13 mins read
Fyodor Lukyanov: How does the Russia-Ukraine conflict end?
The pendulum has swung in Moscow’s favor and last year’s Western confidence has disappeared
13 mins read
The pendulum has swung in Moscow’s favor and last year’s Western confidence has disappeared
6 mins read
It is ten years, not two years, since the war in Ukraine began. And once you have grasped that, you can begin to think clearly about it. What is Britain’s interest in this conflict? Why do so many in politics and the media cheer for carnage that has devastated Ukraine, the country they claim to love and admire? What has Ukraine gained from it? What can Ukraine and its people possibly gain from it?
6 mins read
In answer to the question I posed yesterday – can Russia show that with the fall of Avdiivka it can press ahead westwards with convincing confidence? – yes, it’s shaping up to look in the affirmative. Now at least three settlements west of Avdiivka have fallen or are at clear close to falling and ahead lies Konstantinivka and Kramatorsk. Dima this morning February 25 reports that Ukrainians have not had sufficient time to develop robust alternative fortifications further to the West and at present are simply doing their best to hold Russian forces back in order to create more time to develop the fortifications they need, at least in the west Avdiivka area.
5 mins read
NATO is risking a wider war
2 mins read
For more than a decade, the United States has nurtured a secret intelligence partnership with Ukraine that is now critical for both countries in countering Russia.
6 mins read
U.S. Global Engagement Initiative
10 mins read
There is a curious wave of Western analysts’ opining, including earlier today from Col. Lawrenece Wilkerson, and also in a recent Quincy Institute paper by Lieven and Bebe, that concede that Ukraine is losing – Wilkerson goes so far as to say that Ukraine has already lost, and that every day that passes now will mean that it will lose more – and then go on to assert that now Ukraine must negotiate or must be forced by the Western powers into negotiation with Russia (with Lieven and Bebe insisting that in the meantime the West must provide more arms to Ukraine).
11 mins read
Full Chinese logistical support for Russia could be the real game changer of the war – and that support is growing more important and less discreet.
14 mins read
Two years ago today Vladimir Putin explained why he went to war. He said he had no intention to control Ukraine and only wanted to “demilitarize” and “de-Nazify” it, after the U.S. had pushed Russia too far, wrote Joe Lauria.
6 mins read
As the second anniversary of Russia’s invasion nears, and the latest aid package for Ukraine stalls in Congress, we must be clear-eyed about the future.