Can the West win a сeasefire with Russia?
Opinion

Can the West win a сeasefire with Russia?

by Catarina Buchatskiy

Since 2014, every ceasefire Russia has signed has ended the same way: with Russia in a stronger position, and the West scrambling to catch up when Russia decides to escalate again. The gap between how the West sees a ceasefire and how Russia uses one isn't theoretical. It's why Ukraine is still fighting — on a more devastating scale — a war for nearly a decade now. The West faces a choice, but so does Ukraine. Used correctly, a ceasefire could see Ukraine rearm, the Western industrial capacity

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Ukraine war latest: Russia launches 'one of the largest' attacks on Ukraine's energy infrastructure since start of war

Key developments on Nov. 8-9: * Kyiv faces over 12 hours of emergency power cuts following 'one of the largest' Russian attacks on Ukraine's energy infrastructure * Russia's Lavrov says he is ready to meet Rubio in person to discuss war in Ukraine * Ukraine slaps new sanctions on Putin's team and propagandist publishers * Russian Ka-226 helicopter crashes in Dagestan, killing weapons plant employees * 'The threat was constant' — Russian drone flew over Angelina Jolie during her Ukraine tri

Russia's air defenses are wide open — there's just one problem

Ukrainian drones — and the occasional missile — have been causing havoc across Russia for months. According to Ukraine's Security Service (SBU), nearly 160 successful strikes have been conducted in 2025 against oil extraction and refining facilities, leading to fuel shortages and a 37% drop in refining capacity. "These are legitimate military targets. Oil extraction and refining make up around 90% of Russia’s defense budget. These are the dirty petro-rubles funding the war against us," SBU Chi

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