moving with enormous difficulty, at a colossal price,” Rogozin said
  • Russia’s slow advance is tactical, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said

MOSCOW: The front lines in Ukraine have reached an impasse, as parity in equipment, training and morale between Russian and Ukrainian forces stalls momentum on both sides, nationalist Russian senator Dmitry Rogozin said in an interview.
“(The map of the front lines) is moving with enormous difficulty, at a colossal price, which our military is paying in order for it to move,” Rogozin, who has fought in Ukraine, told the Bloknot media outlet in an interview published on Russian social media site VKontakte on September 19.
“Nevertheless we are moving, our pressure is definitely there. Victory will be ours, the question is just at what price. And the price will be very big.”
Russia’s slow advance is tactical, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Wednesday, a day after US President Donald Trump said Russia has been fighting “aimlessly” in Ukraine.
In a striking rhetorical shift in Ukraine’s favor, Trump said that a “real military power” would have won the war in less than a week, describing Russia as a “paper tiger.” Trump, who has sometimes echoed Russia’s views on the conflict, said he believed Ukraine could retake all the land occupied by Russia.
In his comments, Rogozin said it was very difficult to advance in Ukraine as assault groups consist of three-to-four middle-aged men, who are weighed down by armor and weaponry and surrounded by mines and with drones buzzing overhead.
“It’s impossible to get up from a chair, let alone go somewhere to attack,” he said, adding that any military equipment brought within 20 kilometers of the line of contact, on either side, would get burned.
“There are only bare fields, no forest belts, a hare appears and I can see it,” he said, referring to drone footage he had seen around Stepnohirsk, in Zaporizhzhia region, at his command post.
“How is it possible to move and get through? And all equipment will be blown up because the roads are mined by us and by them.”


Five Indian nationals kidnapped in Mali

Updated 15 sec ago
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Five Indian nationals kidnapped in Mali

Five Indian nationals kidnapped in Mali
The workers were kidnapped Thursday by gunmen near Kobri, in western Mali
No group has claimed the kidnappings so far

DAKAR: Gunmen have kidnapped five Indian nationals in Mali, their company and a security source said Friday, as the west African country reels from mounting unrest and militant violence.
The workers were kidnapped Thursday by gunmen near Kobri, in western Mali, the security source told AFP on condition of anonymity, saying they were employed by a company that is working on electrification projects.
“We confirm the kidnapping of five Indian nationals,” a company representative told AFP.
“The other Indians working for the company have been evacuated to Bamako,” the capital, he added.
No group has claimed the kidnappings so far.
Mali, currently ruled by a military junta, has been struggling to contain surging unrest blamed on criminal groups and militants linked to Al-Qaeda and the Daesh group.
The security situation has exacerbated an economic crisis in the impoverished country, where the Al-Qaeda-linked Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM) has imposed a suffocating fuel blockade.
Kidnappings targeting foreigners are common in the country, which has been plagued by coups and conflicts since 2012.
JNIM militants kidnapped two Emirati nationals and an Iranian near Bamako in September.
The victims were released last week for a ransom of at least $50 million, according to sources close to the negotiations.