Perun cuts through the noise of daily headlines to argue that Russia's relentless, costly offensives are not a sign of military stupidity, but a calculated strategy to manipulate global perception and force a diplomatic surrender. The piece is notable for reframing the battlefield not just as a contest of territory, but as a theater of psychological warfare where Moscow's primary goal is to make the war's cost unbearable for Kyiv's allies.
The Logic of Attrition
Perun begins by dismantling the common critique that Russia is foolishly attacking a fortified defender. Instead, he posits that Moscow has two distinct "win conditions" that drive their aggression. "From Moscow's perspective, there are arguably at least two interrelated win conditions here," Perun writes. "Either they directly achieve their political goals by military means... or they inflict so much pressure on Ukraine and its allies... that they're able to force Ukrainian capitulation even in the face of these maximalist demands." This distinction is crucial because it explains why Russia continues to attack even when tactical gains are minimal; the attacks themselves are the weapon.
The author suggests that Russia understands it cannot economically exhaust Ukraine without Western support, so the battlefield serves a secondary, perhaps more important, purpose: shaping the political will of the United States and Europe. "You could argue, for example, that by continually remaining on the offensive... Russia can continuously generate headlines... and therefore play on global perceptions that Russia has the military advantage and that its victory is inevitable." This framing is effective because it connects the muddy trenches of the Donbas to the boardrooms of Washington and Brussels. It suggests that every Russian advance, no matter how small, is a message designed to fracture NATO unity.
Critics might note that this theory assumes Western leaders are purely reactive to battlefield headlines, potentially underestimating the structural commitment to Ukraine's sovereignty regardless of tactical setbacks. However, Perun's evidence of Russia's "28-point plan" suggests a sophisticated understanding of how to exploit these fractures.
"In the best case scenario, those terms are accepted and they get for basically free something they've been unable to achieve through almost four years of war so far."
The Diplomatic Trap
The commentary shifts to the diplomatic front, where Perun argues that Russia's "maximalist demands" are a feature, not a bug, of their strategy. He points out that the Kremlin's refusal to compromise on issues like Ukraine's disarmament and neutrality is designed to be a dealbreaker. "The demands around disarmament and security guarantees... are in and of themselves arguably a dealbreaker from Ukraine's perspective," Perun notes. By setting terms that Ukraine cannot accept, Moscow creates a narrative where Ukraine is the obstacle to peace.
Perun highlights a specific, potentially divisive element of recent proposals: the use of frozen Russian assets. "According to reports, the 28-point plan includes a provision that has hundred billion dollars of Russian assets frozen in Europe going to fund the reconstruction of Ukraine with the United States keeping half the profits." He argues this is a masterstroke of diplomatic maneuvering. It makes the proposal attractive to Washington by offering a financial solution, while simultaneously ensuring it remains a "non-starter" for European allies who are wary of the legal and economic precedents.
This analysis reveals the dual nature of Russia's current strategy: hardening the front lines to create a sense of inevitability while softening the diplomatic approach to create a wedge between allies. "Putin, for example, has reportedly said that Ukraine is being unrealistic... while blaming Europe and Ukraine for the absence of peace," Perun writes. "When Putin blames Ukraine and its European allies for being under the quote illusion and dream of inflicting a strategic defeat on Russia, end quote, he's implicitly splitting Ukraine and most of the NATO allies off from the United States."
The strength of this argument lies in its ability to explain why Russia persists in diplomacy despite having no intention of accepting a fair compromise. The goal is not agreement; it is the appearance of good faith to sow discord among the opposition.
The Winter Imperative
As the season turns, Perun warns that the coming winter adds a layer of urgency to these dynamics. The author notes that while Russia's summer offensives failed to generate strategic breakthroughs, the pressure on Ukraine is reaching a critical point. "The coming winter is expected to be a difficult and cold one," Perun states, linking the physical reality of the weather to the political pressure on Kyiv. The strategy relies on the belief that as temperatures drop and energy infrastructure is targeted, the political cost of supporting Ukraine will rise for its partners.
The author's focus on the "fortress belt" of cities like Slaviansk illustrates the sheer scale of what Russia hopes to achieve without fighting. "That includes not just open fields and the homes to many Ukrainians, but also the towns and cities of the so-called fortress belt," Perun explains. He argues that Moscow knows taking these cities militarily would be "an incredibly long and bloody process," so the incentive is to pressure Ukraine into surrendering them through diplomatic exhaustion rather than direct assault.
"If the patterns for most of this war so far held, taking those objectives would be an incredibly long and bloody process for the Russian military, if they could do it at all."
This section underscores the high stakes of the current moment. The battlefield is not just about ground; it is about time and endurance. Perun suggests that Russia is betting that the West's patience will run out before Russia's resources do.
Bottom Line
Perun's strongest contribution is the reframing of Russia's costly offensives as a deliberate psychological operation designed to break the political will of Ukraine's allies rather than just the Ukrainian army. The argument's biggest vulnerability is its reliance on the assumption that Western decision-making is primarily driven by battlefield optics rather than long-term strategic interests. As winter approaches, readers should watch not just for territorial gains in Pokrovsk, but for any fractures in the diplomatic coalition that Russia is so carefully trying to engineer.