Ukraine war protest sign saying 'Ukraine freedom'.

Ukraine is losing this war at the moment. The west needs to massively step up its military aid to the country.

Frank Ledwidge

5 min read

For a few weeks Ive been in Kyiv, partly as a visiting fellow at leading Ukrainian thinktank the . Kyiv is an astonishingly elegant and beautiful city; a premier league European capital. The regular air raid warnings delivered on your phone, as well as by the baleful second world war-style sirens, are largely ignored now despite the occasional .

Cafes and restaurants are open and largely busy. It was in one of the latter that I met a senior Ukrainian government official who had contacted me, expressing approval for something I had said in the international media.

You know, dont you, that this time next year, a Russian soldier could be sitting right where you are, he said after a brusque introduction. We are losing this war.

He is right. There were the great victories at Kyiv, Chernihiv and Kharkhiv. But with , the appalling realisation is sinking in that this is likely to be a very bloody war, lasting years. The  is in the invaders hands and its  are blockaded.  both in Ukraine and . While Ukraine is not winning, it is losing.

Last weeks  stated that it would assist member states in providing support to Ukraine, while recognising each members specific situation presumably the specific situation of some countries being unwilling to contribute usefully to the defence of Ukraine.

Assistance in the form of weaponry is still   doing Russian intelligence officers jobs for them, by giving them often precise information as to the numbers and capabilities of the weapons provided by donors.

All that notwithstanding, western weapons have helped Ukraine hold the line, and are likely to continue to do so. They will, however, be unable to impose strategically meaningful costs on Russias leaders.

Between 20,000 and 30,000 soldiers killed and  turned into scrap are meaningless irrelevancies to Vladimir Putin. Generals  or ? Plenty more where they came from. The  of neutralising Ukraine as a viable state is being achieved.

Strategic objectives

For Ukraine, as for Russia, the key strategic front is in the south.   the ancient city on the Black Sea coast that Russia  as part of its scheme to would be a real blow to the Kremlin. Ukrainian forces entering Crimea, a short tank ride from Kherson, would send the message: This is what strategic defeat looks like.

So to attempt this would make sense both militarily and politically. But Ukraines problem, as matters stand, is that  to be certain of success. The trend of weapons supply is nowhere near what will be required to ensure the  and a consequent end to this war by negotiation, or decision of arms.

Some weeks ago, the US  that Russia is weakened to the degree it cant do the kind of things it has done in invading Ukraine. That is all very well, but the problem is the means by which the west has chosen to achieve this long-term attrition, rather than decisive defeat.

Wanted: greater firepower

What the west calls its arsenal of democracy   but barely. Serious doubt hangs over whether the US is serious about its war aims. The question is: does the US want Ukrainians to win, or does it want them to bleed for years?

If the former, arrangements need to be made very soon to release the thousands of M1 Abrams tanks, , artillery,  and other systems much of which are currently in storage rather than in service.

No units of the US armed forces need to be depleted. All of this equipment was, by the way, specifically designed to destroy the equipment the Russians now deploy. Bidens pledge to has something of a double-edged feel. Without a step change in the delivery of weapons, as long as it takes a phrase weve heard before from western leaders concerning  and   might indicate a very long time indeed. There is of course, sadly, the possibility of  setting in first.

Preparations must begin for a move from drip-feeding weapon systems in single figures towards . Ukraine also requires an extensive and systematic regime to form and train brigades capable of imposing that really heavy strategic cost upon Putin. No such system of mass training-and-equipping seems to be planned.

Back in Kyiv, a colleagues partner Sergiy (until February in product design) was deployed to the Donetsk region two weeks ago. He now lives in a bunker near the frontline. His group is armed with ancient Soviet gear, and ammunition for their weapons 

Since deployment, two of Sergiys unit have been killed. As matters stand, at best he will be doing these deployments for years as the rest of the world becomes bored, , and the west provides a trickle of weapons.

In 1941, Nazi officers enjoyed their leave passes in Paris but not London as Winston Churchill spoke the words: . Like those Germans, Russian officers could yet enjoy Ukraines beautiful capital. All that is stopping them are Ukrainian soldiers and their still mostly outdated tools.

Frank Ledwidge is a Teaching Fellow in Strategy Enterprise & Innovation in the Faculty of Business & Law.

This article is republished from  under a Creative Commons Licence. .

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