The reality is that data reveal early to mid 2025 was Russia's high water mark in Ukraine. Since then, his depleted forces have not only failed to gain any ground of significance, but are now giving up territory to advancing Ukrainian troops. The only question is how long Putin can keep this up before China and North Korea, the suppliers on whom he depends, force him to stop wasting their resources. JL
Frederick and Kimberly Kagan report in the Washington Post:
Since 2022, Russia has seized only 1.5% more Ukrainian land while suffering over 1 million casualties: it has needed 3.5 years to seize 9,318 square kilometers, an area smaller than Los Angeles. Ukraine's forces have not only held Russian advances to a slow crawl, they have begun to push Russian forces back in local counterattacks since last autumn. Ukraine has also embarked on a long-range strike campaign, using both drones and a new domestically produced cruise missile. They are beginning to deploy midrange weapons to disrupt Russian attacks before they reach the line of contact. And they have been able to take advantage of Russian overextensions and missteps to retake ground. Military leaders we spoke to during a recent trip to Ukraine are increasingly confident they can continue to keep the Russians at bay. The Russian negotiating position is based on a bluff and a lie.























