2026-02-21
1 小时 0 分钟I'm Dan Kurtz-Valen, and this is the Foreign Affairs Interview.
Putin wanted the war, okay?
He wanted the war from the very outset during the negotiations in 2021 when the ultimatums he issued.
He still wants the war,
and he wants it more than all the other things currently being offered on the table.
February 24th marks the fourth anniversary of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
After Moscow's initial onslaught, Ukrainian counter-offensives, and slow Russian gains since,
the war has settled into a brutal pattern of attrition, adaptation, and endurance.
Ukrainian cities are rationing electricity,
as the Ukrainian military struggles to muster the manpower and munitions needed to gain a decisive edge.
Meanwhile, the battlefield has become a hellscape of drones and artillery fire,
with no clear breakthrough for either side in sight.
Michael Kaufman has been one of the sharpest observers and analysts of the changing nature of the war from Russia's troop buildup in late 2021 to the present in the pages of Foreign Affairs and elsewhere.
He has also considered the geopolitical implications of each new phase of fighting,
what the continued threat of a belligerent Russia means for the West,
and how Ukraine's allies can prepare it for sustained conflict.
Now, as the war enters its fifth year, Kaufman,
a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace,
argues that Russia retains battlefield advantages, but they have not proved decisive,
and more and more, time is working against Moscow.