EDITORIAL: Four Years and More of Heroic Resistance: Ukraine Will Not Be Broken

Time to take stock, and for Ukraine’s supporters to make a greater concerted effort to end Russia’s barbaric war against an independent, democratic, European state.

Feb. 22, 2026

A national flag of Ukraine flies in front of the landmark Independence Monument in Kyiv on February 24, 2023, on the first anniversary of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (Photo by Sergei Supinsky / AFP)

Four years ago this week, on Feb. 24, 2022, Russian President Vladimir Putin launched his full-scale invasion, expecting Kyiv to fall within days and sovereign Ukraine to disappear within weeks.

He had begun his military aggression against Ukraine back in 2014 when his unidentified “green men” seized Crimea and plunged the Donbas into a bloodbath.

He was confident Russia’s might and the West’s hesitation. would allow him to get away with his criminal goals.

He was wrong.

Ukraine still stands. Its flag flies over Kyiv. Its military fights on. Its people endure, remaining defiant and hopeful.

The cost has been brutal. Tens of thousands of soldiers are dead. Thousands of civilians killed. Millions displaced. Cities reduced to rubble. Some 18 percent of Ukraine’s territory occupied by the Russian invaders.

Yet Ukraine has not broken.

Whatever his domestic shortcomings, Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, has provided the necessary wartime leadership and become a Churchillian figure on the international scene.

Ukraine’s armed forces have held the line against a larger enemy. Citizens have kept the country running through blackouts and air raids. Western military aid and financial support have been crucial.

But US President Donald Trump’s approach has created grave uncertainty about his country’s commitment. Europe has stepped up instead. Britain, France, Germany, Poland, the Nordics, the Baltics, and Canada – a Coalition of the Willing – are filling the void.

Russia has paid a staggering price. Hundreds of thousands of soldiers killed or wounded. Its economy buckling under war costs and sanctions. Internationally disgraced and isolated, Moscow depends on China, North Korea, and Iran for survival.

Western support has been vital, but it hasn’t reached decisive levels. Ukraine needs more – not just to survive, but to force Russia to the table on terms that respect sovereignty and territorial integrity.

Talk of peace negotiations is hollow without real pressure. Putin won’t negotiate in good faith. He respects only force. Appeasement has never worked with Moscow, and it won’t work now. Every delay, every half-measure, and every attempt to accommodate the Kremlin only emboldens further aggression.

Remember, this is not a neighborhood dispute. This is a genocidal war against Ukraine and a direct threat to Europe and the free world. If aggression succeeds here, autocrats worldwide will take note.

The West must act. Expand sanctions. Increase military aid. Isolate Moscow completely. Guarantee Ukraine’s future in a democratic Europe with a clear path to EU and NATO membership. Pressure Russia to retreat – not merely hope it will.

This is a struggle between authoritarianism and freedom, old-style imperialism and national self-determination.

Four years ago, Putin sought to erase Ukraine. Instead, he forged a nation more united than ever. That is his failure – and Ukraine’s strength.

Putin has also woken Europe up to realities, and even as the US steps back and its leadership appeases the Kremlin, Ukraine has been reassured that it will not be abandoned and left to fend for itself. 

There is no more time to waste!

Slava Ukraini.

https://www.kyivpost.com/editorial/70521

2 comments

  1. Ukraine will not be broken. The country has proven beyond any measure of doubt that it’s a brave nation, and one that not only manages to fend off the most brutal attacks by an exceedingly vile and wicked aggressor, but also boosts its arms production, creates innovative new weapons and tactics, and brings the war to the warmongers.
    Not much can be said about its collection of friends. Hesitant, could be one word, slow, another, and cowardly cannot be left out. Even worse, there are those among the ranks of Western nations that are not hiding the fact that they are siding with the russian terrorist federation: Hungary, Slovakia, and the United States.
    History will never forget who did what and who sided with whom. Most of the West will be blemished by its cowardice, while those mentioned above will have the stain of collusion pockmarking their faces. None of this can ever be erased.

  2. We need a powerful new military/political/trade/intel-sharing alliance.
    Not sometime in the future, NOW.
    Core members should consist of : CANZUK, Japan, the Scandies, the Balts, France, Poland, Germany, Netherlands and of course Ukraine.
    The armed forces of the alliance should integrate with each other as much as possible.
    With Ukraine as the Senior Service, I’d put a Ukrainian General in overall command.
    Each member should commit to at least one division of mechanised troops and at least one squadron of warplanes.
    The ones with naval assets should also commit as much as they can.
    The military-industrial complex should also integrate and go immediately onto a war footing.
    Troops should start flowing into Ukraine until all the major cities are guarded; thus freeing off at least ten more Ukrainian divisions for the frontline.
    For every third world idiot willing to fight for the putinaZis, there must be an equivalent number of them willing to join a new force of mercs. Let’s tap that resource.
    The U.K. should be tooling up now to start producing home grown tactical nukes. We had them for almost 50 years; until Tony Blair decommissioned them.
    We can no longer rely purely on US-supplied trident strategic nukes, so this is the solution.
    We should then start supplying them to Ukraine.

Enter comments here: