Order of Battle, Izium Region:
resource: military land9/12.
ISW 9/12 report:
On September 12, the Ukrainian army continued to consolidate the gains in eastern Kharkiv Oblast. The Kharkiv Oblast Detachment of the Special Forces of the Ukrainian Azov Regiment said Ukrainian troops had taken control of the entire northeastern part of Kharkiv Oblast along the Vesely-Vovshansk line.[4] Ukrainian sources confirmed that Ukrainian troops have recaptured Dvorcina (100 km east of Kharkiv city) and Trnova (30 km northeast of Kharkiv city), indicating that Ukraine is in Kharkiv The range of advance in the northeastern part of Fuzhou.[5] The Ukrainian Airborne Assault Command also claimed that Ukrainian paratroopers took control of Bohorodychne, a small settlement in northwestern Donetsk Oblast, directly along the southeastern border of Kharkov Oblast.[6] Geolocation imagery also shows that Ukrainian forces have taken full control of Sviatohirsk, 3 kilometers east of Bohorodychne.[7]
Russian sources say the front has largely stabilized on the Oskir River west of the Kharkov-Luhansk border.[8] The Russian military blog reported that Ukrainian and Russian troops were fighting around Lehman, but Lehman remained under the control of Russian and proxy forces.[9] Some Russian sources also expressed concern that Ukrainian troops were trying to cross the Siverskyi Donets river around Zakitny (about 15 kilometers southeast of Lehman) to retake Yampil.[10] Russian sources appear to have identified the Lehman-Yampier line as the next potential target for Ukraine’s advance.
Following Ukraine’s victory in the eastern Kharkov state, Russian troops have failed to strengthen new fronts and are actively fleeing the region or redeploying to other axes. Ukrainian sources say that all Russian troops have left Svatov, Luhansk Oblast (about 45 km east of current Ukrainian positions along the Oskir River), with only the Luhansk People’s Republic (LNR) militias — – probably a local – to stay in Svatov.[11] Social media footage showed cars lined up for kilometers near Shastia and Stanisian Luhanska, both on the border of long-held LNR territory, close to the Russian border.[12] Russian troops and pro-Russian collaborators may be feeling the psychological pressure of Ukraine’s rapid rise and trying to evacuate themselves from settlements near new fronts they see as vulnerable to a Ukrainian offensive. Certain proxy forces have also reportedly been redeployed from Kharkiv Oblast to southwestern Donetsk Oblast, suggesting that the Russian command is not prioritizing strengthening of vulnerable positions east of the Oskir River.[13]
I think this is a good answer JohnH’s 9/2 Question: “How about that [Ukrainian] Has the trap been solved? “



