The Foreign Affairs Interview

Bonus: Is There an Endgame in Ukraine?

100 snips
Feb 21, 2026
Michael Kofman, senior fellow at Carnegie and leading Russia-Ukraine analyst, breaks down four years of grinding war. He discusses attrition and positional fighting. He examines manpower limits, drone and strike campaigns, and why time may favor Ukraine. He weighs diplomacy, U.S. roles, and what realistic security guarantees might look like.
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INSIGHT

Attrition And Drone Dominance Define The Front

  • The war has settled into prolonged attrition and positional fighting with tactical changes every few months.
  • Drone superiority often determines initiative but has produced only operational, not strategic, shifts.
INSIGHT

2025 Was Not Russia's Breakthrough Year

  • Despite material advantages, Russia failed to achieve decisive gains in 2025 and mostly made incremental advances on less-prioritized axes.
  • Rising Russian casualties and recruitment limits suggest time is increasingly unfavorable for Moscow.
INSIGHT

Putin's Dual Bets Have Misfired

  • Putin made political and battlefield bets that have not paid off: forcing a collapse by pressure and maneuvering the West away from Ukraine.
  • He still prefers war and appears committed by sunk costs, legacy aims, and misperceptions about success.
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