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Pokrovsk and the End of the Illusion: Why Ukraine’s Strategy Failed | Prof. John Mearsheimer

By The Mearsheimer Lens

Summary

## Key takeaways - **Material realities trump slogans in war.**: Wars are not won through slogans or moral narratives, but through manpower, logistics, industrial capacity, and strategic coherence. The fall of Pokrovsk signifies the undeniable imbalance between Russian and Ukrainian war-making capacity. [00:09], [00:45] - **Attrition favors states with depth.**: Wars of attrition reward states with economic, demographic, and strategic depth. Ukraine faced a great power with more soldiers, artillery, industrial capacity, and a higher tolerance for casualties. [00:49], [01:04] - **Elite units, once spent, are irreplaceable.**: Pokrovsk symbolizes the exhaustion of Ukraine's strategic reserves; once elite brigades are committed and spent defending terrain, they cannot be regenerated quickly. Time, not intention, becomes the decisive factor. [01:25], [01:54] - **Russia adapted to grinding warfare.**: Russia shifted from costly offensives to methodical grinding operations, targeting infrastructure, stockpiles, and transport nodes. This cumulative pressure eroded Ukraine's capacity to maneuver and sustain defense. [02:16], [02:40] - **Western strategy relied on illusions.**: Western strategy assumed sanctions and weaponry would grind down Russia, but Russia's defense industry accelerated. Ukraine, dependent on external decision-making, entered a phase where war's tempo outpaced its means. [03:07], [03:44] - **Democracy's time horizon is a liability.**: Ukraine became caught in the gears of democratic time horizons, with Western capitals arguing about short-term political costs while Russia fought a long war. Strategic stamina was in short supply. [14:47], [15:04]

Topics Covered

  • Material Realities Trump Slogans: The True Drivers of War
  • The Illusion of Western Strategy: Willpower vs. Structural Inequality
  • Pokrovsk's Fall: When Illusion Yields to the Reality of War
  • Morality is not a substitute for strategy in war.
  • Ukraine's dilemma: Controlled settlement or risk of collapse.

Full Transcript

When states engage in protracted war,

material realities eventually reassert

themselves. Armies do not prevail

through slogans or moral narratives.

They win through manpower,

logistics,

industrial capacity,

and strategic coherence. The fall of

Pocrs represents the most significant

expression of this logic since the

beginning of the conflict. It is not

merely a tactical loss, nor simply

another city changing hands. It is the

moment where the fundamental imbalance

between Russian and Ukrainian war making

capacity becomes undeniable.

Wars of attrition reward states with

depth economic demographic

and uh strategic. From the outset,

Ukraine faced a great power with more

soldiers, more artillery,

greater industrial capacity, and a

higher tolerance for casualties. The

West attempted to bridge this gap with

technology,

financial support, and rhetoric. But

wars are not won by belief alone.

Picrosoft matters because it symbolizes

the exhaustion of Ukraine's strategic

reserves. Over months, Keev committed

elite brigades to defend the terrain

that held symbolic and logistical

importance. Once those forces were

spent, there were no equivalent

replacements. The tragedy of modern war

is that once seasoned units are lost,

they cannot be regenerated quickly.

Time, not intention, becomes the

decisive factor. In the end, Ukraine

faced the harsh truth all weaker powers

encounter in prolonged conflicts. It

could not replace its losses at the pace

required to sustain its defense. Russia,

in contrast,

adapted. It shifted from costly

offensives to methodical

grinding operations aimed at suffocating

Ukraine's capacity to maneuver it

targeted energy infrastructure,

ammunition stockpiles,

and transport nodes. Each blow in

isolation

seemed manageable cumulatively. They

eroded the war machine. When veteran

brigades are depleted, when energy grids

strain, when logistics falter, collapse

becomes not a possibility but an

inevitability. Pokro is where the

accumulated weight of attrition crossed

the threshold. What unfolded there also

exposes the illusion underpinning

western strategy. Many in Washington and

Brussels assumed that through sanctions,

advanced weaponry,

and uh financial aid, Russia could be

ground down. Yet, the opposite occurred.

Russia's defense industry accelerated.

Its workforce reoriented

and its political system internalized a

wartime posture. Ukraine without

equivalent industrial backing and

dependent on external decisionmaking

cycles entered a phase where the tempo

of war no longer aligned with its means.

Realists are often accused of pessimism.

In truth, we are students of

constraints. We examine what power

allows and forbids from the beginning.

The war rested on a dangerous premise

that political will and moral conviction

could overcome structural inequality.

But the battlefield is indifferent to

narratives it rewards states that match

ambition with capability as Ukrainian

lines fractured near Pocross.

This unforgiving truth returned to the

foreground. Some will insist that more

weapons or firmer western resolve might

have changed the outcome, perhaps

temporarily, but strategy must rest on

durable foundations,

not aspirations.

The imbalance in manpower,

artillery,

and production made a prolonged

stalemate untenable for Kiev. When the

line broke at Picro, it confirmed what

structural logic had long suggested

victory in a war of attrition belongs to

the side with deeper reserves and

greater strategic patience. The fall of

Prosovk marks not only a battlefield

defeat, but the moment when illusion

yielded to reality. Wars that begin as

contests of will eventually become

contests of endurance. In the early

phases, Ukraine relied on mobility,

morale, and western technology to

compensate for its smaller industrial

base and manpower pool. That strategy

worked only as long as Ukraine retained

experienced units, and the West supplied

consistent material support at scale.

But by the time Pocrsk fell, the

attritional logic that governs

protracted conflicts had already taken

hold was depleted. Brigades cannot be

replaced with formations of comparable

quality and momentum shifts. And when

the reserve pool is exhausted, the

facade of resilience gives way to the

arithmetic of war. The Ukrainian

counteroffensive of 2023 is central to

understanding this turning point. Keeve

placed its best trained and best

equipped units, many prepared by NATO

forces, at the spearhead of a campaign

premised on breaking Russian lines and

forcing political concessions. The West

encouraged this ambition. Washington and

European capitals spoke of liberating

all occupied territory and even floated

the possibility of retaking Crimea. The

political narrative demanded success.

The strategic reality demanded patience.

But patience is difficult for states

whose war aims exceed their means.

Ukraine gambled its most capable units

on a decisive breakthrough. That

breakthrough never came. What followed

instead was systematic attrition. When a

state commits its elite formations to a

frontal offensive against fortified

defenses backed by heavier artillery and

deeper reserves, it runs the risk of

bleeding its core. And once those

formations are consumed, replacing them

becomes far more difficult than

political leaders often admit. By the

time Ukraine returned to the defensive,

it did so with a diminished cadre of

seasoned soldiers. The consequence was

inevitable when Russia shifted its own

strategy from defense to grinding.

Multiaxis pressure from Kansk through

Prosk and beyond Ukraine no longer had

the elasticity to respond effectively.

Exhaustion in war is not always visible

from the outside. It reveals itself

slowly increased casualty sensitivity,

difficulty rotating units, shrinking

tactical initiative and reliance on

hastily trained personnel. Leaders begin

speaking of strategic pauses,

mobilization reform, and temporary

redeployment. But these are euphemisms

for shortage and strain when the battle

for Pocrs intensified.

Keeve faced the consequence of spending

its finest units too early and without

sufficient industrial backing. That is

not a failure of bravery. It is a

failure of strategy. The West's role in

this dynamic cannot be ignored. Western

policymakers

convinced that Ukraine could achieve

battlefield transformation through

injections of high technology weapons

encouraged offensive action without

delivering the volume of artillery, air

defense, and armor necessary to sustain

long campaigns. There was a profound

mismatch between rhetoric and reality.

promises of as long as it takes support

collided with political fatigue,

industrial constraints

and uh electoral cycles. Meanwhile,

Russia mobilized industry,

manpower and logistics on a wartime

footing. Ukraine tethered to the rhythms

of foreign legislatures

could not match the temp. By the time

Picrosk became the focal point, Ukraine

was defending not just a city but the

assumption that momentum could be

regained through resolve alone. Yet

resolve cannot substitute for

replenishment. War is unforgiving to

states that exhaust their best units.

before securing external guarantees of

sustained material support. Ukraine

fought bravely, but bravery does not

refill ammunition stockpiles,

nor does it regenerate veteran

battalions. In the end, exhaustion is

not simply physical, but strategic. It

is the moment when a state realizes its

war aims no longer align with its

available power. Propsk revealed that

moment with clarity. Once a military

system reaches the point where it must

defend critical terrain with diminished

forces and insufficient reserve.

Collapse becomes not sudden but

cumulative. It arrives slowly, then all

at once. From the outset, Western

leaders framed the war in Ukraine not

only as a moral struggle, but as a

strategic imperative for Europe and the

transatlantic alliance. They declared

that Russia must be defeated, that

Ukraine would be supported for as long

as it takes, and that NATO's credibility

rested on resisting Russian power. But

declarations are not a strategy and

credibility is not preserved by

rhetoric. It is preserved by hard power,

by industrial capacity and by political

will measured over years, not news

cycles. The tragedy for Ukraine is that

it embraced Western promises as

strategic guarantees when in reality

they were primarily instruments of

signaling and domestic politic. Europe

has long spoken the language of

geopolitics without building the

institutions and capabilities necessary

for it. After the Cold War, European

governments assumed the United States

would remain the guarantor of the

continent's security. Defense budgets

stagnated. Industrial production lines

closed. Recruitment pipelines dried.

Europe outsourced deterrence to

Washington and congratulated itself for

its virtue. When war returned to the

continent, Europe discovered that it

lacked the depth to sustain a modern

industrial conflict. Ammunition

production was insufficient.

Air defense stocks were thin and

political consensus was fragile. In

Brussels,

unity was expressed through

communicates.

In Moscow,

unity was expressed through

mobilization. The war exposed this

asymmetry.

European states promised aid in headline

figures that masked the reality of slow

delivery and limited capacity. They

pledged air defense systems they had not

yet produced and armored vehicles they

could not replace. Initiatives repeated

in press releases became substitutes for

strategy. Meanwhile,

Russia continued to strike Ukraine's

energy and logistics infrastructure,

expanding its industrial base and

adapting militarily.

Western politicians imagined that

sanctions would the Russian

economy. Instead, Russia reoriented

trade, stabilized production, and

leveraged partnerships with non-western

powers. Sanctions did inflict cost, but

not decisive ones. Power is resilient

when it is rooted in sovereignty and

industrial depth. As Ukraine's positions

strained around Picro,

Western internal contradictions grew

clearer. Some European states advocated

negotiation.

Others insisted on total victory.

Elections across the continent shifted

domestic priorities. Energy costs and

migration competed with foreign policy

and public discourse. In Washington,

electoral politics intruded as factions

debated spending levels and strategic

clarity gave way to tactical

improvisation. Ukraine became caught in

the gears of democratic time horizons.

While Russia fought a long war, Western

capitals argued about short-term

political costs. strategic stamina was

in short supply. NATO's credibility,

invoked so frequently, rested on a

dangerous assumption that alliance unity

equal alliance capability, but unity is

not synonymous with capacity. A

coalition of states may agree on an

objective, yet lack the means to achieve

it. In Ukraine's case, the West relied

on sanctions,

technology transfers,

and symbolic displays, tanks, missiles,

and training missions without matching

them with the scale of production

required to sustain prolonged war. There

is a profound difference between

supplying enough to prevent defeat for a

time and supplying enough to make

victory possible. Ukraine received the

former. This mismatch between promise

and power had consequences. It

encouraged Keev to pursue maximalist

aims at moments when strategic restraint

might have been wiser. Believing NATO

would stand with it indefinitely.

Ukraine overextended and exhausted elite

formations on offensives that lacked

overwhelming support. The illusion of

unlimited aid became a trap. Not because

Western leaders intended deception, but

because they misjudged their own

capacity and the resolve of their

societies to bear the cost of long war.

Pocrovsk exposed this illusion sharply

as lines weakened and ammunition

reserves thinned. The limits of Western

power materialized on the battlefield.

The alliance that claimed to defend

European security discovered it had

neither the industrial depth nor the

political discipline to match its

ambitions. Ukraine paid the price for

believing otherwise. Wars are rarely

decided by sudden breakthroughs. More

often they are determined by the slow

methodical erosion of an adversary

strength and will Russia's campaign

around Pocrs follows this pattern. It

reflects not rash ambition but

calculated pressure. The kind of

incremental advance that prioritizes

patience over spectacle. Many Western

observers once dismissed Russian

strategy as clumsy and disorganized.

Yet war is a harsh teacher and Russia

adapted. It shifted from early

overextension to deliberate grinding

operations designed not to seize

territory for its own sake, but to

systematically collapse Ukraine's

capacity to resist encirclement has been

the cornerstone of this evolution rather

than push recklessly forward. Russian

forces fixed Ukrainian defenders in

place, stretched their logistics,

and bled their elite units through

repeated contact as Ukrainian brigades

fought desperately to hold key lines.

They expended the very combat power they

could least afford to lose. Russia did

not need rapid breakthroughs. It needed

only to ensure that each Ukrainian

counteraction cost Ukraine more than it

cost Russia overtime.

This asymmetry compounded the fall of

Pacro is not the story of a single

offensive. It is the product of

accumulated advantage. The Russian

approach targeted depth not headlines.

Strikes on energy infrastructure

degraded Ukraine's industrial

resilience. Precision attacks on command

nodes, air defense, and ammunition

depots eroded the ability to coordinate

and sustain defense. Small persistent

advances across wide front lines forced

Ukraine to disperse scarce reserves. The

objective was never merely to seize

cities. It was to stretch Ukrainian

defenses until they thinned, then

fracture them piece by piece. Pocross is

the visible culmination of that

strategy. The real battlefield victory

occurred long before its streets changed

hands in the exhaustion of Ukrainian

brigades and the depletion of their

experienced cadre. Attrition alone does

not explain Russia's approach. It paired

pressure with maneuver probing

constantly for weak points. When

Ukrainian leadership concentrated forces

for counterattacks in one sector, Russia

exploited gaps elsewhere. When Keeve

rotated exhausted units, Russia struck

logistics nodes and assembly areas. When

Ukraine attempted to reinforce Picro, it

did so at the expense of other critical

fronts. In war, choices imposed by the

enemy are victories in themselves.

Russia forced Ukraine into a reactive

posture, dictating the tempo and

location of battle when a state can no

longer shape the battlefield. It is

already losing even before territory

falls. Western analysts often fixate on

tactical episodes rather than strategic

art. Every Ukrainian tactical success

was celebrated as proof of Russian

weakness. Every Russian setback as

evidence of impending collapse, but wars

are not judged in weeks. They are judged

in seasons and years. Russia's ability

to absorb early failures

mobilize industry and recalibrate

command structures reflected a state

prepared for prolonged conflict.

Ukraine, by contrast,

was fighting a war it could not afford

to lose without the structural

advantages necessary to sustain one. The

encirclement at Prosk underscores a

deeper principle. Once defensive lines

begin to bend under attrition and

reserves thin collapse tends to

accelerate, fronts that appear stable

from afar may already be brittle. When

the dam breaks, it does not fail at a

single point. It fractures across its

length. Picrok is not isolated. It is a

signal. It tells us that Ukraine has

crossed from contesting ground to

struggling to preserve its force itself.

At that stage, continued resistance

becomes less a strategy and more uh an

obligation one paid in blood. With

diminishing strategic return, war

rewards endurance, adaptation,

and patience. Russia demonstrated all

three. Ukraine fought with courage, but

courage without replenishment cannot

hold out indefinitely. The tragedy is

not simply that Picrok fell. It is that

the outcome was set long before the city

was encircled. When structural realities

overtook political ambition,

encirclement on the map reflected a

deeper encirclement, one of exhausted

reserve is spent brigades and waning

support. Great power conflicts are

rarely decided on the battlefield alone.

They are shaped by the wider

constellation of power, by the decisions

of outside actors, and by shifts in the

international environment. Ukraine's

fate was never determined solely in

Detsk or Kkefe. It was determined in

Washington, Brussels, and Moscow. And as

the war entered its later phase, a

profound reality emerged. The western

commitment upon which Kev's strategy

depended was neither indefinite nor

immune to internal political currents.

When great powers intervene, they bring

not only support but uncertainty.

Ukraine learned this painful lesson in

real time. Donald Trump's return to the

center of American politics accelerated

a trajectory already underway. Long

before any summit or policy shift, his

presence alone signaled volatility

during the earlier phase of his

political career. He openly questioned

the logic of unlimited aid to Ukraine,

challenged NATO's burden sharing, and

expressed skepticism toward the notion

that the United States should subsidize

European security indefinitely. Uh for

two years, many dismissed those

statements as rhetoric. But in strategy,

perception matters as much as policy.

Russian planners could see the writing

on the wall. American strategic

attention was shifting inward and

eastward toward China and domestic

priorities. When great powers

recalibrate,

smaller states feel tremors first. As

the US political debate intensified,

aid packages slowed, ammunition

deliveries lagged, and uncertainty

spread through European capitals. The

West still issued statements of unity,

but unity in words is not unity in

resources. Europe already straining to

meet Ukraine's needs now faced the

prospect of doing so without guaranteed

American leadership. That possibility

altered Russian expectations and

Ukrainian calculations alike. Moscow saw

time as an ally. Keev increasingly saw

time as a threat. Trump's foreign policy

instincts,

whatever one thinks of them, have always

been transactional and skeptical of long

costly commitments abroad. He believed

the United States had overextended

itself and should force allies to assume

greater responsibility in Ukraine that

translated into a colder appraisal of

American interests. He did not share the

belief that Russia's defeat was

essential to US security or that moral

clarity justified open-ended strategic

exposure even before any formal policy

shift. This stance changed the war's

calculus. Strategy is not merely action.

It is expectation. And expectations

shape behavior on the battlefield. to

cave. The signals were stark. It could

no longer rely on the assumption that

Western aid would expand indefinitely.

The debate in the United States echoed

through Europe, exposing divisions that

had been masked by wartime urgency. Some

states insisted Ukraine must fight to

total victory. Others privately

acknowledged limits. The alliance that

once spoke with one voice now grappled

with the oldest problem in coalition war

divergence of interest over time. Russia

recognizing this intensified its

pressure accelerating operations around

Picrok and elsewhere. In war timing is a

weapon for Ukraine. The strategic

dilemma became severe. Continued

resistance without assured long-term

support meant burning dwindling reserves

for uncertain political promises. Yet

negotiation carried its own political

risk. No leader wants to concede under

pressure. No society wishes to admit

that early expectations exceeded

capacity. But realism does not bend to

hope when the most powerful member of

your supporting coalition signals

fatigue. When industrial bases cannot

sustain promised aid and when domestic

politics begin to reshape foreign

priorities,

the war's trajectory narrows. The

tragedy lies not in Trump's preferences

alone, but in the structure of power

politics. The United States acts

according to its interests and domestic

constraints. European states maneuver

around their own vulnerabilities.

Ukraine, dependent on decisions made

elsewhere, entered a strategic vacuum

just as its battlefield position

weakened. For Russia, this convergence,

declining Ukrainian reserve, European

caution, American political

recalibration created an opportunity for

Ukraine. It marked the moment where war

aims built on assumed western permanence

collided with the reality of shifting

great power priorities. power once again

proved unforgiving. The battlefield

around Pocrs was shaped not only by

artillery and infantry, but by ballots,

debates, and strategic fatigue thousands

of miles away. In great power politics,

smaller states often pay the price when

the winds change. Ukraine now confronts

that truth directly when patrons

hesitate and rivals adapt. The space for

independent decisionmaking narrows and

the harsh arithmetic of war comes due.

Modern liberal societies often convince

themselves that wars can be won not

through the balance of power but through

the balance of virtue. They speak as if

justice alone confers strength and moral

clarity itself generates strategic

advantage in Ukraine's case. The West

framed the conflict not only as a

geopolitical contest but as a

civilizational struggle between

democracy and authoritarianism.

In doing so, it substituted narrative

for necessity and assumed that moral

framing could compensate for material

constraints. Yet morality,

however, genuina is not a substitute for

strategy.

States do not prevail because they

believe they should win. They prevail

because they possess the power to impose

outcomes. Ukraine became the vessel for

a western conceit that the ark of

history inevitably bends toward liberal

triumph that nations fighting under the

banner of democracy cannot lose to those

outside it. This belief is rooted in a

postcold war ideology that mistook a

temporary moment of western primacy for

a permanent feature of world politics.

The reality is harsher. War is not a

referendum on political systems or

values. It is a contest of resources,

organization, and endurance. Ukraine

fought courageously,

but courage never overcomes structural

disadvantage without sustained

overwhelming backing. And that backing

never materialized at the scale needed

in this moral framing. Russia was not

merely an adversary, but an aberration,

an anacronistic force destined to

crumble under sanctions, diplomatic

isolation, and international

condemnation. Western leaders spoke of

economic collapse, political fracture,

and strategic humiliation.

Yet, Russia did not collapse. It

mobilized,

adapted, and accepted costs. The image

of Russia as a fragile state, unable to

absorb pressure, reflected wishful

thinking rather than sober analysis.

Strategy should be grounded in an

adversar's capabilities,

not fantasies about their impending

failure. The West's moral certainty

blinded it to the fact that states with

large industrial capacity,

energy resources,

and national cohesion can endure far

more than Western commentators assume.

Ukraine internalized this optimism. It

is believed, not unreasonably,

that the world's leading democracies

would match their rhetoric with

resources

that the language of solidarity would

translate into industrial partnership

and long-term security guarantees.

But the West's moral crusade masked its

material limitations. When slogans

outpace production lines, when values

exceed commitments,

the result is tragic disillusionment.

Kev's strategy rested on the assumption

that Western promises were strategic

realities. Instead, they were political

declarations constrained by domestic

fatigue and competing priorities.

This is not to diminish the

righteousness many in the West saw in

Ukraine's cause. It is to highlight the

fundamental flaw in conflating moral

legitimacy with strategic inevitability

in international politics.

Outcomes are not determined by who holds

the moral high ground, but by who

commands the resources and will to act

decisively. When Ukraine launched

offensives premised on Western backing,

it did so believing that moral urgency

guaranteed strategic backing. In truth,

it exhausted elite brigades on the altar

of expectation. The wreckage around Pok

symbolizes this dissonance. uh a city

fell not because Ukraine lacked bravery

but because bravery was asked to carry a

burden that industry

strategy

and demographics could not sustain

indefinitely to insist that moral

resolve could bend structural reality

was to misread the very nature of war.

Empires have fallen, nations have

fractured, and leaders have been humbled

by the same illusion that virtue ensures

victory. Realism does not deny morality.

It simply refuses to confuse it with

strategy. A moral cause can still be

strategically doomed if it ignores the

balance of power. And when leaders

elevate sentiment above strategy, they

place their own societies at risk.

Ukraine paid dearly for a belief that

noble intention could substitute for

sustained material power. The fallacy

was not in defending national

sovereignty. The fallacy

lay in assuming that ideals alone could

overcome the relentless arithmetic of

war. In every major war, there comes a

moment when the underlying balance of

power asserts itself so forcefully that

political leaders can no longer ignore

it. For Ukraine, the collapse around

Pocrs is such a moment, it marks not

merely the loss of strategic terrain,

but the exhaustion of a theory of

victory that depended on infinite

endurance.

unbroken western unity and an adversary

too fragile to sustain pressure. None of

those conditions materialized. And as

they failed, the logic of negotiation,

once dismissed as premature or defeist,

has re-entered the realm of necessity.

Negotiation in war is never an act of

generosity. It is an act of realism.

States negotiate when the continuation

of conflict threatens to erode their

core interests more than compromise

does. Ukraine now faces that dilemma. It

can continue fighting but each month

diminishes its manpower,

strains its infrastructure

and deepens its strategic dependence.

The battlefield around Pocrosk did not

just absorb Ukrainian brigades. It

absorbed illusions about time, about

western capacity, and about the ability

to impose outcomes through perseverance

alone. Negotiation is no longer a choice

between victory and compromise. It is a

choice between a controlled settlement

and the risk of collapse. the West to

confronts uncomfortable truths. Support

for Ukraine was framed as a moral

imperative, but it now collides with

economic pressures, political

polarization,

and the demands of global competition.

Europe confronts energy insecurity,

industrial strain,

and military depletion. The United

States is pulled by strategic

commitments in Asia and internal

political volatility. To expect that

Western capitals will escalate

indefinitely is to misunderstand the

nature of democratic foreign policy.

Democracies support wars. They believe

they can win at an acceptable cost when

victory becomes uncertain and costs

compound. Commitment erodess not out of

malice but out of political logic.

Russia for its part senses momentum. It

knows that time and attrition work in

its favor. But Moscow also faces

constraints. Sanctions strain the

economy. Casualties weigh on society.

Alliances have limits. Russia does not

seek an endless war. It seeks a

settlement that secure strategic depth

and prevents Ukraine's alignment with

hostile military block. These aims may

be unacceptable to Western leaders

rhetorically,

yet they reflect the core realities of

great power politics if the war

continues without diplomatic adjustment.

The likely result is not the restoration

of Ukraine's pre-war borders, but the

further erosion of its bargaining

position for Ukraine. The danger now is

fighting for symbolic objectives after

the strategic window has narrowed.

Nations often continue wars beyond the

point of utility because leaders fear

the political cost of admitting altered

circumstances.

Yet statesmanship demand confronting

reality,

not postponing it. The tragedy of this

conflict is not simply the suffering

borne by Ukrainians. It is that early

diplomatic possibilities, however

imperfect, were overshadowed by

maximalist aims and misplaced faith in

the permanence of Western resolve. A

negotiated settlement will not satisfy

all ambitions. No war ends without

disappointment. But recognizing limits

is not surrender. It is the discipline

of statecraftraft. Ukraine remains a

sovereign nation and the West retains an

interest in its survival. The

alternative to negotiation is not noble

resistance.

It is the risk of territorial

dismemberment,

demographic loss and permanent strategic

exhaustion. Props stands as a warning

when forces spent and allies waver. time

becomes an adversary rather than an

asset. As a realist, I do not celebrate

these outcomes. I simply acknowledge

them. The international system is

unforgiving to states that mistake

desire for capability and rhetoric for

guarantee. The path forward is neither

triumph nor capitulation,

but sober recalibration.

A durable peace will require recognizing

Russia's security interest

and the limits of Western influence in

shaping outcomes at will. It will

require uncomfortable concessions and

the abandonment of illusions. History

offers a harsh lesson. Wars end. When

leaders accept the world as it is, not

as they wish it to be. The tragedy of

Ukraine is that its leaders believed

they could defy the structural logic of

power politics through determination

alone. The tragedy of the west is that

it encouraged that belief and the lesson

for all who study statecraft is clear

power defines possibility

and ignoring that truth invites

disaster. The time for moral

proclamations has passed. The time for

negotiation

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