
The Foreign Affairs Interview The Reeducation of Russia’s Military
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Oct 9, 2025 Dara Massicot, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, delves into Russia's evolving military strategy amidst the Ukraine conflict. She highlights how Russia has adapted its tactics, learning from initial failures to improve operational effectiveness. Massicot warns that the Russian military's resilience and experience could pose future threats as they share insights with allies like China and Iran. She also discusses the implications of U.S. policy on supply stability and warns of intensified strikes on Ukraine as winter approaches.
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Two Hidden Causes Of Russia's Early Failure
- Two overlooked facts changed the opening campaign: last-minute troop notification and extensive Western intelligence sharing with Ukraine.
- Those factors undercut Russia's expectation of a quick Crimea-style operation and helped Ukraine anticipate attacks.
Constraints, Not Only Caution, Shaped Aid
- Western support ramped up incrementally and faced inventory and training limits rather than purely political hesitation.
- Complex systems require training and logistics, so capability transfers take time even when politically approved.
Russia's Pattern Of Post-Failure Adaptation
- Russia historically learns from early failures and adapts its forces and industrial base over time.
- Mobilization in Sept 2022 injected money, authority, and production that produced operational effects about a year later.

