Ukraine Rejects Russian Claim of Full Control in Luhansk
Ukraine’s military on April 1 denied a Russian Defense Ministry statement that Moscow’s forces had fully captured Luhansk Oblast, saying Ukrainian troops still hold positions in the region’s western sector.
Russia controls most of Luhansk Oblast, including the city of Luhansk and the regional administration, which is run by Kremlin-installed proxies. However, a small area along the oblast’s western edge remains contested, according to Ukrainian military statements and battlefield mapping.
Ukraine’s Third Assault Brigade said its units are still operating in the region and “holding the last lines of defense.” The brigade described the Russian announcement as propaganda and said Ukrainian forces remain present despite Moscow’s declaration that the occupation had been “completed.”
Fighting Continues Near the Luhansk-Donetsk Border
The Third Assault Brigade said Russian forces conducted 144 assault attempts in settlements near the Luhansk-Donetsk border over the past six months, involving more than 260 Russian personnel. The brigade said Russia lost up to 260 troops in those attacks.
Open-source battlefield monitor DeepState also showed the relevant settlements as not fully occupied by Russian forces as of April 1.
Precise assessment of territorial control remains difficult along this part of the front. The widening “grey zone” between confirmed Ukrainian- and Russian-held positions has made real-time measurement of gains and losses increasingly uncertain.
Luhansk’s Strategic and Political Significance
Luhansk Oblast forms part of Ukraine’s Donbas region and has been a central theater of fighting since Russia’s initial intervention in eastern Ukraine in 2014. Moscow has claimed Luhansk as Russian territory, along with Donetsk, Kherson, and Zaporizhzhia oblasts, following its internationally unrecognized annexation declarations in September 2022.
Russia continues to insist that Ukraine withdraw from the entirety of Donbas, including areas still under Kyiv’s control. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on April 1 that President Volodymyr Zelensky could decide “already today” to surrender the region.
The demand followed Zelensky’s statement that Russia had given Kyiv two months to pull its forces from Donbas or face additional conditions in U.S.-mediated peace talks. Those negotiations remain stalled.
Ukraine Reports New Russian Losses
In a separate April 2 update, Ukraine’s General Staff said Russia has suffered about 1,300,030 troop losses since the start of the full-scale invasion on Feb. 24, 2022, including 1,300 over the previous day.
The same report listed Russian equipment losses at 11,830 tanks, 24,334 armored combat vehicles, 86,773 vehicles and fuel tanks, 39,228 artillery systems, 1,713 multiple launch rocket systems, 1,338 air defense systems, 435 aircraft, 350 helicopters, 213,393 drones, 33 ships and boats, and two submarines.
Competing Casualty Assessments
Ukraine does not publicly provide regular figures for its own military losses, citing operational security. Zelensky said in a February interview with France TV that at least 55,000 Ukrainian soldiers had been killed in action since the full-scale invasion began, with additional personnel listed as missing in action.
Independent Western assessments generally conclude that Russian casualties exceed Ukrainian losses. A January 2026 report by the Center for Strategic and International Studies estimated Ukraine’s total casualties from February 2022 through December 2025 at 500,000 to 600,000, including roughly 100,000 to 140,000 killed in action, while describing Russian losses as roughly two to two-and-a-half times higher.
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