The narrative sure has changed. A year ago, sonorous experts were warning of Ukraine's imminent collapse due to manpower shortages and Russia's seemingly implacable strength. Fast forward to this month and Ukraine has not only taken on the offensive initiative in the Donbas and southern parts of its land, but is helping the US defend itself against Iranian drones with Russian targeting (despite White House denials).
The implication is that in the preceding year, despite the US government trying to assist Russia and despite Russia's brutal attacks on Ukrainian energy infrastructure in the depths of winter, Ukraine has emerged stronger. And as if that were not significant enough, Russia's attempts at offensive operations across the front this winter have uniformly failed. Given the disparity in sizes, this may not be a complete momentum shift, but it is a signal that the previous, negative narrative was superficial and, arguably, inaccurate. JL
A year ago, many were saying Ukraine was failing. Ukraine was facing a manpower crisis, would be unable to hold back the Russian steamroller and with the US now under Donald Trump, faced a bleak future. The reality ended up being rather different. From that to helping the USA defend itself is quite a trajectory. Ukraine is helping the US and Gulf States and is the only nation in the world who could have provided aid so quickly. (And) the most important battlefield development of the past year was Ukraine’s liberation of occupied Dnipropetrovsk Oblast in a deliberate, planned series of attacks. The operation resulted in Russian forces postponing their planned offensives, redeploying troops from other sectors, and reinforcing their defenses. Russia’s spring-summer offensive disrupted before it commenced is a significant achievement.























