For the past two months, Russia has systematically targeted Ukrainian infrastructure, devastating the country’s power grid and putting many basic services from healthcare to sanitation at risk. Apart from destruction, this campaign has achieved virtually nothing positive for Russia.

Ukrainians are undeterred in their fighting spirit, and Kyiv’s international partners show no sign of weakening in their resolve of support. But this is unlikely to force Putin to change course. On the contrary, all the signs are that he will double down and continue to lay waste to a country whose very right to exist he denies.

Over the holiday period, Russia continued its daily attacks against mostly civilian targets in Ukraine. For example, on December 29 a massive barrage of missile strikes and drone attacks hit infrastructure facilities in Kyiv, Kharkiv, Lviv, Odesa, and government-controlled areas of the contested Donetsk oblast. Similar attacks continued for several days and show no sign of abating in the new year. This prompted the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, to warn that Russia was probably planning a prolonged air campaign aimed at exhausting Ukraine.

If this is indeed Putin’s plan, there are no signs that it is working. Despite the hardship that the Kremlin’s campaign has caused Ukrainians, their spirit has remained unbroken and their leaders are still confident of eventually defeating Russia and restoring Ukraine’s full territorial integrity.

There are indeed grounds for such optimism. Following Ukraine’s successful counteroffensive in the summer and autumn, front lines have largely stabilised and Ukraine’s position on the ground is generally considered to be strong. Despite a partial mobilisation, the retreat from Kherson, and the increasing use of mercenaries from the Wagner Group, Russia has been unable to make any significant territorial gains in Donbas, which Putin still aims to “liberate”.

This lack of Russian progress is particularly telling in the case of Bakhmut, a small city in Donbas, that has been relentlessly attacked by regular and irregular Russian forces for months, but has been ably defended and thus remains firmly in Ukrainian hands.

Ukraine’s military successes are not only a consequence of the country’s soldiers’ skills and determination but also of the support it has received from its western partners. There is no sign that this will change in 2023. The USEU, and UK have all assured Ukraine that they will continue to stand with the country.

During his visit to the US in December, Zelensky was able to obtain an additional US$1.85 billion (£1.5 billion) security assistance package. Critically, this includes a Patriot air defence system – something Ukraine has long coveted. Although this delivery will not on its own turn the tide of war, it clearly signals that previous US concerns about delivering more powerful weapons systems to Ukraine that can reach deep into Russian-occupied territories, and potentially into Russia itself, have been overcome. This might then also pave the way for other allies to deliver such weapons to Ukraine.

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