The analytical framework for Ukraine’s counteroffensive was, in effect, rigged from the start.
Author: Joshua C. Huminski, opinion contributor
The US-UK alliance is rebuilding: How Biden’s visit laid a new foundation
By any measure, the relationship now is certainly far stronger than it has been in recent years at the political level.
Ukraine’s counteroffensive might halt the fighting, but won’t end the war
Losing sight of the bigger picture risks not just faulty analysis, but also mismanaged expectations, the latter of which could have far greater consequences than the former.
How America can support Ukraine and stay on guard against China
The alluringly false choice of security in the Euro-Atlantic or stability in the Indo-Pacific ignores the totality of American power and the distinction between the two theatres.
The American people deserve to know how the war in Ukraine will end
This necessitates moving beyond simplistic clichés and bumper sticker slogans and asking some very hard questions.
We must not ignore the non-nuclear options for Russian escalation
The West would be remiss if it only focused on the nuclear part of the escalatory question, despite Moscow’s past behavior.
How a long, cold winter could dampen Western support for Ukraine
An open-ended conflict will assuredly lead to the erosion of Western support for the war, especially as other pressures emerge.
Victory in Ukraine could mean a stalemate
The West should begin to recognize that this war will not end in the near future either on the battlefield or at the negotiating table.
If Russia invades Ukraine, what’s next?
Right now it would appear that Washington, London, Brussels and indeed Moscow are not considering what comes next or what comes thereafter.