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Russians likely capture Kurakhove in Donetsk region, says ISW

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Russian forces have likely occupied the city of Kurakhove in the Donetsk region. However, it may be challenging for enemy forces to advance further west from this settlement, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) informs.

The report states that Russian forces have likely captured the city of Kurakhove in the Donetsk region. Geolocated footage released on December 24 and 25 shows that Russians have recently advanced in the western part of the city and up to a windbreak southwest of the settlement.

According to ISW’s assessment, Russian forces likely advanced to the administrative boundaries and captured this settlement, as well as fields south of the city and north of the village of Dalne.

Russian military bloggers claim that units of Russia’s 5th Motorized Rifle Brigade (51st Combined Arms Army (CAA), formerly the 1st Donetsk People’s Republic Army Corps (DNR AC)) raised the flag over the western part of Kurakhove. Meanwhile, units of the 110th and 114th Motorized Rifle Brigades of the 51st CAA, as well as the 20th and 150th Motorized Rifle Divisions (both part of the 8th Combined Arms Army, Southern Military District, SMD), are conducting offensives along the northern and southern flanks of Kurakhove.

Russian sources have published contradictory claims about the scale of the Russian advance in Kurakhove. Some military bloggers assert that Russian forces have moved beyond the city toward the village of Dachne (west of Kurakhove). At the same time, others claim that the Russian troops are unsuccessfully attacking the Kurakhove Thermal Power Plant (TPP) to the west of the city, which, according to ISW estimates, lies outside the administrative boundaries of Kurakhove.

The Khortytsia Operational-Strategic Group of Forces acknowledged that Ukraine’s Defense Forces recently lost unspecified positions in the direction of Kurakhove.

Росіяни, ймовірно, захопили місто Курахове в Донецькій області, - ISW

Significant losses

The Institute for the Study of War calculated that the Russian army spent more than two months capturing Kurakhove, an area of 7.3 square kilometers. Russians intensified their offensive operations to capture the settlement in mid-October 2024.

ISW referred to geolocated video footage confirming that Russian forces first advanced toward the city in late October 2024. According to the Institute, in recent months, the Russian military concentrated between 35,000 and 36,000 servicemen in the Kurakhove direction to capture the settlement and eliminate Ukrainian resistance to its north and south.

“Russian forces have likely sustained significant casualties during this period of intensified offensive operations. Russian forces have also conducted a large number of armored assaults within and near Kurakhove over the last two months and have likely sustained significant armored vehicle losses during their effort to seize the settlement,” the report states.

Difficult prospects for Russian advancement

ISW analysts believe that Russian forces may find it difficult to advance further west from Kurakhove along the H-15 Kurakhove-Pokrovsk highway if the Defense Forces decide to defend the Kurakhove TPP and Russians fail to outflank Ukrainian positions at the TPP near Dachne or Ulakly.

Russian military bloggers claim that the Ukrainian Armed Forces maintain a presence near the Kurakhove TPP west of the settlement along the H-15 highway.

“Russian forces may struggle to advance farther westward along the H-15 highway from Kurakhove if Russian forces choose to conduct a frontal assault through the Kurakhove TPP area and if Ukrainian forces decide to allocate sufficient manpower and materiel to defend in the area,” the report states.

Russian forces may try to bypass the TPP, advancing further south of the highway through fields west and northwest of Dalne (south of Kurakhove) toward Ulakly (west of Kurakhove).

The Institute for the Study of War does not rule out that Russians may also try to advance south from the village of Stari Terny (northwest of Kurakhove and on the northwestern bank of the Kurakhove Reservoir) to Dachne (west of Kurakhove) to outflank Ukrainian positions at the TPP.

Russian forces may also attempt to advance north from Zelenivka (southwest of Kurakhove) toward Ulakly. This would threaten Ukraine’s Defense Forces’ ability to supply positions at the TPP and complicate a potential future withdrawal of Ukrainian forces from the plant and positions in the fields south of Dachne.

Units involved in Kurakhove offensive

The primary forces involved in capturing Kurakhove were units of the 51st CAA amid ongoing efforts to centralize and formalize the units of this formation within the Russian armed forces.

Elements of the 51st CAA’s 5th and 110th motorized rifle brigades have participated in the most tactically significant offensive operations in Kurakhove since mid-October 2024 and have been involved in offensive operations west of Donetsk, as Russia intensified its activities in this area at least since the summer of 2024.

In addition, ISW notes that units of the 150th Motorized Rifle Division are also operating in Kurakhove, likely overseeing brigade operations in the settlement and future offensives west of it.

“Russian authorities have recently intensified their efforts to formalize former DNR units under the Russian military and will likely credit and praise these forces for their role in seizing Kurakhove in the coming days,” the ISW report states.

Situation on frontline

On the frontline of the Russian-Ukrainian war, the situation remains challenging and intense.

Ukrainian forces have advanced in the Toretsk area. At the same time, Russians are actively assaulting Ukrainian defenders near Kupiansk, Pokrovsk, and Velyka Novosilka.

Over the past day, the Russian army has lost more than 1,600 soldiers at the frontline, as well as a large number of tanks and artillery systems.

Meanwhile, the Russian military has deployed a carrier of Kalibr cruise missiles in the Black Sea.


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Russia’s losses in Ukraine as of December 27: +1,650 troops, 14 tanks, 1 air defense system

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Ukrainian defenders have eliminated an additional 1,650 Russian invaders in the past day. The Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU) also destroyed 14 tanks, 18 armored combat vehicles (ACVs), 22 artillery systems, and 1 enemy air defense system, reports the General Staff of the AFU.

The total combat Russian losses from February 24, 2022, to December 27, 2024, are estimated to be:

  • personnel – about 782,510 (+1,650) Russian troops were eliminated;
  • tanks – 9,644 (+14);
  • armored personnel vehicle – 19,951 (+22);
  • artillery systems – 21,379 (+22);
  • MLRS – 1,256;
  • anti-aircraft warfare systems – 1,032 (+1);
  • airplanes – 369;
  • helicopters – 329;
  • UAV operational-tactical level – 20,999 (+28);
  • cruise missiles – 3,003;
  • warships/boats – 28;
  • submarines – 1;
  • vehicles and fuel tanks – 32,262 (+82);
  • special equipment – 3,668 (+1).

It was previously reported that South Korean intelligence confirmed information about the capture of a wounded North Korean soldier by the Armed Forces of Ukraine in the Kursk region. The relevant information appeared on Ukrainian media resources the previous evening.

Additionally, it should be noted that in the report published on December 27 by the American Institute for the Study of War (ISW) regarding the situation on the front lines in various directions, it was stated that the AFU had success near Toretsk, where they regained previously lost positions. At the same time, Russian occupiers were recorded to have advanced near Kupiansk, Pokrovsk, and Velyka Novosilka settlements.


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Russia deploys Kalibr missile carrier to Black Sea: Possible salvo named

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One Russian ship, armed with Kalibr cruise missiles, has been deployed on combat duty in the Black Sea as of the morning of December 27, reports the Ukrainian Navy.

The military clarified that, in the event of a missile attack, the Russian ship could launch up to four Kalibr missiles in a single salvo.

Meanwhile, according to the Ukrainian Navy, no enemy ships have been detected in the Sea of Azov.

Additionally, the military reported the presence of eight Russian ships in the Mediterranean Sea, three of which are equipped with Kalibr cruise missiles. These ships have the capacity to launch up to 26 missiles in total.

The military also noted that no Russian vessels passed through the Kerch Strait in the past 24 hours.

The Ukrainian Navy stated that Russia continues to violate the 1974 International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS) by disabling automatic identification systems.

Notably, during the last massive combined attack on the morning of December 26, Russian forces also used Kalibr missiles, launching them from the Black Sea. At that time, the enemy deployed four Kalibr missile carriers, with a total salvo of up to 28 missiles.

Following that, Russian forces left one Kalibr missile carrier in the Black Sea.


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Why 2024 Was the Year of the Viral Animal

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Pygmy Hippo Moo Deng Continues To Delight People

Moo Deng. It’s a name millions around the world have come to know. She’s the most obsessed-over, least controversial celebrity. Her dewy skin, her enviable lifestyle of frolicking and feasting, her eminently meme-able face have all made her an icon of the internet. She’s also … a hippopotamus.

[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

Cute creatures going viral is nothing new. Seven years ago, the Cincinnati Zoo wanted TIME to name Fiona the hippo Person—er, Animal?—of the Year.

But 2024 seems to be on a different level of feral fascination.

The plump pygmy hippo from Thailand—who was born in July and whose name translates approximately to “bouncy pork”—rose to fame perhaps when she was needed most. “Observing animals, whether online or in person, can be therapeutic in many ways,” University of Washington psychology professor emeritus David Barash tells TIME. They can provide a comforting distraction, he says, “when so many people are depressed by the state of the world.”

And distract Moo Deng did.

What started as simply a new subject of photos and videos posted on Khao Kheow Open Zoo’s social media platforms quickly snowballed into the world’s latest It girl. Social media users obsessed over every new documentation of her teething and tumbling and infantile antics, and the followers of the zoo’s TikTok, Facebook, X, and Instagram accounts skyrocketed.

Moo Deng inspired fan art, merchandise, even makeup trends. Foot traffic to the zoo hit record highs, prompting new measures to protect Moo Deng’s safety and limitations on visiting hours. (A 24/7 livestream was set up for her most dedicated fans to get round-the-clock access.)

Jin Lee, a media sociologist at Curtin University in Australia, thinks Moo Deng initially resonated so widely because her relationship with her caretaker seemed genuine rather than staged or manufactured for clicks. “He spent a lot of time with her, and then he just started to post things about her,” says Lee, and people crave such authenticity.

Moo Deng’s reach has since extended far and wide: She made her way into photoshops of movie scenes, became the U.S. Labor Department’s poster girl for staying hydrated, and in September was even parodied on Saturday Night Live. In November, GMM, one of Thailand’s largest music companies, produced an upbeat theme song for Moo Deng in four different languages—Thai, Chinese, Japanese, and English—that have collectively racked up hundreds of thousands of streams on YouTube.

Tony Sampson, a digital-media researcher at the University of Essex, tells TIME he defines digital virality as “affective contagion.” In other words, posts that make you feel something tend to spread better than purely informational posts. “Negative emotions like anger and frustration spread well too,” he adds. “But maybe people need to escape that sometimes.”

“I think this year might be slightly different given that there’s been a lot of depressing news,” Sampson says. “Certainly, on my networks, where there’s been an understandable increase in downbeat posts related to the depressing political situation and the wars, my most popular post was of a small bird peeping through my window.”

It’s no wonder, then, that Moo Deng was not alone this year in attracting the world’s attention. A cohort of adorable animals have joined her in the online spotlight—from Pesto the very large penguin to Nibi the “diva” beaver to Biscuits the seal, Hua Hua the giant panda, and even Haggis, a fellow baby pygmy hippo who was born in Scotland in October. The list goes on, but one thing these social media sensations appear to have in common is that people seem to like to ascribe humanlike traits and emotions to them.

Austrian ethologist Konrad Lorenz coined the concept of Kindchenschema, or baby schema, to describe humans’ affinity to facial and bodily features that make a creature appear cute—big eyes, protruding cheeks, an awkward gait—and that trigger a desire to care for and protect them. The most popular Moo Deng posts often center around likening her to a toddler, from finding her footing to calling for her mom to throwing tantrums. One post even made out that she carried a leaf around on her snout for emotional support.

Anthropomorphism can sometimes misread what animals are actually going through, Barash warns. But the fact that much of Moo Deng’s appeal seems to stem from her perceived relatability isn’t necessarily a bad thing, he suggests—and it isn’t always off base. “Fortunately,” he says, “animal behaviorists are increasingly comfortable recognizing the obvious: that many animals share a wide range of mental states with human beings.”

Maybe we could all do with our own emotional-support leaf. Or maybe Moo Deng is already just that.


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