Ukraine's outgoing ground forces chief says his command was mired in 'managerial stagnation' when he joined
The outgoing chief of Ukraine's land troops says he initially found his officers stuck in "stagnation."
Mykhailo Drapatyi, 42, took command in November as Kyiv urgently sought reform among its ranks.
His complaints of an "atmosphere of fear" and other issues echo frustrations in Ukraine's military.
The outgoing chief of Ukraine's ground forces said on Wednesday that his command was in a "state of managerial stagnation" when he first took his post in November.
Writing on social media on Wednesday, Mykhailo Drapatyi listed a slew of issues he discovered last year, including an "atmosphere of fear, lack of initiative, closure to feedback, indifference to personnel problems, a facade of discipline, a deep gap between headquarters and units."
Drapatyi wrote that he replaced half of the leaders under him, slamming what he said was systematic abuse, staffing decisions based on connections, and chaos within the officer ranks.
"There was not even a trace of a developmental spirit in command," Drapatyi added.
The remarks from Drapatyi, who led Kyiv's land forces for roughly six months, reflect an oft-discussed frustration in Ukraine's military that it was thrown into war with an outdated structure and culture that cleaved to old Soviet habits.
Ukraine has urgently tried to initiate changes as it battles Russia on its own borders. Drapatyi, a 42-year-old general, was appointed command in November as part of a younger wave of leaders aimed at facilitating reform.
"I worked to break this system," he wrote on Wednesday.
Drapatyi said one of his focuses was reshaping Ukraine's training divisions, which he said also saw half of its leading officers removed.
Additionally, the general said he had to bring digitalization to training management and logistics systems, and introduced "psychological support tools" for soldiers.
"The Command of the Ground Forces is only at the beginning of change. A system does not change in a few months, but the vector has already been set, the team assembled, and the approaches revised," he added.
Drapatyi stepped down from his post on June 1 in the aftermath of a Russian strike on a Dnipro training ground that killed 12 Ukrainians.
While announcing his resignation, Drapatyi blamed himself for the deaths of the soldiers, calling them young Ukrainians who were "supposed to learn, live, fight— not die."
"The behavior of fighters matters, but the main responsibility always lies with the command," he wrote.
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy summoned Drapatyi for a meeting on June 3, after which the latter was reassigned to the commander of the Joint Forces of Ukraine, another military branch that reports to the General Staff.
Zelenskyy said that in his new role, Drapatyi would focus "exclusively on combat issues."
Shortly after Zelenskyy's announcement, Drapatyi wrote that he would "remain in the ranks" and take on the new position assigned by the president.
"I am stepping down with a clear conscience," he wrote on Wednesday.
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A munition dropped from a reusable drone, usually also something like a modified mortar shell or 40-millimeter grenade, also costs less than $100.' 'The second reason why these drones rarely do what they were designed to do is technical,' he noted. 'They are finicky, unreliable, hard to use, and susceptible to electronic interference. Few first-person-view drones have night-vision capability. Those that do are in short supply and cost twice as much as the base model. In Ukraine, in the winter, it's dark for 14 hours a day. Wind, rain, snow, and fog all mean a drone cannot fly.' Jajcay's conclusions echo some of the concerns a Ukrainian drone commander raised with us in an exclusive interview back in May. He estimated that, for a variety of reasons, only about 30% of radio-controlled FPV drones reach their target. Still, this is one foreign fighter's observation and doesn't take into account that FPV drones have been transformative, striking equipment and personnel and keeping both sides pinned down for a fraction of the cost of other guided weapon systems with standoff capabilities. In addition, as the Ukrainian drone commander pointed out, the majority of losses inflicted on the enemy were by FPV drones. A very interesting first hand account of problems experienced while operating typical radio-controlled FPV drones in Ukraine: — Samuel Bendett (@sambendett) June 26, 2025 A video popped up on social media showing an FPV drone apparently making contact with, but not destroying, a vehicle. Come on ! Do something — War Monitor Clips (@WarMonitorClips) June 24, 2025 A Russian milblogger offered some advice on how to survive the ubiquitous onslaught of Ukrainian surveillance drones. In a post titled, 'How to survive under the 'bird': fighting small surveillance UAVs,' the Mad Dogs Telegram channel provided some ways to avoid detection and lambasted methods that do not. 'Where Mavic is, there is death,' Mad Dogs wrote. In addition, Mad Dogs pointed out that nighttime doesn't mean the drones can't operate, but there are limitations using thermal cameras. The bottom line – don't congregate in groups because 'the thermal imager sees a dense group better than a single one.' As for other things not to do, Mad Dogs said playing dead and hiding in garbage are useless. 'The thermal imager unmistakably shows where the heat is, which means where life is. It works worse than a bad joke,' Mad Dogs said about playing dead. 'Masking under trash — only in movies. The person is moving, and that's the main thing. Even if you covered yourself with cellophane and buried yourself in the mud, you moved your finger and got on the record. The drone operator will calculate you. Quickly.' 'Drone war is not the future, it is yesterday.'A Russian blogger gives advice on surviving under the constant gaze of Mavic drones.'How to survive under the 'bird': the fight against small surveillance UAVs.1/ — Roy (@GrandpaRoy2) June 27, 2025 Speaking of thermal imaging on drones, two Russian soldiers are seen being hit by FPV drones in a video shot by a thermal camera. Thermal drone watches as an FPV drone targets a Russian duo, reportedly in Zaporizhzhia. — FUNKER530 (@FunkerActual) June 30, 2025 The pro-Ukrainian Russia Volunteer Corps (RDK) claims it obtained tens of gigabytes of secret data on Russia's strategic electronic warfare (EW) systems by hacking into Russian networks. The data shows serious flaws in those systems. For 20 years, Russian propaganda molded the myth of its 'unparalleled' radio-electronic shield,' RDK stated on Telegram. 'Over-the-horizon radars, suppression complexes, 'secret' stations – all this turned into a dense layer of disinformation, vultures and paranoia. Today it is in the hands of the RDK. Russian electronic warfare is no longer a 'hospitality.' This is an open designer marked: made in a hurry, tested in the fog, vulnerable in the cold. Now Ukraine knows where to beat. What does not work, what heats up, what freezes, what makes noise, and what is just a dummy. And most importantly, it has a full range of necessary information and an understanding of the entire electronic warfare architecture, which will significantly increase defensive capabilities.' The group released that information on a YouTube video on June 14. An X user named @ChrisO_wiki offered greater detail about the hack and what was uncovered. For example, one Russian system, the Tirada-2.3 satellite communications electronic suppression station, has serious flaws,' he posted on X. 'It is reported to be extremely sensitive to weather, vibrations, requires complex settings and a stable power supply. The system copes poorly with combat conditions.' 16/ However, they say that it has serious flaws. It is reported to be extremely sensitive to weather, vibrations, requires complex settings and a stable power supply. The system copes poorly with combat conditions. — ChrisO_wiki (@ChrisO_wiki) June 30, 2025 Images have emerged on social media showing that the Russians have begun turning AK-630 naval anti-aircraft guns into permanent firing positions. The AK-630 is a single-turreted, six-barreled 30mm gun with a rate of fire of up to 1,000 rounds per minute. The guns are being removed from ships and deployed in the occupied south. Russians have begun installing AK-630 naval anti-aircraft guns as permanent firing positions. The AK-630 is a six-barreled 30mm gun with a rate of fire of up to 1,000 rounds per minute. The guns are being removed from ships and deployed in the occupied south. — WarTranslated (@wartranslated) June 25, 2025 That's it for now. Contact the author: howard@


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The singer was quickly lowered down and without injury, according to Beyoncé's entertainment and management company. 00:57 - Source: CNN Video shows woman clinging to tree as immigration agents try to detain her A bystander captured on video the moment immigration agents in street clothes chased a woman across the street trying to detain her outside of a Home Depot where she had been selling food in West Los Angeles just moments prior. 02:07 - Source: CNN Key lines from UVA president's resignation letter University of Virginia president James Ryan announced his resignation amid pressure from the US Department of Justice to dismantle the university's diversity, equity and inclusion programs. CNN's Betsy Klein reports. 01:09 - Source: CNN Minnesota lawmaker and husband lie in state at State Capitol Mourners and lawmakers gather to pay tribute to former Minnesota State Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark Hortman, who were killed in a targeted attack. The couple is joined by the family's golden retriever, Gilbert, who also died after being shot during the attacks. 00:41 - Source: CNN Sean 'Diddy' Combs' son escorted out of courtroom A judge removed Sean Diddy Combs' son, Justin Combs, from the courtroom and apparently asked him to change his clothing after Combs' son arrived wearing a shirt that says 'Free Sean Combs' to the defense team's final closing arguments. The controversy comes nearly two weeks after Diddy's son Christian 'King' Combs was also removed and spoken to by the judge for wearing a similar slogan in sight of the jury. 01:28 - Source: CNN Trump reacts to win at the Supreme Court President Trump thanked conservative Supreme Court justices and explained what he plans to do next after the Court backed his effort to curtail lower court orders that have hampered his agenda for months. 00:46 - Source: CNN Supreme Court backs parents who want to opt out of LGBTQ+ curriculum The Supreme Court on Friday backed a group of religious parents who want to opt their elementary school children out of engaging with LGBTQ books in the classroom, another major legal win for religious interests at the conservative high court. 00:52 - Source: CNN Supreme Court limits ability of judges to stop Trump The Supreme Court backed President Donald Trump's effort to curtail lower court orders that have hampered his agenda for months. However, it signaled that the president's controversial plan to effectively end birthright citizenship may never be enforced. 01:32 - Source: CNN See moment suspect lights fire on Seoul subway CCTV footage released by the Seoul Southern District Prosecutors' Office captures the moment a man lit a fire on a busy subway in the South Korean capital last month. The footage, from May 31, shows passengers running away after the suspect doused the floor of the train carriage with flammable liquid before setting it alight. Reuters reports that according to the prosecutors' office, six people were injured. The prosecutor's office says it charged the 67-year-old man with attempted murder and arson. 00:48 - Source: CNN