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Ukrainian forces withdraw from several positions in Zaporizhzhia

3:16
Blackouts in Ukraine after another wave of Russian strikes
Russian Defense Ministry via Reuters
ByDavid Brennan and Nadine El-Bawab
November 11, 2025, 7:30 PM

LONDON -- Ukrainian forces have been forced to withdraw from several positions in the Zaporizhzhia region, the southeastern front, due to intense Russian assaults, according to a spokesperson for the army.

Russian forces have launched more than 400 artillery strikes per day and Ukrainian troops faced the destruction of defensive fortifications, Southern Defense Forces spokesman Vladyslav Voloshyn told ABC News.

The withdrawal affected the areas around Novouspenivske, Nove, Okhotnyche, Uspenivka and Novomykolaivka, according to Voloshyn.

"The situation there remains difficult, in part because of weather conditions that favor the attacks. But we continue to destroy the occupier, and I thank every one of our units, every warrior involved in defending Ukraine’s positions," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Tuesday.

Russian soldiers set up a national flag, as the Russian Defense Ministry said its forces took control of the village of Uspenivka in Ukraine's south eastern Zaporizhzhia region, in this still image taken from video released Nov. 7, 2025.
Russian Defense Ministry via Reuters

A mandatory evacuation was announced in a settlement about 6 miles from Zaporizhzhia. Families with children are being forcibly evacuated from the village of Malokaterynivka in the Zaporizhzhia region, officials said.

The Kushuhum settlement council reported the decision was made based on an order issued by the Zaporizhzhia Regional Military Administration on Nov. 10.

At the same time, fierce battles continue for control of Rivnopillia, Solodke and Yablukove, Voloshyn said.

Ukraine is also facing the potential fall of Pokrovsk -- a city home to around 60,000 people at the time of Russia's 2022 full scale invasion of Ukraine -- to Russia after 18-month battle of attrition. This could be one of the most serious defeats of the war for Ukraine.

Drone crashes in Romania as Russia attacks Ukraine

In a separate development overnight, a drone crashed on the territory of NATO member Romania during Russia's overnight attack on Ukrainian targets along the Danube River, the country's defense ministry said in a statement on Tuesday.

Radars "signaled the presence of groups of drones in the area neighboring the national airspace, which led to the preventive activation of air defense systems," the ministry said in a statement posted to its website.

One "aerial vehicle" was reported impacting in the Grindu area, around 3 miles south of the shared border, the ministry said.

"Teams made up of military personnel went on-site and reported the presence of possible drone fragments," it added. "The area was secured and investigations are to be conducted in the early hours."

This file photo shows Romanian air force F-16 fighter jets during a NATO Air Policing exercise above eastern Romania, on March 6, 2024.
Andreea Alexandru/AP

"Weather conditions in the southeast of the country prevented the aircraft conducting air policing missions from scrambling," the ministry said of its air force assets.

Alert messages were sent to residents of Romania's northern Tulcea County, along the Danube River which forms the border with Ukraine, the ministry said. On the other side of the river, "a large number of explosions were observed" around ​​the port of Izmail, it added.

The drone incursion came as Ukraine defended another night of intense Russian attacks. Ukraine's air force said Russia launched 119 drones of various types into the country overnight, of which 53 were shot down or suppressed.

The air force said 59 drones impacted across 18 locations, with drone debris reported falling in one location.

The Odesa region -- which borders Romania to the west and encompasses Ukraine's Danube River ports -- was among the main targets of Monday night's barrage, the air force said.

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Poland, Romania scramble jets as NATO ally records new Russian drone violation

Russian drone and missile incursions into Romanian airspace have become a relatively common occurrence as Moscow expands its long-range strikes into Ukraine.

Romania's Defense Ministry told ABC News in September that it had recorded at least 11 violations of the country's airspace by drones since the start of Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

A ministry spokesperson said there had been approximately 50 attacks involving Russian drones on Ukrainian territory near Romania's borders up until mid-September, of which 30 saw drone debris falling on Romanian territory.

Such incidents have become "almost routine" for Romanians, Constantin Spinu, a former spokesperson for Romania's Defense Ministry, told ABC News.

"There is a war going on right across the border, so this situation is no longer a surprise for Romanian public opinion," he added.

A military helicopter flies above French soldiers during the "Dacian Fall" military exercise in Santimbru, Romania, on Nov. 9, 2025.
Andreea Campeanu/Reuters

The Defense Ministry and wider government, though, "are taking this very seriously," Spinu added.

Repeated incursions of Russian projectiles have prompted questions as to NATO's readiness to defend its airspace. In September, Poland became the first NATO nation to shoot down Russian drones over its territory.

Romania is yet to down any intruding Russian munitions. "There is always a risk-benefit calculus -- and that is to be sometimes in seconds," Spinu said. "Whenever you shoot something in the air, you have to take into consideration that you might not hit the target and your projectile can be a danger."

As NATO scrambles to revitalize its military-industrial base and refill its arsenals, there is also the question of resources.

“You don't use an F-35 missile or an F-16 missile that costs millions” against a relatively cheap drone, Spinu said. “But should that €2,000 drone represent a real danger for the population, I think it is worth using a multi-million piece of equipment.”

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