After 225 days stuck in a front-line foxhole, the Ukrainian infantryman's muscles were so weak he could barely walk.

His commanders had tried five times to swap him with another soldier - but they could never reach him. Rotating soldiers on the front line in eastern Ukraine is extremely difficult because of the constant threat of drones.

This area near Kostyantynivka is currently one of the most dangerous hotspots and the Ukrainian military admits that Russian forces have reached its outskirts.

Known as Kenya, the infantryman took two days to walk 11 km (6.8 miles) to get back to his brigade, avoiding mines and hiding from drones to get out.

Ukraine's 93rd brigade has the job of defending Kostyantynivka and its surrounding towns and villages from Russia's advance. If this highly strategic city falls, Moscow will be able to push towards the last remaining Ukrainian strongholds in the Donbas region – Kramatorsk and Sloviansk – from the north, east and south.

Vladimir Putin sees the capture of the Donbas as Russia's priority goal, and Ukrainian intelligence says he wants it done this year. President Volodymyr Zelensky believes the Kremlin is planning another major offensive in the summer.

However, Russia's campaign has lately become bogged down in the region. Moscow gained half as much territory in the Donbas in April than in March, and a sixth of what it captured in December 2025, according to Ukrainian monitoring website DeepState.

Kenya's task was to maintain his position and listen for any movement outside. He and his comrade would engage only if Russian troops tried to move against them. Most fighting was done by drones, he said. And these weapons have transformed how wars are fought.

Gone are the battles where a column of tanks and waves of soldiers charge enemy positions. Instead, assaults often involve two or three soldiers walking across a field or riding motorbikes, sometimes even on horseback or on bicycles.

Speed has become more important than armour if you want to survive inside the kill-zone - a wide and desolate area dominated by drones that hunt down anything that moves.

This is a grey zone along the front line within the range of drones piloted remotely from both sides. Every time when we had to come out of our positions, we prayed we would come back alive, said Kenya. At night, we had to put on anti-drone cloaks to protect us against thermal cameras, but they would last for 20 minutes at the most.

Drones cannot seize positions; they cannot control heights and crossings. So, even in the age of robots and remotely operated weapons, the old rule of war is still true: without boots on the ground, an army cannot hold territory. That is why Ukraine keeps soldiers like Kenya in small foxholes and dugouts inside the kill-zone, where they can do little more than stay and mark that territory.

Their biggest fear is being detected by the Russians. That's what happened to Khani, who spent 122 days at the front. He came to Ukraine as a Palestinian student in the 1990s and stayed. Khani's position was in the basement of a two-storey house, when it was turned into rubble by Russian drones and artillery.

Once they knew we were there, they first dropped explosives from drones, then kamikaze drones attacked us, he recalls.

A drone attached to fibre-optic cables managed to fly inside the basement, but it became tangled up in its wires at the entrance and started spinning, so Khani shot at the cable reel and the drone lost connection with the pilot operating it.

At this point two Russian soldiers stormed his position. They detonated anti-tank mines outside and destroyed the entrance, burying it under debris. They thought we were dead. They survived thanks to a hidden exit they had dug just in case.

Ukraine's military says Russian forces are regrouping along the front line, ahead of a possible summer offensive. To counter that, the Ukrainians say they have increased attacks on Russian military logistics and supply routes.

But it is still the foot-soldiers at the front of the kill-zone who still have the biggest task to hold on to Ukrainian territory. Without them, says Khani, the front line would collapse.