Russia and Ukraine have been “at war” since 2014. Russia seized the Crimean peninsula and supported “rebellion” in two majority Russian “oblasts” in eastern Ukraine. Then, in February 2024, Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine. They missed their punch. Since then, the Russians and Ukrainians have been engaged in a prolonged war of attrition. Recently, a Ukrainian offensive ground to a halt without reaching its ambitious goals. Since then, the Russians have mostly been grinding away on the Ukrainian lines in the Donbas. Western observers predicted that the Ukrainian defense would hold as Russian bodies piled up in “No Man’s Land.” Moreover, the Ukrainians launched their own minor counter-offensive in the Kursk region. The intent was to seize Russian territory and force the Russians to shift soldiers from the Donbas, blunting the Russian offensive.
The West has provided Ukraine with far more “lethal” aid since February 2022 than it did before then. That aid has come with restrictions however. In particular, Western governments seem to have wanted Ukraine to bleed Russia white until Vladimir Putin would agree to negotiate a reasonable settlement. On the other hand, they didn’t want Ukraine risking an expansion of the war toward a threshold where Putin might use nuclear weapons. So long-range weapons that could reach deep into Russia have been off the table. Ukrainian President Zelensky has kept asking all the same.
The trouble is that there are more Russians than Ukrainians. Specifically, there are 143 million Russians and 38 million Ukrainians. The Russians have suffered between 400,000 and 600,000 military casualties dead and wounded since the invasion began almost three years ago; Ukraine has lost perhaps as many as 80,000 dead and 400,000 wounded.[1] However, the Russians have managed to dredge up 25,000-30,000 replacements per month. Now they have managed to recruit 8,000 North Korean soldiers. (There may be more to come.) In contrast, Ukraine is just running out of soldiers. It is the one being “bled white.”
As a result, Russians managed to contain the incursion near Kursk while still attacking in the Donbas. Now the Russians are moving forward against the Ukrainian defenses in both the Donbas and Kursk. On the Ukrainian side, the fighting men are becoming exhausted and “morale is eroding.”
People sympathetic to Ukraine ask “Why must Ukraine keep fighting with one hand tied behind its back?”[2] Because NATO countries do not want to go to war with Russia directly. Hemingway has one of his characters explain how he went broke: “Gradually and then suddenly.”[3] The same thing is true for Ukraine now. Ukraine is going to have to make a deal with Russia. Shrewd, realistic thinking says that Ukraine will have to accept the loss of the territory that the Russians have conquered.[4] Ukraine will have to settle for some guarantee of its future security, coupled with financial aid for reconstruction. Membership in NATO, or just fair words and promises from Putin, may be that guarantee.
[1] See: Casualties of the Russo-Ukrainian War – Wikipedia
[2] The Observer, quoted in “Ukraine: A grim reality sets in,” The Week, 15 November 2024, p. 15.
[3] Ernest Hemingway, The Sun Also Rises (1926). And Jackson Browne counsels “don’t think it won’t happen just because it hasn’t happened yet.” The Road and the Sky (Remastered)
[4] Richard Haas, quoted in “Ukraine: A grim reality sets in,” The Week, 15 November 2024, p. 15.