But recent developments suggest that Russia's will to battle, which has not wavered for four years despite historically horrific losses, may have begun to ebb as Ukraine's successes on the ground, in the air and on the sea begin to tell. That multiple observers note 'an air of desperation around Putin' suggests this is systemic, not temporary. JL
Thomas Harding reports in The National:
Thomas Harding reports in The National:
Russia's minor operations to seize Ukrainian territory are “at best tactical victories leading effectively to strategic defeat. The amount of kit and humans they have expended on very small gains is unsustainable even for a country that has willing manpower." The Ukrainians “have largely replaced trench warfare with “zonal defence." If the Russians attack, they're not being repelled by humans but by air and ground drones collectively. "Ukraine isn't losing so many people, and Russia is losing vast numbers.” Ultimately ground doesn't matter, it’s the enemy's will to fight matters and that willpower could be ebbing on the Russian side. "There's an air of desperation about Putin at the moment.”























