Tymofiy Mylovanov Profile picture
President, Kyiv School of Economics; Minister of economy, Ukraine, 2019-2020; Associate professor, University of Pitt...
Jul 7 7 tweets 3 min read
Stubb: 35,000 Russian soldiers killed per month won't end this war. Economic strain won't end it either.

What ends it: the Russian population turning against it. Drones hit St. Petersburg and Moscow. Kids lose their summers in Crimea. Gas lines. Internet shutdowns.

1/ Stubb: Ukraine's long-range strikes took down 40% of Russia's oil refining capacity.

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Jul 7 8 tweets 2 min read
Trump turned NATO from a security guarantee into a paid service. Allies buy American weapons, and in return the US keeps protecting them.

They committed nearly $120B in the past year and spent half of it on US-made arms — Politico. 1/ Image Trump demanded that allies raise defense spending from 2 percent of GDP to 5 percent, or risk losing US protection altogether.

He has often threatened to quit the alliance if they fall short. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth tied higher spending to faster US arms sales. 2/
Jul 7 10 tweets 3 min read
Europe is preparing for the once-unthinkable — defending the continent against Russia with little or no US help.

NATO's plans from a year ago assumed the US would carry nearly 40% of the warfighting burden. This share now almost certain to shrink after year of lost trust in Trump, — FT. 1/Image The shift is driven by a string of shocks.
Trump's threat to take Greenland by force, cancelled US troop deployments, a national security strategy hostile to Europe, and recriminations over the lack of European support for his war in Iran. 2/
Jul 7 6 tweets 2 min read
Rutte: Russia's war machine is not unstoppable.

Right now, Ukraine is changing the dynamics on the battlefield, thanks to the bravery, the dedication, and ingenuity of its armed forces — United24. 1/ Image Rutte spoke on July 6 at a press conference in Ankara, ahead of the 2026 summit and its latest support for Kyiv.
He tied Ukraine's front-line progress to its soldiers, naming their courage, commitment, and inventiveness as the qualities driving the shift against Moscow. 2/
Jul 7 8 tweets 3 min read
Zelenskyy: Russia believed no one could reach its strategic rear — its factories, equipment, everything the war depends on.

We reached them. Ukraine in NATO is extraordinary defensive capability. The threat stays next door for a long time. We stay ready.

1/ Zelenskyy: War has changed as fundamentally as when machine guns decided WWI battles, or when tanks reshaped WWII.

Today drones and long-distance warfare represent that same revolutionary shift.

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Jul 7 4 tweets 2 min read
Head of Zelenskyy’s Office Budanov: Russia used to plan an attack on Europe only after finishing Ukraine.

Now their plans are adjusting — they're ready for both simultaneously. All documents pointed to combat readiness by early 2027. That's not far away.

1/ Budanov: Russia’s Duma elections in September — do they matter? Look at 2024.

People fled Belgorod in columns as the operation hit the city. Belgorod recorded Russia’s highest voter turnout. They’ll draw whatever results they need.

2X
Jul 7 5 tweets 2 min read
Budanov: Russians believe in "3+2": Crimea, Donetsk, Luhansk plus the occupied parts of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia

Recognition of full Russian sovereignty over all of it. That's what they call the "spirit of Anchorage" and apparently Americans read something into that term too.1/ Budanov: We've gone too far for legislative compromises to matter. You think making Russian the second state language gets Crimea back?

No. Everything gets decided on the battlefield and in offices — together, as a package.

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Jul 7 5 tweets 2 min read
Head of Zelenskyy’s Office Budanov: If Russia knew this war would last longer than their beloved Great Patriotic War, they wouldn't have started it.

Not would they have. No. People I've encountered on the Russian side say the same.

1/ Budanov: Ukrainian production finally hit serious scale — that increased intensity, intensity produced results.

The goal: exhaust and destroy enemy capabilities. Right now we're destroying their logistics.

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Jul 7 14 tweets 3 min read
A Ukrainian crew of six fighters destroyed about 20 Russian radars over Bryansk and opened a corridor into Russia's rear.

Blinding that air defense first is what lets Ukraine's deep-strike drones reach the refineries and oil ports deep inside Russia — Oboronka. 1/ The frontline holds Russia's densest air defense and jamming. Russia downs most Ukrainian deep-strike drones at the border, before they reach targets in its rear.

So the 1st SBS Center flipped the sequence and cleared that wall first, before the long-range drones fly. 2/
Jul 7 4 tweets 2 min read
Zelenskyy: It is absurd that modern production has still not been scaled up to the level actually required to protect people from ballistic terror.

Ukraine has the know-how to produce such weapons, Reuters. 1/ Image Zelenskyy: If Ukraine received US licenses to manufacture Patriot systems, our production would be sufficient not only to defend Ukraine, but also to assist partners who need them. 2X
Jul 7 6 tweets 2 min read
I told CNN Ukraine needs U.S. and European money and weapons commitments beyond 2027.

If Ukraine has that support, Russia knows the war will end. The more support Ukraine gets, the faster the war will be over.

1/ Me: Russia keeps sending more drones and missiles. Ukraine now intercepts most drones and cruise missiles, but not ballistic missiles.

That is the gap. We need Patriots and ballistic interceptors. Russia cannot move much on the front, so it doubles down on bombing civilians. 2/
Jul 6 7 tweets 2 min read
"I slowly looked to the side and saw my legs. One leg was bent like the letter G. Hysteria started.

You can't move, no help coming, and you can do nothing." — Volodymyr Prostokishin, 23, lost both legs in Bakhmut.

Ukrainska Pravda writes his story.

1/ Image He was evacuating a 100-kilogram wounded soldier across an open minefield. A 120mm mortar hit. Two legs gone. Right arm shattered. Shrapnel entered his body and exited in spirals.

His comrade Grusha, who he was saving, died. It was two days before Volodymyr's 24th birthday.

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Jul 6 7 tweets 2 min read
"Russians call it games. They put a bag over your head, pour water on your face until you almost drown.

They stick needles under your fingernails and apply electric shocks to your ears, your testicles, your fingers." — Yevhenii Malik, Mariupol defender — Kronen Zeitung.

1/ Image Malik on daily beatings: "In the morning they beat the whole barracks — just to say hello." Ten men in a 20-square-meter cell, standing from 6 AM to 10 PM.

No walking, sitting, talking, looking out the window, or smiling. Toilet and water only on command.

2/
Jul 6 6 tweets 2 min read
Russia shifted air defense systems to Moscow from elsewhere in the country. Ukraine still penetrated them — The Atlantic, Phillips Payson O’Brien.

By revealing the limits of Putin's power, Ukraine has to be making his allies and flatterers very nervous.

1/ Image Ukraine struck the Dubna Space Communications Center twice in one week. Russia uses it to collect intelligence and coordinate army units in occupied Ukraine.

Zelenskyy: "Relevant actions are also being prepared against other similar enemy facilities."

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Jul 6 5 tweets 1 min read
After 2022, NATO drilled scenarios that still assumed technological superiority and uninterrupted supply chains. In Ukraine, soldiers improvised with software updated overnight.

NATO is not prepared for the battlefield of the future. — Myroslava Gongadze, Ukrainska Pravda.

1/ Image For decades, NATO exported military knowledge to its partners. Today, Ukraine exports combat experience in drone warfare, electronic warfare, and battlefield adaptation back to NATO.

Integrating Ukraine is a strategic necessity.

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Jul 6 7 tweets 3 min read
Foreman: Putin is becoming the Robert Mugabe of Russia. Each year he grows older, more detached from the man he used to be and more surrounded by aging sycophants.

He'll die in harness. He's driving Russia into the ground with no plan. When he goes, Russia will face crisis. 1/ Foreman: The Kursk submarine disaster was a huge political lesson for Putin.

He learned never to expose himself that way again. Everything since then has been stage-managed. 2/
Jul 6 5 tweets 2 min read
Foreman: Putin wasn't a major figure in the KGB. He was a functionary in a minor town in East Germany.

The head of the KGB residency there didn't even know who he was. He was spying on East Germans, not the West. 1/ Foreman: The judo analogy fits Putin better than the idea that he is a grand strategist playing multidimensional chess.

He is reactive. He sees opportunities and takes them rather than following some master plan. 2/
Jul 6 5 tweets 2 min read
Foreman: Putin grew up in post-war Leningrad. His older brother died of starvation during the siege. Another brother died before that.

His mother survived the siege. His father was wounded. I think all of that shaped his upbringing in the 1950s and 1960s. 1/ Foreman: Putin said he was a small boy who was bullied in a tough neighborhood.

He grew up in communal housing and looked for a way out of poverty. He was looking for structure and order, and that's what drew him toward the KGB. 2/
Jul 6 6 tweets 3 min read
Foreman, ex-attaché in Moscow: Putin saw Biden as a weak touch after the evacuation from Afghanistan. He looked at Biden and thought: You're weak. I can get away with it

He chose badly. NATO stood together. America stood with Ukraine. Ukrainians fought for their independence. 1/ Foreman: Putin launched the invasion to absorb Ukraine, Ukrainian statehood and nationhood, and Ukrainians as an independent people, and bring them back into the fold.

He believes Russia cannot be a great power without Ukraine. 2/
Jul 6 6 tweets 2 min read
Kyiv Independent: Zaluzhnyi’s electoral rating fell from 25% in July 2025 to 16% in June 2026.

Zelenskyy stayed almost unchanged: 31% then, 32% now. Budanov rose from 5% to 11%, Rating Group. 1/ Image If a presidential election were held now, Zelenskyy would get 32% of all respondents. Zaluzhnyi, now Ukraine’s ambassador to the UK, would come second with 16%. Budanov would come third with 11%. 2/
Jul 6 4 tweets 2 min read
Matviichuk, Nobel Peace Prize laureate: The world embraced Trump's simplified idea: open negotiations, sign a peace deal, Russian war ends and Trump gets Nobel Prize.

But Russia does not want peace. Putin is only imitating negotiations. He wants to achieve his historic goals. 1/ Matviichuk: In Davos, people talked about geopolitical concessions and security guarantees.

But almost nobody discussed how to prevent another Minsk, or how to stop Russia from using a ceasefire to regroup and attack again. 2X