Tymofiy Mylovanov Profile picture
President, Kyiv School of Economics; Minister of economy, Ukraine, 2019-2020; Associate professor, University of Pittsburgh
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Dec 23 8 tweets 2 min read
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/ Image 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/
Dec 23 10 tweets 2 min read
“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/ Image 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/
Dec 23 6 tweets 2 min read
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/ Image 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/
Dec 23 8 tweets 3 min read
Sometimes I forgot my mother’s name.

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/
Dec 22 4 tweets 2 min read
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
Dec 21 5 tweets 2 min read
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/
Dec 20 9 tweets 2 min read
US and Israel linked nonprofits raised $600k-$700k per Ukrainian child with cancer and delivered $1,200-$1,700 to the families.

The Kyiv Independent traced the money, the contracts, the ads, and the payouts behind these campaigns. 1/ Image The campaigns run mostly from the United States, use Israeli fundraising platforms, and keep operators anonymous.

They target donors worldwide with ads in English, German, French, Bulgarian, and more — while blocking access from Ukrainian IPs. 2/
Dec 20 7 tweets 3 min read
Zelenskyy: The Americans have proposed a direct negotiation in the Ukraine-US-Russia format, and possibly Europe.

Today there is no peace deal, and there cannot be one until the war is stopped. Ukraine’s MFA is working on creating the infrastructure for elections abroad. 1/ Zelenskyy: There is no peace agreement today. And there may not be one.

A peace agreement will exist only when it is not just on paper, but when it is signed by leaders and when the war has stopped. That is what constitutes an agreement — unlike the Budapest Memorandum. 2/
Dec 20 4 tweets 2 min read
Rubio: I won’t discuss deal details in public. No peace is possible unless Ukraine agrees and unless Russia agrees.

Ukraine is a combatant. If it says no, there is no peace. The U.S. will not force a deal on anyone.

1/ Rubio: We’re trying to define what Ukraine can live with and what Russia can live with, then push those positions closer.

Wars end by surrender or negotiation. We don’t see surrender from either side, so only a negotiated settlement can end this war.

2/
Dec 20 8 tweets 2 min read
Dmitri Kozak, ex Putin aide, refused the president's orders on day two of the Ukraine invasion, insisting he didn't know Russia's goals.

He told Putin he was ready to be arrested or shot, — NYT. 1/ Image Days before the invasion, Kozak warned Putin at a Security Council meeting: Ukrainians will resist, sanctions will be severe, Russia's position will suffer.

He drafted a memo predicting Sweden and Finland would join NATO, which came true. 2/
Dec 20 13 tweets 3 min read
An 18-year-old from occupied Crimea was about to be drafted into the Russian army. Instead, he escaped more than 3,000 kilometers and reached Kyiv.

This is the story of Artem, who chose flight over serving the state that occupied his home. — Suspilne 1/ Image Artem was born in Zaporizhzhia. At age five, his family moved to Sevastopol. In 2014, Russia occupied Crimea. From that moment on, his life unfolded inside a closed, repressive system that punished dissent and offered young people no real choices. 2/
Dec 20 9 tweets 2 min read
Leva, Ukrainian marine infantry just came back after a concussion.

Leva: I walked onto the position. Snow still lay there. Blood stains showed through it.

Crimson drops spread on the white slope. A drone buzzed “bzzzz”. I stared at those stains, and it burned me, reports UP. 1/ Image Leva: The dugout smelled of urine, smoke, and dust. A Russian drone had just killed a buddy there. I came back from a concussion.

My eardrums did not heal. Sleep broke. Paranoia hit. The mortar kept landing closer and closer. 2/
Dec 19 7 tweets 2 min read
The US-Ukraine Reconstruction Investment Fund is fully operational and poised to start its first investments in 2026.

Development Finance Corporation activated a fund of this size and complexity in less than a year, advancing US-Ukraine shared national interests, — DFC.

1/ Image The Fund's board reached final consensus on investment policies, fund policies, and investment strategy. Alvarez & Marsal was announced as Fund Advisor in November. The board includes DFC General Counsel and Head of Investments.

2/
Dec 19 9 tweets 2 min read
China and Russia aim to make the US an isolated, second-tier state.

Trump's first term declared great-power competition.

His second term now obscures that reality, pursuing policies that give adversaries what they want, — Bloomberg. 1/ Image Putin's war targets the Western community that reduced Russia after the Cold War.

He wages hybrid warfare against US allies: drone incursions, sabotage, attacks on US water systems and meat-packing plants.
2/
Dec 19 4 tweets 2 min read
Bolton: If Trump is not really committed to Article 5, how committed is he to Article 5-like guarantees?

Zelenskyy needs to remember: "Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me."

If you want to take a guarantee from Trump, good luck is all I can say. 1/ Bolton: I've seen reported there's no commitment by the United States to put American troops in Ukraine. American troops are the tripwire.

No American troops in Ukraine means it's a long way from the east coast to Ukraine. 2/
Dec 19 5 tweets 2 min read
Putin: We see signals from Kyiv that they’re ready for dialogue. We want peace — but only on the terms I set June 2024 and by addressing the so-called “root causes.”

[That means Ukraine’s capitulation. What “progress” is Russia talking about?]

1/ Putin: We don’t see Ukraine ready for peace. This began with the 2014 coup and broken Minsk deals.

In 2022 we told Kyiv to withdraw troops from Donbas. They refused. In Istanbul they agreed, then walked away. Now they again reject ending the war peacefully.

2/
Dec 19 7 tweets 3 min read
I told CNN Ukraine’s shift on NATO creates an opening: “fine, no NATO — but give us NATO-level protection.” Labels don’t matter, guarantees do.

Now it’s on the U.S. and Europe to build real security — money, structure, and the ability to act if Russia strikes. 1/ Q: If Trump pressures Zelenskyy, not Moscow, why would Russia give anything?

Me: I agree. Early on the US pushed Ukraine more than Russia. Now it’s shifting to real guarantees and reconstruction funds. Russia’s line is keep the Donbas grind or pause a few years.

2/
Dec 19 12 tweets 2 min read
Timothy Snyder’s sharpest claim is that Ukraine sits at the start of big human stories: the first large cities, the spread of Indo-European languages, and the grain routes that fed ancient empires. — Ukrainska Pravda 1/ Image Snyder describes an ongoing research project with unusual scale: 3 years of work by 100+ Ukrainian and international scholars writing a “longue durée” history of Ukraine, from geology and ecology to the present war. 2/
Dec 18 4 tweets 2 min read
Rutte: Putin has to know, if he would try to attack Ukraine again [after a peace deal], the reaction will be devastating.

Ukraine’s armed forces will be the first line of defense, followed by the Coalition of the willing, with leadership from the UK and France. 1/ Rutte: The key question is how to prevent Russia from attacking, avoiding a repeat of the Minsk 2 failure in 2014. Security guarantees will be essential to prevent future Russian aggression. 2/
Dec 18 4 tweets 2 min read
Zelenskyy: There’s still a key question I don’t have an answer to. If Ukraine is not in NATO, how do security guarantees actually work?

What exactly will the United States do if Russia attacks again? How will these guarantees function in practice?

1/ Zelenskyy: We can’t let Ukraine face next year without answers on financing. The risk is real: a $45–50 billion deficit, possibly more.

Russia talks more about war than peace. Ukraine must stay strong — this isn’t just about the front, it’s about our ability to survive.

2/
Dec 17 9 tweets 2 min read
Ukraine’s war is increasingly being fought by women.

As the full-scale war enters its fifth year, manpower shortages are reshaping the front line.

More than 70,000 women now serve in Ukraine’s military, including 5,500 in combat roles, up 40% since 2021. - Forbes 1/ Image As Ukraine enters the fifth year of full-scale war, manpower shortages are forcing a structural shift.

Women are moving from support roles into frontline combat, drone strikes, and high-risk evacuations. 2/