BERLIN — After incremental gains for months, Russian forces are advancing on Ukrainian battlefields at the fastest pace this year. They are bombarding Ukrainian cities with some of the biggest drone and missile strikes of the war. They have even opened another front in northern Ukraine.

The Kremlin’s summer offensive appears to be underway.

Military analysts say it is clear that Russian forces this month began their latest concerted attempt to achieve a breakthrough, even as Moscow’s representatives engaged in the first direct peace talks with Ukraine since 2022.

In particular, Russian forces are pushing into the remaining Ukrainian-controlled territory in the Donbas area in the east, in the fourth year of a conflict that has become a war of attrition. They used the winter lull to build up equipment reserves, improve battlefield communications, and tweak the tactics and technical abilities of attack drones, the military analysts said.

Despite some localized battlefield successes, the pace of Russia’s advances remains slow, and few analysts expect it to achieve a decisive victory this summer that would reshape the war.

Russia’s intensified bombing campaign and mounting civilian casualties are already hurting geopolitically.

President Donald Trump has stopped praising Russian President Vladimir Putin and threatened new U.S. sanctions against Russia. Ukraine is deepening its alliance with European nations. And the Ukrainian public is more skeptical than ever of Russia’s peace overtures.

“What Vladimir Putin doesn’t realize is that if it weren’t for me, lots of really bad things would have already happened to Russia, and I mean REALLY BAD,” Trump said in a social media post Tuesday. “He’s playing with fire!”

The Kremlin has not directly commented on the offensive or announced its commencement. Putin has said merely that the Russian forces are creating a “buffer zone” with Ukraine to protect Russian civilians from enemy raids.

He has also repeated his mantra that the war will end only when Russia eliminates the “root causes” of the conflict, a shorthand for wide-ranging demands that Ukraine and its allies see as subjugation.

While advancing on the ground despite heavy losses on both sides, Russia is also using combined drone and missile strikes to overwhelm Ukrainian air defenses, exhaust its citizens and deplete its industrial base.

Russia’s Defense Ministry has justified attacks on Ukrainian cities as a tit-for-tat response to the more limited Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian towns and cities, which are causing a smaller number of civilian deaths.

It is unclear what role the Kremlin expects the unfolding offensive to play in the broader complex diplomatic maneuvers over ending the war. Nor is it clear whether Trump would follow through on his threats to exert more pressure on Putin to reach a ceasefire.

Some Western analysts say Putin may be using the dry-weather season most conducive for offensive operations to maximize his negotiating power before giving more weight to peace talks later this year.

It would be rational, they argue, for Russia, which has had the edge on the battlefield for most of the past two years, to use military pressure as leverage in any negotiations.

But many other analysts, as well as the governments of Ukraine and the European Union, say the acceleration of attacks proves that Putin is not serious about the peace talks, which tentatively restarted in Istanbul this month under pressure from the White House.

The Russian offensive is not about gaining negotiating leverage, they say — it is about winning the war.

On Wednesday, Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, proposed a new round of talks for Monday in Istanbul.

Ukraine’s defense minister, Rustem Umerov, responded by saying that Kyiv was open to another meeting but wanted to see concrete ceasefire proposals from the Kremlin first. Kyiv said it already submitted its own proposals to allies.

“Diplomacy cannot succeed amid constant attacks,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Monday, hours after one of Russia’s largest aerial strikes of the war.

Some Russian analysts tied to the opposition contend that this year’s offensive could backfire, the culmination of Putin’s military hubris. They argue that any Russian gains might evaporate as the country’s military machine deflates later this year under economic pressure and dwindling resources.

But Russia’s military and economy have already survived multiple setbacks and predictions of collapse.