Russian forces have pushed roughly five kilometers beyond the international border over the last 10 days and are holding positions about 16 kilometers northeast of Velykyi Burluk. Their likely near-term objective is to widen the salient in this sector by seizing Khatnie, creating a staging area for further attacks toward Velykyi Burluk. Geography will shape what comes next: the Velykyi Burluk River traces a Shevchenkove–Mykhailivka–Velykyi Burluk line that offers Ukraine a natural defensive barrier. If Ukrainian troops choose to anchor on this river line, the water obstacles and settlement chain could slow or canalize Russian advances, complicating any rapid breakthrough. To sustain momentum and attempt an organized offensive against Velykyi Burluk, the Russian command almost certainly needs to reinforce with additional units and enabling assets; those reinforcements could arrive faster if Russian forces keep making measurable gains in this previously quieter area and see an opportunity to consolidate success. A Russian capture of Velykyi Burluk would significantly strain Ukraine’s defenses around Vovchansk and Dvorichna by positioning Russian tube artillery within range to interdict key ground lines of communication and strike both frontline and near-rear positions. In a worst-case scenario, the collapse of Ukrainian defenses in the Vovchansk and Dvorichna sectors would help Russia realize its declared aim of a “buffer zone” shielding Belgorod Oblast from Ukrainian fire, at least in part of northern Kharkiv Oblast. Over the medium to long term, if Russian forces can knit together advances from the Vovchansk, Velykyi Burluk, and Dvorichna directions, the resulting Vovchansk–Velykyi Burluk–Dvorichna arc could harden into an internal defensive line within that buffer zone. The coming battles will likely hinge on whether Russia can surge enough combat power to breach the river-anchored defenses and whether Ukraine can exploit the terrain and interior lines to blunt the salient before it becomes a springboard for deeper operations.