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John Woods's avatar

There is no way the West could trust Russia to keep any agreement. This is not Korea 1953 when both sides are exhausted and totally unable to defeat the other side. Russia has persuaded itself that Ukraine, colonised in the 17th century, is part of Russia, and will exhaust its armed forces to recover that position it lost when the USSR collapsed. Far better for the West to continue to aid Ukraine where it can until Trump is gone in 2029.

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Josh Arnold-Forster's avatar

As ever a concise and sound assessment of the situation. Germany, France and the UK would all have challenges in making a credible contribution to a European multinational force to provide some type of committment to Ukraine. Currently the UK Govt promises to spend 2.5% of GDP on defence but currently there is no target year to meet this target or a willingness to accept that it may need to go to 3% or more of GDP. Our allies and adversaries will have noticed a British "senior government source" who briefed the Times that hitting the 2.5% of GDP target by 2030 "will mean deeper cuts to public services in the run-up to the election. It feels like a non-starter.” Under previous Labour leaders this type of off-the-record briefing would have lead to the "source" involved either being sacked or at least severely reprimanded (and of course this may have already happened). It would be very difficult for the UK military to deploy and properly support an enduring Brigade level presence to Urkraine without a very rapid move to 2.5% of GDP defence spending, and many would argue it needs 3% or more of GDP. Ukrainian and NATO military leaders are aware of this, and it is not hard to find the evidence in various Parliamentary Committee and NAO reports. No matter what the PM says to our European or US allies they will not think we are serious unless we can prove we are willing to put our money where our mouth is.

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