John Bolton: The West is losing Ukraine without losing a single battle.
EU paralysis and Trump’s diplomacy are shifting the war in Moscow’s favor — without Russia changing its goals. Ukrainian sovereignty and NATO unity are now at stake, he writes for WP. 1/
EU summit failed to agree on using €210bn in frozen Russian state assets as collateral for a reparations loan to Ukraine.
Belgium, backed quietly by others, blocked the plan over legal and financial risks. 2/
Instead, the EU approved a €90bn loan—less than half the original proposal. Hungary, Slovakia, and the Czech Republic opted out.
The money covers short-term budget support, not Ukraine’s defense or reconstruction. 3/
“The best thing Russians can do against Russia’s dictatorship is to fight on Ukraine’s side,” says Pyotr Ruzavin, a Russian journalist who joined Ukraine’s military in 2024. — Suspilne 1/
Ruzavin serves in Khartiia, a National Guard unit, working in UAV operations. He was wounded during service, recovered, and returned to his unit within a month. 2/
He has lived in Ukraine since 2017. Before the war, he worked for Russian independent outlets including Dozhd, Mediazona, and Important Stories. 3/
Maksym, Ukrainian soldier of the 22nd brigade, spent 33 days in the gray zone with a tourniquet on his wounded leg.
He was saved by an unmanned ground vehicle.
Six UGVs sent before were destroyed by Russians on the approach — CNN. 1/
He spent three hours in total darkness inside a steel capsule. FPV drone shredded the hull. Then UGV ran over a mine. The front left wheel was torn off, but it kept moving on three. Maksym is alive.
Now he’s in a hospital. His leg was amputated, but he survived. 2/
UGVs are simple, cheap, and expendable. Wheels, a platform, an armored capsule or a stretcher. They are slow, awkward, and sometimes break. But they don’t require a crew. 3/
They forced us to sing up to 160 songs a day. In +40°C heat or –20°C cold. Every morning they played the Russian anthem.
They wanted to destroy me physically — Rasti, a Ukrainian POW returned after 2.5 years of torture in Russia. 1/
In late 2022, in the early stages of the war, Russians advanced from Crimea, the Donbas, and from the sea toward Mariupol
Rasti: We were surrounded in a week. Most of us understood that this was probably the last moment — the nearest friendly forces were 120 kilometers away. 2/
They held out at the metallurgical plant. Helicopters managed to deliver supplies only a few times.
Rasti: Sometimes I managed to record a short voice message for my mom. Sometimes I wrote: “The internet isn’t down — the generator was turned off. I’m alive. I didn’t die.” 3/
Fiona Hill: What we're trying to do now is blunt Putin's ability to keep on devastating everything. He's done incalculable damage to the fabric of Russian society, its demography, its economy.
His whole economy, society and politics revolve around having this war go on. 1/
Hill: Capitulating, Ukraine giving Putin what he has got now isn't sufficient to put end to this. Putin's not going to demilitarize or change the course of the Russian economy. He's created enemies out of most of Europe. It's scared US allies and shown how ruthless war is. 2X
Aiden Aslin, British POW on Russian captivity: Russian said "I am your death". He asked "do you want a beautiful death or a quick death? I wanted a quick death.
He said "no, you're going to have a beautiful death". I was fully expecting to be murdered at that point. 1/
Aslin: I remember they came for three of the guys that were in the cell with me. They put bags on their head, and then the door closed. You hear the guards shouting, laying on the floor. Then you hear them get beat. While they're crawling, you can hear them being beat. 2/
Aslin: They put a bag on my head. They shout at me to lay down. He asked "do you speak Russian?". And then he started beating me and started giving me directions.
I had to crawl on in prone. He was beating me in the back with a police baton. 3X