Wars usually end when one side runs out of options. This one has not, because too many actors still have them.
On paper, Russia should have paused by now. Three years into the invasion of Ukraine, Moscow has absorbed heavy casualties, economic sanctions, diplomatic isolation, and a long war it clearly did not plan for. Ukraine, meanwhile, has defied expectations, preserved statehood, rebuilt parts of its economy under fire, and turned Western military aid into a functioning defense. And yet, missiles continue to fall. Drones still cross borders nightly. Front lines shift by meters, not miles.
If you are asking why Russia is still attacking Ukraine, the honest answer is uncomfortable. The war persists not because diplomacy failed, but because stopping now would lock in outcomes that key players are not ready to accept.
That includes Moscow. It also includes Kyiv. And yes, it includes Washington.
To understand what is really happening, you must look beyond public statements and examine incentives, timing, and the quiet political bargaining that never reaches press briefings. The much-discussed “peace talks” associated with Donald Trump are part of that story, but not in the way they were sold to the public.
Russia is no longer fighting for victory. It is fighting for positioning.
In early 2022, Russia’s objectives were expansive and blunt. The Kremlin expected a rapid collapse of the Ukrainian government, minimal resistance, and a swift reordering of Ukraine’s political alignment. That plan failed decisively.
By late 2022, Russian strategy shifted. The war stopped being about overthrowing Kyiv and became about reshaping the long-term security order in Eastern Europe. Moscow adjusted its goals downward but made them more durable.
Today, Russia’s campaign rests on three pillars.
First, it seeks to maintain de facto control over occupied territories without the political cost of formal annexation recognition. A frozen conflict, rather than a signed peace treaty, allows Moscow to hold land while avoiding binding commitments.
Second, Russia aims to degrade Ukraine’s economic and civilian resilience. This explains the relentless focus on energy infrastructure, ports, and logistics nodes rather than large-scale armored advances. The objective is cumulative pressure, not dramatic breakthroughs.
Third, Russia is betting on time. Western democracies operate on electoral cycles, budget negotiations, and public opinion. Moscow believes patience will fracture unity faster than battlefield losses will break Russian resolve.
This is not ideology. It is arithmetic.
Russia’s military spending exceeded seven percent of GDP in 2024, a level consistent with full war mobilization. Defense production has been reorganized around sustained conflict, not short campaigns. These are not the decisions of a state preparing to disengage.
Russia keeps attacking because stopping now would confirm strategic failure without securing compensating gains.
Ukraine’s success changed the war’s shape, not its inevitability
Ukraine’s resistance has been extraordinary. That statement holds even when stripped of emotion.
Independent military assessments estimate Russian casualties at well over 300,000 killed or wounded since 2022. Equipment losses include thousands of tanks, armored vehicles, artillery systems, and aircraft. Ukraine forced Russia to abandon its initial blitzkrieg approach and exposed deep flaws in command, logistics, and morale.
But Ukraine’s success created a paradox.
By proving it can survive, Ukraine also inherited the burden of sustaining a long war under constraints that Russia does not face in the same way. Ukraine’s population is smaller. Its economy is more exposed. Its military depends heavily on external supply chains that are shaped by foreign politics rather than battlefield necessity.
Ukraine’s leadership understands this reality better than many of its loudest supporters. Kyiv is not chasing symbolic victories. It is managing risk.
That is why Ukraine listens to diplomatic signals without embracing them. A ceasefire that locks in occupation without security guarantees is not peace. It is deferred defeat.
Sanctions weakened Russia, but they did not coerce surrender
Western sanctions were never designed to produce instant collapse. Their real purpose was to raise the long-term cost of aggression. On that measure, they succeeded.
Russia lost access to advanced technologies, faced capital flight, and saw its growth prospects curtailed. Financial isolation increased transaction costs and forced structural adjustments. Living standards stagnated.
What sanctions did not do was dismantle Russia’s capacity to wage war.
Energy exports continued, rerouted primarily toward Asia. Trade intermediaries absorbed risk in exchange for profit. Defense production expanded under state direction. Political repression muted domestic opposition.
Russia emerged slower, poorer, and more militarized. That is not a peaceful equilibrium, but it is a sustainable one in the short to medium term.
This is why the Kremlin continues to press its military advantage where it can. The economic pain, while real, has not crossed the threshold that forces strategic reversal.
Why infrastructure strikes matter more than territorial gains
Russia’s current campaign emphasizes infrastructure for a reason.
Large-scale ground offensives are expensive and visible. Infrastructure attacks are cheaper, deniable, and politically corrosive. Repeated strikes on power generation, transmission lines, and urban utilities impose costs far beyond the battlefield. They affect civilian morale, industrial output, and foreign investor confidence.
This approach allows Russia to maintain pressure while minimizing its own losses and avoiding actions that could trigger direct NATO intervention.
It is not restraint. It is calibration.
The Trump “peace talks” were not peace talks
Public discourse around Donald Trump’s role in Ukraine diplomacy has been deeply misleading.
There were no formal peace talks brokered by Trump. There was no mutually accepted framework. There was no mandate from the U.S. government.
What existed were informal signals, floated ideas, and media-facing assertions that the war could be ended quickly through personal negotiation.
From Moscow’s perspective, this rhetoric was useful. It suggested that Western unity was conditional and that Ukraine might eventually be pressured into concessions. From Kyiv’s perspective, it was dangerous. Any settlement imposed without Ukrainian consent undermines sovereignty and invites future aggression.
These exchanges were not negotiations. They were positioning exercises aimed at future political leverage, particularly in the context of U.S. electoral uncertainty.
Russia engaged rhetorically because it costs nothing. Ukraine resisted substantively because the stakes are existential.
Why Russia wants talks without compromise
Russia does not oppose negotiations. It opposes outcomes that reflect failure.
The Kremlin’s preferred scenario involves a ceasefire along current lines, no Ukrainian NATO membership, gradual sanctions relief, and the normalization of territorial gains. That is not reconciliation. It is consolidation.
Continuing military pressure improves Russia’s bargaining position. Every strike signals resolve. Every delay in Western aid reinforces Moscow’s belief that time works in its favor.
This is why attacks continue even when negotiations are discussed. War and diplomacy are running in parallel, not in opposition.
The diplomacy you rarely hear about
While public attention fixates on personalities and sound bites, quiet channels remain active.
Military-to-military communication reduces nuclear risk. Negotiations over prisoner exchanges continue intermittently. Grain and shipping corridors are discussed through intermediaries. These efforts manage escalation. They do not resolve the conflict.
Resolution requires trust. Trust does not exist.
The real battlefield is political, not territorial
Russia watches Western politics with precision. Elections, budget fights, inflation data, and protest movements matter as much as artillery ranges.
Ukraine understands this too. That is why Kyiv pushes for long-term security commitments rather than short-term aid packages. It knows the war will not be decided by a single offensive, but by endurance across political cycles.
Russia keeps attacking because it believes the coalition supporting Ukraine will weaken before its own tolerance does.
So far, that belief has not been disproven.
The question you should actually be asking
The war continues not because peace is impossible, but because peace on acceptable terms is unavailable to the parties that matter.
Russia attacks because stopping now locks in loss.
Ukraine resists because accepting less risks erasure.
The West hesitates because escalation carries its own dangers.
Until those incentives change, the missiles will keep coming.
The war is not frozen. It is managed.
Reference links
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Stockholm International Peace Research Institute – Military Expenditure Database
https://www.sipri.org/databases/milex -
International Institute for Strategic Studies – The Military Balance
https://www.iiss.org/publications/the-military-balance -
International Energy Agency – Ukraine Energy Sector Updates
https://www.iea.org/topics/ukraine -
International Monetary Fund – Russian Federation Country Reports
https://www.imf.org/en/Countries/RUS -
U.S. Department of State – Ukraine Conflict Statements and Briefings
https://www.state.gov/ukraine -
NATO – Strategic Assessments and Press Releases on Ukraine
https://www.nato.int/cps/en/natohq/topics_192648.htm
