Thick columns of smoke rise on a live drone feed, transmitted from the smouldering edges of Pokrovsk—a key front-line city in Ukraine’s Donetsk region. Moments earlier, Ukrainian artillery had zeroed in on Russian positions where troops had been seen advancing toward a vital road. One Russian soldier lies motionless; others scatter for cover.
We’re inside a modest rural home, now repurposed as the command centre for Ukraine’s 155th mechanised brigade. Just miles from the artillery line, this modest outpost offers a stark window into a war that shows no signs of slowing. The devastation visible on the screens—entire neighbourhoods reduced to rubble—outstrips anything seen here six months ago.
“The bloodshed is endless,” says a soldier nicknamed Kozak, his khaki shirt emblazoned with his namesake. He watches the footage grimly, unmoved. “Too many have died to simply hand over our land.”
Still, whispers of negotiations between Kyiv and Moscow are beginning to reach even the front-line trenches. For some exhausted troops, peace—once an unthinkable prospect—now glimmers faintly amid the wreckage. Others, like Kozak, remain unconvinced, hardened by loss and sacrifice.
As the war grinds on, Ukraine’s defenders are forced to confront a painful question: Is it time to talk—or to keep fighting until the last shell falls?




