Russian President Vladimir Putin recently suggested the war in Ukraine could soon conclude, amid shifting military dynamics and economic vulnerabilities.
Russia Faces Battlefield Setbacks
Following Ukraine’s unsuccessful counteroffensive in summer 2023, Russian forces steadily advanced, capturing territory at a high cost. This created perceptions of inevitable Ukrainian defeat. Recent developments reverse that trend. Ukrainian troops reclaimed Kupiansk in December, a move that caught Western military analysts off guard despite Moscow’s prior claims. Restrictions on Starlink usage by invaders in February, combined with Russia’s limits on Telegram, enabled Ukraine to regain roughly 100 square miles in Zaporizhzhia. In April, Russia experienced a net territorial loss of 45 square miles, per analysis from the Institute for the Study of War. This marks the first such setback since August 2024, after Ukraine’s incursion into Russia’s Kursk region, with minimal gains in February and March. Moscow’s path to victory appears less assured.
Russian Losses Outpace Recruitment
Ukraine reports killing or wounding more Russian soldiers than Moscow recruits over the past five months. These estimates draw from combat footage, claiming around 35,000 Russian casualties monthly in March and April, mainly from drone strikes. Recruitment has slowed to 800-1,000 daily in 2026, or 24,000-30,000 monthly, according to economist Janis Kluge’s review of regional budgets. This aligns with Dmitry Medvedev, former Russian president and recruitment commission head, who noted over 80,000 enlistments in the first quarter. No plans emerge for another public mobilization, following unrest from the 2022 effort.
Oil Infrastructure Strikes Heighten Economic Risks
Russia’s economy rebounded early 2026 on surging oil prices after U.S. strikes on Iran. March oil export revenues hit $19 billion, up from $9.8 billion in February—the highest since autumn 2023, per Kyiv School of Economics data. Yet Ukrainian missile and drone strikes on Baltic export terminals like Primorsk and Ust-Luga, among 14 targeted refineries in April, cut daily exports from 5.2 million to 3.5 million barrels. Sergey Vakulenko of the Carnegie Foundation notes higher prices currently offset volume drops, but a U.S.-Iran deal reopening the Strait of Hormuz could crash prices and strain Russia’s finances.
Ukraine Emerges as Drone and Missile Powerhouse
Initially dependent on Western arms post-invasion, Ukraine now prioritizes domestic innovation as allied supplies dwindle. Hopes once pinned on F-16 jets and Patriot systems have shifted. Deep strikes on Russian oil sites, including recent Perm refinery attacks 930 miles from the front, showcase progress. New low-cost interceptors deployed this spring counter most Russian missiles amid Patriot shortages. Ukraine reports these systems, like Sting from Wild Hornets, downed 33,000 drones in March—double February’s total. Exports now reach Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE, hit by Iran earlier this spring. Russia heightened security for its recent Red Square Victory Day parade, fearing Ukrainian drones; President Volodymyr Zelenskyy permitted the event via decree.
Diplomatic Push Targets U.S. Engagement
Russia focuses heavily on diplomacy, seeking U.S. President Donald Trump’s leverage to compel Ukraine to cede remaining Donetsk areas. Putin proposed this at the August Alaska summit; the U.S. reviewed it but did not press Ukraine. Despite recent remarks and floating Gerhard Schröder as mediator, demands remain firm. Kremlin aide Yuri Ushakov stated last week that talks require full Ukrainian withdrawal from Donetsk. With Trump occupied by Iran, Putin aims to revive White House involvement through renewed rhetoric.

