Fragile Ceasefire Persists Amid Mutual Accusations and Limited Front-Line Moves

The May 9–11 ceasefire in Ukraine remains fragile as both sides accuse the other of violations while fighting persists at a limited tempo. Zelensky says Russia carried hundreds of ground assaults, artillery strikes, and thousands of drones from May 9–10, while Moscow claims Ukraine conducted its own extensive strikes; NASA FIRMS shows activity dipping but not stopping. Putin hints the war could end soon with no concrete plan, and Zelensky rejects Russian claims about POW-exchange sabotage, noting lists for 1,000 POWs exist with the United States as guarantor. On the battlefield, Ukrainian forces have advanced in Borova, Slovyansk, and western Zaporizhzhia, while Russia maintains limited offensives and shifts emphasis toward Orikhiv. Russia continues long-range drone activity and infiltration tactics, and its information warfare apparatus—using AI-generated footage and clampdowns on pro-war voices—intensifies to shape the narrative.
- Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, May 10, 2026 Institute for the Study of War
- Ukraine reports Russian attacks and battlefield clashes despite ceasefire Reuters
- Russia kills three Ukrainians in 24 hours, accuses Kyiv of violating truce Al Jazeera
- Trump says Russia and Ukraine have agreed to his request for a 3-day ceasefire NPR
- Putin Says Ukraine Ceasefire Prompted By Kyiv Security Warnings Bloomberg.com
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